Showing posts with label Costs and benefits of chemotherapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Costs and benefits of chemotherapy. Show all posts

02 September 2013

Ian Gawler Blog: Cancer, Four Corners and hope

Anyone with advanced cancer who watched the recent Four Corners program Buying Time (ABC TV 26 8 13), could be forgiven for thinking they were in a pretty bleak position. For patients and families, as I suggest in the attached letter I sent to the Four Corners team, the message bordered on the hopeless.

The suggestion of Buying Time was clear – find a new drug, find a way to meet the incredible cost of the new drug – or die. No real mention of quality of life. No mention at all of other possibilities.

So this week we go way Out on a Limb and ask, why no options? Why no choices? Why does a great program like Four Corners focus on these new cancer drugs with their incredible price tags, multiple side effects and marginal benefits; and at the same time give the impression to the uninformed that there is nothing else on offer?

What do you think? What did you think of Buying Time? (Link below). What sort of program would you like to see? But first


Thought for the day


So long as you write what you wish to write,
That is all that matters;
And whether it matters for ages or only for hours,
Nobody can say.

     
        Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own




                                                                                        The daffodils are out in force - delightful!
Dear Four Corners
I have had the chance to speak or communicate in writing with quite a few people now who saw your program Buying Time and I feel it important to share the feedback and ask for your help.

The program did a good job of clarifying how the modern cancer drugs are offered as a new hope, yet cost vast amounts and produce incredibly modest gains at the additional price of serious side-effects.

I would love to be more positive, but I think you need to know a number of patients I spoke to turned the program off early into the story. Many others report feeling deeply despondent. Where was the hope?  In fact, for patients and families I suggest the message of Buying Time actually bordered on the hopeless. The suggestion was clear – find a new drug, find a way to meet the incredible cost of the new drug – or die. No real mention of quality of life. No mention at all of other possibilities.

Sure, what Buying Time did achieve was to accurately portray the modern cancer dilemma. Many new drugs are coming onto the market, often heralded with the words “significant new breakthrough” and building the hope of major benefits.

However, when the reality is examined, these drugs commonly improve survival times in terms of a few weeks; at best a few months. To achieve these modest gains, they have price tags that can run over $100,000 per person per year and they have even higher side-effect profiles than the old chemotherapeutic agents.

Obviously there is a limit to how many of these new, expensive drugs we the taxpayers can afford to fund. Already the real growth in healthcare spending over the last decade has gone up 5.3%, close to twice the average annual growth in GDP for that time of 3.1%.

As you now know, Yervoy, the new drug for people with advanced melanoma, adds 4 months to average survival times, has multiple side-effects and will cost the public purse up to $60 million dollars a year. Is this the best way to spend $60 million dollars? As a community, we are not very far away from needing to make difficult choices about how we spend our health dollars.

However, for people directly affected by cancer, the problem is more immediate, more dire. The program clearly portrayed these drugs as being out of reach financially and not very effective; yet people were still clinging to them anyway. What people affected by cancer need is realistic hope. They need genuine options. At the very least a good quality of life and a good quality of death. But more, they need to know that there are real possibilities available to them through things they can do for themselves.

In my opinion and from what I hear from others, this is where Four Corners failed. By focusing on the medical dilemma, the program omitted the imperative for modern cancer management to be more inclusive. A huge resource; an affordable, credible resource was overlooked.

There are constant reports in the media and the scientific literature of people surviving against the odds. At the same time, there is an impressive body of evidence for the quality of life and increased survival gains to be had through the application of nutrition therapeutically, through the generation of positive states of mind and the practice of meditation.

Lifestyle Medicine, the study and implementation of what people can do to help themselves, empowers the patient and their families. Lifestyle medicine offers the promise of dramatic improvements in quality of life – and the research establishes that it delivers on this promise. Lifestyle Medicine offers the prospect of significant increases in survival times – in a highly cost effective manner with almost no adverse side effects.

Maybe Lifestyle Medicine is complementary to the current mainstream cancer treatments. Synergistic. But what if the benefits of Lifestyle Medicine were actually more cost effective than these new high-powered cancer drugs?

