Ponatinib (Iclusig) – GREAT NEWS!!!

Leave a comment

I love news like this, especially when it’s been four-years in the making.

Iclusig (ponatinib) for the treatment of Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) in adult patients with chronic phase, accelerated phase, or blast phase CML who are resistant to dasatinib or nilotinib; who are intolerant to dasatinib or nilotinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate; or who have the T315I mutation.

For CML patient in England, this means we now have another safety net that is readily available for consultants to prescribe immediately. This is going to make a big difference to treatment options and the mental well-being of many patients.

Just a quick shout to all of the people who work for and are associated with Incyte (formally ARIAD) who’ve never given up on this and have worked so hard to get it to us. Congratulations and thank you.

NICE has also recommended ponatinib for treating Philadelphia-chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in adults. Hit the link for more info on this: www.leukaemiacare.org.uk/news/NICE-recommends-ponatinib

The full press release follows.

Kris

 

NICE Issues Positive Final Recommendation for Iclusig (ponatinib) for Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) in England

CML patients across the UK who are resistant or intolerant to second generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapies will now have equal access to Iclusig

LONDON, UK [28 April 2017] – Incyte Corporation (Nasdaq:INCY) announces that the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Technology Appraisal Committee (TAC) has published a positive Final Appraisal Determination (FAD) recommending Iclusigâ (ponatinib) for the treatment of Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) in adult patients with chronic phase, accelerated phase, or blast phase CML who are resistant to dasatinib or nilotinib; who are intolerant to dasatinib or nilotinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate; or who have the T315I mutation.[i]

The positive FAD from NICE brings CML patients in England in line with those in Wales and Scotland who have had full-access to Iclusig, according to its license,[ii],[iii] since 2015; providing patients with CML across the UK who have failed other treatments equal access to an additional and important option.

Today’s decision is important for patients with CML who have failed other treatments, as well as for physicians in England, who will now have access to the clinical benefits of Iclusig,” commented Mark Tanner, General Manager of Incyte Bioscience UK. “Together with the CML community, we have worked very hard over the last four years to encourage NICE to reconsider their original evaluation and are delighted that NICE has acknowledged the unmet need and the value that Iclusig brings.”

CML is a rare blood cancer with around 700 new cases each year in the UK.[iv]  CML affects economically active people, with around 50 percent of UK cases in people aged under 65 years.iv Many patients with a new diagnosis of CML have a prolonged clinical benefit from targeted therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). However, there has been a high unmet need and poor prognosis for patients whose advanced disease is resistant and intolerant to other therapies.[v] Once available treatment options are exhausted, the prognosis can be poor.v  Despite advances in treatment, there remains a need for additional effective therapies for the management of CML.[vi] Iclusig fulfils an important need in the treatment pathway for CML patients and provides clinicians and patients with a full suite of treatment options for CML.

Professor Jane Apperley, Department of Haematology, Imperial College School of Medicine, Hammersmith Hospital, London said, “This is an exciting and long-awaited outcome, which allows physicians to manage patients in a logical and clinical-evidence based manner with the goals of improving long-term survival and providing a good quality of life.”

Iclusig was approved by the European Commission[vii] in 2013 as an orphan drug for the treatment of adults with chronic phase, accelerated phase, or blast phase CML who are resistant to dasatinib or nilotinib; who are intolerant to dasatinib or nilotinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate. In Ph+ALL (Philadelphia chromosome‒positive Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia) patients, Iclusig is licensed for adult patients with Ph+ ALL who are resistant to dasatinib; who are intolerant to dasatinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate. Iclusig is also licensed for people with CML and PH+ALL who have T315I mutation.[viii]

About CML and Ph+ ALL

CML is a cancer of the white blood cells that is diagnosed in approximately 7,000 patients each year in Europe.[ix] CML is characterized by an excessive and unregulated production of white blood cells by the bone marrow due to a genetic abnormality that produces the BCR-ABL protein. After a chronic phase of production of too many white blood cells, CML typically evolves to the more aggressive phases referred to as accelerated phase and blast crisis. Ph+ ALL is a subtype of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia that carries the Ph+ chromosome that produces BCR-ABL. It has a more aggressive course than CML and is often treated with a combination of chemotherapy and tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The BCR-ABL protein is expressed in both of these diseases.

