Regorafenib improves survival of colorectal cancer patients

by Sunita Kumar

Know more about
Colorectal cancer
Regorafenib improves survival of colorectal cancer patients

Regorafenib - an investigational drug - slowed the progression of tumors and lengthened the lives of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. This is the first novel agent in eight years to show improvement in overall survival of colon cancer patients who have run out of treatment options.

"For years, patients with metastatic colorectal cancer have faced a devastating impasse when standard chemotherapies have failed to halt the growth of tumors and physicians have run out of effective drugs to offer them," says Dr. Grothey - Mayo Clinic oncologist.

Researchers tested regorafenib in a phase III, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, conducted simultaneously in the United States, Europe, Japan, Australia and China. They looked at survival outcomes in 760 patients whose cancer had progressed despite standard chemotherapy regimens. Regorafenib is a multi-kinase inhibitor, which has the effect of slowing cell proliferation and blood vessel growth and tempering a variety of biological pathways that are activated in tumors.

Researchers found that patients with metastatic colon cancer who were treated with the drug showed a 29 percent increase in overall survival when compared to those treated with placebo. The median length of survival for patients treated with the drug increased from 5 months to 6.5 months, a statistically significant jump. Overall, regorafenib reduced patients' risk of dying from cancer during the trial by 23 percent.

The trial, whose largest group of study participants in the United States was at Mayo Clinic, finished more than a year ahead of schedule.

"Patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who have failed all approved standard therapies have a poor prognosis," says Dr. Grothey. "This is the first and only agent in this setting that has demonstrated statistically significant overall survival benefit."

The findings were presented at the Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in San Francisco by Mayo Clinic oncologist Axel Grothey, M.D., principal investigator of the trial in the United States.

Other Mayo Clinic researchers included Daniel Sargent, Ph.D. Dr. Grothey's research was sponsored by Bayer Healthcare.


(Sunita Kumar -- sub-editor compiled and published Regorafenib improves survival of colorectal cancer patients at HealthNewsTrack on January 19, 2012 sourced from Mayo Clinic - http://www.mayoclinic.org/)

Colorectal cancer - recent articles and current news stories:

- High fiber diet reduces colorectal cancer risk
- Activation of biomarker may improve survival among obese patients with colorectal cancer
- New stool test to predict colon cancer
- Obesity in colon cancer patients increases mortality

Colorectal cancer article/news source:

Read more health articles from Mayo Clinic and health articles from USA.

Colorectal cancer - search related terms:

Colon cancer, Colorectal cancer, Investigational drug, Metastatic colorectal cancer, Regorafenib, Survival,
Colorectal cancer books,

Mission
Health Newstrack is dedicated to serve recent and updated health & medical research, events/news, views/reviews to its subscribers and free access to general public, health & medical professionals, and other health seekers worldwide online with a user-friendly system.


Subscribe to Health News by Email

Current news
Drug improves survival of colorectal cancer patients, trial results show

Colorectal cancer
About Colorectal cancer
Cancer of the colon is the disease characterized by the development of malignant cells in the lining or epithelium of the first and longest portion of the large intestine. Malignant cells have lost normal control mechanisms governing growth. These cells may invade surrounding local tissue, or they may spread throughout the body and invade other organ systems.


List health news, Health organizations, Health news world, Glossary, Best health articles, Featured     Go to top

The information provided on Health Newstrack is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between a patient/site visitor and his/her physician. We comply with the HONcode principles for trustworthy health information, and Health News Track is hon code accredited, verify here.
About us, Site map Privacy policy, Disclaimer
© 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 HealthNewsTrack.com
0.46