Canadians, palbociclib and clinical trials
Comments
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dancingdiva, are you able to get into the Palestra trial? I know that it is available in QC but not sure which facilities. I will be starting it as second line on Tuesday. I don't blame you for being upset. GG
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The Palestra trial is available at the following facilities in Quebec:
Saint-Sacrement Hopistal in Quebec City
CHUM - Notre Dame Hospital in Montreal
Sacré-Coeur Hospital in Montreal
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Wow Linda, I had no idea that it would be available in 3 places in Quebec. We have one... one
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hi! Can you , please, provide me with an information on Ibrance. How does it work? Whom do you have to contact- Pfozer, onc. Doctor ? Or insurence ?
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Ezoka - you should start with your MO. He/she should initiate the request. Good luck and keep us posted.
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I had an appt with the trial MO today (2 schedules of Ibrance combined with hormone therapy). My regular MO wants me to participate due to slight progression, trial MO says no progression in her opinion. Further testing shortly should clarify. Faslodex would be the next hormone therapy for me if I participate in the trial. I was surprised to learn that Fas will not be provided, only Ibrance would. Fas cannot be obtained on an exception basis in my case, so I would have to co-pay for the med which is a good chunk of money.
Question: Anyone ever had to pay for a drug as part of a clinical trial?
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Hi Linda, I do not have a wide experience with trials (just the one I am in), but I have never heard of having to pay for one of the trial drugs. It seems to be the sponsor/pharm company and the province playing games, leaving the patient in the middle, which makes me very frustrated for you. Heather
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Linda have no clue. Just seems odd. Is Faslodex approved in Canada and maybe that's why they're not paying?
These drug games are frustrating as hell.
D
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DD, you got it. Commercialized drugs may not be provided, at least in Quebec. Fas is approved by Health Canada but not funded by provinces, hence all the huff and puff. Any news on Ibrance/Letrozole for you?
The trial nurse called this am. She agrees that it's absurd to have to pay that amount of money to be on a clinical trial and could restrict participation. She however thinks that Fas is provided?! She is checking with hospital pharmacy and will let me know. I also wrote to Health Canada to see if this is standard practice.
NG - thanks. How are you doing?
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Good news! Nurse confirmed that Fas will be provided in the study.
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glad to hear Linda!
My onc agreed this was my first line of tx for mets so he had to call the insurance. Then they changed their minds! So yes I'm finally approved.
But the pFizer lady was saying they would keep giving it to me if onc thought i needed it. Not sure about the free funding. I'm guess I'm not used to getting things for free. So glad insurance approved.
d
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Great news DD!
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Hi,
I just found this thread now! I have been off the board for a while but came back looking for help to find out what comes after palbociclib. (I post for my sister who was diagnosed in 2008 and has been Stage IV since 2013 and called me today to tell me it's over for palbo).
She was originally in the Paloma trial but ended up in the placebo group. When she progressed and was taken out of the trial, she tried to get palbociclib through special access in Canada but was refused. We ended up going to Dana Farber in Boston to get it. It was out of our means (10k/month) but luckily my brother was able to pay. Several months later palbociclib was approved in Ontario and my sister was doing pretty well on it till November (10 months). However, a CT found progression of the tumour in her neck in November, and now the bone scan is back showing progression too, so she has to switch to something else.
I am wondering what other people have done after palbociclib stopped working. I know there is exemestane+everolimus. Are there any other options? Would anyone have advice or suggestions that could help us?
Thank you for any help!
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Hi Irish, sorry about your sister's progression. The list of meds she took so far is not in the profile but Faslodex would be an option is she didn't take that before. Again, approved by Health Canada but not by the provinces hence not funded by the provinces. I think it was offered on compassionate use in the past but not sure it still is. Exemestane+everolimus or Afinitor and aromasin could be another option. There is a thread on the A/A combo if you want more info. Then, if she has exhausted AIs, there is an oral chemo called Xeloda. There's also a thread on that one. MO could also look into another clinical trial.
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Hi Linda,
Thank you for your answer! My sister was on Faslodex as part of the Paloma trial, and it worked really well (she stayed in the trial for more than a year, responding to Faslodex + placebo). When she went on palbo it was with letrozole. That combination worked well for about 10 months, but no longer (maybe partly because they had to reduce the dose below the recommended level because her white counts kept crashing).
When they biopsied her neck tumour it came back still E+/P+ but Her2 inconclusive. I don't know if it is possible to try a Her2 drug if it's inconclusive (they measured it two different ways and both times it came back inconclusive). Maybe the doctors would consider it inappropriate? (Maybe the government wouldn't pay?) I don't know.
Thank you for mentioning Xeloda. The idea of chemo, even oral, is going to be stressful but maybe it's not so bad.
It sounds like otherwise the option is Afinitor/Aromasin, if she is not appropriate for Her2+ treatments.
Gill
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Hi Linda & IrishTwin
I haven't been on this discussion board for a little while, but received an email notice that one of my favourite topics had an update.
Irish Twin - I am so sorry to hear about your sister's progression. Linda's answer covered everything I could think of. I've had both the A/A and capectitabine - both came with some side effects, but my QOL was still good. Good luck to her with her next treatment.
Linda - I thought I would check in and see how you are doing with your trial? I'm still in my trial of palbociclib and bazedoxifene. Crazy to think that I've now made 21 monthly trips to Boston from Calgary.
Heather
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Hi Heather, I didn't get into the clinical trial because I failed their testing as they say. In other words they said I had no progression and didn't qualify. Which was good news of course. It was hard to determine if there was progression because of a lot of inflammation caused by different fractures. I'm still on Letrozole. My Jan bone scan came back stable and abdo US was clear. We're staying away from dye contrast as long as possible with CTs because of allergic reactions. Still waiting on results of CT scan of neck and chest. My breast TM doubled since Oct so we'll see if that's hiding something. First time they went up in 3 years. MO is not overly concerned but may want further investigation is she's not satisfied with CT.
Wow crazy travelling but so happy to hear you're doing well. Nice to hear from you.
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Irish, you bring up an interesting question re HER2 inconclusive. I'd be interested to know what her MO recommends as next tx and the HER2 issue. Both Xeloda and Afinitor can be used at different dosages. Wishing your sister the very best.
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Update: Chest CT showed progression, new axillary lymph node mets, new sternum mets and lung nodules but those nodules are so small, we don't know if it's cancer or benign. It's a wait and see approach for those. The clinical trial of Ibrance + Fas (no placebo) we looked at is no longer recruiting. So moving on Fas alone.
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Hi Linda, I'm so sorry to hear that you have progression - and that the window for the fas/palbo trial has closed. Are there any of the other CDK inhibitor (abemaciclib, or ribociclib sp?) trials going on near you?
Nonetheless, I hope you have a great response to faslodex. I found the monthly shots quite tolerable (well the shots themselves weren't great, but I pretty much had no SEs).
Take care, Heather
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Hi Heather - MO looked at other possible clinical trials but none are
available/adequate. I was given 2 choices, Fas or A/A combo. I'd rather stay
away from A/A just now and enjoy a good QOL with Fas. Quebec gov protocol would
have been A/A but I have medical insurance through my ex-employer as a retiree
and can choose the sequence of tx. MO was concerned that my insurance would not
approve A/A later, frankly I'm not sure but I think they would. Anyway we
decided that we would cross that bridge when we get there. MO was happy I can
get Fas and prefers it to A/A. I see you were on A/A for a while. How was it
in terms of SEs?
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Hi All,
I wonder where things will end up in Canada with the use of Ibrance and how soon. I will be meeting with my MO in a few weeks, midway through my chemo and plan to raise the issue. He is recommending Arimidex as the next step with Faslodex as the backup if the Arimidex fails. But I wonder if I will be missing the boat if I don't look at Faslodex combined with Ibrance as the first line of hormone therapy for my Stage IV treatment. Thoughts?