About Iclusig® (ponatinib) tablets

Iclusig targets not only native BCR-ABL but also its isoforms that carry mutations that confer resistance to treatment, including the T315I mutation, which has been associated with resistance to other approved TKIs.

In the EU, Iclusig is approved for the treatment of adult patients with chronic phase, accelerated phase or blast phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) who are resistant to dasatinib or nilotinib; who are intolerant to dasatinib or nilotinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate; or who have the T315I mutation, or the treatment of adult patients with Philadelphia-chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL) who are resistant to dasatinib; who are intolerant to dasatinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate; or who have the T315I mutation.

Incyte has an exclusive license from ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, to develop and commercialize Iclusig in the European Union and 28 other countries, including Switzerland, Norway, Turkey, Israel and Russia.

About Incyte

Incyte Corporation is a U.S.-based biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of proprietary therapeutics. For additional information on Incyte, please visit the Company’s website at www.incyte.com.

Follow @Incyte on Twitter at https://twitter.com/Incyte.

[i] NICE. 2017. Final Appraisal Determination: Ponatinib for treating chronic myeloid leukaemia and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. Available at https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/gid-ta10060/documents/final-appraisal-determination-document Last accessed 28 April 2017

[ii] All Wales Medicines Strategy Group. Ponatinib (Iclusig). Appraisals. Available at: http://www.awmsg.org/awmsgonline/app/appraisalinfo/1163. Last accessed 24 March 2017

[iii] Scottish Medicines Consortium. SMC Advice. Ponatinib (Iclusig). Available at: http://www.scottishmedicines.org.uk/SMC_Advice/Advice/1032_15_ponatinib_Iclusig/ponatinib_Iclusig. Last accessed April 2017.

[iv] CRUK. Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) incidence statistics. Available at: http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-info/cancerstats/types/leukaemia-cml/incidence/. Last accessed April 2017.

[v] Cortes JE, KimD-W, Pinilla-Ibarz J, et al. A Phase 2 Trial of Ponatinib in Philadelphia Chromosome–Positive Leukemias. N Engl J Med 2013;369: 1783-1796. Available at: http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa1306494.

[vi] Woessner DW, Lim CS, Deininger MW. Development of an Effective Therapy for CML. Cancer J 2011;17(6):doi:10.1097/PPO.0b013e318237e5b7. Available at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251313/pdf/nihms-332259.pdf. Last accessed April 2017.

[vii] EMA. Iclusig EPAR summary for the public.  Available at: http://www.ema.europa.eu/ema/index.jsp?curl=pages/medicines/human/medicines/002695/human_med_001656.jsp&mid=WC0b01ac058001d124. Last accessed April 2017.

[viii] Iclusig Summary of Product Characteristics. Available at: http://www.medicines.org.uk/emc/medicine/28145. Last accessed April 2017.

[ix] Rohrbacher M, Hasford J. Epidemiology of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML). Best Pract Res Clin Haematol. 2009 Sep;22(3):295-302. Based on current estimate of population of Europe (738,199,000 in 2010).

 

Please sign and share this important petition

3 Comments

I’m not a huge fan of petitions, they are far too easy to ignore but this one is just 1,707 short of the target of 10,000 signatures. It’s simply too close to the target for us not to go after it.

I’ve been writing about my friend Khalid Younis on this blog for some time now. Like me, Khalid is a leukaemia patient as well as a father of four. He lives in England and has received the devastating news that he does not qualify for ponatinib, a treatment freely available in Scotland and Wales. This drug is his last chance and he’s been told that his case is “not exceptional.”

As well as this petition going off to NHS England if we achieved the 10,000 signatures, it would also mean that any correspondence we have with ministers and government departments we could reference it – it’s quite a powerful statement and makes the case to get access to these drugs a little strong.