What if as a community we had the basic common sense to push our cancer authorities to fund serious research to investigate this compelling question? Why not a three arm trial to compare one, the standard medical treatment with two, standard treatment plus the lifestyle options with 3, the lifestyle options on their own. If a super expensive, high side effect drug trial qualifies as being ethical, surely there is enough grounds to compare it to the cheap, almost side effect free lifestyle option. What does help a person with cancer the best?

I call on you all at Four Corners to prepare and screen the logical follow up to Buying Time. The public needs to know. What does the patient bring to cancer management? Why has mainstream oncology spent years blocking or even attacking the growing cancer self-help movement? When will researchers cast their nets wider and investigate the many, many stories of long-term survival? When will the patients and their families, the public and the doctors realise just how much lifestyle has to do with the successful management of cancer?

How many people do we need to watch suffer and die? How broke does the health budget need to become before Lifestyle Medicine is taken seriously?

As I said, I would like to have been able to be more positive about the program. It did open discussion around the cost/benefits of modern cancer drugs and that is a very good thing. The public needs to engage in the conversation around how the health budget is allocated. But as I mentioned to you when the decision was taken to drop lifestyle factors from the program, from the patient's perspective there was the risk of lowering hope, increasing despondency.

So now I look forward to when you are ready to do the next part of this story; the part that has the chance to be uplifting and foster evidence based hope as it focuses on the role and potentials of the patients and their families to contribute to their own health and wellbeing through the therapeutic application of Lifestyle Medicine.

Many people would offer to contribute to such a program. Many would welcome it. Many would be informed by it.

be well

Ian Gawler

RELATED BLOG

Cancer, facts and fiction

RESOURCES
Link to view Buying Time: CLICK HERE

The Gawler Foundation for Lifestyle Medicine information and programs

You Can Conquer Cancer - a comprehensive, integrated lifestyle based, self-help approach to cancer

NOTICEBOARD

IMAGES, WORDS and SILENCE 
Training/retreat for those interested in mind made healing – either for personal use or as a health professional.
With Dr Nimrod Sheinman, Ruth and myself in the Yarra Valley. Details: CLICK HERE

MEDITATION UNDER the LONG WHITE CLOUD
Ruth and I are leading our first meditation retreat in New Zealand in December at the beautiful Mana Retreat centre that has a similar high reputation for a good environment and great food as the Foundation. Details: CLICK HERE

5 DAY FOLLOW-UP CANCER PROGRAM
Specifically for people who have attended a CanLive program in NZ, or Gawler Foundation program. November 18 – 22 at Wanaka out of Queenstown - one of the most beautiful environments there is. Details: CLICK HERE


 

               More daffies   


















      
      A couple of early tulips 
      glistening in the sun

26 August 2013

Cancer, facts and fiction

Firstly, a big thank you to those who have used the new webstore linked to my website, and made favourable comments on the style and ease of use of the store.

But then, what is going on in modern cancer medicine? Amidst reports that new drugs are too expensive with too few life-saving benefits, how much can we trust what is in the scientific literature and what is being recommended?

As the ABC’s investigative program Four Corners is about to broadcast an examination of the cost/benefits of modern cancer drugs and their impact on quality of life and survival (Monday 26th August at 8.30pm), there is growing concern amongst health professionals and those closely affected by cancer that trust is being lost.

This week, a look at a rather extensive selection of recent research studies that highlight some of the problems and a reminder to watch and consider joining the comments on the Four Corners program. Next week, back to the good news with research on the positive benefits of lifestyle based medicine, and the obvious question: why is it not being promoted more strongly by modern oncologists? But first





Thought for the day

Good judgement comes from experience
Experience comes from bad judgement
                   Dr K L White







                                                                   Spring is in the air - and the daffodils are on the move
DID YOU KNOW?

Over the last 10 years, 8 times more is now being spent on cancer drugs
Annual PBS expenditure for all cancer drugs has increased almost 8 times between 2000 and 2012, from $65 to $508 million. During the same time, the average price paid by the PBS for an anti-cancer drug increased almost 4 times, from $237 to $801.

Reference: Dr D Kariokios, who presented the findings in November 2012 to the Clinical Oncology Society of Australia’s annual scientific meeting.

