Publication

Article

Oncology Nursing News

December 2010
Volume4
Issue 6

Oncology Community Facing Severe Drug Shortages

Author(s):

Hospitals, pharmacists, and physicians across the United States are reporting shortages of critical anticancer drugs, including carboplatin, cisplatin, dacarbazine, fludarabine, and cytarabine.

Hospitals, pharmacists, and physicians across the United States are reporting shortages of critical anticancer drugs. The FDA Website confirms that growing demand and manufacturing problems have resulted in an insufficient supply of common chemotherapy agents, including carboplatin, cisplatin, dacarbazine, fludarabine, and cytarabine.

The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) recently warned that the “oncology community is experiencing severe and worsening shortages of many critical therapies.” According to ASCO, doxorubicin, leucovorin, etoposide, nitrogen mustard, and vincristine are also in short supply. In a statement, ASCO president-elect Michael P. Link, MD, a pediatric oncologist, said these shortages have caused treatment delays for patients and hampered drug development research. Supplies of drugs used to mitigate treatment-related adverse effects or cancer pain are also insufficient to meet demand. The American Society of Health System Pharmacists (ASHP) added several supportive care agents to its drug shortage list in November, such as epoetin alfa, granisetron hydrochloride

injection, propofal, and morphine. To address the growing concern about the widespread drug shortages, which extend well beyond oncology, ASCO, ASHP, the American Society of Anesthesiologists, and the Institute for Safe Medication Practice (ISMP) convened a Drug Shortages Summit in early November. They invited representatives of health professional organizations, along with pharmaceutical manufacturers and suppliers, to discuss the issue. Recommendations that emerged from the summit include having the pharmaceutical supply chain notify providers sooner of impending shortages; giving drug manufacturers and the FDA more leeway in finding ways to deal with a drug shortage, such as extending a drug’s expiration date; and updating the definition of a “medically necessary” therapeutic, triggering more rapid

reporting of an impending shortage to the FDA. Most of the shortages are for drugs that are no longer patent protected.In published statements and interviews, representatives from the FDA have ascribed the lack of profitability for these generic drugs as the underlying cause of the shortages. Valerie Jensen, an associate director with the FDA’s drug shortage program, told MSNBC in October that manufacturing problems account for 40% of the shortages, 20% are due to production delays, and 20% have occurred because a manufacturer has stopped making the drug.

Related Videos
J. Bradley Elder, MD
Rimas V. Lukas, MD
Ruth M. O’Regan, MD
Steven H. Lin, MD, PhD
Anna Weiss, MD, associate professor, Department of Surgery, Oncology, associate professor, Cancer Center, University of Rochester Medicine
Haley M. Hill, PA-C, discusses the role of multidisciplinary management in NRG1-positive non–small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer.
Haley M. Hill, PA-C, discusses preliminary data for zenocutuzumab in NRG1 fusion–positive non–small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer.
Haley M. Hill, PA-C, discusses how physician assistants aid in treatment planning for NRG1-positive non–small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer.
Haley M. Hill, PA-C, discusses DNA vs RNA sequencing for genetic testing in non–small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer.
Haley M. Hill, PA-C, discusses current approaches and treatment challenges in NRG1-positive non–small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer.