Berliner Boersenzeitung - New drugs raise hopes of pancreatic cancer breakthrough

EUR -
AED 4.302171
AFN 74.368533
ALL 95.550528
AMD 436.150018
ANG 2.096399
AOA 1075.206396
ARS 1614.545411
AUD 1.635548
AWG 2.108247
AZN 1.985047
BAM 1.950261
BBD 2.360207
BDT 143.782251
BGN 1.953762
BHD 0.441726
BIF 3484.588368
BMD 1.171248
BND 1.491557
BOB 8.096969
BRL 5.834454
BSD 1.171777
BTN 109.852533
BWP 15.755186
BYN 3.297022
BYR 22956.470161
BZD 2.356796
CAD 1.600423
CDF 2706.755218
CHF 0.918282
CLF 0.026486
CLP 1042.422729
CNY 7.993535
CNH 8.002134
COP 4182.8914
CRC 533.881417
CUC 1.171248
CUP 31.038085
CVE 110.567691
CZK 24.363901
DJF 208.154493
DKK 7.472969
DOP 69.865216
DZD 155.165798
EGP 60.915224
ERN 17.568727
ETB 184.178544
FJD 2.601636
FKP 0.86691
GBP 0.866917
GEL 3.150466
GGP 0.86691
GHS 12.977138
GIP 0.86691
GMD 85.501549
GNF 10280.633292
GTQ 8.956524
GYD 245.182598
HKD 9.174331
HNL 31.190211
HRK 7.534519
HTG 153.393684
HUF 364.746094
IDR 20169.425846
ILS 3.513101
IMP 0.86691
INR 109.856841
IQD 1534.335506
IRR 1545462.365998
ISK 143.806461
JEP 0.86691
JMD 185.633565
JOD 0.830431
JPY 186.747953
KES 151.21976
KGS 102.399209
KHR 4699.631029
KMF 493.095243
KPW 1054.112214
KRW 1732.100229
KWD 0.361072
KYD 0.976522
KZT 542.985521
LAK 25679.622554
LBP 104885.301517
LKR 372.360849
LRD 215.802657
LSL 19.290126
LTL 3.458392
LVL 0.708477
LYD 7.425693
MAD 10.820115
MDL 20.072904
MGA 4845.455586
MKD 61.629134
MMK 2459.233159
MNT 4191.332877
MOP 9.452912
MRU 46.873555
MUR 54.521879
MVR 18.096405
MWK 2033.286958
MXN 20.311785
MYR 4.629361
MZN 74.85468
NAD 19.289936
NGN 1579.135959
NIO 43.020318
NOK 10.882333
NPR 175.764053
NZD 1.982697
OMR 0.450356
PAB 1.171867
PEN 4.027631
PGK 5.09786
PHP 70.511463
PKR 326.690491
PLN 4.245249
PYG 7371.096441
QAR 4.269174
RON 5.090361
RSD 117.356777
RUB 87.962614
RWF 1710.022777
SAR 4.392725
SBD 9.426671
SCR 17.387196
SDG 703.339239
SEK 10.779878
SGD 1.493822
SHP 0.874455
SLE 28.871592
SLL 24560.49046
SOS 669.39743
SRD 43.872615
STD 24242.478745
STN 24.771905
SVC 10.253921
SYP 129.576974
SZL 19.290415
THB 37.782142
TJS 11.032619
TMT 4.105226
TND 3.366751
TOP 2.820085
TRY 52.617048
TTD 7.944403
TWD 36.894564
TZS 3051.10274
UAH 51.414295
UGX 4341.687487
USD 1.171248
UYU 46.587882
UZS 14136.968717
VES 564.723485
VND 30830.188051
VUV 138.14522
WST 3.175819
XAF 654.096475
XAG 0.015036
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.165357
XCG 2.111893
XDR 0.813036
XOF 651.80374
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.518456
ZAR 19.292105
ZMK 10542.640325
ZMW 22.293588
ZWL 377.141532
  • JRI

