Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Cancer-fighting drugs included in UN list

- UN PHOTO

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) announced that dozens of new drugs have been added to the list of essential medicines that every country should have, including new cancer treatments that can be swallowed rather than injected.

More than 150 countries use the UN’s Essential Medicines List, which contains around 460 drugs deemed critical to treat public health needs. This latest update adds 28 products for adults and 23 for children, and specifies new uses for 26 already-listed products, based on value for money, evidence and health impact.

According to WHO, the five cancer therapies added to the list are regarded as “the best in terms of survival rates” to treat melanoma, lung, blood and prostate cancers.

They include two recently developed immunother­apies — nivolumab and pembrolizu­mab — that have delivered up to 50 percent survival rates for advanced melanoma, a skin cancer that, until recently, was incurable.

“The inclusion in this list of some of the newest and most advanced cancer drugs is a strong statement that everyone deserves access to these life-saving medicines, not just those who can afford them,” said WHO Director General Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesu­s.

Other updates to the list include new oral anticoagul­ants to prevent stroke, as an alternativ­e to warfarin treatment of deep vein thrombosis. These are “particular­ly advantageo­us” for low-income countries, according to WHO, because, unlike warfarin, they do not require regular monitoring.

In addition, the agency’s committee also advised that countries supply new products to treat chronic inflammato­ry conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and inflammato­ry bowel diseases.

Life-threatenin­g bleeding after childbirth was also addressed in this year’s Essential Medicines List update, with the proposal to use carbetocin rather than the currently used therapy, oxytocin.

“This new formulatio­n has similar effects to oxytocin…but offers advantages for tropical countries as it does not require refrigerat­ion,” WHO said in a statement.

In a related developmen­t, the UN health agency also updated its Essential Diagnostic­s List, in recognitio­n of the critical, life-saving importance of finding out what is wrong with patients before it is too late.

The first list, issued last year, concentrat­ed on a limited number of priority diseases, such as HIV, malaria, tuberculos­is and hepatitis. This year’s list includes more non-communicab­le and communicab­le diseases. In all, WHO added 12 tests to the Essential Diagnostic­s List to detect a wide range of solid tumors such as colorectal, liver, cervical, prostate, breast and germ cell cancers, as well as leukemia and lymphomas.

The first list, issued last year, concentrat­ed on a limited number of priority diseases, such as HIV, malaria, tuberculos­is and hepatitis.

 ??  ?? RAGHAD, who lives in a refugee camp in Jordan, suffers from type 1 diabetes and requires daily administra­tion of insulin. She finds it hard to keep the insulin cool in the summer with limited electricit­y in the camp but exercises to stay healthy.
RAGHAD, who lives in a refugee camp in Jordan, suffers from type 1 diabetes and requires daily administra­tion of insulin. She finds it hard to keep the insulin cool in the summer with limited electricit­y in the camp but exercises to stay healthy.

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