The Philippine Star

Biden vows faster US approval for cancer drug cocktails

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DAVOS (Reuters) — US Vice President Joe Biden said on Tuesday that the United States would speed up the approval of promising new drug combinatio­ns in his government’s newly announced drive to cure cancer “once and for all.”

Biden, who lost his 46-year-old son Beau to brain cancer last year, set out his plans at a World Economic Forum meeting of internatio­nal cancer experts in Davos, a week after being appointed to lead the initiative by US President Barack Obama.

So-called combinatio­n therapy is increasing­ly seen as central to fighting tumors, as scientists unlock the different genetic factors driving cancer cell growth, but bringing such cocktails to market can be slow and costly.

Biden said he had hosted a meeting at his home with three unnamed large drug companies and the head of the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) at which both sides had pledged to do more to get novel cancer drug cocktails to patients.

“The head of the FDA made a commitment that everybody would move much more rapidly in approving combinatio­ns,” Biden said.

At the same, the pharmaceut­ical industry executives had all said they were “open to different way of doing business” in order to ensure that promising drugs from different companies were tested together as early as possible, he added.

Cancer experts are particular­ly excited by the promise of new immunother­apy medicines that help the body’s immune system fight tumors and which have been shown to work well when used alongside other drugs.

Francis Collins, director of the US National Institutes of Health, described their potential as “breath-taking.”

But such immunother­apy drugs are expensive, typically costing well over $100,000 a year per patient.

Obama’s call to “make America the country that cures cancer once and for all” in the last State of the Union address of his presidency has led to criticism from some scientists of an over-simplified approach to the killer condition.

The latest government­led initiative has echoes of former president Richard Nixon’s unsuccessf­ul “War on Cancer” in the 1970s, since when scientists have discovered that cancer is hundreds of different diseases rather than one single disorder, making the notion of a single cure outdated.

Biden acknowledg­ed the complexity in Davos.

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