NHS England approves new ovarian cancer drug Elahere for advanced cases

7 reported

NHS England has approved the use of mirvetuximab soravtansine, known as Elahere, for patients with a hard-to-treat form of ovarian cancer, marking the first new drug for resistant ovarian cancer approved in over 20 years. The drug targets folate receptor-alpha-positive platinum-resistant epithelial cancers, which have limited treatment options when standard chemotherapy stops working. Up to 400 women a year in England could benefit from the treatment, according to NHS England. A global clinical trial involving eight NHS hospitals found that the drug delayed cancer progression and prolonged survival by an average of four months compared with chemotherapy alone, with more manageable side effects. In more than a third of patients (37%), tumors shrank by at least 30%, compared with 16% with chemotherapy. The drug, made by AbbVie, combines a homing antibody that seeks out the FRα protein on cancer cells with a cancer-killing molecule. Experts and charities described the decision as a landmark moment offering hope for improved quality of life.

What’s reported

Elahere is the first new drug for resistant ovarian cancer approved in England in more than 20 years.
The drug is for patients with folate receptor-alpha-positive platinum-resistant epithelial ovarian, peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer.
Up to 400 women a year in England could benefit from the treatment.
A global clinical trial found the drug delayed cancer progression and prolonged survival by an average of four months compared with chemotherapy.
In 37% of patients, tumors shrank by at least 30%, compared with 16% with chemotherapy.
The drug is administered by a drip once every three weeks.
The drug is made by AbbVie.

Key figures

Prof Ruth Plummer, NHS England’s national clinical lead for cancer drugs
Rachel Downing, head of policy and external affairs at Target Ovarian Cancer
Victoria Clare, chief executive of Ovacome
Helen Knight, director of medicines evaluation at Nice

Sources: The Guardian

You may also like...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *