We know that, Eribulin (see structure E7389)  is an investigational  anticancer drug. Eribulin was previously known as  E7389.  Eribulin is currently being investigated by Eisai  Co. for the third-line treatment of advanced breast cancer in  patients who have been previously treated with anthracyclines, taxanes  and capecitabine, as well as a variety of other  solid tumors, including non-small cell lung cancer, prostate cancer and  sarcoma.
Structurally, eribulin is a fully synthetic macrocyclic ketone analogue of the marine sponge  natural product halichondrin B a potent mitotic inhibitor with a unique mechanism of action found in the Halichondria  genus of sponges.  Eribulin is a mechanistically-unique inhibitor of microtubule  dynamics,  exerting its anticancer effects by triggering apoptosis of cancer cells  following prolonged mitotic blockage.  A new synthetic route to E7389 was published in 2009.
Now   research team at the University of Leeds and St James's Institute of  Oncology led an international trial of the new chemotherapy drug,  eribulin mesylate. As per the claim by the researchers, average survival was typically 25 per cent longer for women who took  eribulin mesylate.
In the EMBRACE trial, 762 patients with advanced breast cancer  received either eribulin or standard cancer treatment. All of the patients had already been heavily treated with  conventional therapies, but their disease had returned or spread to  other parts of the body.  Researchers concluded that those who took the new drug lived for 13.1 months, on average, compared  with 10.7 months for those on conventional chemotherapy. The drug was  also well-tolerated by most patients. Researchers hope that these results may establish eribulin as a new, effective treatment for  women with late-stage metastatic breast cancer (either single drug or in combination with other anticancer drug). The drug is not yet available for routine clinical treatment and is  awaiting regulatory approval in the European Union, the US and Japan.
Ref : http://www.asco.org/ASCOv2/Meetings/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=74&abstractID=50309
"Until now, there hasn't really been a standard treatment for women with such advanced breast cancer. For those women who have already received all of the recognised treatments, these are promising results, claims the lead investigator Professor Christopher Twelves...
Ref : http://www.asco.org/ASCOv2/Meetings/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=74&abstractID=50309
