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Doctors excited about targeted prostate cancer therapy, but can’t prescribe it yet

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Dale Cousins was thrilled when he saw his body scans from before and after a new prostate cancer treatment.

“(The doctor) said, ‘Do you see any difference?'” the 79-year-old from Petrolia, Ont., recalled.

“I said, ‘all these spots around my abdomen, they’re gone.'”

Cousins is part of a clinical trial of radioligand therapy, or RLT — a precise targeting of cancer cells with radiation given intravenously. Oncologists say RLT is poised to become a new “pillar” of cancer care, alongside surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. But unlike Cousins, prostate cancer patients who aren’t in a clinical trial don’t have free access to it.

“We’re able to deliver this very specific therapy to specific cells in the body,” said Dr. David Laidley, a nuclear oncologist with Western University and London Health Sciences Centre.

“We’re able to deliver lethal radiation therapy specifically targeted to cancer cells and at the same time generally sparing the normal tissues,” said Laidley, who is the principal investigator for the London, Ont., site of the Canada-wide clinical trial comparing RLT to chemotherapy.

Cousins was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2010 and has been through many treatments, including surgery. After being stable for several years, a scan last year revealed his cancer had spread and he was enrolled in the trial.

With the last of his six RLT infusions coming on July 10, Cousins has already had a “dramatic reduction” in cancerous lesions and his prostate specific antigen levels have decreased significantly, suggesting an “excellent response,” Laidley said.

Past clinical trials have already shown RLT’s effectiveness, leading to Health Canada approving Pluvicto — the radioactive drug that kills the targeted cancer cells — in August 2022 for patients whose prostate cancer has spread and chemotherapy has failed.

But almost two years later, advanced prostate cancer patients still can’t get public access to radioligand therapy because negotiations on how much it should cost government health plans are ongoing.

While waiting for that decision, there are men with prostate cancer who need the treatment to improve their quality of life and live longer, Laidley said.

“Oncologists are asking ‘can we refer patients or is this an option?’ And unfortunately, we have to say that it’s not available.”

Right now, radioligand therapy for cancer is only publicly available for patients with neuroendocrine tumours, an uncommon but not rare cancer that starts in neuroendocrine cells in the gastrointestinal system or the pancreas, said Dr. Simron Singh, a medical oncologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.

Singh was the global principal investigator for a recent international clinical trial that found another radioactive drug delivered through RLT, called Lutathera, reduced neuroendocrine tumour progression and death by 72 per cent when given early after a patient’s diagnosis.

Like Pluvicto, Lutathera was already approved in Canada as a last line of cancer treatment but the trial results, published in The Lancet last month, were the first to show that RLT could be used as a “starting treatment,” said Singh, who is the co-founder of Sunnybrook’s Susan Leslie Clinic for Neuroendocrine Tumours.

In addition to neuroendocrine and prostate cancer, radioligand treatment using different radioactive drugs is currently in clinical trials for other types of cancers, he said.

“This is a new pillar (in cancer care) that we’re developing,” Singh said.

“It’s going to revolutionize the way we treat cancer completely in the years to come.”

RLT works by finding a target, which is usually a receptor on the surface of cancer cells that doesn’t exist in healthy tissue, he said.

Successful radioligand therapy depends on identifying that receptor in each patient’s cancer cells using a PET scan, then delivering the right radioactive medication — like Pluvicto for prostate cancer and Lutathera for neuroendocrine tumours — that will bind to the cancer cells and kill them without harming healthy cells, he said.

The Canadian Cancer Society calls radioligand therapy “a remarkable breakthrough” that started with Lutathera for neuroendocrine cancer around 2018.

”We saw patients having metastases all over their body and then with one or two treatments completely cleared up. It’s incredible,” said Stuart Edmonds, a pharmacology expert and the cancer society’s executive vice-president of mission, research and advocacy.

RLT also has “considerably lower” side-effects compared to traditional radiation because it minimizes harm to healthy cells, Edmonds said.