Please sign. https://www.change.org/p/nhs-nice-cancer-dad-denied-tratment#petition-letter. Please share.

Thank you. Kris

Khalid Younis – A Letter From Number 10

Leave a comment

In October I wrote this letter to David Cameron, our Prime Minister.

Dear Prime Minister,

The photo below is of me with my new friend, his name is Khalid Younis. We both have a rare form of leukaemia called Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML). Treatment for CML was revolutionised in 2001 when Time magazine hailed a drug called imatinib a magic bullet against cancer. Now, 14 years later, my friend cannot access a new, potentially life-saving drug called ponatinib because it hasn’t been appraised by NICE.

Khalid Younis and Kris Griffin

Khalid Younis and Kris Griffin

I don’t understand why the cancer drug fund process was closed alongside the appraisal process, we find ourselves falling through an administrative gap. Khalid’s situation has attracted nearly 8,000 signatures on a petition and the story has been featured in the Daily Mail, Daily Mirror and the local Birmingham newspapers. We’ve contacted Khalid’s MP, Roger Godsiff and my MP, Mark Garnier. Mark knows my work and has always been really supportive.

Whilst I realise you have many responsibilities and must receive many letters like this; if you have time to meet or discuss this issue and help us I would be extremely grateful.

Ponatinib offers the last real hope Khalid has, not being able to access it in England is devastating.

Yours sincerely,

Kris Griffin (Mr)

Last week I received this reply:

PM Khalid

Of course I’m disappointed, I’m not sure if I ever thought he’d agree to a meeting and fix the problem. My issue with this letter is that the Department of Health is part of the problem. They’ve allowed this issue to manifest and within the space of two days (last week) I’ve managed to extract three different dates when they expect the appraisal process to be ready. Not ready for use…oh no..ready for it to be reviewed. In the meantime, we don’t have an appraisal process and by that point we won’t have a cancer drugs fund. I don’t want to write a ‘told you so’ letter to our PM.

So, I’ll be writing to Mr Cameron again, perhaps I’ll also include the 8,000 signatures on this petition and ask him what he thinks the Department of Health will do; because from where I’m sitting they are making the situation worse.

Kris Griffin – Access CML Drugs

Another Day In Westminster

1 Comment

I spent an exhausting day in Westminster meeting parliamentarians this week. Henry Smith MP, Mark Durkan MP and Nic Dakin MP all gave up their valuable time to sit with me in Portcullis House to discuss Khalid Younis, Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) and the problem we currently face with the lack of an appraisal system for new drugs.

All three MPs were incredibly kind with their time and very supportive. They all agreed to support a letter from Roger Godsiff MP (Khalid’s member of parliament) to the Prime Minister asking him to intervene in Khalid’s case as well as agreeing to submit written parliamentary questions where appropriate. All three were very concerned with the issues I raised and offered lots of advice and opinion on how we can move forward.

It’s great to have days like this. We’ve made friends with more, influential, people who now know about the struggle CML patients face as well as issues facing the wider cancer community. Although to their credit all three men were very aware of the restrictions faced getting the right drugs to the right people in a timely and cost-effective way. I certainly appreciated the balance in conversation; we all know that the funding pot is finite but to have a productive discussion on how to address this in a fair and progressive way, ensures we, as patients, become part of the solution, rather than part of the problem.

I’ll progress this by suggesting some written questions we can submit and go on record by thanking all three gentlemen very much for caring about CML patients.

Best, Kris

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Letters from NHS England and 10 Downing Street

Leave a comment

Some very pertinent housekeeping. Earlier in the year David Ryner from CML Support asked me, Bloodwise, Leukaemia Care and CML-UK (Facebook) to co-sign a letter he penned to Simon Stevens (Chief Executive of NHS England) and Prime Minister, David Cameron. The letters and responses are all posted below.

