In April 2005 the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC) approved the listing of aprepitant as a pharmaceutical benefit. Aprepitant is available as an authority item for the management of nausea and vomiting associated with cytotoxic chemotherapy being used to treat malignancy, in combination with a 5-HT3 antagonist and dexamethasone, where any one of the following chemotherapy agents are to be administered:
- altretamine
- carmustine
- cisplatin
- cyclophosphamide at a dose of 1500 mg/m2/day or greater
- dacarbazine
- procarbazine or
- streptozocin.
Aprepitant was approved by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) for use in combination with other antiemetic agents for the prevention of acute and delayed nausea and vomiting associated with initial and repeat courses of highly emetogenic cancer chemotherapy, including high-dose cisplatin. This TGA approval is broad, yet the PBAC has restricted the use of aprepitant as a pharmaceutical benefit to certain cancer chemotherapy.
The only phase III trial data available for aprepitant are from patients receiving cisplatin chemotherapy. Presumably the PBAC selected drugs that had an emetogenic risk similar to that of cisplatin.1,2 If this were true, why were drugs such as dactinomycin, lomustine, mechlorethamine or pentostatin omitted?1
Combinations of chemotherapy increase the emetogenic potential.3 The National Comprehensive Cancer Network's 2005 antiemesis guidelines include the combination of doxorubicin or epirubicin with cyclophosphamide as having the same high emetogenic risk as cisplatin.2 Aprepitant is not available for this combination. How did the PBAC decide which cytotoxic drugs would qualify patients for subsidised treatment with aprepitant?
Jim Siderov
Senior Pharmacist
Cancer Services
Austin Health
Melbourne