Now that RLT’s effectiveness in prolonging life for patients with metastatic prostate cancer who have run out of other treatment options has been proven, the cancer society is funding clinical trials across Canada looking at whether Pluvicto can be used for prostate cancer patients in much earlier stages of the disease.

In the meantime, Edmonds said it’s “tremendously important” to make Pluvicto publicly accessible for advanced prostate cancer patients.

“I just want it to be available in Canada as soon as possible,” he said.

Global pharmaceutical company Novartis manufactures both Pluvicto and Lutathera.

Both the company and the agency in charge of negotiating drug pricing confirmed to The Canadian Press that they have not yet reached an agreement on how much Pluvicto should cost.

The negotiations began in August of last year, but then had “an unanticipated delay,” said Dominic Tan, acting CEO of the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance in an emailed statement.

“The pCPA always strives to complete the process as quickly as circumstances allow,” Tan said.

“However, negotiations are a two-way street, and as such we are unable to provide a precise timeline for when the process will be complete.”

Novartis said it recognizes the “high unmet need” of advanced prostate cancer patients.

“It is with these patients in mind that we continue to actively collaborate with the pCPA with the goal of achieving timely and responsible access to this therapeutic advance,” Novartis Canada spokesperson Rosa D’Acunti said in an emailed statement.

“We are hopeful that an agreement with pCPA that recognizes the significant innovation Pluvicto represents and the value it brings to patients is within reach.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 6, 2024.

Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.

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Quebec public services are becoming ‘dehumanized’ due to rise in demand: ombudsperson

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MONTREAL – Quebec’s ombudsperson is warning that public services are becoming “dehumanized” in the province amid a rise in demand for them.

Marc-André Dowd released his annual report today, which highlights several examples of people receiving inadequate care across the health network in the 12 months leading to March 31.

One dying man who lived alone was denied help cleaning his cat’s litter box by his local health clinic, a service Dowd says should have been given for “humanitarian reasons.”

Dowd also describes staff at a long-term care home feeding residents “mechanically” and talking among each other — despite health ministry guidelines directing staff to maintain eye contact with residents.

The ombudsperson says his office received a record number of problems to investigate across the province’s public services — 24,867 compared with 22,053 last year.

He says his office investigated 13,358 cases between April 2023 and March of this year.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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French President Emmanuel Macron to visit Ottawa, Montreal next week

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OTTAWA – French President Emmanuel Macron will visit Canada next week after a planned trip in July was cancelled amid political turmoil in France.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced in a statement today that Macron will be in Canada Wednesday and Thursday after the leaders attend the United Nations General Assembly in New York City.

Trudeau will welcome Macron in Ottawa on Wednesday, where they are expected to discuss collaboration on geopolitical issues including their ongoing support for Ukraine.

They are also expected to discuss ways to strengthen the response to emerging threats, such as disinformation.

In Montreal, Trudeau intends to show off the city’s artificial intelligence sector, while both countries reaffirm their commitment to work with counterparts on responsible use of AI.

The leaders will also discuss promoting the French language ahead of the Francophonie summit being held in France next month.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Health Canada approves updated Novavax COVID-19 vaccine

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Health Canada has authorized Novavax’s updated COVID-19 vaccine that protects against currently circulating variants of the virus.

The protein-based vaccine, called Nuvaxovid, has been reformulated to target the JN.1 subvariant of Omicron.

It will replace the previous version of the vaccine, which targeted the XBB.1.5 subvariant of Omicron.

Health Canada recently asked provinces and territories to get rid of their older COVID-19 vaccines to ensure the most current vaccine will be used during this fall’s respiratory virus season.

Earlier this week, Health Canada approved Moderna’s updated mRNA COVID vaccine.

It is still reviewing Pfizer’s updated mRNA vaccine, with a decision expected soon.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.

Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.

Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version erroneously described the Novavax vaccine as an mRNA shot.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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