The letter from Professor Sean Duffy confirms that the new model for the evaluation of drugs, including cancer drugs, following the Accelerated Access Review’ s report will be launched on April 1st 2016. Not good enough. I want to make this clear. We currently don’t have a method of evaluating new drugs and the old method was flawed (see the issues ponatinib had with small population numbers). This gap in service and the delisting of life-saving drugs is going to kill people.

I’m making this extra clear because a politician I’ve spoken to recently questioned me, quite ferociously, on the launch date of the new model. I know that this politician subscribes to my blog updates and I hope that they now have all of the facts they need to do something about the issue and register their protest.

A huge thanks to David Ryner from CML Support for coordinating this activity.

Kris Griffin

LETTER TO SIMON STEVENS

Dear Mr Stevens,

We are writing to you regarding the recent announcements relating to the Cancer Drugs Fund (CDF) and the specific decisions that have been taken on treatments for chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML).

As patient groups representing the concerns of patients with CML, we are particularly alarmed by both the inclusion of CML treatments in the next review of the CDF for delisting at the end of this month, and by the suggestion that there may not be any further meetings of the CDF panel to consider new treatments or indications for the remainder of the 2015/16 financial year.

In particular, I would like to draw your attention to the situation currently facing two medicines which treat patients with more advanced CML, who therefore face severely limited treatment options. Bosutinib is scheduled for review at the next meeting of the CDF panel at the end of this month. Ponatinib, a drug which has never been appraised by NICE due to its small patient population, is only available through the CDF for patients with the T315i mutation, rather than in its full licensed indication. Ponatinib was due to be assessed by the CDF panel for its full licence in June, before the cancellation of the last scheduled meeting.

This situation for those patients needing access to ponatinib is particularly acute; with NHS England’s Commissioning Intentions for 2015/16 committing to producing algorithms for all chemotherapy within the year, ponatinib now faces the prospect of being effectively excluded from the CML algorithm entirely, with the exception of the T35i mutation.

When the threat to bosutinib is factored in and with the exception of the minuscule number exhibiting the T315i mutation, patients in England now face a lack of access to two of the five drugs that are currently available to them. The clinical effectiveness of these drugs in being able to secure optimal responses at speed and scale relative to the current entry level CML inhibitor, imatinib, now over a decade old, is well established.

The Government’s Accelerated Access Review (AAR) demonstrates a welcome recognition that current evaluation processes require revision to ensure they are fit for purpose in assessing the new generation of innovative products, including targeted therapies for CML. We recognise, too, that the CDF needs to adapt its processes to remain in step with the wider Government agenda.

It is therefore bewildering, contradictory and illogical for NHS England’s real time activity to be moving in the opposite direction of travel in reversing, rather than accelerating, access to targeted therapies for CML. This is made even more remarkable given the fact that, relative to other CDF list treatments, the performance of this class of drugs has been considered outstanding when judged against standard measures of survival. As a result, the overwhelming majority of patients are now able to secure decades of benefit from these home-based oral therapies, with their lives returning to near normal (and patients enjoying near-normal life expectancy) following treatment.

Such marked improvements in CML patient outcomes have been achieved by the steady increase in targeted therapies. We believe that to withdraw the opportunity from patients who would benefit from targeted CML therapies such as ponatinib and bosutinib is both discriminatory and perverse and we would strongly urge you to reconsider this decision by NHS England.

Yours sincerely,

xxxx

cc. Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP

RESPONSES

from the Department of Health (Malcolm Jones)

from NHS England (Professor Sean Duffy)


LETTER TO RT HON DAVID CAMERON

Dear Prime Minister,

We are writing to you following the intervention you recently made to NHS England regarding its consideration of the funding of medicines for a number of rarer diseases, to make you aware of the situation patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML), a rare form of blood cancer, currently face.

As patient groups representing patients with CML, we were concerned with recent announcements relating to the Cancer Drugs Fund (CDF) and the specific decisions that have been taken regarding treatments for CML. We have great concerns about the fact that the CDF panel will not now consider any new treatments or indications for the remainder of the 2015/16 financial year, meaning new and innovative treatments for CML will remain unavailable to patients, and that CML treatments currently available on the Fund are at risk of being delisted.

CML is treated with targeted therapies which have ensured marked improvements in patient outcomes but mean patient sub populations are small. Patients need to have a wide range of treatment options available to them because of the problem of resistance to medicines, as well as contraindications and co-morbidities which mean some patients are unable to tolerate certain drugs currently within the treatment pathway.

Patients with more advanced CML face severely limited treatment options, with two of the five CML drugs either at-risk or unavailable to all patients who would benefit. Bosutinib, a second-line treatment for CML, is at risk of being delisted from the CDF following its inclusion in the review of current treatments conducted by the CDF panel on the 29th and 30th July. Ponatinib, a drug which has never been appraised by NICE due to its small patient population, is currently only available through the CDF for patients with the T315i mutation, rather than in its full licensed indication. Ponatinib was due to be assessed by the CDF panel for its full licence in June, before the cancellation of the last scheduled meeting, and now has no opportunity to be appraised for clinical and cost effectiveness, meaning the wider CML patient population are unable to access the drug other than through Individual Funding Requests (IFRs).

The clinical effectiveness of both drugs in being able to secure optimal responses at speed and scale relative to the current entry level CML inhibitor, imatinib, now over a decade old, is well established. The following comment from a patient on ponatinib, which was used in the CML Support Group submission to the SMC in Scotland – who approved the drug for its full licence – confirms its clinical effectiveness; “Ponatinib for me represents a quantum leap forward in the treatment of my CML and the impact of this condition on my family and work life. For me, even though I am likely to have to take this for life, ponatinib represents the optimum treatment that I could have expected and hoped for beyond the major trauma and loss of employment that the only other “ total “ cure , a bone marrow transplant, represents.”

We were reassured to read your comments in a letter to the Specialised Healthcare Alliance dated 28th April 2015, in which you stated “I am absolutely committed to ensuring that patients with rare diseases have access to the latest and most effective treatments that represent value to the NHS and deliver benefits to patients.” Any assistance you could offer in ensuring CML patients have access to the full range of effective treatments would be greatly appreciated. In addition, we would be grateful of any clarity you are able to secure on our behalf from NHS England regarding the new system of appraisal – particularly in terms of when the CDF will consider new medicine appraisals, and how medicines for rarer cancers and those with small patient populations will fit into the new system of evaluation – which will replace the current CDF when it ends in March 2016.

Yours sincerely,

RESPONSE

from 10 Downing Street (Ed Whiting)

Khalid Younis – an update

1 Comment

You’ll recall that we’ve been working with Khalid Younis, the father-of-four who lives in England and has received the devastating news that he does not qualify for Ponatinib, a treatment freely available in Scotland and Wales. The new ‘wonder’ drug is the only treatment left for the 43-year-old who is battling Chronic Myleoid Leukaemia (CML), of which there are 700 new cases a year in the UK. His body has become resistant to all other medicines and he is not eligible for a stem cell transplant. Mr Younis, a former carpet fitter, is being treated at Birmingham’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital and this drug is his last chance; he’s been told that his case is “not exceptional.” You can find my original posts HERE and HERE.

Whilst the story received exceptional media coverage, things may have appeared to have quietened down over the last two weeks. They haven’t.

Firstly, the petition set up by Debbie Williams has attracted 7,507 supports, the target is 10,000. If you haven’t signed the petition, please sign it now: www.change.org/p/nhs-nice-cancer-dad-denied-tratment

Kate from The Pamela Northcott Fund is putting together an appeal against the decision. Kate is an incredible person who has an amazing track record of supporting cancer patients who have been denied access to new drug therapies that have yet to be approved by NICE or refused by NICE. Kate offers this as a completely free service to patients, her reward is seeing a cancer patient on the right treatment. You can find more out about the Fund by visiting the website www.pamelanorthcottfund.org.uk.

IMG_7949

Roger Godsiff MP, Khalid Younis, Kris Griffin

Khalid and I have been in touch with Khalid’s MP, Roger Godsiff – www.rogergodsiffmp.co.uk – who has written to NHS England, NICE and the Secretary of State for Health about the case. Roger has been incredibly supportive. We met up with him last week at his home and he listened with interest to Khalid’s story and offered advice on next steps.

If you are a patient, based in England and wish to take action on this matter, please get in touch with me through my contact form. I’ll ask you to write to your MP as a CML patient and request they too write to the Secretary of State to Health to highlight Khalid’s case. I’ll help you out with the wording of the letter.

Finally, if all else fails we are considering a fund-raising campaign to pay for Khalid’s drugs. We hope that it doesn’t come to that.

All things considered, Khalid is in incredibly good spirits. He very much appreciates the efforts that everyone is making and wishes to send thanks out to you all.

We’ll keep fighting. Thanks, Kris

Khalid Younis and Kris Griffin

Khalid Younis and Kris Griffin

World CML Day 2015

Leave a comment

9/22 represents the genetic change of Chromosomes 9 and 22 that is the cause of Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML).
Since 2008, patient organisations around the world have initiated events and projects on “CML Awareness Day” on September 22 to raise awareness of the needs of patients living with CML. Since 2011, the worldwide community unites to celebrate “World CML Day” on that date.  – from CML Advocates Network

Sitting down to write a post for World CML Day, even if there are only a few hours left, is always a daunting prospect. Ultimately it’s not just one day for patients, but I understand the sentiment. For patients like Khalid Younis it brings more attention to his cause to get the drug (ponatinib) he deserves – you can read his story here.

So, when it came to writing I was in danger of either repeating myself or simply bashing governments and organisations again. PING. An email arrives. It’s a blog post from my good friend Greg Stephens, the executive director of the National CML Society in the US. Greg is one of the good guys, a really good guy. That’s the thing about CML, it brings people together. I would be a poorer person for not knowing Greg. His fiery determination, humility and wit makes for great company which come in handy when the sensible people have gone to bed at conference.

His blog post was a complete inspiration and I asked him if I could post it here, he said yes in the most beautiful way. Here it is, he said things I wanted to say in a much better way. Cheers Greg x

Kris

Some things to ponder on World CML Day
by Greg Stephens

Today, 9/22, is a day that is known well among those of us in the CML community. It’s a day set aside for awareness activities and a time to call attention to the many challenges faced by anyone living with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. Over the past seven years, today’s awareness initiatives have grown in scope, rising from the first CML Awareness day in Canada to a global emphasis. Right now, activities are going on around the world and key issues are being discussed. So, what are some things to consider on this day set aside as a day of awareness?

First off, it’s not for us. While we benefit from raising awareness, the true purpose for promoting blood cancer and CML awareness (year round, actually) is so the public and those who know nothing about blood cancers can learn more about this group of diseases, recognize the amazing progress that has been made through medical research, have a better understanding of the realities of blood cancer, and dispel myths and misconceptions that may exist. For those of us in the CML community, it’s an opportunity to share our “reality” – truths if you will, with friends and family, medical professionals, the makers of our treatment drugs, and countless others who need to know just how much CML impacts one’s daily life. While there is focused attention on CML, we have a great opportunity and responsibility to create awareness for those outside our community.

Here are a few things to think about:

  1. Eighteen! Today, 18 people will be diagnosed with CML* in the United States. There will be 18 more tomorrow and the next day, and the next….all throughout the year.
  2. For the majority of those people, their CML will be brought under control with treatment, however, a small portion will not have that experience.
  3. The current costs of our CML treatment drugs are unsustainable and many, even WITH insurance coverage and other assistance, are suffering financial ruin as a result.
  4. There is no “GOOD” leukemia. Did I just say “GOOD” and LEUKEMIA in the same sentence?
  5. Side effects are an ever-present reality that impedes many patient’s daily lives.
  6. Drug parity legislation and fair access to oral chemotherapeutic drugs at a national level is needed, now more than ever.
  7. Some may be able to achieve a treatment-free remission (TFR) and go months – even years without treatment. Others will be dependent upon treatment for their lifetime.
  8. Quality of life issues are widespread and more attention must be focused on addressing them.
  9. Learning about CML from reputable resources and becoming knowledgeable about the disease is imperative for anyone diagnosed.
  10. We aren’t “finished” with CML – we not only need curative research to continue, we need it to increase.