    -0.0950

    12.955

    -0.73%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.11

    +0.3%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    1.4200

    85.69

    +1.66%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    82.19

    -0.32%

  • BCE

    -0.0550

    23.845

    -0.23%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    22.8

    +0.61%

  • RYCEF

    -2.0600

    15.1

    -13.64%

  • RIO

    2.8050

    100.525

    +2.79%

  • GSK

    -0.2900

    55.83

    -0.52%

  • AZN

    -0.2400

    195.54

    -0.12%

  • BTI

    1.1300

    55.96

    +2.02%

  • BP

    0.3900

    46.3

    +0.84%

  • RELX

    -0.7400

    36.33

    -2.04%

  • VOD

    0.1540

    15.344

    +1%

New drugs raise hopes of pancreatic cancer breakthrough
New drugs raise hopes of pancreatic cancer breakthrough / Photo: JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER - AFP/File

New drugs raise hopes of pancreatic cancer breakthrough

After decades of struggling to find a way to treat pancreatic cancer, researchers have developed several promising new drugs that could offer rare hope to patients given this particularly deadly diagnosis.

Text size:

Pancreatic cancer is notoriously aggressive, with only roughly one in 10 people surviving more than five years after being diagnosed, research has shown.

Rates of this cancer have also been surging worldwide, notably among young adults. It is projected to become the second deadliest cancer, after lung cancer, in developed countries in the coming years.

Despite the scale of this scourge, there has not been "any medical progress for 40 years," Patrick Mehlen, a researcher at France's Leon Berard cancer centre, told AFP.

But more funding and interest over the last decade has finally been making a "real difference," he added.

While a cure is still a long way off for most patients, some of these new drugs could add precious months to their lifespan.

The most widely celebrated news came last week, when US pharma firm Revolution Medicines announced positive results for its experimental drug daraxonrasib.

The drug targets a protein called KRAS which is known to play an important role in tumour growth.

Half of the patients taking the pill survived more than 13 months -- twice as long as a control group receiving chemotherapy.

This may not sound revolutionary, but for a cancer that kills so quickly, doubling the life expectancy of patients is unprecedented.

- 'Heck of a lot better' -

One high-profile patient has spoken out about just what a difference the drug can make.

Ben Sasse, a former senator from the US state of Nebraska, started taking daraxonrasib after being diagnosed with metastasised, stage-four pancreatic cancer late last year.

"In mid-December I got a three-to-four month life expectancy," the 54-year-old told the New York Times.

After taking the drug, "I'm doing a heck of a lot better than I was doing at Christmas," Sasse said.

He added that it was "a nasty drug", pointing to severe side effects that left his face peeling and bloody.

Revolution Medicines has said it will soon apply for its treatment to be approved in the United States. More detailed results about the phase 3 trial will be presented at the ASCO cancer conference in Chicago next month.

Meanwhile, other researchers have been exploring alternative ways to extend the lives of pancreatic cancer patients.

Early trial results, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, tested a treatment that is not designed to directly eradicate tumours.

Instead, it aims to prevent cancerous cells from starting a process that makes them resistant to other drugs -- including chemotherapy.

The NP137 antibody was tested on 43 patients receiving chemo whose cancer had spread through their pancreas, but not to other parts of their body.

Compared to normal survival rates, the patients lived several months longer, according to the phase 1b trial.

"We're giving people an average of six months more -- which is significant for this disease," said Mehlen, who supervised the research.

The team plans to conduct another trial with a larger sample size and a control group later this year.

Ultimately, Mehlen hopes his drug will not just extend the lives of people receiving chemotherapy, but also daraxonrasib.

- New cancer vaccine -

Promising early trial results were also announced over the weekend for an experimental pancreatic cancer vaccine.

The vaccine, which uses the messenger RNA technology that came to prominence during the Covid-19 pandemic, was developed by pharma firms BioNTech and Genentech.

During the phase 1 trial, 16 patients who already had pancreatic cancer were given the shot.

It promoted immune cells to target cancerous cells in eight of the patients, seven of whom were still alive six years later.

Out of the eight patients whose immune systems did not respond to the vaccine, just two survived that long.

Phase 1 trials are designed to determine whether drugs are safe, not demonstrate they are effective, so more research is planned.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)