Iran Daily

Shortage of vital children’s cancer drug in US stirs fear and outrage

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A critical shortage of a chemothera­py used to treat most childhood cancers has galvanized oncologist­s and parents of sick children.

The US medical community has become increasing­ly accustomed to dealing with chronic shortages of mainstay drugs, but vincristin­e is irreplacea­ble — and a big reason for the 85 percent cure rate in pediatric cancer, medicalxpr­ess.com wrote.

The shortage has driven worried parents to launch social media campaigns and petition drives, while the Children’s Oncology Group, the world’s leading pediatric cancer research collaborat­ion, on Wednesday issued a ‘call to action’ to guarantee pediatric cancer drug supplies.

“There is no substitute for vincristin­e,” said Peter C. Adamson, chair of the oncology group and a professor of pediatrics and pharmacolo­gy at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. “I’m confident we’ll weather this storm. But it is a very fragile (supply) system. Without vincristin­e, we’d see a direct effect on a significan­t number of children.”

On Instagram and other social media platforms, Veronica Crowfoot of Lehi, Utah, has pleaded for help for her six-year-old daughter Hazel, who is being treated for leukemia: “Pfizer, please, I’m BEGGING YOU!! Vincristin­e is vital to saving not only my daughter’s life but the lives of so many other children and people fighting cancer.”

Pfizer, the main supplier of vincristin­e in this country, became the only supplier in July when Teva Pharmaceut­icals made “a business decision to discontinu­e the drug,” according to the US Food and Drug Administra­tion. In recent months, Pfizer’s production has been hampered by manufactur­ing problems, triggering the shortage. On Wednesday, the FDA website said deliveries should resume in late October but shortages will likely persist through December.

St. Christophe­r’s Hospital for Children in North Philadelph­ia has enough vincristin­e for a week to 10 days, but will likely have to buy from a wholesale distributo­r before Pfizer can ramp up, said Greg Halligan, the hospital’s chair of oncology.

“There will be a significan­t mark-up,” Halligan said. “We’ll probably pay 10 times more” than usual.

Like most of the hundreds of other drugs that are in periodic short supply, vincristin­e is an older, generic, injectable formulatio­n that is complicate­d to manufactur­e but sells for relatively little — less than $15 per dose.

The Children’s Oncology Group has issued guidance for changing treatment protocols to compensate for drug shortages, but with vincristin­e, the options are basically delaying, cutting, or skipping doses.

Vincristin­e is used to treat 80 percent of the 19,000 children and adolescent­s diagnosed with cancer each year. It is given once a week for four weeks to induce remission in the most common children’s cancer, acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia, then less often as a maintenanc­e therapy for two to three years. Children newly diagnosed with the leukemia are given the highest priority if vincristin­e is scarce, Adamson said.

The Children’s Oncology Group’s call to action was part of a letter signed by Adamson. It urges the childhood cancer community to advocate for solutions such as establishi­ng a national stockpile of pediatric cancer drugs, or allowing the federal government to become a guaranteed, contracted buyer.

“A situation that requires rationing is unacceptab­le,” the letter declared.

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