Mesothelioma Help Cancer News

Nurses and Mesothelioma Patients Benefit Equally from a Friendly Ear
This past week one of my co-workers, an RN who I have worked with for decades, lost a young family member to cancer. As a community we grieve for the loss of this young, newly-married man. His journey with cancer was swift, debilitating, and heart-wrenching to hear about. Through my co-worker, we learned what an ordeal it had been for him, and for everyone in his family. After he died she texted me with the news, and thanked me for all the support. This tragedy made me reflect on how important it is to listen more. We all have different life experiences and we can all offer something to someone going through a crisis – a suggestion, a story, or maybe just an ear.
Throughout life, our relationships note the important times and the mundane times of our life’s journey. Relationships are what keep our lives rich. Although patients and their families living with mesothelioma did not elect to go on the cancer journey, one of the unexpected side effects is that it can strengthen their relationships with each other.
As a nurse, I have been fortunate to have many coworkers with whom I have worked with for decades. We have known of each other’s relatives – husbands, parents, children – most we have never met, but we know a lot about them. We have been through life’s happy experiences including weddings, births, anniversaries, and birthdays. We have supported each other through personal hard times like the death of a parent, a divorce, illnesses and accidents.
We remember patients who have been gone for years, we remember funny stories and very sad stories. We support each other. We are a community of people bound by our jobs and a genuine caring for each other. Like the mesothelioma community we come from all different backgrounds, cultures, and have varied personalities and life experiences. Also, like the mesothelioma community, we might not know the lasting effect kindness and listening can have on a person dealing with a crisis.
As you or your loved one continue on this journey with mesothelioma, remember you do not have to go it alone. Reach out for support. As the Beatle’s song goes, “I get by with a little help from my friends.”
Know more about Mesothelioma and how you can deal with it.

Mesothelioma Growth May be Slowed by Blocking Glutamine Pathway
Glutamine, an amino acid and one of the primary building blocks for proteins, is vital for providing fuel to cells throughout the body. However, researchers now believe glutamine can also fuel cancer growth and they are targeting it to develop anti-cancer drugs that may someday be used to fight mesothelioma.
Mesothelioma is a rare, incurable cancer that is caused by breathing in, or ingesting, asbestos fibers. Although chemotherapy is the number one treatment modality, nearly every patient builds up resistance to the drug. In fact, according to researchers from the Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, there are 917 different types of cancer, “and many cures work only for a single type of the disease or become ineffective as cancers develop resistance to chemotherapy.”
For that reason, and to try to develop a drug with much less serious side-effects than standard chemotherapy, the researchers looked at glutamine that is a “very common mechanism in cancer cells.” The researchers decided to focus on the “glutomainolysis pathway” to prevent the glutamine from getting to the cancer cells, thus inhibiting the cancer’s growth.
After first attempting to genetically alter cancer cells, which was ineffective, the team found a way to disable the gateway. They were able to turn off “the biochemical alarm” and successfully blocked gateways through which the cancer cells obtained glutamine. In effect, by cutting off the cancer cells fuel supply they starved the cancer cells. This resulted in a 96 percent reduction in the cancer cells’ growth.
“It is an exciting time to do cancer research,” said lead author Angelika Bröer, from ANU Research School of Biology. “We now have precision tools in our hands to manipulate the genome of cancer cells, allowing us to address problems that were difficult to solve previously.”
First, though, they must turn their attention to finding anti-cancer drugs that will block the glutamine pathways and kill off the cancer. They plan to do this using tests they have developed that will use robots to “test tens of thousands of drugs for us over the next year or two.”
By focusing on pathways that can cut off growth of cancer cells, researchers bring hope to the mesothelioma community that a new, effective treatment is on the horizon. Nearly 3,000 Americans are diagnosed each year with the terminal cancer.
For more information on the study, see the April 26 issue of Journal of Biological Chemistry.
Sources :
- The Australian National University
http://www.anu.edu.au/news/all-news/starving-cancer-the-key-to-new-treatments - April 26 issue of Journal of Biological Chemistry
http://www.jbc.org/content/early/2016/04/26/jbc.M115.700534.full.pdf+html

“Exciting” Results in Study of EGFR-Targeting Drug
In November, Mesothelioma Help reported the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval for the anti-cancer drug Tagrisso (osimertinib) for lung cancer. This approval opened the door for another mesothelioma treatment as well. Now, researchers report exciting results from a study looking at osimertinib as first-line therapy for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation positive lung cancer patients.
The news of this drug is exciting for several reasons, but primarily for the fact that it demonstrated progression-free survival in first-line therapy. Typically, nearly 50 to 60% of lung cancer patients who experience disease progression after being treated with an EGFR inhibitor often develop the T790M resistance mutation. However, many of the patients in the study “have not had disease progression on the study and are still benefitting from treatment,” according to the researchers.
“The overall response rate was among the best reported for first-line therapy of EGFR-mutated NSCLC,” said Suresh Ramalingam, MD, professor of hematology and medical oncology at Emory School of Medicine and deputy director of the Winship Cancer Institute in Atlanta, in an April 15 press release announcing the findings. “The progression-free survival results are exciting, well exceeding the historical control rates of 10 to 13 months with first- or second-generation drugs.”
In the study of 60 patients with EGFR mutatated non-small cell lung cancer, who received osimertinib without having undergone any other treatment, the overall response rate was 77%. In addition, the patients who did have disease progression did not have T790M mutation, leading Ramalingam to suggest the drug is “changing the biology of the disease.”
In a second study, patients realized nearly the same response rate, 71% in this study, in EGFR-mutated/T790M positive lung cancer patients who had progressed on previous EGFR TKI therapy.
EGFR is a protein found on the surface of some cells to which epidermal growth factor binds, which causes the cells to divide and spread. According to a 2009 article in Current Drug Targets, EGFR overexpression has been shown in more than 50% of pleural mesothelioma patients, and approximately 15% of patients with lung cancer in the U.S. express EGFR mutations. T790M is a genetic mutation responsible for EGFR-TKI treatment resistance. Osimertinib inhibits both EGFR and T790M, according to AstraZeneca, the maker of the drug.
Next, researchers will conduct a phase III clinical trial with approximately 500 patients comparing osimertinib to either erlotinib or gefitinib for front-line therapy. Erlotinib and gefitinib are kinase inhibitors used to treat mesothelioma and lung cancer. According to the press release, results are expected within 18 months.
The information was presented by Suresh Ramalingam, MD, professor of hematology and medical oncology at Emory School of Medicine and deputy director of the Winship Cancer Institute in Atlanta, at the European Lung Cancer Conference 2016 in Geneva.
http://www.esmo.org/Conferences/Past-Conferences/ELCC-2016-Lung-Cancer/News-Press-Releases/Osimertinib-Given-as-First-line-Treatment-May-Alter-Biology-of-EGFR-Mutated-Non-Small-Cell-Lung-Cancer