This list could go on for countless pages and not even begin to cover all the things our community deals with on a daily basis. You probably have a list of your own. It may seem overwhelming, but together we can bring greater awareness to these and other realities we face every day. To succeed, we must look beyond ourselves and our community and boldly speak up so that those who minimize the life with CML or know nothing about it will know the truth. Yes, great things have happened and will continue to happen for our community, but much work remains.

I hope you will join us in making a difference for anyone living with CML.

Greg

WCMLD

Leukaemia Man – not exceptional (follow up)

6 Comments

This is turning into a rather extraordinary day and I hope that you don’t mind me publishing a brief update. I hope that you’ve seen my previous post regarding the situation Khalid Younis finds himself; he is unable to access ponatinib – a drug that is essentially his last resort.

The media have picked the story up. I’ve just been interviewed for ITV Central News, that’ll be going out this evening and I’ll be doing a live interview on BBC WM Drivetime around 1715. Please tune in if you are able and spread the word on social media.

The story has also been covered by the Daily Mail and the Daily Mirror, links below:

Mirror – Dying dad denied ‘life-saving cancer drug’ by NHS in postcode scandal is told his case ‘not exceptional’

Mail – Dying father-of-four is denied life-saving cancer drug by the NHS in postcode lottery scandal that’s outraged doctors

We’re breaking ground here and bringing, what is essentially a tiny disease, to public consciousness. We can and will make a difference. Khalid and his family deserve our support. Please help.

Birmingham Mail story – Leukaemia Man – NOT EXCEPTIONAL!

2 Comments

This is possibly the most important post I’ve carried to date. It compounds all of our fears about our CML drugs and exposes NHS England bureaucracy as a cruel, unsympathetic, misguided fool. This is the story of a father-of-four, who lives in England, and has received the devastating news that he does not qualify for Ponatinib, a treatment freely available in Scotland and Wales. This drug is his last chance and he’s been told that his case is “not exceptional.” Thank you to the Birmingham Mail and to reporter Alison Stacey for covering this and for contacting me and asking for my comment.

This is not an isolated incident and I am in touch with another gentleman who is in a similar position who has been told that he’s not exceptional either, I’ll be writing about him next week.

This, in a city where we have one of the finest blood cancer charities in Europe, Cure Leukaemia, desperately raising money to save lives. Khalid attends the same hospital as me, the QE in Birmingham; I can only imagine their despair at not being able to give him the drugs that he needs.

And the response from NHS England: “NHS England and NICE will shortly be consulting on a proposed new system for commissioning cancer drugs…” SHORTLY!! Written by people who don’t realise the consequence of their actions – cancelled reviews, cancelled meetings and a new process that only exists as a blank sheet of paper. All this whilst people die. If Khalid lived in Scotland or Wales he’d be taking Potaninib right now; afforded another lifeline.

We’re putting a patient pack together right now to help you campaign but in the meantime share the blog post, share the original article and show your support for Khalid. NHS England have to hand the keys to the medicine cabinet over, this is not about extending lives, it’s about saving them – to refuse to do is a death sentence.

Kris Griffin

Click the headline to take you to the original article.

Kings Heath dad denied ‘wonder’ cancer drug and told his case is ‘not exceptional’

Father-of-four Khalid Younis, 43, does not qualify for Ponatinib because of postcode lottery

A dying Birmingham dad has been denied a potentially life-saving cancer drug by the NHS in a postcode lottery scandal – and told his case is ‘not exceptional’.

Father-of-four Khalid Younis, from Kings Heath, has received the devastating news that he does not qualify for Ponatinib, a treatment freely available in Scotland and Wales.

The new ‘wonder’ drug is the only treatment left for the 43-year-old who is battling Chronic Myleoid Leukaemia (CML), as his body has become resistant to all other medicines.

