Texarkana Gazette

Shortage of cancer drug for children stirs fear, outrage

- By Marie McCullough

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

The U.S. 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% cure rate in pediatric cancer.

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 6-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 U.S. 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% 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.

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