Breast cancer trials guilty of spin and bias
Analysis of 164 phase 3 Randomised Controlled Trials from 1995-2011 for breast cancer demonstrated the under-reporting of toxic effects and the over-emphasis of secondary outcomes when primary results were negative.

In two-thirds of trials there was poor reporting of the toxic effects of the treatment being investigated, with only a third detailing the frequency of grade 3 or 4 toxicities in the abstract. Toxicity was even more likely to be under-reported if the trial showed significant treatment benefit.

Around a third of trials were reported as positive based on secondary endpoints only, and of the trials that failed to find a statistically significant treatment benefit, 58% used secondary endpoints to suggest benefit.

“Clinicians, reviewers, journal editors and regulators should apply a critical eye to trial reports and be wary of the possibility of biased reporting,” they concluded.

Vera-Badillo et al. Bias in reporting of end points of efficacy and toxicity in randomized, clinical trials for women with breast cancer. Ann Oncol (2013) doi:10.1093/annonc/mds636

Selective drug trials, unreliable outcomes. Is less more?
Melbourne’s Age newspaper on  23rd  January 2012 quoted Professor John Zalcberg of the Peter Mac Hospital as saying “many clinical trials - used by Australian health authorities to decide which techniques to use or subsidise - involved carefully selected groups of patients most likely to respond well to the study treatment.

“But the treatment might be less effective in more typical patients. It was important for government to pay for studies that directly compared alternative approaches, to ensure researchers could pursue an independent agenda, even if it might undermine industry revenue.”

Further, Zalcberg said “A key question in cancer treatment was whether shorter courses of chemotherapy would work as well as longer courses already endorsed by industry-sponsored studies, But such trials, despite potential savings to the health budget, were ''not seen as innovative'' and were unlikely to be funded under the usual competitive research grants process.”

Most falsely believe chemo is curative
According to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine although chemotherapy is the primary treatment for patients with lung and colorectal cancer, it is not curative.

In an American national survey of 1193 advanced-stage patients, 69% of patients with lung cancer and 81% of those with colorectal cancer misunderstood the intent of chemotherapy, mistakenly believed that chemotherapy might cure their disease.

The authors commented “this study fills a gap in the medical knowledge about what advanced cancer patients understand about chemotherapy. These findings raise questions about whether patients have "met the standard for...consent to their treatment."

Weeks et al, N Engl J Med. 2012;367:1616-1625, 1651-1652.  

Call to publish all clinical trial data to protect patients
Currently, researchers, pharmaceutical companies and institutions are free to not publish research data that may be detrimental to their professional reputations and bottom line, but potentially vital to public health. Clearly, if negative findings are not published, it could powerfully skew the overall impression of a drug’s effectiveness, leading to bad treatment decisions and missed opportunities for good medicine.

Speaking in the British Medical Journal, Australian professor of evidence-based medicine Paul Glasziou said the current system “betrays” patients who volunteer for clinical trials, thinking they are contributing to the advancement of medical knowledge. “Non-publication negates this reasonable assumption,” and “distorts the evidence base for clinical decisions.”

BMJ editor in Chief Fiona Godlee commented “Patients who are invited to participate in trials should consider the track record of the institutions and funders concerned and refuse to participate unless they receive written assurance that the full study results will be made publicly available and freely accessible."

Chalmers I, Glasziou P, Godlee F. All trials must be registered and the results published. BMJ 2013; 346:f105.

Key research unable to be reproduced
A top researcher has found that many recent basic studies on cancer -- a high proportion of them from university labs -- are unreliable.

Over the last two decades, the most promising route to new cancer drugs has been one pioneered by the discoverers of Gleevec, the Novartis drug that targets a form of leukemia, and Herceptin, Genentech's breast-cancer drug.

In each case, scientists discovered a genetic change that turned a normal cell into a malignant one. Those findings allowed them to develop a molecule that blocks the cancer-producing process. This approach led to an explosion of claims of other potential "druggable" targets.

During a decade as head of global cancer research at Amgen, C. Glenn Begley identified 53 "landmark" publications -- papers in top journals, from reputable labs -- for his team to reproduce. Begley sought to double-check the findings before trying to build on them for new drug development. He found 47 of the 53 could not be replicated.

