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A Triumph in the War Against Cancer

Oncologist Brian Druker developed a new treatment for a deadly cancer, leading to a breakthrough that has transformed medicine

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  • By Terence Monmaney
  • Photographs by Robbie McClaran
  • Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
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Dr Druker with patient
"We're just seeing the start of matching patients with the right drug and seeing rapid improvements," says Dr. Brian Druker. (Robbie McClaran)

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Ladonna Lapossa at her gravesite

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Related Links

  • Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Treatment (PDQ®) – National Cancer Institute
  • The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society
  • The Lasker Foundation 2009 Awards
  • OHSU Knight Cancer Institute
  • Newcmldrug.com

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There’s a photograph of LaDonna Lopossa that helps tell the story. She’s all smiles, lying on the grass in a vaguely Betty Grable manner atop her own cemetery plot. The portrait was her husband’s idea—in their decades together it seems George, a.k.a. Mr. No Serious, never saw a gag he didn’t like—but it was LaDonna who came up with the cheesecake pose.

“OK,” George had said, “now take off your shirt.”

“George!”

Click.

On the one hand it’s a silly snapshot of a 60-year-old woman in a cardigan and sensible sandals in Winlock, Washington, one sunny day in May 2000. On the other hand it’s a glimpse of a possible future in which science has solved a fearsome problem. For this is how LaDonna and George faced her lethal cancer, not just whistling past the graveyard but clowning around in the middle of it.

Three months before, LaDonna was lying in a hospital bed in Olympia about to draw the curtain. There was a lot to let go of: four grown children, several grandkids, friends at church, a good marriage. (Never mind that as she lay there George was loudly telling the nurses he was going to hit the bars to find another wife, which she understood as his oddball effort to ease her mind.) She was ready to leave everyone and all those things and more because of the pain.

Her spleen, normally tucked beneath the lowest left rib and no bigger than a peach, was so engorged with white blood cells it was the size of a cantaloupe. She could hardly walk. Her skin was ghostly, her blood dangerously short of red cells. To breathe was a chore. Regular vomiting. Stabbing aches deep in her bones, where the marrow was frantically cranking out white cells, or leukocytes. Recurring fevers. And cold, strangely, unnervingly cold: she was freezing under the hospital blankets.

She was too old and too sick to undergo a bone marrow transplant, a grueling, highly risky treatment for her blood cancer, chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). She had already tried the other standard CML treatment, regular doses of the powerful compound interferon. But it so intensified her nausea, fevers and bone pain she abandoned the medication, come what may. With nothing left in their leukemia-fighting arsenal, the doctors were down to Dilaudid, a derivative of morphine, the narcotic painkiller. It was calming, it was comforting and for a patient in her condition it was, of course, the end.

George had given away most of her belongings and had reserved a U-Haul truck to cart his stuff to Southern California, where he would move in with one of their sons. The music for her funeral was chosen, including “Because I Have Been Given Much,” to be sung by the grandkids. When the hospital recommended moving LaDonna to a hospice, George took her home instead and followed her doctor’s advice to summon the children; Terry, Darren and Stephen flew up from the Los Angeles area, and Kelly drove over from her place in Winlock. One by one they went into the bedroom, sat at LaDonna’s bedside and said goodbye.

CML is one of the four main types of adult leukemia, but it is not common, striking 5,000 people in the United States each year. As a rule, it is fatal, with most patients dying within five years of being diagnosed. The first phase, a stealthy explosion of otherwise normal white blood cells, can last months or years; patients are often alerted to the condition by a routine blood test. If the disease goes unchecked, the white cells become increasingly abnormal, issuing helter-skelter from particular stem cells in bone marrow called myeloid cells; such leukocytes burst capillaries, overwhelm organs and suffocate tissues by crowding out oxygen-carrying red blood cells. The disease’s course is exceptionally predictable, physicians say, but its clockwork nature has also provided scientists with an opportunity: prying into the molecular gears and springs that propel CML, they understand it better than any other cancer.

Once, in early December 1999, George was driving to see LaDonna at the hospital in Olympia and stopped at a Safeway to buy a newspaper. Mr. No Serious is an avid reader, had even briefly run a bookstore with LaDonna, and he devoured the paper in her hospital room. As it happened, an experimental leukemia treatment was then making headlines. “Leukemia Pill Holds Promise,” the Associated Press reported, saying CML patients “had normal blood counts within a month of beginning treatment.” The study was then underway at the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) in Portland.

George hurried out of the hospital room to find LaDonna’s oncologist.

Target for Intervention

A steep, winding, tree-lined road leads to the main campus, which is perched near the summit of 574-foot-high Marquam Hill and on foggy days appears to float above the city like a castle in a fairy tale. Another route up to OHSU is the Portland aerial tram: two Swiss-made gondola cars of gleaming steel soar on cables high over Interstate 5, whizzing people back and forth between the west bank of the Willamette River and a hospital platform perched closer to the edge of a cliff than disembarking heart patients might wish it to be.

Brian Druker arrived at OHSU in 1993, years before the tram would be built and the hall-of-fame mural in the adjacent passageway would include a picture of him. Tall, as lanky and lightfooted as a greyhound, soft-spoken, Druker was 38 and had just spent nine years at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, part of Harvard Medical School, in Boston. “I saw cancer as being a tractable problem,” he recalled of the research path he chose after finishing medical school at the University of California, San Diego. “People were beginning to get some hints and some clues and it just seemed to me that in my lifetime it was likely to yield to science and discovery.”


There’s a photograph of LaDonna Lopossa that helps tell the story. She’s all smiles, lying on the grass in a vaguely Betty Grable manner atop her own cemetery plot. The portrait was her husband’s idea—in their decades together it seems George, a.k.a. Mr. No Serious, never saw a gag he didn’t like—but it was LaDonna who came up with the cheesecake pose.

“OK,” George had said, “now take off your shirt.”

“George!”

Click.

On the one hand it’s a silly snapshot of a 60-year-old woman in a cardigan and sensible sandals in Winlock, Washington, one sunny day in May 2000. On the other hand it’s a glimpse of a possible future in which science has solved a fearsome problem. For this is how LaDonna and George faced her lethal cancer, not just whistling past the graveyard but clowning around in the middle of it.

Three months before, LaDonna was lying in a hospital bed in Olympia about to draw the curtain. There was a lot to let go of: four grown children, several grandkids, friends at church, a good marriage. (Never mind that as she lay there George was loudly telling the nurses he was going to hit the bars to find another wife, which she understood as his oddball effort to ease her mind.) She was ready to leave everyone and all those things and more because of the pain.

Her spleen, normally tucked beneath the lowest left rib and no bigger than a peach, was so engorged with white blood cells it was the size of a cantaloupe. She could hardly walk. Her skin was ghostly, her blood dangerously short of red cells. To breathe was a chore. Regular vomiting. Stabbing aches deep in her bones, where the marrow was frantically cranking out white cells, or leukocytes. Recurring fevers. And cold, strangely, unnervingly cold: she was freezing under the hospital blankets.

She was too old and too sick to undergo a bone marrow transplant, a grueling, highly risky treatment for her blood cancer, chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). She had already tried the other standard CML treatment, regular doses of the powerful compound interferon. But it so intensified her nausea, fevers and bone pain she abandoned the medication, come what may. With nothing left in their leukemia-fighting arsenal, the doctors were down to Dilaudid, a derivative of morphine, the narcotic painkiller. It was calming, it was comforting and for a patient in her condition it was, of course, the end.