Mesothelioma Patients to Benefit from Research Confirming Portrazza Improves Survival in EGFR-Expressed Lung Cancer
In December, Mesothelioma Help reported the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Portrazza (necitumumab) for first-line treatment of people with metastatic squamous non-small cell lung cancer. Now, researchers confirm necitumumab is most Beneficial to Lung Cancer Patients expressing epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR).
EGFR is a protein found on the surface of some cells to which epidermal growth factor binds, which causes the cells to divide and spread. It is found at abnormally high levels on the surface of many types of cancer cells, including more than 50% of pleural mesothelioma patients, and approximately 15% of lung cancer in the U.S. Necitumumab blocks the activity of EGFR.
In a report presented April 15 at the European Lung Cancer Conference in Geneva, Switzerland researchers analyzed the results of the SQUIRE Phase 3 clinical trial, designed to determine if necitumumab given in combination with cisplatin and gemcitabine will be more effective than the chemotherapy combination alone. The researchers report the addition of necitumumab to the combination chemotherapy improved overall survival and progression free survival by 21%, over patients who did not receive necitumamab.
The SQUIRE clinical trial did not pre-select patients based on whether they expressed the protein. The researchers, however, drilled in on the subpopulation of patients in the trial, and found that of the 982 patients in the trial, 95% expressed EGFR tumors and just 5% had no EGFR protein. They report that there was no benefit to the necitumumab/cisplatin/gemcitabine combination for patients with negative-EGFR tumors.
“Necitumumab is targeted at EGFR so it makes sense that the drug is active in patients with the receptor,” said Dr. Luis Paz-Ares, Chief of medical oncology at the University Hospital 12 De Octubre in Madrid, Spain, lead author. He added, “the drug had no effect when the receptor was absent, presumably because there was no target to bind to.”
Necitumumab is prescribed in combination with the chemotherapy drugs gemcitabine and cisplatin for the initial treatment of squamous NSCLC that has metastasized. Mesothelioma patients are also candidates for the drug as the cancer is often treated with the preferred chemotherapy combination of gemcitabine and cisplatin.
Within the standard framework of cancer treatments, chemotherapy is considered the most effective single modality for the treatment of mesothelioma and is likely to be the most commonly deployed treatment as well. However, mesothelioma is a highly aggressive cancer and often fights off the effects of chemotherapy. Finding a way to increase the efficacy of the drugs brings hope to mesothelioma patients.
“Based on this analysis, the European Medicines Agency has decided that necitumumab is approved only for patients with EGFR expressing tumours,” said Dr. Luis Paz-Ares.
The FDA did not limit its approval to EGFR-positive patients. Necitumumab was approved in November by the FDA for use in non-small cell lung cancer regardless of the presence of biomarkers. The approval opened up another treatment option for mesothelioma patients.
The researchers report additional research and analysis will be conducted with necitumumab and patient populations.
See ClinicalTrials.gov for information about the SQUIRE clinical trial.
Sources :
- European Lung Cancer Conference
http://www.esmo.org/Conferences/Past-Conferences/ELCC-2016-Lung-Cancer/News-Press-Releases/Patients-with-EGFR-Expressing-Non-Small-Cell-Lung-Cancer-Benefit-Most-from-Necitumumab-Added-to-Chemotherapy - SQUIRE clinical trial
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00981058?term=SQUIRE&rank=2

Patient’s Mesothelioma Journey is Different From Each Other
For patients diagnosed with mesothelioma, “journey” is the word used often to refer to the different steps of the patient’s condition. According to the Oxford Dictionary, journey is defined as “An act of traveling from one place to another,” or “A long and difficult process of personal change and development.” Both of these definitions can be applied at different points for mesothelioma patients and their families. No one knows what the journey will look like, or how long it will be, as each patient‘s experience is different.
This past week, our medical team saw patients and families who were at different points on their journey. We saw a gentleman who had surgery 25 months ago. He came for a follow-up and stopped to see us: he looked well. It was shocking to see him walk in with his family and with a smile on his face. The last time I saw him he was fragile and weak, and his personality had dulled from his illness. He was subsequently discharged to a rehab facility, but he did not flourish and his family decided to take him home. One of the healthcare workers asked him if he was enjoying life now, and he said, “Yes, but it is different now.”
He doesn’t work so much anymore. He has learned to enjoy different things that make him happy, like taking his grandchildren out for ice cream cones. He is being maintained on chemotherapy which he said is okay, and it is just another thing he has learned to live with. His only complaint is back pain from his surgical site where they removed his lung. His family was with him and his grown children have also begun to move on with life. For example, his daughter who was his primary caregiver, has taken a new job, relocated, and is enjoying her life.
Two years ago he or his family or his healthcare team could not have foreseen that he would have recuperated enough to smile and enjoy life. On the flip side, I spoke with someone on the phone who is frustrated with this disease and how it is stripping her loved one of his life. A few short months ago he was moving around fine, but now he needs a lot of assistance with everyday living. His wife is trying to reassure him and help him enjoy his life, but he is so limited from the physical weight of the disease. Is this a progression of his disease or is it another bump in his journey?
Journey is a great word to describe the mesothelioma experience. The journey can be “a long and winding road,” with unexpected turns and twists, that no one can predict. The “long and difficult process of personal change and development” can apply to life with mesothelioma, a journey no one knew they were going to make.
If you have questions about your mesothelioma treatment or any aspect of your mesothelioma care, please email me at [email protected].
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