ecancermedicalscience

Policy

Phosphoethanolamine and the danger of unproven drugs

17 Oct 2016
Noam Pondé, Evandro de Azambuja, Felipe Ades

The use of unproven forms of therapy in cancer treatment is very common. In Brazil, the distribution by researchers to patients of an investigational agent called phophoethanolamine (PHOS) has led to a widely publicized scientific scandal. PHOS is a precursor to components of the cell membrane, with some published pre-clinical studies suggesting cytotoxic activity in cancer cells. The willingness of courts and of legislators to guarantee access to PHOS in spite of the lack of any clinical data and against the recommendations of scientific and medical organisations underscores the risks that unproven agents pose to regulatory authorities, health care systems and patients, and bears resemblance to other cases such as the controversy surrounding the approval of zidovudine for AIDS treatment by the FDA.

Related Articles

Prajwal Dhakal, Christopher S Wichman, Shailesh Simkhada, Bunny J Pozehl, Radowan Elnair, Amulya Yellala, Kalika Mahato, Vijaya Raj Bhatt
Prasoon Mishra, Rahat Hadi, Ajeet Kumar Gandhi, Madhup Rastogi, Rohini Khurana, Ashish Singhal, Surendra Prasad Mishra, Anoop Srivastava, Avinav Bharati, Ashish Chandra Agarwal, Avinash Poojari, Vachaspati Kumar Mishra, Raunaq Puri, Akanksha Manral, Vikas Gupta, Bhoopendra Pratap Vishwaranjan, Saumyta Mishra
Navjot Kaur, Pritam Halder, Yuvaraj Krishnamoorthy, Gursimer Jeet, Garima Bhatt, Sathish Rajaa, Priyanka Sudhir, Rohit Sharma, Sarthak Tandon, Manish Gupta
María Valeria Jiménez-Báez, Sofía Concepción Thomas-Gómez, Gabriel González-Guerrero, David Rojano-Mejía, Eduardo Patricio Achurra-Godinez