George had given away most of her belongings and had reserved a U-Haul truck to cart his stuff to Southern California, where he would move in with one of their sons. The music for her funeral was chosen, including “Because I Have Been Given Much,” to be sung by the grandkids. When the hospital recommended moving LaDonna to a hospice, George took her home instead and followed her doctor’s advice to summon the children; Terry, Darren and Stephen flew up from the Los Angeles area, and Kelly drove over from her place in Winlock. One by one they went into the bedroom, sat at LaDonna’s bedside and said goodbye.

CML is one of the four main types of adult leukemia, but it is not common, striking 5,000 people in the United States each year. As a rule, it is fatal, with most patients dying within five years of being diagnosed. The first phase, a stealthy explosion of otherwise normal white blood cells, can last months or years; patients are often alerted to the condition by a routine blood test. If the disease goes unchecked, the white cells become increasingly abnormal, issuing helter-skelter from particular stem cells in bone marrow called myeloid cells; such leukocytes burst capillaries, overwhelm organs and suffocate tissues by crowding out oxygen-carrying red blood cells. The disease’s course is exceptionally predictable, physicians say, but its clockwork nature has also provided scientists with an opportunity: prying into the molecular gears and springs that propel CML, they understand it better than any other cancer.

Once, in early December 1999, George was driving to see LaDonna at the hospital in Olympia and stopped at a Safeway to buy a newspaper. Mr. No Serious is an avid reader, had even briefly run a bookstore with LaDonna, and he devoured the paper in her hospital room. As it happened, an experimental leukemia treatment was then making headlines. “Leukemia Pill Holds Promise,” the Associated Press reported, saying CML patients “had normal blood counts within a month of beginning treatment.” The study was then underway at the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) in Portland.

George hurried out of the hospital room to find LaDonna’s oncologist.

Target for Intervention

A steep, winding, tree-lined road leads to the main campus, which is perched near the summit of 574-foot-high Marquam Hill and on foggy days appears to float above the city like a castle in a fairy tale. Another route up to OHSU is the Portland aerial tram: two Swiss-made gondola cars of gleaming steel soar on cables high over Interstate 5, whizzing people back and forth between the west bank of the Willamette River and a hospital platform perched closer to the edge of a cliff than disembarking heart patients might wish it to be.

Brian Druker arrived at OHSU in 1993, years before the tram would be built and the hall-of-fame mural in the adjacent passageway would include a picture of him. Tall, as lanky and lightfooted as a greyhound, soft-spoken, Druker was 38 and had just spent nine years at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, part of Harvard Medical School, in Boston. “I saw cancer as being a tractable problem,” he recalled of the research path he chose after finishing medical school at the University of California, San Diego. “People were beginning to get some hints and some clues and it just seemed to me that in my lifetime it was likely to yield to science and discovery.”

At Dana-Farber, Druker landed in a laboratory studying how a normal human cell gives rise to runaway growth—malignancy. Among other things, the lab focused on enzymes, proteins that change other molecules by breaking them down (gut enzymes, for example, help digest food) or linking them up (hair follicle enzymes construct silky keratin fibers). Enzymes also figure in chain reactions, with one enzyme activating another and so on, until some complex cellular feat is accomplished; thus a cell can control a process such as growth or division by initiating a single reaction, like tipping the first domino. Under the lab’s chief, Thomas Roberts, Druker mastered numerous techniques for tracking and measuring enzymes in tissue samples, eventually turning to one implicated in CML.

Working out the details of why this particular enzyme is the key to CML had involved hundreds of scientists around the world—research that would lead to several Nobel Prizes—but here’s basically where Druker started:

First, all CML patients have the renegade enzyme in their white blood cells.

Second, the enzyme itself is the product of a freakish gene, called BCR-ABL, formed during a single myeloid stem cell’s division and thereafter transmitted to billions of descendants: the tips of two chromosomes, those spindly structures that store DNA, actually swap places, causing separated genes called BCR and ABL to fuse (see illustration). The new mutant BCR-ABL gene sits on a peculiar chromosome discovered in 1960 by scientists at the University of Pennsylvania. This “Philadelphia chromosome,” visible through a microscope, is CML’s hallmark.

Third, the BCR-ABL enzyme is the evil twin of a normal enzyme that helps control the production of white blood cells. But like a switch stuck in the “on” position, the mutant spurs the wild proliferation that is leukemia.

You didn’t have to be a Harvard doctor to see that a single enzyme that causes a fatal leukemia was, as researchers say, an attractive target for intervention. And, indeed, scientists were then setting out to find or invent compounds that could block the BCR-ABL enzyme.

Druker and his Boston co-workers, using specially designed antibodies, developed a new way to measure the enzyme’s activity—a tool that would prove invaluable to evaluating potential CML treatments. A necktie-wearing physician among jean-clad PhDs, Druker was racing competitors at other research centers to find a drug that suppresses cancer by disabling a critical enzyme and spares healthy tissues in the bargain. By tradition, cancer treatments carpet-bombed the body with powerful drugs, killing healthy and cancer cells alike—“cytotoxic chemotherapy,” doctors call it. The alternative, targeted therapy, would fight cancer better with less collateral damage, or at least that was the notion that often kept Druker in the lab until 11 p.m.

Then things began to fall apart. “My marriage had broken down. I wasn’t what you would call a devoted husband. I was a devoted researcher and scientist and physician. And that took a toll.” (Druker and his wife split after two years of marriage and were later divorced.)

Still, with a score of published studies and a nifty enzyme-measuring technique to show for his efforts, Druker thought he was ready to move up the Harvard ladder from instructor to assistant professor. “I sat down with the head of medical oncology at Dana-Farber,” Druker recalled. “He looked over my résumé and said, ‘I just don’t think this work is going to go anywhere here.’” Translation: “I was told I had no future at Dana-Farber.”

“It was awful,” he recalled. “I was depressed. But it forced me to really say, Do I believe in myself? Am I going to make it, make a difference?”

Growing Concern

Asked to describe Druker’s approach, one scientist said it boiled down to “perseverance and stubbornness in not letting go of an idea.”

“I think intrinsically he’s a shy person,” said another. “But on this”—cancer therapy—“he’s like a crusader.”

“He takes everything that is complicated, shoves it in his mind and outputs the simplest possible interpretation and intervention.”

“When you ask a question, there’s silence in the room, almost uncomfortable silence, and you’re, like, did he even hear me? He thinks things through before giving an answer.”

“He lets the science do the talking.”

Druker grew up the youngest of four children in St. Paul, Minnesota, and attended public schools, excelling at math and science. His father was a chemist at 3M whose work on printing processes was patented. His mother was a homemaker who got involved in school-board politics and ran unsuccessfully for the state legislature. After graduating with a chemistry degree from UC San Diego, he stayed on, and in 1978, his first year in medical school, he wrote a 16-page paper hinting at a future he would help create. Written in longhand with blue ink on lined notebook paper and titled “Cancer Chemotherapy,” it concluded that, someday, when the action of cancer drugs is “understood in biochemical terms the field of cancer chemotherapy should make advancements far beyond the progress already made.”

After the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute gave him the bum’s rush, Druker marshaled new resolve. “When I moved here to Oregon, my goal was to identify a drug company that had a drug for CML and get that into the clinic,” he said.

He’d previously met Nick Lydon, a biochemist at the Swiss pharmaceutical firm Ciba-Geigy (which would merge with Sandoz in 1996 to form Novartis). Lydon had collaborated with Roberts, Druker’s former lab chief. “I called my friend Nick at Ciba-Geigy and he said, ‘We have what you’re looking for.’” It was called STI571. Company chemists had synthesized it and other compounds while searching for a new anti-inflammatory drug, but they had learned it could also block the activity of enzymes in a test tube. Still, they hadn’t quite decided what to do with the compound.

In August 1993, Druker received his first batch of liquid STI571 and another candidate compound from Switzerland. Using the enzyme-measuring tool he’d helped develop, he confirmed that STI571 strongly inhibited the BCR-ABL enzyme, which belongs to a class of enzymes known as tyrosine kinases; the other compound did so only weakly. He also poured minute amounts of STI571 into a tray of thimble-size containers that held fluid and live white blood cells derived from a CML patient. Druker had hoped the cells’ growth would slow or stop. Even better, the cells died. Moreover, a large amount of STI571 given to healthy cells in a dish did no harm. “Brian’s contribution was critical,” Lydon recalled, in convincing the company to “move in that direction.”

But, of course, the road to dashed hopes is paved with experimental drugs that looked terrific in a test tube but failed in human beings. Skeptics pointed out that hundreds of different types of tyrosine kinase enzymes are at work in the body, and, they added, wouldn’t a drug that blocked one also block many others and wreak physiological havoc? “There were many naysayers who argued that it would be impossible to develop specific protein kinase inhibitors” for treating cancer, Tony Hunter, a biochemist at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California, wrote in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Scientific ideas don’t take root like dandelion seeds wafted onto fertile ground. They need advocates, people who want to win. Druker plugged away, doing more experiments, such as inducing a form of CML in laboratory mice and subjecting them to STI571. It all but eliminated the animals’ disease. “I was putting in probably 60 to 80 hours a week,” recalled Druker, who in his scant free time competed in bicycle races, a sport that demands a high tolerance for pain and a sense of when to break out of the pack. “My life in those days was I’d work [in the lab], work out, eat and sleep.” What was driving him, he said, were CML patients who were dying.

By 1997, having published numerous studies with co-workers in Portland and Switzerland, Druker believed the compound was ready to be tried in human beings. Novartis disagreed. For one thing, when dogs had been given the drug in intravenous form, it tended to cause blood clots at the end of the catheter. Novartis chemists spent months reformulating the liquid drug as a pill. But when the researchers gave large doses to dogs, the animals showed signs of liver damage. Some company officials, Druker recalled, advised dropping the project altogether.

But the canine liver damage didn’t faze him; chemotherapy, after all, is destructive. “We knew how to give people toxic cancer drugs,” he said.

The next thing Druker did may not have been illegal, but it certainly wasn’t kosher. He bypassed Novartis and went straight to the Food and Drug Administration to see if he’d accumulated enough data to start a human trial. “I called up the toxicologist at the FDA and said, ‘Here’s the problem.’ And he said, ‘My goodness, you have a ton of data, we would probably accept this application.’” Druker then told Novartis what he’d done. “I got myself in some hot water because I’d gone behind their back.”

Finally, in June 1998, with FDA permission to proceed, Druker administered STI571 to a human being, a 68-year-old Oregon man with CML. “It was almost anticlimactic,” Druker recalled, “in that we’d been ready in November 1996 and here it was over a year and a half later.”

He had recruited two eminent oncologists to help run the clinical trial, Moshe Talpaz at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and Charles Sawyers at UCLA. All the CML patients enrolled in the three cities had undergone interferon therapy and either had failed to improve or had relapsed. None was eligible for a bone marrow transplant.

Gradually increasing the STI571 dosage, the physicians observed by around six months that astronomical white blood counts of nearly 100,000 cells per cubic millimeter were falling to less than 10,000, well within normal. Analysis of one of the first patients’ white blood cells found no signs of the Philadelphia chromosome, suggesting the leukemia had been stopped at the source. More impressive, whatever trace of the BCR-ABL gene remained had ceased copying itself. “That’s when we knew we had something the likes of which had never been seen before in cancer therapy,” Druker said.

As word spread on the Internet, other CML patients wanted in. Druker pressed Novartis to produce more of the drug. But Novartis wasn’t ready. The drug was difficult to make, Daniel Vasella, then the Novartis chief executive officer and now chairman of the board, would recall in his book about the drug, Magic Cancer Bullet. “Nor was [the drug] a high priority, given the small number of CML patients,” he added. Plus, proving that it was both safe and effective would require a substantial investment. “A severe side effect could develop in one out of 1,000 patients and that would be the end of the trial,” he wrote.

In September 1999, Druker got an e-mail from a 33-year-old CML patient in Montreal, Suzan McNamara. She’d been on interferon, which had suppressed her disease for nearly a year, but now it was roaring back, and she wanted to join an STI571 trial. “I was sick to the point where I could barely leave my house,” she recalled to me.

Druker phoned her the next day and said it would be months before she could enroll in a study—Novartis had not committed to producing more STI571. But, he added, the company might move more quickly if it heard directly from patients.

McNamara and a friend used an Internet site to create a petition requesting that the drug be made more widely available; thousands of CML patients endorsed it. She sent it to Vasella with a letter saying, “We have viewed with growing concern our belief...that the supply of the drug has not been sufficient to expand the trials as fast as the evidence to date would warrant.”

“The letter could not be ignored,” Vasella has said. The company increased STI571 production.

The honor of announcing the early clinical results fell to Druker. In New Orleans on December 3, 1999, he told an auditorium full of hematologists that all 31 patients in the study responded favorably to STI571, with the white blood cell counts of 30 falling to normal within a month. The pill’s side effects—upset stomachs, muscle cramps—were what oncologists term “mild to moderate.” Druker says he doesn’t remember the standing ovation.

The findings were “a molecular oncologist’s dream come true,” wrote Harold Varmus, who now heads the National Cancer Institute and was awarded a Nobel Prize for research that laid some of the groundwork for STI571’s success. The drug, he recalls in his 2009 book, The Art and Politics of Science, was “the best evidence to date that the most fundamental aspects of cancer research had dramatic benefits for patients with cancer.”

CNN, the New York Times, “Good Morning America” and the Associated Press covered the breakthrough cancer pill.

Wave of the Future

After LaDonna Lopossa and her children said their goodbyes in February 2000, she eked out a few more days and made it to an appointment at OHSU. LaDonna’s oncologist and George had managed to get her into the second phase of the STI571 trial, which would enroll some 500 new patients at a dozen medical centers worldwide. She shuffled into the clinic on George’s arm. “What have we gotten ourselves into?” one of the nurses said, meaning LaDonna’s death, which appeared imminent, would count as a black mark against the drug. Her white blood count exceeded 200,000, more than 20 times normal. “There were no two ways about it,” Druker said. “You looked at her and she was in trouble.”

They examined her and gave her an STI571 pill. She threw it up.

The next morning, George and LaDonna awoke in her sister’s apartment in Portland and George made LaDonna a banana milkshake. Later that day, the STI571 pill stayed down. And the next, and so on.

“Within three weeks her spleen was back to practically normal,” Druker said. “She was feeling great. White count had come down. A Lazarus-like effect. It was truly miraculous.”

It was in May of that same year that LaDonna and George visited the cemetery in Winlock to place flowers on her mother’s gravesite, which is next to the plot LaDonna had bought for herself. “I’m supposed to be in that grave,” she said to George.

“Well,” he said, “since you’re not, why don’t we take a picture?”

By the late winter of 2001, Druker and his collaborators had pooled much of their STI571 data: in roughly 95 percent of patients, white blood cell levels had returned to normal, and in 60 percent the Philadelphia chromosome was not detected. The company submitted the results with its new-drug application to the FDA, which it approved in two and a half months—to this day the fastest drug review in the agency’s history.

Ten years ago this month, the U.S. government announced that the drug, which Novartis named Gleevec in the North American market (Glivec in Europe), would be available to CML patients. It was a defining moment. The previous century of cancer treatments—intermittently successful, based on trial-and-error testing, almost always agonizing—would be known to experts as “before Gleevec.” From then on was “after Gleevec,” the era of targeted therapy. At a Washington, D.C. press conference on May 10, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Tommy Thompson, called the drug a “breakthrough” and “the wave of the future.” The then director of the National Cancer Institute, Richard Klausner, described it as “a picture of the future of cancer treatment.”

Today, Suzan McNamara would agree that future is good. When she first traveled to Portland in 2000 to take part in the Gleevec study, she recalled, “I went there with half my hair, and anorexic, and couldn’t even walk up a flight of stairs. And I came back in one and a half months 20 pounds heavier and full of life.” Her next steps were to attend McGill University, study leukemia therapies and earn a PhD in experimental medicine. Now 44, she lives in Montreal and works in Ottawa for Health Canada, a federal agency. Still on Gleevec, she runs several miles a few times a week. “I’d go more if I wasn’t so lazy,” she said. In January 2010 she wed her longtime boyfriend, Derek Tahamont, in Hawaii. “He stood by me through the whole illness and everything,” she said. “We decided to hop on a plane and get married on a beach, just the two of us. It was perfect.”

Gleevec has encouraged people to think cancer is not always a deadly invader that must be annihilated but a chronic ailment that can be managed, like diabetes. In follow-up studies led by Druker, some 90 percent of newly diagnosed CML patients who began taking Gleevec had survived five years. “I tell patients how optimistic I am about their future,” Druker said. “We’re projecting for Gleevec that average survival will be 30 years. Someone who’s diagnosed at 60 can live to 90, and die of something else.”

Back when LaDonna Lopossa was 60, she recalled, Druker said he would keep her alive until she was 70. Then she reached that milestone. “I meant when I turned 70,” he joked to her then.

LaDonna, now 71, and George, 68, live in Battle Ground, Washington, a rural town 24 miles north of OHSU, where LaDonna remains under Druker’s care. The Lopossas live in a bungalow in a state-subsidized senior-citizen housing complex across the street from a family that keeps hens in the yard and lets George grow herbs. A framed magazine ad for Gleevec featuring LaDonna hangs on a living room wall. Two portraits of Christ grace a dining room wall. George, who is quick to say he’s not religious—“nobody knows what Jesus looked like,” he quipped of LaDonna’s iconography—has his own den, where he watches “Family Guy.”

LaDonna volunteers at the North County Community Food Bank down the street, at the Mormon church she belongs to and, by telephone, she counsels people newly diagnosed with CML for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. One of her biggest challenges these days, she said, is convincing patients to keep taking Gleevec; they haven’t endured the symptoms of fulminating CML and some find the drug’s side effects annoying.

Gleevec held LaDonna’s CML at bay for seven years, at which time her disease became resistant to the drug. Fortunately, medical scientists and drug companies had developed two new CML drugs, each disabling the BCR-ABL enzyme in a different fashion and compensating for a type of Gleevec resistance. Sprycel didn’t help LaDonna, but Tasigna did—for about two years. Now she’s on her fourth targeted CML drug, bosutinib, which is still experimental. “Her leukemia is the best controlled it’s ever been since I have taken care of her in the past 11 years,” Druker said.

Personalized Oncology

Seated at the small round conference table in his small corner office high on Marquam Hill, Druker said he was still studying CML, hoping to understand how to eliminate every last mutant stem cell, and he was also trying to apply “the Gleevec paradigm” to other leukemias. A bright yellow bicycle-racing jersey worn and autographed by the Tour de France champ and cancer survivor Lance Armstrong hung framed on the wall. It was a clear day and the great vanilla ice-cream scoop of Mount St. Helens was visible out the window facing north and the storybook white triangle of Mount Hood could be seen through the window facing east. The guy who didn’t have the right stuff to be a Harvard assistant professor is today the director of OHSU’s Knight Cancer Institute, named after Phil Knight, the founder of Nike and a Portland native, and his wife, Penny, who in 2008 pledged $100 million to the facility. “Brian Druker is nothing short of a genius and a visionary,” Phil Knight said at the time.

The honors have poured in, including the field’s top U.S. prize, the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, which Druker shared in 2009 with Lydon and Sawyers. Of his many appearances in the news media none would change his life more than a story about him in People, “The Miracle Worker,” published in February 2001. The magazine had sent a reporter named Alexandra Hardy to interview the dragon-slaying physician at the hospital in the clouds. The two were married in 2002 and are parents to Holden, Julia and Claire. Said Druker: “I have the ability now to focus on family as a priority. I couldn’t have done that 10 or 15 years ago.”

To some observers, the Gleevec fable soon lost its luster. “‘Wonder Drug’ for Leukemia Suffers Setback,” the Wall Street Journal reported in 2002 once some patients became resistant to the drug or could not tolerate it. Also, it seemed researchers were slow to produce other drugs targeted to tame other cancers, calling the strategy’s promise into question. A Time reporter blogged in 2006 that Gleevec was a “Cinderella drug”—a glass slipper that fit a singular candidate. Sawyers said he got tired of researchers saying Gleevec was a one-off, a lucky shot.

The drug’s cost has been controversial since Day 1. A year’s supply in the United States now runs about $50,000, or around $140 per daily pill. That is twice the original cost, which Vasella had defended as “high” but also “fair,” because the drug gives patients a good quality of life and the company’s revenue underwrites research on other drugs. (Asked about the reasons for the price increase, a Novartis spokeswoman declined to comment.) In any event, a drug that Novartis balked at developing because the market was too small is now a blockbuster. In 2010, Gleevec generated $4.3 billion in worldwide sales—the company’s second-highest-grossing drug. To be sure, Novartis has provided free or discounted medication to low-income patients. In 2010, the company assisted some 5,000 U.S. patients by donating to them $130 million worth of Gleevec and Tasigna, also a Novartis drug.

But patients, doctors and others have long complained about Gleevec’s price. In her 2004 book, The Truth About the Drug Companies, Marcia Angell, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, suggested Novartis was “gouging” patients on Gleevec. Recently, physicians have reported that patients stopped taking Gleevec because they could not afford it, despite the company’s assistance program.

Druker, who said his lab has received Novartis research funding but neither he nor OHSU has ever earned Gleevec royalties, deplores the cost. “It should be an affordable price, which would be in the $6,000 to $8,000 a year range,” he told me. “The company would still have plenty of profits.” He went on, “Many cancer drugs are now priced well out of the realm of affordability. As a health care industry, we’re going to have to tackle and deal with that.”

There will be plenty to deal with: it appears Gleevec was not merely a lucky shot. Just the fact that scientists quickly designed new drugs to cope with Gleevec resistance shows they increasingly know what they’re doing, said Sawyers, now at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. He led a group that was the first to explain resistance and was involved in Sprycel’s development. “Why am I so optimistic?” he said. “We know the enemy and we know how to vanquish it.”

Indeed, several enzyme-targeted cancer therapies won FDA approval in Gleevec’s wake, including drugs against particular forms of lung cancer and pancreatic cancer. And researchers say they’re heartened by treatments well along in clinical trials. Some melanoma patients whose disease is caused by a known genetic mutation appear to benefit greatly from an experimental drug called PLX4032. Sawyers is studying a form of prostate cancer spurred by a mutant hormone receptor, and he said clinical tests of a drug (called MDV3100) targeted against it are “exciting.” One pharmaceutical-industry analysis estimates that drug companies are currently developing and testing nearly 300 targeted molecular cancer therapies à la Gleevec.

Arul Chinnaiyan, a research pathologist specializing in cancer at the University of Michigan Medical School, in Ann Arbor, is frank about Gleevec’s influence. “We’re trying to franchise its success,” he said of his attempts to apply the targeted-therapy approach to solid tumors, which are more complex than CML. Each type of solid tumor may be driven by multiple errant enzymes and receptors—protein structures that transmit chemical messages—and the variety of mutations might vary person to person. Chinnaiyan himself has discovered two different mutant gene fusions analogous to BCR-ABL that appear to drive many prostate cancers. “The thought is if we know these are the molecular lesions, we’ll be able to match the drug or combination of drugs appropriately,” Chinnaiyan said.

I got a sense of what he calls “personalized oncology” one day in a brew pub in Ann Arbor. Across the scarred wooden table eating a bacon cheeseburger and sipping ale was Jerry Mayfield, 62, a former Louisiana state trooper. Diagnosed with CML in 1999, Mayfield was told at the time by his hematologist that he had two to three years to live. Mayfield asked if there were experimental drugs to consider. The doctor said no. Mayfield checked the Internet, learned about STI571 and, having taught himself computer programming while manning the night desk at police headquarters in Monroe, created a Web site, newcmldrug.com, to inform other patients. If he’d listened to his hometown doctor, Mayfield said, “without question I would not be here today.”

He still runs his Web site, and these days lives in Bloomington, Illinois. He was in Ann Arbor to see Talpaz, who had collaborated on the initial Gleevec clinical trials in Houston but had moved to the University of Michigan. He has taken care of Mayfield for more than a decade, administering targeted therapies in succession as Mayfield became resistant or could no longer tolerate them: Gleevec, Sprycel, Tasigna, bosutinib and now ponatinib, yet another experimental kinase-blocking CML drug racing through clinical trials.

Mayfield is “a poster boy for CML therapy,” Talpaz told me. “He’s doing extremely well.”

Over the pub’s blaring music Mayfield said of his BCR-ABL gene, “I had the G250E mutation—have the G250E mutation—which is why I became resistant to Gleevec.”

His remark sounded like something out of a time machine programmed to years or decades from now, when people will nonchalantly talk about their deadly genetic mutations and the drugs that stymie them. It’s an image Druker often conjures. “In the not-too-distant future,” he wrote when accepting the Lasker-DeBakey Award, “clinicians will be able to thoroughly analyze individuals’ tumors for molecular defects and match each person with specific, effective therapies that will yield a durable response with minimal toxicity.”

Mayfield has never been treated by Druker but has consulted him. “I was sitting in my local oncologist’s office one day ten years ago, and my cellphone rang,” Mayfield said. “It was Dr. Druker. I’d sent him an e-mail. I was stunned. I told my oncologist, ‘It’s rude to answer this call but this is my hero.’ He’s such a kind and gentle and dedicated man, not the least bit arrogant. He has saved so many lives. Everybody in the country should know his name. He’s the kind of idol we should have, instead of sports stars.”

Mayfield’s Web site has an “appreciation album” dedicated to Druker, filled with tributes from CML patients. Snapshot after snapshot shows people smiling in bright sunlight—hiking, planting trees, drinking champagne—people who felt moved to say they owed him, well, everything. They submitted dozens of poems and limericks, such as this one by a patient named Jane Graham:

There once was a doctor named Brian
On whose research we all were relyin’
He knew we were ill,
So he made us a pill,
And now we’re not plannin’ on dyin.’

Contrary to Expectations

Druker met with LaDonna Lopossa in the examining room where he sees study patients every Thursday. George, who says LaDonna has an “unsinkable-Molly Brown quality,” had driven her down from Battle Ground for her checkup. She sat in a chair while Druker, wearing a loose-fitting dark blue suit, leaned against the edge of an examining table. “I wouldn’t be here without you,” LaDonna said (possibly for my benefit).

“Well, you’re here,” Druker said. “You’re doing well.”

“I’m, like, dancing-in-the-streets well.”

“Great. Any problems?”

“No. I just have a rash.”

“When did that start?”

“About ten weeks ago.”

He asked about the rash, and later I would leave the room so he could examine her.

“You still working at the food bank?” he asked.

“I’m doing one day a week.”

“How’s that going?”

“Terrific.”

“How’s your energy?”

“My energy is low. But my brain is active.”

“You’re just doing spectacularly, leukemia-wise.”

“I know it. I can feel it.”

“What else? Questions for me?”

“I’m going on a trip tomorrow.”

“To?”

“San Diego and Knott’s Berry Farm with all my grandkids.” She updated their progress, and Druker recited their ages, as if to check that he had the facts right. When he addresses scientists at professional conferences, he often shows photographs of LaDonna and her grandchildren. Contrary to all expectations, he says, she is getting to watch her great-grandchildren grow up.

“I have such a wonderful life,” LaDonna said, tearing up. “And I didn’t want it. I told my doctors, ‘Don’t do any more to me.’ ”

Dabbing her eyes with a tissue, she mentioned her first visit to the clinic, in 2000, when she’d barely made it through the door. “That was a long time ago,” she said to no one in particular.

Then, to Druker, she said, “But it’s gone fast, hasn’t it?”

“Hasn’t it?” he said.

Terence Monmaney first wrote for Smithsonian in 1985. He is the executive editor. Portland-based Robbie McClaran photographed his adopted hometown for the November 2010 issue.


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Comments (54)

Ponatinib is one of the medications currently under investigation for its ability to treat CML and ALL (via http://www.rxwiki.com/ponatinib). Is there any news on when this will hit the market?

Posted by dailyrx on December 13,2012 | 03:36 PM

Dr. Druker well deserves Nobel Prize! His work ushered the era of effective treatment of metastatic stage IV melanoma, for example. For 40 years no one knew how to effectively combat this disease. It killed a lot of young people, including Bob Marley. PLX4032 (aka vemurafenib, trade name Zelboraf) is now FDA-approved. GSK prepares even better stuff- dabrafenib+tamatenib (BRAF+MEK inhibitor combo). Now the research in targeted therapy is exploding, and Dr. Druker ushered this watershed!

Posted by Gregory Pribush on October 24,2012 | 07:40 AM

this was very well writen. it's very thourgh amd keep writing stuff like this i enjoy reading it.

Posted by bryan wines on May 22,2012 | 02:16 PM

lovely

Posted by jneppz on May 2,2012 | 01:06 PM

Dude you a boss thanks man you awsomes

Posted by Munoz on May 2,2012 | 01:05 PM

Dr,

My mother was diagnosed with lukemia 11 years ago. she had from what i can understand two types, of the blood and of the bone marrow. they doctors here in spain managed to cure her of the blood but she has been on gleevec to treet the bone marrow for the past 11 years. in the past year she has been suffering from problems, fatuige, water retention, and she has been told after blood tests that she is very aneemic. they started giving her injections and pills to balkance her iron deficiency out but in the end they have found out that it is the gleevec that is causing the problem. in the last week they have taken her off gleevec and she has started taking another medication. as a result it has knocked her for 6 and she can barley walk around . they had to give her an emergency blood transfusion two days ago and it has made her worse. she is suffering from vomiting and nausea, and is constantly sleeping or out of breath. she has no apitite at all and no energy. I was suprised that they did not keep her in at the hospital to monitor her after the transfusion but i suppose due to all the doctors and nursing cuts here in spain, she would just be filling up another bed. i am truly conserned about her. do you have any suggestions as to how she sould prosceed and is what she is going through normal after a medication change and transfusion ? i would very much apreciate your advice.
many many many thanks,

Frank from spain, mallorca

Posted by frank on January 21,2012 | 01:40 PM

It is truely amazing how Gleevec came to be. Thank You Dr. Drunker and all the other doctors who put forth the effort to bring this to us. My husband was dx Sept 17 2003 intially statred gleevec for two years then he became resisant. He actually particapted in first phase trials for sprycel which actually just concluded a couple months ago. What a blessing for us to have this drug and several more if needed.

Posted by Tammy on October 13,2011 | 01:30 PM

I was so excited to read this article a friend told me about it. It was nice to see the person who came up with this drug. Praise the Lord Dr. Druker found this and he wanted to help others. So glad he he didn't give up. I was just diagnosed with CML August 15, 2011. Praise the Lord I don't have to go through the agony so many others have endured. What a mighty God we serve!! :)

Posted by Angie Burns on September 24,2011 | 10:42 AM

I have Hemochromatosis for over 20 yrs & was recently found to be in early stage of CLL which was confirmed by 2 blood tests. I also am slightly Anemic. I am 81 yrs young and in general good health. If there are any test programs I would be interested.I am presently being monitored at Sloan Kettering

ThANK YOU.

Posted by susan miller on August 6,2011 | 03:12 PM

I was diagnosed with a very rare form of CML after a routine blood test in August 2005. The difference versus regular CML is that my mutated gene is 5;12 and not 9;22. I was blessed to have been offered Gleevec through M D Anderson, Dr. Susan O'Brien and Lizzy Pavel PA and I'm in a testing protocol for my rare form of CML like disease. To make a long story short, I've been in complete remission for 6 years since taking Gleevec in November 2005. I thank God first, and al the researchers and MD's that made this targeted cancer drug successful and available. I hopeful that by being in a testing protocol that the drug will be available to anyone who needs it. Gleevec is still not FDA approved for my disease, therefore not available through Medicare D. The only way I got the Gleevec in 2006 was through a company retirement secondary benefit drug program. I got the Gleevec to in November 2005 and then our wonderful government took it away me in early 2006 when Medicare D stared. I have only contempt for our wonderful Medicare D program. After all, the only reason to have medical insurance like all insurance, is to cover the very serious situation. After paying into system at max. Level for 40 plus years, the medicare drug wasn't,t there when I needed it!!!

Gleevec worked for me and I continue to monitor blood and bone marrow once a year at M D Anderson in Houston.

When I hear about previous treatments for this blood disorder, I, so blessed to have Gleevec. Thanks be to God, I'm truly grateful!

Posted by Charles Hannah on July 14,2011 | 05:00 PM

After reading this wonderful article, Dr Brian Druker is my hero! Last month my dear brother, William E. Barnett of Williamsburg, VA was diagnosed with CML! Thank goodness for Dr Druker's research to discover the "miracle drug" Gleevac! In 1 1/2 months he is back to work and doing great! There are no words but to say "Thank You, Thank you!" over and over again.....

Bud's sister in California

Posted by Cindy R. Jagger on July 5,2011 | 09:01 PM

Would this drug help ALL patients?

Posted by Tina McAninch on July 5,2011 | 10:09 AM

Cancer is one of the most typical diseases in the Western countries. Its seriousness is seen in many countries where as many as every third person dies of it, and it is the second most common cause of death immediately after the cardiovascular diseases. Especially cancer of the lungs has become very common, and for example in the United States, it takes more victims than any other type of cancer.

Posted by telson on June 27,2011 | 12:47 AM

My Dad is 72 and is currently going thru chemo for AML..can this drug help him?
Scott

Posted by Scott on June 22,2011 | 01:35 PM

Thank you, Rick Weinstein, for writing in. I am not familiar with the medical literature on CLL and would not presume to offer medical advice. A list of clinical trials tracked by the National Institutes of Health can be found at http://clinicaltrials.gov/
Best wishes,
Terence Monmaney

Posted by Terence Monmaney on June 15,2011 | 01:08 PM

My story is I was diagnosed in Mar 2011 with CLL and asymptomatic at that. My WBC has risen from 18,000 in Mar to 25,000 last week. My situation is not desperate like many CML cases. However, I feel like a sitting duck waiting for the blast. Are there any targeted therapies in the works for CLL? I imagine there must be since there are many more cases of CLL than CML, not to diminish in any way, the impact on every person who receives a leukemia diagnosis.

Posted by Rick Weinstein on June 6,2011 | 11:26 AM

Dr. Druker,
I was diagnosed with DFSP on my scalp, as you probably know it has a low rate of metasis in most case, but is very debilitating at the site. Many people have gone through disfiguring surgeries and have experienced chronic pain due to the surgery. I was told of gleevec by one of my doctors and told my surgeon Dr. Valencia Thomas at MD Anderson I wanted to try it before surgery. They all agreed, and I was on it for only close to four months!!They removed the site all the way down to the skull, NO DFSP in the deep tissue or anywhere in the entire area!! Thanks to God first and second to you and your hard work and discovery of Gleevec. You have a reason to smile 24 hours a day because YOU have made a difference in the lives of so many others. Dr. Brian Druker, thank you.

Lisa Salinas-Gruver
Austin, Texas

Posted by Lisa Salinas-Gruver on May 17,2011 | 10:59 PM

Crystal - The public has hardly been misled. Rather, they are being educated. Gleevec and similar medications are not taken for the short term, but for many years. Consider for example, myself who has had CML for almost 20 years. During that time I've taken 3 drugs to treat the disease, of which Gleevec was only one; however the others were/are of similar cost. So far my medication has cost almost $1,400,000, give or take a few. Since I am only 50 and in very good health, I hope to live a long time yet, during which time Novartis stands to make a whole lot more. Still think it's fair? Obviously R&D takes money, and yes, the shareholders need their part.

And Crystal, the word is "gouge" as opposed to "gauge" - a whole other meaning. And yes, Novartis is gouging.

That being said, my gratitude to Brian Drucker is imossible to measure, A thousand thank yous could never be enough.

Posted by Anita Rowland on May 12,2011 | 02:41 PM

Diagnosed with CML in August 2006 and started Gleevec early October 2006. Feared I would not live to turn 60. The grandchildren's eyes really got big when they saw the cloud of smoke from blowing out 60 candles in April 2007. Have been an avid "fan" of Dr. Druker's ever since. I have a brother in Battle Ground, WA and a sister in Seattle. Next trip to the Pacific Northwest will include, hopefully, an opportunity to shake Dr. Druker's hand and get a picture with him! Yes, he is my hero! A special Thank You to his wife and children; 60-80 hrs a week isn't much fun for those at home. His accomplishments are a blessing to me every day.

Posted by Jennie on May 10,2011 | 12:25 AM

I thank God and Dr. Druker for saving my life. My story is very similar to LaDonna Lopossa's. After being single and serving the Lord for 28 years, I was just planning on getting married to a wonderful man when I was diagnosed with CML and given 5 years to live, if I survived the bone marrow transplant... I was not eligible for the experimental trials at that time (year 2000). We decided to elope anyway! As it turned out, there was no bone marrow match for me, so that was out of the question. I was put on interferon. Just like LaDonna's story, the pain and side effects were so horrendous, I just stopped taking it, "come what may." Thankfully, miraculously after that, I was called to participate in the drug trials. That was ten years ago and I am still alive and happily married. Thank You, Lord, and God bless Dr. Druker and his family.

Posted by Judy Grenz on May 10,2011 | 11:50 AM

THANK YOU VERY MUCH Dr. Druker,you saved my life!!! I started treatment with Gleevec 10 years ago, 1 month before FDA approval. My CML dignosis was back in 1995. I went to OHSU to be treated and I met a wonderful team that gave me all its support to go on in this battle again this horrible disease. GOD BLESS ALL OF THEM!!

Posted by Alex on May 9,2011 | 02:35 PM

I just read your article on Dr.Drucker and Gleevec with great interest because I was diagnosed with a rare cancer called dermatofibrosarcoma (DFSP) last summer. This rare cancer was only able to be treated by surgery until gleevec. If my cancer comes back I have that option if they can't operate again. Gleevec may someday save my arm or even my life. I can't thank the good Dr. enough for his work. The mutation in DFSP is a chromesone translocation(17,22). Angelina Wilson
Douglas,MA

Posted by Angelina Wilson on May 8,2011 | 01:44 PM

LaDonna Lopossa is my mother! There are few words for what this Drug and specifically Dr. Druker has meant to our family. The experience of having a doctor tell me that my mother would die was my worst nightmare. To then have Dr. Druker say that she may live gave me hope and to then have him say,just two weeks later, that she was getting well was my greatest joy. I am having brunch with her today on a Mother's Day that might not have been. It was certainly a miracle for us. Thank you for your kind thoughts and words.

To John Nienstedt: Smithsonian is an academic magazine. If you find the articles to lengthy, perhaps you should read People Magazine. I will share with my mom the Betty Grable comparison. I think she will love that.

Posted by Kelly Schaefer on May 8,2011 | 10:44 AM

LaDonna Lopossa is my granny! Dr. Druker REALLY is our hero. I was 11 years old when she was diagnosed and didn't really understand anything beyond "Grandma is very sick." In the years since, I've realized just how incredibly sick she was and how miraculous her remission is thanks to Dr. Druker. I love her so much and I am ever mindful that because of him, my granny got to be at my graduation, play matchmaker and set me up with the man that is now my husband, and meet our two beautiful babies. :)

Posted by Julia Bennett on May 7,2011 | 01:38 AM

Thank you for the well written story and thank you to Dr. D for saving my life and so many others' lives.

When I was diagnosed, I wanted to delay treatment because I had a trip planned and my doctor didn't want me to travel with the possbility of serious unknown side effects after starting Gleevec. So I proposed waiting( even though my white blood cells were approaching the stratosphere). Being sarcastic I said, What; am I going to die if I don't start treatment?" He said, "yes." That was four years ago and thanks to Gleevec and the second , third and fourth generation drugs, I have a pretty normal life. Most importantly, I have life.

I agree with the other person who posted- Where is the movie?

Posted by Chi Neal on May 6,2011 | 12:52 PM

I was diagnosed in November, 2006 and was immediatley put on Gleevec. I'm in total remission and have been since about 3 months after my first dose. I'm embarassed to say that I didn't know the history of how this drug came about but I do know. I'm sure Dr. Druker receives daily thank you's and here it mine.

As to the cost of the drug - I was very fortunate to have friends that knew how to work the patient assistant program at Novartis. One friend that worked for a doctors office actually backed the Novartis drug rep in a corner and would let him leave until he had made the contacts we needed to get the assistance. Norvatis is very generous with their program but my biggest fear is that someday that generosity will stop.

Thank you Dr. Druker and Norvatis for your great contributions.

Posted by Liz Veazey on May 5,2011 | 11:12 AM

Terence, thank you for your story. Dr. Druker is our hero also. My husband Tim has GIST, with huge metastases in his liver. Because of Gleevec Tim is alive today and those tumors are now all calcified and hopefully dead tumors. He has been on Gleevec 6 1/2 years, feels great, looks great, and is living a normal life. Dr Druker is in our prayers every day and every night.

Posted by Gail Mansfield on May 4,2011 | 11:12 PM

After suffering a series of 3 strokes, my father was finally diagnosed with a form of blood cancer called essential thrombocytosis about 6 years ago. Since then, like some patients with CMS, he has been treated using hydroxyurea. Although platelet count seems to be well controlled, he continues to have "spells" (passes out) from time to time, and I am aware that his condition could evolve into acute myeloid leukemia with long-term use of hydroxyurea. After reading the Smithsonian article about Dr. Brian Drucker, I was wondering if there was any new therapy that might be better for my father's condition.

Posted by Jude on May 4,2011 | 07:55 AM

We would also like to thank Dr Druker and the teams involved. My daughter was 13yo at her dx 18 months ago, she is still heading towards all the zeros but doing a whole lot better than her unexplained illness 18.1 months ago. I do fear for the longer term for her, not only from the dx side but also what the drug may do in the longer term - because she is so young. Wish I had complete answers about the future. Nobody has a crystal ball though, take each day as it comes :-)
We are so completely happy she is still with us, and living life relatively normally again, thank you - all.

Posted by S Smith on May 3,2011 | 10:41 AM

I'm a new victim of CML. I discovered my condition 2 months ago, and started Glivec with spectacular response. I read the article. The least I can say is that this saga should be made into a movie. THANK YOU Dr. Brian Druker for saving so many lives including mine. God bless you.

Posted by AHMED ELSADR on May 1,2011 | 04:59 AM

Is there any such magic pill for AML? Any information will be helpful.

Posted by Sheila on April 29,2011 | 02:12 AM

The article did a good job in informing the genearal public how things are done in R&D(research and development) world. However, as a pharma insider, I have to pooint out this is not a complete picture. The author implies the high price is "gauging' the patients. He failed to give some hard facts, including it takes on average 12 years and $1.2 billion to put a drug through. The patent life of 20 years starts from when a molecule is registered right after it's synthesized. That gives only 8 years of protected life by the time it's approved, if it's approved at all. The matter of facts is, >99% of molecules would not even make to clinical trial. They are killed at various stage for various reasons, mostly due to issues in safety, secondly efficacy. For those made to market, <5% will become a blockbuster like Gleevec, with vast majority will not make pay for the development cost. Companies must use the revenue from a few successful products to underwrite the entire R&D. With increasingly stringent political environment, the cost of drug development is skyrocketting. The bar set by FDA to proof a drug worth marketing is incredibly high. Using one analogy, by today's regulatory standard of drug safety, aspirin will not be approved!
I hope the magazine encourages their writers to provide a balanced view, instead of misleading the public.

Posted by Crystal on April 29,2011 | 04:11 PM

Terrance, I want to say how beautifully this story is written. The opening graphs are especially artful. Well done and thank you.

Posted by Kathy Price-Robinson on April 27,2011 | 08:34 PM

My 9 year old son was diagnosed with CML 3 years ago. He has been taking Gleevec since he was diagnosed and we flew across the country to meet Dr. Druker. In the world where people idolize performers and sports players, Dr. Druker is my hero.

Posted by Julie on April 27,2011 | 03:07 PM

My dear sister in law was a part of that study. Thank you Dr. Druker and thank you God that she is still with us. God bless you!

Posted by Cheryl Pippin on April 27,2011 | 03:05 PM

I was diagnosed with CML in January of 2002 and Gleevec and Dr. Druker's work has allowed me to live a productive life since my diagnosis. I will be celebrating 10 years on Gleevec in less than a year! Only one bump in the road and that took an increase in the dosage. I don't have all the side effects that I read about from other patients and if I did it is a good trade-off!

Posted by Richard Jones on April 27,2011 | 08:57 AM

John, "get to the point quicker?" Are you serious? If you had CML, you would not be so quick to judge the article. Without Gleevec, a person who has CML or in fact GIST, had a life sentence of 5 years. Gleevec took the 5 year mark away and made it disappear. This is why Gleevec is called "The Magic Bullet." I am glad that the article shows the human side of what transpired. It makes it a more personalized story, not just medical.

The history behind the development IS personal and humanistic.

Sorry you viewed this article that way.

I am now an 8 year survivor!

Thank you, Dr. Druker, for keeping me around to witness both my sons getting married....THANK YOU!

Hugs,
Susan

Posted by Susan Rosenthal on April 26,2011 | 08:16 PM

I was diagnosed with CML on 10/15/07. You never forget dates like that. I can relate to the stories of enlarged spleen, pain and fatigue before treatment. After several months on hydroxyurea and recovery from kidney surgery, I started on Gleevec on 1/4/08. I have been in remission with undetectable cancer levels since November of 2009. There are unconfortable side effects, but I would not go off the drug for the world. It has given me back my life! People think I am crazy when I say I am the luckiest guy I know, but I am; I got just the right cancer that had an oral chemo pill for treatment, and it works. Thank you Dr. Druker!

Posted by Steve Main on April 26,2011 | 06:02 PM

Mark Lavender's comment asks why the story doesn't mention GIST, or gastrointestinal stromal tumor, an afflictionn also mentioned in Terri Morgan's comment. Good question. The answer is that the story is already rather long and complex, and bringing in another genetically complicated disease risked taxing the reader's patience. But Gleevec does play an important role in controlling GIST (and several other afflictions besides CML), and, significantly, Brian Druker was involved in the early research on the drug's action against GIST. Thank you, readers, for your feedback and close reading of the story.

Posted by Terence Monmaney on April 25,2011 | 04:21 PM

John,
On the other side of the coin, I found all the personal details very humanizing and they made for me a much more pleasurable reading experience. I find strictly clinical reports not only difficult to enjoy, but also more easily forgotten. I know I will remember Dr. Druker and his accomplishments for a very long time.

Posted by Carol Ross on April 25,2011 | 02:07 PM

I was diagnosed with GIST (gastrointestinal stromal tumor), a rare form of cancer, 4 1/2 years ago and am taking Gleevec. I know how much this drug means to CLM and GIST patients who live wth hope instead of a death sentence. We owe our lives to Dr. Druker and hope other doctors and scientists are as successful and determined in finding a cure for CLM, GIST, and the other cancers. I found the entire article very interesting but wish more had been mentioned about and Gleevec and GIST earlier in the article. GIST can be hard to diagnose and this article could have helped spread information regarding a little-known cancer to doctors and patients.

Posted by Bonnie Emerson on April 25,2011 | 01:49 PM

The drug Gleevec saved my brother Geoffrey's life. He is a 17 year survivor. He was originally part of a clinical trial at MD Anderson when the drug was called STI571 I had the pleasure of meeting Dr. Druker when he visited South Florida and expressed my appreciation and gratitude.

Posted by GORDON LATZ on April 25,2011 | 10:54 AM

I have CML and I want to say thank you Dr. Druker for believing in yourself.

Posted by Robin Keeler on April 24,2011 | 04:07 PM

This is indeed a miracle. My father-in-law died of this disease, and I was surprised that this treatment has been around this long - and more surprised that he wasn't given the drug. It may have been that he was 86 and on Medicare. Seems to me that if they know what gene is causing it, that there might be some sort of gene therapy that can be done to "turn it off" before it gets turned on. If at least one parent has the gene, then their child has a higher chance of having it as well.

As a family member of someone with a genetic disorder related to tyrosine enzymes (specifically PKU, and it's lack of production of Phenalyanine Hydroxylase), I'm anxious to hear of any news in the direction of enzyme therapy.

Posted by Debi on April 24,2011 | 12:28 PM

Gleevec is a very important drug in the fight against GIST -Gastro Intestinal Stromal Tumour. Why no mention of this?

Posted by Mark Lavender on April 24,2011 | 03:01 AM

Gleevec is also used to treat a fairly rare form of cancer, called GIST (Gastro-Intestinal Stroma Tumor). Before it was introduced, the mortality rate for GIST sufferers was 65% within 5 years. Now there is no telling how long a patient may live - and live a normal life; working, gardening, raising families and everything else.

I have GIST. I am extremely grateful for the work that enabled my surgeon and oncologist to tell me that while I had cancer, my chances of dying of it quickly were very improbable.

Posted by Terri Morgan on April 23,2011 | 04:01 PM

As a CML patient I'd like to thank you for focusing on the human side in your story. There are hundreds of articles on the technical side, but there has been far too little focus on the personal elements of Dr. Druker's work and on the patients who contributed so much to others by participation in clinical trials and sharing information through the Internet and other forums.

While the "miracle cancer pill" aspect of this story gets a lot of attention, meeting the needs of patients who are now living with a lifetime of drug therapy, side effects and costs does not. Fortunately there are now organizations to support patients who are living with CML instead of dying.

In the US, there is the National CML Society. In Canada, there is the CML Society of Canada. Support groups representing 54 additional countries can be found at the CML Advocates Network website. Patients are newly diagnosed with CML every day, and like all cancer patients, need support and resources to move forward and make the most of each and every day. Thank you again for sharing our story.

Posted by Pat Elliott on April 23,2011 | 02:19 PM

What a wonderful story. My son who is 30 has cancer, he has a neruo endocrine tumor. This is a rare cancer we have been told, I hope that they will soon have a cure for this type of cancer also.

Posted by Mary Jenkins on April 22,2011 | 08:50 PM

I have CML and have taken Gleevec for 1.5 years. There is nothing quite as frightening as a cancer diagnosis, and nothing quite as amazing as what Dr Druker has done to address it for CML patients worldwide.
His determination to develop this drug despite many challenges is greatly appreciated.
Dr. Druker even took a phone call from my oncologist when I had some mysterious side effects (later proven unrelated to Gleevec).
He is a hero. He has potentially changed the way all cancer will be addressed in the future.
Katherine Pastre
50 year old mother of three, diagnosed 9/22/10.

Posted by Katherine Pastre on April 22,2011 | 12:28 PM

It is notable story of how patient has been treated by the doctor with his full faith and broad-mindedness.

Posted by barcode label software on April 21,2011 | 02:07 AM

The treatment is indeed miraculous - my concern is about the cost of treatment which even for patients in the U.S. is very high. Unless he belongs to the top 1% of the super rich what chance does an ordinary patient in India have to be treated with the wonder drug ?

This is NOT criticism but an observation of the way things are in my country as far as critical disease medical treatment is concerned.

Posted by Ashok Rajadhyaksha - Mumbai (India) on April 21,2011 | 01:28 AM

I am a 63 year old woman dx with cml 8-1-2007
I was put on gleevac immediately within 1 month my bw was fine.
I was told cml was rare and usually affected middle age people.I am on a cml discussion board
Over the last few months so many young people have come to our site. From ages 19-37, Most of them have small children and work full time,or they just finished college,some of them just got engaged or only been married a short while.
Does anybody have any idea why these young people have been afflicted with this disease.There is no cure and they have to live with cml the rest of their lives.We adapt to our cml it's not easy,but these are such young people just starting their lives.It's heartbreaking they are so scared.

Posted by Billie Murawski on April 21,2011 | 12:28 AM

I wish these stories would get to the point quicker. "A Triumph in the War Against Cancer" is a provocative title. I want to read and know the facts asap. But first I have to read about a (Betty Grable look alike sitting on a grave, blab, blab, blab). (The size of her spleen, blab, blab, blab.) (He reserves a U-haul to haul away her clothers, blab, blab, blab.

That type of story approach is great for a novel, but for serious articles promising critical information I say gets to the point. I'm very happy that the woman survived. I really am, but it's the what and how of the article that matters most in this story. After that if you want to tell us the human interest, then fine.

Posted by John Nienstedt on April 21,2011 | 07:31 PM

What a remarkable story for his patients as well as dogged perseverance on Dr. Drukers part. Goes to show us all that maybe conventional treatments as well as the ones who provide them can be dramatically improved with an open minded approach.

Posted by Richard Scaramelli on April 21,2011 | 05:32 PM



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