Part way through his project to reproduce promising studies, Begley met for breakfast at a cancer conference with the lead scientist of one of the problematic studies.

"We went through the paper line by line, figure by figure," said Begley. "I explained that we re-did their experiment 50 times and never got their result. He said they'd done it six times and got this result once, but put it in the paper because it made the best story. It's very disillusioning."

As recently as the late 1990s, most potential cancer-drug targets were backed by 100 to 200 publications. Now each may have fewer than half a dozen.

Begley, CG. Nature 483, 531–533 (29 March 2012) 

New Anticancer Drugs are more Toxic
Modern cancer drugs are increasingly aiming to be “biologically elegant”. Many are designed to block cancer by interfering with specific molecules involved in tumor growth and progression.

One of the main promises of targeted therapies has been less toxic side effects. But a meta-analysis has found a significant overall increase in the odds of toxic death with the new targeted agents, compared with the older drugs that were used as controls. The new targeted agents were also associated with a statistically significant increase in grade 3 or 4 adverse events.

The authors point out that virtually all new drugs undergo evaluation in early-phase clinical trials designed to assess toxic effects and tolerance. However, these trials tend to be small and can only detect common toxic effects, and some agents receive their approval on the basis of smaller, nonrandomized, unblinded trials "in which detection of toxicity can be severely impaired."

Our group has already established that, "in the postmarketing period, there are frequently new toxicities," Dr. Amir added. "The problem is that these are not usually reported in the scientific literature, but simply submitted to regulatory agencies. As such, some clinicians may be unaware of these."

In addition, they note that "despite improvements in efficacy with the use of new molecular targeted and chemotherapeutic agents, most cancers remain incurable."

"Therefore, maintenance of quality of life and minimization of treatment-related toxicity are key objectives of drug development," the authors write. "This is especially important in settings in which improvements in efficacy are modest and might be counterbalanced by an increase in toxicity."

"We recommend that treatment decisions be based on a more holistic assessment of patients, rather than an empirical approach based on tumor characteristics," he said.

Niraula et al. The Price We Pay for Progress: A Meta-Analysis of Harms of Newly Approved Anticancer Drugs. J Clin Oncol. 2012;30:3012-3019.

Editorial from Lancet Oncology on this problem.
"These data raise the question of whether the pursuit of improved survival outcomes come with a trade off in tolerability that is reaching an unsustainable level,"

The editorial continues: "… new drugs are not as clean in their targeting as anticipated, and, ironically, are perhaps not as predictable as the older pancytotoxic chemotherapy drugs."

Editorial, Lancet Oncol. 2012;13:849. 

Chemotherapy affects brain function and memory.
This meta-analysis (that included 13 studies) assessed whether chemotherapy-related cognitive impairment is consistently observed in cancer patients.

Evidence for the presence of cognitive impairment following cancer treatment was established for executive function and memory. No relationship was found between cognitive impairment and time since treatment cessation but a significant negative relationship was found for treatment duration. Age had no impact on treatment-related cognitive impairment.
A meta-analysis of the effects of chemotherapy on cognition in patients with cancer.

Hodgson KD et al, Cancer Treatment Reviews, Volume 39, Issue 3, May 2013, Pages 297–304

New study shows chemotherapy effects last twice as long
While earlier studies suggested the cognitive effects of chemotherapy could 
last 10 years, new data suggest they could last for more than 20 years.

Almost 300 women who had been treated with adjuvant cyclo-phosmamide, methotrexate, and fluoroacil (CMF) chemotherapy an average of 21 years earlier were studied.

Researchers found their processing speed, executive functioning, psychomotor speed, and immediate and delayed verbal memory were all “significantly worse” than a control group of women who had never had cancer.

The authors cautioned that the impact of their study was tempered by the fact that CMF was “no longer the most optimal adjuvant therapy for early-stage breast cancer,” and admitted it was impossible to glean if they were applicable to other forms of chemotherapy.
Given advances in treatment are increasing the number of long-term breast cancer survivors, their research into long-term cognitive effects was “highly relevant”, they said.