I know he anticipates that I will respond well to the Arimidex and was on it as adjuvant treatment. My hope is that by the time the first line fails Ibrance will be approved but I don't know how long that takes.
Pat
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Pat, I asked my MO last week re approval of Ibrance as second line tx, but unfortunately she hasn't heard anything. Let us know what you learn.
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Hi Linda, I ended up with quite bad mouth sores on A/A. e reduced the dose and subsequently the remaining SEs were manageable (I did become hyperglycemic too).
Pat, as I understand it, currently palbociclib is going through the funding review process for use as first line in combination with letrozole. Pfizer has not submitted the use of the combination faslodex/fulvestrant with palbociclib as second hormonal line, although there are several clinical trials ongoing.
That said, I have heard of women receiving palbociclib from Pfizer on a compassionate basis for use with fulvestrant (ie, not in a trial) - Linda I wonder if the drug navigator at your hospital could inquire?
Good luck, Heather
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Thanks Heather - I will bring it up.
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Abemaciclib is shaping up to be an interesting alternative to palbociclib. Not FDA approved yet, but look for trials, expanded access etc. I'd be very interested in Abemaciclib if I weren't doing okay on ibrance at the moment.
>Z<
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Linda - haven't been on bco for a while so just saw your posting - sorry to hear you have progression. I've been on fas shots for over two years now and doing well on them - tm's are low, some shortness of breath and certain times of the cycle pretty fatigued but nothing like when I was on AA (I only lasted I think six months). I am in Ontario as you know and Pfizer has "donated" the fas shots - set up by my cancer clinic (they filed all the papers and got approval in record time) the actual shots themselves don't bother me - I have two fabulous nurses (used to have one that nearly killed me) - I have the shots very high up now and that might be the trick - get on the faslodex thread - there is a list of what you need to know at the top. PM me and let me know how you're doing - I am still campaigning to get to Paget(sp) bakery to see you.......
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Hi Linda,
I just came back today because I was at my sister's onc appt this morning. I am really sorry to hear about your progression. I hope the faslodex is going OK. My sister did not like the experience of the injections but the drug worked really well for her. She said the injections hurt less if the nurse takes the medication out of the fridge in advance and warms it up to room temperature.
My sister got back CT results today and progressed too, since November. Most of the changes seemed minor but the not good things were a new 2cm tumour in her neck and a 2 cm tumour in her liver :-( In some ways it isn't surprising there is more progression because there was progression back in Nov and the doc didn't change her drug at that point saying radiation of the neck tumour would be an option (but wasn't given).
The onc has ordered a new biopsy to try to get the Her2 issue resolved. She says if it stays equivocal, then no Herception because Cancer Care Ontario won't allow cancer centres to administer it in those circumstances. I asked if it was because of money, because my brother would pay, but she said no. Then she said a cancer centre in Ontario had to pay back CCO $1 million dollars for administering Herceptin over several years to someone who was Her2 equivocal. After the appt., my sister pointed out that if the person was on it for several years, it was probably working! (She'd like to be on it for several years :-)) The onc is also requesting permission for A/A, which should take about 2 weeks to get, in case the Her2 comes back equivocal.
I hope things are going well for you!
Gill
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Gill, I hope this biopsy will give a straight answer. Will they biopsy the liver? Soft tissue is easier to get the pathology than with bones. Sorry about her new progression as well. Take a look at the A/A thread, some are on different dosages to help manage SEs or start at a lower dose to gradually increase the Afinitor. I wish your sister the best with this tx if equivocal. Gosh the waiting and the unknown must be so hard.
I've had only one loading of Fas so far and shots went very well, nurse said she was a pro at it! Next loading is Friday and my regular nurse is on vacation so we'll see how that goes. No new SEs to speak of really.
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Hey Linda, just wondering how u r doing? Hello othe CDN ladies. I go off and on bco cuz sometimes I just can't take it. I had Rads on my IBC IDC left side and that seemed to work but things change so quickly so enjoying everyday and life in general.
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