The big news in my inbox this week was the official FDA Alert for Tazemetostat.
Tazemetostat had been voluntarily pulled from the market a couple of months ago by its manufacturer after results from a trial showed that there were concerns about patients developing new cancers. The news from the FDA gives more detail about that.
Tazemetostat had been given accelerated approval by the FDA, based on results from a phase 2 trial. It is an EZH2 Inhibitor, meaning it stops or inhibits an enzyme called EZH2, controlled by the EZH2 gene, which is part of process in calls that keeps them from dying as they normally would. About 20% of Follicular Lymphoma patients are effected by this issue with EZH2, and Tazemetostat was the first treatment that specifically targeted EZH2. That was enough to have the FDA give accelerated approval, which means patients could start taking Tazemetostat outside of a trial while the larger phase 3 trial went on to confirm the results of the phase 2 trial.
But even when they grated accelerated approval, the FDA was aware of potential issues with secondary cancers. About 1.7% of patients in the trial had developed a new cancer.
The FDA's alert gets into more detail about this. During the phase 3 trial, the rate of new cancers went much higher, with 18 of 318 patients (about 5.7%) developing new cancers, some as soon as 7.5 months after they began treatment, though most developed them 1-3 years after beginning treatment.
Most of the new cancwrs were Myelodysplastic Syndrome and Acute Myeloid Leukemia, though there were some other blood cancers as well.
The phase 3 trial isn't taking new patients, but it will remain open so doctors can follow up on long-term side effects of the patients in the trial.
Obviously, there is lots of bad news all around, but most especially for the patients in the trial who developed new cancers. The rest of the patients in the trial will also have to deal with the uncertainty of long-term side effects. And the rest of us have one less treatment to rely on.
The good news, if we can still see good news, is that things were handled as well as they could be, with the trial sponsors shutting it down as soon as they could, and then making sure they are following up with the patients in the trial and making sure they are taken care of. Let's all hope they are doing OK.
I think it's very important to state, though, that this doesn't mean we shouldn't take part in clinical trials.
It's a natural reaction to read something like this and get nervous about serious side effects. But that's going to be the case no matter what treatment we end up taking. It's worth a conversation with your oncologist about whether or not a trial is right for your situation. I talk about trials with my oncologist at least every other visit, so I know what 's available.
Trials are the only way new treatments can become available. There is no other way. I remember very early on, soon after I had been diagnosed, someone in the online support group that I belonged to said that patients who agreed to be a part of a clinical trial are "heroes." I agree.
If you are still concerned about clinical trials, or even if you just have questions about them, the Follicular Lymphoma Foundation has a webinar coming up on Tuesday, May 26, called "What No-one tells you about clinical trials and why it matters for your care." It's going to be an excellent webinar. Click on the link to read more about it and register.
More coming soon. Those ASCO abstracts must be just about ripe.