Roche
skin cancer drug meets main goal in combination study
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[July 14, 2014]
ZURICH (Reuters) - An
experimental drug from Roche helped people with an
advanced form of skin cancer live longer without their
disease worsening when used in combination with another
treatment, the Swiss drugmaker said on Monday.
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Pharmaceutical companies are looking to combination therapy to yield
better results and drug cocktails are expected to be crucial as
oncologists seek to block cancer on multiple fronts.
Cobimetinib, which is being developed in collaboration with Exelixis
Inc, is designed to be used with another Roche drug called Zelboraf
for patients with tumors that have a mutation in a gene known as
BRAF that allows melanoma cells to grow.
About half of all melanomas have the genetic aberration the drugs
target.
Results of a Phase III study involving 495 patients previously
untreated for advanced melanoma found those taking both drugs lived
significantly longer without their disease worsening compared to
those taking Zelboraf alone.
Roche plans to present the results at an upcoming medical meeting
and said it would file the data for approval with health regulators
worldwide.
Melanoma globally afflicts more than 232,000 new people each year.
While generally curable if caught early, it is one of the deadliest
cancers in its advanced stages and there are few treatment options.
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Cobimetinib works by blocking the activity of a protein called MEK,
while Zelboraf - which is already approved in more than 80 countries
- binds to the mutant protein BRAF.
Roche is also investigating cobimetinib in combination with other
experimental medicines, including an immunotherapy for the treatment
of non-small cell lung cancer and colorectal cancer.($1 = 0.8929
Swiss Francs)
(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Ron Popeski and Louise
Heavens)
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