Reuters Health Information: New drugs from Bristol, Merck at forefront of cancer meeting
New drugs from Bristol, Merck at forefront of cancer meeting
Last Updated: 2015-05-28
By Deena Beasley and Bill Berkrot
(Reuters) - New data to be released this weekend should help
deepen the understanding of how broadly new drugs that unleash
the body's immune system to fight cancer can be used.
Results from key clinical trials will be presented starting
Friday in Chicago at the annual meeting of the American Society
of Clinical Oncology. These will include studies aimed at
defining ahead of time which patients are likely to benefit from
the costly drugs.
At the forefront will be rival drugs from Bristol-Myers
Squibb Co and Merck and Co designed to block a protein known as
Programmed Death receptor (PD-1) that is used by tumors to evade
the body's natural defenses.
"It's going to be an important meeting to get some more
(details) on the PD-1 and PD-L1 drugs," said Morningstar analyst
Damien Conover.
Bristol's Opdivo, or nivolumab, was approved by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration in December to treat advanced
melanoma. In March, it also received clearance to treat a form
of lung cancer, giving Bristol an early advantage in the much
larger market. Merck's Keytruda, or pembrolizumab, has been
approved for advanced melanoma since September and is awaiting
regulatory approval in lung cancer treatment.
First-quarter sales of both drugs surprised Wall Street,
with Keytruda sales reaching $83 million, compared to $40
million for Opdivo, suggesting an early advantage for Merck in
what many expect will be a years-long battle for market share.
Other drugmakers working on similar treatments include Roche
Holding AG, AstraZeneca Plc and Pfizer Inc .
Many industry experts expect the entire class will
eventually generate billions of dollars in annual sales,
particularly if proven effective against other forms of cancer.
On Friday, the ASCO conference will feature studies looking
at Opdivo's use against advanced liver cancer and non-squamous,
non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the most common form of lung
cancer. Results will also be presented from a trial of Keytruda
in head and neck cancer.
"Bristol's in a really good position," said Leerink Partners
analyst Seamus Fernandez. "My expectation is that they're going
to be and will continue to be the leader in the lung cancer
space." Lung cancer, the most common cancer worldwide, is the
largest cause of cancer deaths in the United States.
At the same time, he said, Merck may bolster its argument
that Keytruda has proven the broadest possible use to date, with
"clear activity in 13 different tumor types."
Other data points that will be closely watched by
oncologists and investors include whether the level of PD-1
protein in a tumor can predict how well the new immunotherapies
will work. Earlier this month, Roche said that a mid-stage trial
of its experimental immunotherapy, MPDL3280A, showed it doubled
the likelihood of survival for lung cancer patients with the
highest levels PD-L1.
A separate trial of Merck's Keytruda to be released at ASCO
was designed to see whether a higher number of genetic mutations
in a tumor can lead to better results in treating colorectal and
other cancers.
Doctors at the meeting will also hear more on the potential
for combining different types of immunotherapies to make them
more effective, as well as the high costs associated with
multiple treatment regimens. Treatment with Opdivo or Keytruda
alone in the United States, for example, costs about $12,500 per
month, or $150,000 a year.
"Really the name of the game is having overall survival data
in your label," said Suntrust Robinson Humphrey analyst John
Boris.
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