Koppelmans et al, Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2012; 10.1200/JCO.2011.37.0189

Chemotherapy linked to Risk for Acute Myeloid Leukemia
A study of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) from 1975 to 2008 indicates that the incidence is almost 5 times higher in patients treated with chemotherapy than in the general population
The researchers warn that the overall incidence of treatment-related AML (tAML) is likely to increase in the future, because increasing numbers of patients have received cytotoxic agents during the past decade.

Although radiation therapy has also been implicated in tAML, the risk appears to be substantially higher with chemotherapy. But also, the risk for tAML was higher with radiotherapy plus chemotherapy than with chemotherapy alone.

Morton L et al, Evolving risk of therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia following cancer chemotherapy among adults in the United States, 1975-2008. Blood. Published online February 14, 2013 

Is this what optimism looks like?
New metastatic melanoma drug ipilimumab (Yervoy) is approved for listing on the PBS. It costs more than $110,000 a year per person, up to $60 million per year for the public purse, has a significant side-effects profile including potential fatalities, and it increases survival on average from 6 months to 10 months.

Co-author of the research that led to Yervoy being listed, Richard Kefford of the University of Sydney reported that “It’s not a cure but it’s a definite step ahead.” He added “that there was a revolution underway in the care of patients with metastatic melanoma, with a host of new therapies on the horizon” and “there is a lot to be optimistic about.”

Flaherty KT et al. Combined BRAF and MEK Inhibition in Melanoma with BRAF V600 Mutations. N Engl J Med 2012; 367:1694-1703

Oncologists are doing a poor job of informing American women with early-stage breast cancer about the disease or their options in terms of surgery. 
Among 440 surveyed women, less than half (about 46%) knew that local recurrence risk is higher after breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) than after mastectomy, and only about 56% of women knew that survival rates are equivalent for both options.

Many women did not recall being asked for their preference. The fact that less than half of the patients recalled being asked their preference was particularly concerning to Dr. (Clara) Lee.

“It would be one thing if we were talking about decisions for which there is clearly a superior treatment, such as treatment for an inflamed gallbladder. In this case, it’s reasonable and actually better for the surgeon to make a recommendation. But here we’re talking about a decision where there is no medically right answer, and it really depends on the patient’s preference. In that situation, it makes sense to ask the patient what she prefers.”

Lee C et al. Many Breast Cancer Patients Uninformed About Options: Journal of the American College of Surgeons; 2012, Volume 214, Issue 1, Pages 1-10

Palliative care and multiple medications
Terminally ill patients often remain on unnecessary medications, and regular reviews are needed to prevent polypharmacy (the use – often overuse – of multiple prescription drugs).

Almost half of the 50 patients were admitted to a Brisbane palliative care service were on nine or more medications and a study found two-thirds of their medications could be stopped within three days.

Another study published in the Australasian Journal on Ageing found 54% of patients aged 65 and over requiring hospitalization in a Melbourne teaching hospital had been prescribed a potentially inappropriate medication, either before or during admission.
Cruikshank R, MJA 2013; 199:29. 

Early palliative care increases survival and quality of life for people with metastatic non–small-cell lung cancer – when compared to aggressive treatment.
Patients assigned to early palliative care had a better quality of life than did patients assigned to standard care. In addition, fewer patients in the palliative care group than in the standard care group had depressive symptoms. Despite the fact that fewer patients in the early palliative care group than in the standard care group received aggressive end-of-life care (33% vs. 54%, P=0.05), median survival was longer among patients receiving early palliative care (11.6 months vs. 8.9 months, P=0.02).

Temel et al, N Engl J Med 2010; 363:733-742

The drug companies and the doctors – tough reading
There is widespread concern within the medical profession and the community about the conflict of interest that exists between for-profit drug companies – with their obligations to maximise sales of their products for the benefit of shareholders – and members of the medical profession who recommend these products to patients.

Pharmaceutical companies are known to be among the most profitable companies in the world. Proceedings of legal cases and published research provide insights into the nature of the influence of drug companies on research and publication practices relating to the drugs they manufacture, on marketing disguised as “education” and on doctors who prescribe their drugs. The influence of drug companies extends further to sponsorship of opinion leaders who promote their drugs and groups that produce clinical guidelines. More rigorous regulation of the relationship between the pharmaceutical industry and medicine is required.

