
- Oncology NEWS International Vol 18 No 8
- Volume 18
- Issue 8
Sutent shows promise for brain metastases in NSCLC patients
SAN FRANCISCO-Non-small-cell lung cancer patients with irradiated brain metastases responded favorably to treatment with sunitinib malate (Sutent), according to interim results presented at the 2009 World Conference on Lung Cancer.
SAN FRANCISCO-Non-small-cell lung cancer patients with irradiated brain metastases responded favorably to treatment with sunitinib malate (Sutent), according to interim results presented at the 2009 World Conference on Lung Cancer. In the 53 patients who could be evaluated for response, progression-free survival came in at 9.9 weeks, leading principal investigator Silvia Novello, MD, PhD, to call the results encouraging in a population that faces poor prognosis and increased morbidity as well as increased mortality.
Patients with NSCLC who had previously received whole-brain radiation therapy for brain metastases, and less than two prior systemic therapies, were eligible to receive single-agent sunitinib (37.5 mg/day) with continuous daily dosing in a four-week cycle. PFS was the primary study endpoint (abstract C1.7).
"These data support preclinical findings suggesting that VEGF signaling is required for the growth of brain metastases and that...sunitinib (has) the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier," said Dr. Novello, who is based at the University of Turin and San Luigi Hospital in Orbassano, Italy.
Articles in this issue
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New Doxil-based regimens don’t fly with FDA advisorsabout 16 years ago
Four steps to improve the profitability of your oncology practiceabout 16 years ago
Mathematical model predicts resistance to Herceptinabout 16 years ago
ASTRO issues guide on accelerated breast radiotherapyabout 16 years ago
Study renews breast ca link to migrainesabout 16 years ago
Abraxane, carboplatin pack one-two punch in two types of lung cancerabout 16 years ago
Discord prevails over pt privacy in clinical trialsabout 16 years ago
Expert panel reviews strategies for nutrition and cancer careNewsletter
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