FDA Approves Piqray for Adv. HR+, HER2- BC w/ PIK3CA Mutation

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FDA Approves Piqray to Treat Advanced-Stage Hormone-Receptor-Positive, HER2-Negative Breast Cancer With PIK3CA Mutation
May 29, 2019

FDA approves Piqray in combination with Faslodex to treat metastatic and advanced-stage, hormone-receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer with a PIK3CA mutation that has grown after hormonal therapy treatment in postmenopausal women and men. Read more...

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  • ShetlandPony
    ShetlandPony Member Posts: 4,924
    edited May 2019

    For heaven’s sake, why do the drug companies have to give drugs weird new names? Here we have been discussing alpelisib for months or years, and now we have to learn that it is also called Piqray?! The new names are no easier to spell, pronounce, or remember. And they don’t have anything to do with anything. They must come from a random name generator or a fantasy novelist.

    “In the darkness of night, Elwayin heard the sound of the Kisqali tromping through the snow, getting closer and closer. She drew her trusty Piqray, and waited, the moonlight glinting off the ancient weapon. Verzenio said a quick prayer and fervently wished he could run back home to his own country and his vineyard, but he tried not to let Elwayin sense his fear...”.

    Ok, who can supply the original names? Answer key: Kisqali = ribociclib, Piqray=alpelisib, Verzenio= Abemaciclib. Elwayin I made up, but they can use it for the next drug approved if they like.

  • SandiBeach57
    SandiBeach57 Member Posts: 1,617
    edited May 2019

    Shetland..too funny.

  • ann273
    ann273 Member Posts: 209
    edited May 2019

    lol thats funny Shetland. It sounds like PiK3CA if someone tried to read it as a word haha..

  • ShetlandPony
    ShetlandPony Member Posts: 4,924
    edited May 2019

    Lol, ann. Be gray? Pick Ray? Big ray? Pig ray? Pi query?

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited May 2019

    Awesome post, Shetland Pony. I think pharma just may steal "Elwayin" from you. Make sure you get royalties if they do.

  • JFL
    JFL Member Posts: 1,947
    edited May 2019

    Seriously, the names are crazy. I agree with everything Shetland said. Why can't the medicines have fluffy, sometimes edgy names like beauty products?! I really want to know the criteria for naming these drugs. Each name is stranger than the previous one.

  • Moissy
    Moissy Member Posts: 550
    edited May 2019

    Shetland - You've got a future as a fantasy novelist! Love it. So true!

  • Rainedrop
    Rainedrop Member Posts: 70
    edited May 2019
    OK, now I want to try all the new drugs. Just because of their names. Oh dear, does this mean I now also have a drug problem?
  • pajim
    pajim Member Posts: 2,785
    edited June 2019

    Believe it or not, the drug companies take naming very very seriously. Focus groups, marketing consultants, the whole nine yards. And then they come up with names that make zero sense. Sigh.

    Love, love, love your post Shetland!

    FYI according to an ASCO poster from Foundation One, 1/3 of women with MBC have the mutation so the number of us who could take the drug is larger than I thought.

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