This article explores the influence of the pharmaceutical industry on medical research and practice. It seeks to discover from the medical literature the extent of such conflict of interest, and the effects of that conflict on the conduct and outcomes of research and its publication, and hence clinical practice.

A lengthy article, it makes for compelling but very important reading.

George A Jelinek and Sandra L Neate. The influence of the pharmaceutical industry in medicine; J Law Med. 2009 Oct ;17 (2):216-23   

The article can be downloaded from www.overcomingmultiplesclerosis.com.au

Pay rates for US cancer specialists slipping.  April 26, 2013
Oncologists remain among the highest earners of all American medical specialists, but their ranking has slipped a little over the past year, according to figures just released in the Physician Compensation Report 2013.

The mean income for an oncologist in 2012 was $287,000, according to the report, although 10% of oncologists earned more than $500,000 and 14% earned less than $100,000. This places oncologists tenth in the rankings. Topping the chart were orthopaedic surgeons (with a mean income of $405,000), cardiologists ($357,000), and radiologists ($349,000).

Also earning more than oncologists were gastroenterologists, urologists, anesthesiologists, plastic surgeons, dermatologists, and general surgeons.

At the bottom of the rankings were specialists in infectious disease (with a mean income of $175,000), pediatricians ($173,000), and family medicine practitioners (GPs) ($170,000).

These rankings of 2012 income show a drop from 7th place in 2011 and oncologists reported the biggest decrease (4%).

A cautionary tale – a profoundly sad letter received recently, and reproduced with permission.

The oncologist gave us 3 different options for treatment. His preference was the middle one, saying that side affects were minimum and chance of success almost the same as the hard one. How much difference in chance of success, he could not say, not even ball-park figure.

We (my partner and I) had chosen to try the hard treatment first (hoping to increase our chances of success and the side affects would be not too bad). The oncologist nurse told me that that was fine and that they would be monitoring my partner’s condition during the treatment and if it would get too difficult the treatment would be changed. 

During the first 8 days of the first treatment cycle, she went into emergency hospital to be looked at on day 6, 7 & 8. There were signs of a stroke, she was very sick, tired & very nauseous and did not get out of bed after day number 3. My partner passed away on day 9 due to a blood-cloth / fluids in her lungs (today – 3 months later - we are still waiting on the post mortem report).

RELATED BLOGS

Buying time - Four Corners, Monday 26th August - must see television

NOTICEBOARD

IMAGES, WORDS and SILENCE 
Training/retreat for those interested in mind made healing – either for personal use or as a health professional.
With Dr Nimrod Sheinman, Ruth and myself in the Yarra Valley. Details: CLICK HERE

MEDITATION UNDER the LONG WHITE CLOUD
Ruth and I are leading our first meditation retreat in New Zealand in December at the beautiful Mana Retreat centre that has a similar high reputation for a good environment and great food as the Foundation. Details: CLICK HERE

5 DAY FOLLOW-UP CANCER PROGRAM
Specifically for people who have attended a CanLive program in NZ, or Gawler Foundation program. November 18 – 22 at Wanaka out of Queenstown - one of the most beautiful environments there is. Details: CLICK HERE


19 August 2013

Buying time - Four Corners

Are new cancer drugs worth the price and are there realistic options available?

Would you buy one of these? Yervoy is a new cancer drug that improves survival time for those eligible from an average of 6 months to 10 months. It costs over $110,000 per person per year. Monday, 26th August and Four Corners will be examining this and other drugs that have led leading cancer specialists to state that modern oncology is costing too much for too little benefit.

Speaking personally, I am deeply concerned by clear scientific evidence demonstrating that many people with cancer are being over treated with drugs that have a very high price tag (including serious side-effects) and yet have only marginal benefits. Also, it would seem that many of these same people are either unaware, uninformed , or worse being dissuaded from genuine self-help options that could be helping them to live better and longer.

I believe there is need for urgent discussion at all levels on these issues. Changes in management and attitudes would seem warranted. I hope the Four Corners program may break the taboos that seem to have been in place for too long when it comes to open discussion around these issues.

So this week we go Out on a Limb, reflect on the facts and question what is happening and why. But first





Thought for the day


Action without vision
Is only passing time.
Vision with out action
Is merely daydreaming,
But vision with action
Can change the world.
                 
