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| | | ![]() Randomized Trial Shows Ganite (Gallium Nitrate Injection) Effective When Compared with a Leading Bisphosphonate in Patients with Cancer-Related Hypercalcemia BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. -- March 2, 2006 -- Genta Incorporated announced publication of a randomized, double- blind, Phase 2 trial that showed Ganite(R) (gallium nitrate injection) was highly effective when compared with Aredia(R) (pamidronate disodium; Novartis, Inc.) in hospitalized patients with cancer-related hypercalcemia. This condition, in which blood calcium levels may rise to immediately life- threatening levels, is the most common metabolic complication in patients with advanced cancer. Ganite is approved for marketing in the U.S. for symptomatic patients with cancer-related hypercalcemia that is resistant to hydration. Results of the trial were published in the current issue of The Cancer Journal and were communicated by the principal investigator, Dr. Frederique Cvitkovic from the Centre Rene Huguenin in St. Cloud, France, on behalf of a combined French and American study group. In this trial, 64 patients who had been hospitalized with hypercalcemia were randomly assigned to receive Ganite (200 mg/m2/day for 5 days) or one of two doses of Aredia (60 mg, or 90 mg if the blood calcium level was extremely elevated) plus placebo for 4 days. The primary endpoint of the study was to describe the proportion of patients who subsequently achieved a normal blood calcium level (normocalcemia). In this critically ill population, 22 of 32 patients (69%) treated with Ganite achieved normocalcemia compared with 18 of 32 patients (56%) treated with Aredia. (The difference was not statistically significant.) Patients with severe hypercalcemia did not respond better to 90 mg of pamidronate (3 of 6 patients; 50%) than to 60 mg of pamidronate (7 of 13; 54%), or compared with the response to Ganite in patients with severe hypercalcemia (15 of 21 patients; 71%). The response to pamidronate was lower in patients with epidermoid (squamous) cancers (33%) compared with 68% for Ganite. Both drugs were relatively well-tolerated. Clinically significant kidney toxicity, which has been associated with both drugs, was not observed in either treatment group. Hypophosphatemia (a low blood level of phosphorus) was observed in more than 80% of patients in both treatment groups. "Hypercalcemia represents the most extreme form of bone loss, in which the rate of calcium loss from bone overwhelms the kidney's ability to excrete it, leading to an acutely life-threatening condition," noted Dr. Raymond P. Warrell, Jr., Genta's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. "Highly potent agents are an essential aspect of current therapy. While bisphosphonates such as Aredia and Zometa(R) (zoledronate; Novartis, Inc.) are the most widely prescribed drugs for cancer-related bone loss, this trial suggests that Ganite is highly potent and may be at least as effective as one of the leading bisphosphonates. Going forward, we want to take advantage of this high potency to develop better treatments for skeletal dysfunction that afflict so many patients with advanced cancer." About Cancer-Related Hypercalcemia About Ganite In a double-blind clinical trial that compared Ganite with calcitonin (a commonly used anti-hypercalcemia drug), 50 patients were randomized to receive either Ganite at a dosage of 200 mg/m2/day for 5 days, or calcitonin at a dosage of 8 IU/kg four times per day for 5 days. Normalization of calcium (normocalcemia) was achieved in 75% of patients who received Ganite, compared with 27% of patients treated with calcitonin (P = 0.0016). Ganite appeared to be useful in treating hypercalcemia associated with many different types of cancer, irrespective of the initial severity of the disorder. Important Safety Information about Ganite(R) (gallium nitrate injection)
SOURCE: Genta Incorporated
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