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Bevacizumab, an anti–vascular endothelial growth factor treatment for which 1 biosimilar has been approved to date, has been shown to improve quality of life for patients with glioblastoma—and to delay disease progression—but has not prolonged patients’ overall survival. However, recent research suggests that using 4 older drugs together with bevacizumab could provide a more effective treatment protocol.
Bevacizumab, an anti—vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) treatment for which 1 biosimilar has been approved to date, has been shown to improve quality of life for patients with glioblastoma—and to delay disease progression—but has not prolonged patients’ overall survival.
However, recent research suggests that using 4 older drugs together with bevacizumab could provide a more effective treatment protocol. Writing in Medical Sciences, Richard E. Kast, MD, describes the current research supporting this regimen.
The drugs in question are apremilast, which treats psoriasis; dapsone, an antibiotic that treats Hansen disease; zonisamide, which treats seizures; and telmisartan, which treats hypertension.
Using these drugs in combination with bevacizumab is expected to lower intracranial pressure, allow for steroid-sparing treatment, enhance bevacizumab’s effects, provide synergy with temozolomide, exert anti-glioma effects, and have low risk of adverse events.
All of these drugs, writes Kast, are low-risk drugs when they are used individually, and are all relatively inexpensive and widely available. Phase 3 testing of the regimen will be necessary prior to general use, however.
Reference
Kast RE. Paths for improving bevacizumab available in 2018: the ADZT regimen for better glioblastoma treatment. Med Sci. 2018;6(4); 84. doi:10.3390/medsci6040084.