The ATOMIC-Meso Trial – Is there finally a breakthrough treatment for patients diagnosed with mesothelioma?
The results from the clinical trial led by Professor Peter Szlosarek at Queen Mary University of London have been described as a “breakthrough” in the treatment of mesothelioma, an asbestos-related cancer, but what is this new “wonder drug” and how does it work?
Mesothelioma is a cancer that usually develops in the lining of the lung. Cancer Research reports that there are approximately 2,700 new reported cases and over 2,400 deaths from mesothelioma in the UK every year. As specialist asbestos disease lawyers, we are all too familiar with the heartbreak, pain and suffering mesothelioma causes for individuals diagnosed and their families. There is no known cure for mesothelioma, and most patients are offered either chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or a combination of both, to slow down their disease progression and extend their life.
Therefore, when headlines broke on 15 February 2024 that a new “wonder drug” was a “breakthrough” in mesothelioma treatment, our interest was piqued.
How does it work?
Some 20 years ago, Professor Szlosarek discovered that mesothelioma cells lack a protein called ASS1, which means mesothelioma cells are not able to make an amino acid called arginine. Mesothelioma cells take arginine from the rest of the body and use it to grow.
Over the past two decades, Professor Szlosarek has developed a drug that depletes the arginine levels in the bloodstream. Reducing the levels of arginine in the bloodstream cuts off the supply of arginine to the mesothelioma cells, who cannot develop their own, and in turn thwarts the growth of these cancerous cells.
This drug is known as ADI-PEG20, or pegargiminase, and the impact of the drug was tested in the ATOMIC-Meso Trial across five countries from 2017 to 2021, with data analysis performed from March 2018 to June 2023.
The ATOMIC-Meso Trial
249 patients with pleural mesothelioma, averaging 70 years of age, took part in the trial. All 249 patients were given a combination of pemetrexed chemotherapy and either cisplatin or carboplatin chemotherapy every three weeks for up to six cycles. 125 of these patients also received additional weekly doses of pegargiminase, with the other 124 patients receiving additional weekly doses of a placebo drug.
The findings from the trial concluded that patients who received the new drug, combined with chemotherapy, had a median overall survival of 9.3 months. This was compared to those who received just chemotherapy and the placebo drug, who had a median overall survival of 7.7 months. In addition, four times the number of patients treated with pegargiminase and chemotherapy survived to 36 months, compared to those treated with the placebo drug and chemotherapy.
Although to some a median survival of an additional 1.6 months may seem low and inconsequential, it must be remembered that this is a significant amount of time for someone diagnosed with this incurable disease. It is also a significant breakthrough for mesothelioma treatment, with pegargiminase being the first drug of its kind to be successfully combined with chemotherapy in over 20 years.
One patient involved in the trial spoke to the Guardian and Cancer Research and said that he had previously been given a life expectancy of four months. Having received the new drug in the trial, he is still alive now, five years after his diagnosis.
In addition, the ATOMIC-Meso Trial reports that the drug has no new known side effects and side effects were similar between patients given pegargiminase and chemotherapy and patients given just chemotherapy and the placebo drug. In fact, the commonly reported side effects for those receiving pegargiminase with the chemotherapy were nausea, fatigue and constipation, compared to those receiving just the chemotherapy, who also reported nausea and fatigue, but also reported anorexia. This suggest that patients given pegargiminase with chemotherapy lost less weight than patients who received just chemotherapy.
Whilst this trial is certainly positive, it is pertinent to note that this trial was focussed on non-epithelioid pleural mesotheliomas and it is not yet known if this drug would be offered to patients diagnosed with epithelioid mesothelioma, or with non pleural mesothelioma.
Simon Bolton, a mesothelioma clinical nurse specialist, commented:
“It’s great to see mesothelioma trials with positive results as it gives our oncologists more ammunition with which to fight this disease.
I’m interested to learn where the drug will fit into treatment pathways now we have first line access to immunotherapy.
I hope the encouraging trial data from ATOMIC leads to the drug being made available soon to all via the NHS”.
The Future
It is hoped this drug will be available as a standard treatment option for patients diagnosed with mesothelioma in the near future. The discovery of this drug is also beneficial to patients diagnosed with other cancers with poor survival outcomes, where those cancer cells are also dependent on arginine.
Above all, this drug provides a viable successful further treatment option against a cancer that so aggressively takes lives, and it gives hope to people diagnosed with mesothelioma and their loved ones.
There is always uncertainty about when and whether new drugs like pegargiminase will be approved by NICE for use within the NHS. In the meantime, those diagnosed with mesothelioma should be encouraged to seek legal advice as it is often possible to access bespoke medical treatment (including drugs like pegargiminase) as part of a claim for compensation.
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