               Nelson Mandela





What does this turn into? See below.
The magnolias are on!




Yervoy. If you pay your taxes, then you have already bought it.
This new cancer drug (which is not a new chemotherapy, but a more biologically elegant way of attacking cancer metabolically - which does make it something of a step forward) was recently added to the PBS – the Government’s free (to the patients) drug scheme. But all of us who pay taxes are helping to pay for it. Described by the Health Minister Tanya Plibersek as “a major breakthrough”, what wonders what small progress looks like? She also called Yervoy “an important treatment option for patients who are not well enough to tolerate further chemotherapy”.

And there is more to all this. It seems that one in five who take Yervoy live an extra 3 years, a good result for them. But statistically, if the drug only takes average survival from 6 months to 10 months, it seems certain those who survive longer must be offset by others who die quicker than average, and yes, the drug does have a raft of side-effects some of which have been proven to be lethal.

How much will we the taxpayers be paying for this new drug? Somewhere between 30 and 60 million dollars a year.

While all my sympathy goes to people eligible for this new drug and we can easily understand their enthusiasm, the question has to be asked. If a top ten list had been made of things that need extra funding in cancer medicine, where would Yervoy have appeared? If you had $60 million to spend on cancer, how would you allocate it? I would love to hear your response via the comments section below.

Then there is the question of what is influencing our decision makers, as well as the public to support the use of so much chemotherapy and other cancer drugs in current time?

Consider this. Back in 2004 it was shown that when 22 of the common cancer types (which included 90% of all cancers) were investigated in Australia, chemotherapy was shown to increase the average 5 year survival time by only 2.3%.

Amazingly, that study was published in 2004 and to my knowledge there has been no up-date. We do not know what the overall success rate for chemo is in current time. This seems a major oversight or error of omission.

Then we have the deeply disturbing evidence from the medical literature that the drug companies are heavily distorting cancer drug trials, and in the process, powerfully influencing the recommendations of doctors and creating unrealistic expectations in patients, families and whole communities.

For example, the literature makes it clear that drug company cancer drug trials are twice as likely to feature positive findings as independent trials. Even more disturbing, published drug company sponsored trials are twenty times less likely to record a negative finding as independent trials. Get a negative finding? Simple. Do not publish it. The result? Distort the overall results and give a falsely positive indication of benefit.

So this means that the 2.3% benefit attributed to chemotherapy in 2004 was highly likely to be inflated. The real effect on 5 year survival actually may have been a negative one.

But it is not just the researchers and the doctors who are being influenced. Women in Sydney already treated for breast cancer with surgery and chemotherapy were asked how much benefit they would need to gain to agree to have more chemotherapy.

Asked to imagine they had 5 years to live from the time of the survey, and offered to imagine another round of chemotherapy that would add just one day to that five years; how many women do you think would agree to take the extra chemo?

In fact, over 50% said they would. (Ref 5 below).

Some time back two women sat talking in a group I was leading.  Both had been treated surgically for early breast cancer, both had 2 children under ten. Both said they had considered the evidence, had found that chemo could probably improve their chances of 5 year survival by around 4 to 4.5% and that the treatment would probably involve a series of side-effects.

Both said they had discussed their options widely, had thought about it a lot and wanted to do the best for themselves and their families.

One decided to have the chemo – fair enough; the other decided not to – again, in my opinion, fair enough. Both made well informed, well considered choices and decided what they thought best for them and their personal circumstances.

The outcomes? Very different. The woman who accepted the chemo was well supported by her doctors, all the support systems of her hospital and the breast cancer networks. She was treated as something of a hero by her family and friends, courageously going through a tough treatment. She received full support.

The lady who declined chemo described a nightmare. Firstly her male doctor overlooked the fact that she was a highly competent businesswoman with intelligence and no neurotic pathology. He told her she was “being a naughty girl” and that “if you did not take the chemo you will be putting your life at risk and so unless you change your mind, I do not want to see you again”.

But while this woman received no help from her hospital, her biggest problem turned out to be from amongst her extended family and friends. They pressured her relentlessly to accept the treatment; constantly challenging her decision and questioning her lack of consideration for her children.

They overlooked the evidence that simply exercising most days would reduce their friend’s risk of dying twice as much as the chemo (and no-one knows as yet how chemo and exercise really interact). She had good support from her immediate family and was strong enough to persevere through all the difficulties, but what is going on?

What has got into the popular psyche that chemotherapy and the newer cancer drugs like Yervoy have become embraced so thoroughly by the medical profession and the public alike? Has our obsession with quick fix drugs reached a point where evidence and cost is overlooked and hope at any price is acceptable? Are we so scared of dying that we are seeking survival at any price?

I will be fascinated to watch the Four Corners program and see what they have made of it. And I would love to hear your own thoughts. Are you a health professional with a different view? Are you a patient faced with choices, or someone who has made choices with particular consequences? Are you a family member or friend who has shared in or observed someone dear to you making their own choices? How do you feel about all this? What are your thoughts?

At the very least, I am hoping the program will stimulate discussion, maybe even constructive debate on these topics which to date have felt surrounded by unspoken taboos. So do consider adding your voice to the feedback on the program, either on the ABC website, or in your own social media pages, or via the wider media. Maybe this is a good blog to share. Please do add to the comments section below. My sense is we are long overdue for lengthy discussion in this challenging area.

RESOURCES
You Can Conquer Cancer – outlines what I do recommend for people with cancer – and how to do it!

The Gawler Cancer Program – the CD or MP3 download that features how cancer develops and how the body and mind can be activated to counteract it.

What to do when someone you love has cancer - the CD or MP3 download that features the combined feedback from thousands of families and friends of people with cancer. What to do, how to be most helpful, how to look after yourself while looking after someone else.

Cancer, lifestyle and chemotherapy. – a detailed and documented analysis of this area that I wrote in 2006.

RELATED BLOGS

The Cancer Council, the survivors and the book

Twenty years and what has changed?

NOTICEBOARD



1. Mt Macedon workshop next weekend
Saturday August 24th, 10am (arrive 9.30) to 4.30pm
Duneira is an exquisite heritage hill station property on the slopes of Mt Macedon. The garden is like a meditative space, so beautiful and filled with majestic trees. I love being there!

Then the house itself is grand enough to host good sized but still quite intimate events. There is a tradition now at Duneira of hosting community events that range from music to personal development and Ruth and I have become regulars.

So, fancy a nice drive to a beautiful place for a meaningful event? If so, CLICK HERE

2. Retreats / Trainings filling 
MEDITATION in the DESERT
If anyone is still thinking of joining us in the desert, you will need to let us know very soon.
Details: CLICK HERE

IMAGES, WORDS and SILENCE 

Training/retreat for those interested in mind made healing – either for personal use or as a health professional.
With Dr Nimrod Sheinman, Ruth and myself in the Yarra Valley. Details: CLICK HERE

MEDITATION UNDER the LONG WHITE CLOUD
Ruth and I are leading our first meditation retreat in New Zealand in December at the beautiful Mana Retreat centre that has a similar high reputation for a good environment and great food as the Foundation. Details: CLICK HERE

5 DAY FOLLOW-UP CANCER PROGRAM
Specifically for people who have attended a CanLive program in NZ, or Gawler Foundation program. November 18 – 22 at Wanaka out of Queenstown - one of the most beautiful environments there is. Details: CLICK HERE

REFERENCES
1. Flaherty KT et al. Combined BRAF and MEK Inhibition in Melanoma with BRAF V600 Mutations. N Engl J Med 2012; 367:1694-1703

2. THE HON TANYA PLIBERSEK MP, Minister for Health, MEDIA RELEASE: Sunday, 5 May, 2013

3. Morgan G, Ward R, Barton M. The contribution of cytotoxic chemotherapy to 5 year survival in adult malignancies. Clin Oncol. 2004; 16:549-60.

4. Segelov, E. The emperor’s new clothes: Can chemotherapy survive? AustralianPrescriber. 2006; 29 (1):2-3.

5. Duric V et al. Ann Oncol 2005 Nov;16(11):1786-94. Epub 2005 Aug 26.

6. Delivering affordable cancer care in high-income countries. Sullivan R, Zalcberg J et al. Lancet Oncol. 2011;12:933-980.