Former carpet fitter Khalid, a patient at Birmingham’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital, said: “They say I’m not exceptional, but talk to my Mum, talk to my kids, they’ll tell you I’m exceptional.

It seems crazy. I have even considered moving to Wales so that I can get the treatment, but I worry about putting my family through it.

We are in a very sad, vulnerable and stressful situation.

Khalid’s case comes just days after NHS England announced it is cutting 16 drugs from its Cancer Drugs Fund after overspending by £70 million.

For Khalid the postcode cancer lottery seems desperately unfair as living in England means his survival odds have been drastically reduced.

As he is unable to have a stem cell transplant due to a lung condition, the drug would have been his last shot at beating the leukaemia.

In a way it’s more painful to know that there’s something out there that could treat me, but I just can’t get Ponatinib,’’ said Khalid.

This is England, the most beautiful country in the world. They can spend millions on Wembley Stadium, but when it comes to a Dad’s cancer treatment there is not enough money.

I am truly blessed that I have my amazing family and friends around me. I worry that there must be people out there going through the same thing as me, but on their own.

Patient advocate Kris Griffin explained this in not an uncommon story for CML patients, as NHS England restricts the amount of drugs patients can access.

We are not talking about extending his life for a few months so he can prepare to say goodbye,” said Kris.

We talk about finding a cure for cancer and one comes along we say it is too expensive. It’s insane.

How is a man not ‘exceptionable’, when he has no other option? This could save his life, and to refuse him is inexcusable.

A spokesman for NHS England said: “We have every sympathy with anyone in this position.

NHS England and NICE will shortly be consulting on a proposed new system for commissioning cancer drugs. The new system will be designed to provide the NHS with a more systematic approach to getting the best price for cancer drugs, meaning more treatments can be made available, and give a greater focus on evaluation, leading to the best drugs progressing swiftly to routine commissioning.
21:00, 16 SEPTEMBER 2015
BY ALISON STACEY

Khalid Younis (Birmingham Mail)

Khalid Younis (Birmingham Mail)

Experts call for equal access to CML therapies in the UK

Leave a comment

A quick update, excellent article from the Pharma Times. Kris

Medical experts are slamming a decision by NHS cost regulators that restricts use of Ariad’s Iclusig in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukaemia in England while patients in Scotland and Wales get full access to the novel drug.

Iclusig (ponatinib) was cleared in Europe in 2013 as an orphan drug considered to offer a significant benefit to patients. However, it was not appraised by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence because of its small target population, leaving the decision on access with the Cancer Drugs Fund, which says it can only be given to patients with the rare T315I mutation, representing about 2%-20% of CML patients.

Results of a poll by the National Cancer Research Institute CML Working Group revealed that 83% of respondents support a change in CDF policy so that Iclusig is available to all appropriate patients in England in line with its approved indication, as the current disparity in access and use of treatments is failing patients.

“The CDF uses a different methodology to score therapies; by assessing the Median Total Drug Cost per Patient this effectively penalises therapies that help patients live longer,” said Mark Tanner, General Manager of ARIAD Pharma UK. “Given recent news about the restructuring of the CDF & NICE, we hope that NHS England will address this anomaly and quickly find a mechanism to allow patients in urgent need the same level of access as their neighbours in Scotland and Wales,” he added.

“Treatments should be available on an equal basis to all people with chronic phase CML across the UK; the decision should be medical, not geographical,” added Prof Mhairi Copland, Chair of NCRI CML Working Group and Professor of Translational Haematology, University of Glasgow, while Dragana Milojkovic, Department of Haematology, Imperial College School of Medicine Hammersmith Hospital, London, noted that “restricted use of therapies imposed by the CDF have seriously limited our ability to treat patients effectively, which is a barrier especially when treatments are used according to their full license elsewhere”.

by SELINA MCKEE

Read the original article here: www.pharmatimes.com/Article/15-08-25/Experts_call_for_equal_access_to_CML_therapies_in_the_UK.aspx#ixzz3jqZxTTre

Older Entries