Qiagen wins U.S. approval for test to
accompany Amgen cancer drug
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[May 24, 2014]
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - U.S. health
regulators on Friday approved Qiagen NV's gene-testing kit to identify
those colorectal cancer patients most likely to benefit from Amgen Inc's
drug, Vectibix, Qiagen said.
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In addition, the Food and Drug Administration
expanded the approval of Vectibix to allow its use as a first-line,
or initial, treatment for colon cancer in combination with the
widely used FOLFOX chemotherapy regimen, Amgen said.
The expanded Vectibix approval is for patients who have a
non-mutated, or wild type, KRAS gene after clinical trials
demonstrated that those patients were most likely to be helped by
the drug.
The FDA approval for the genetic test marks the third U.S. approval
for a Qiagen companion diagnostic for use in combination with a
specific drug, a key growth market for the German company.
Both approvals could pave the way for increased use of Vectibix,
which has been largely a disappointment for Amgen. It means the drug
can be used earlier in the disease and would be accompanied by a
standarushdized diagnostic to help doctors pinpoint patients that
would best respond to the medicine.
Amgen had $389 million in sales from Vectibix last year, $126
million of which came from U.S. sales.
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Close to 40 percent of colorectal cancer patients have tumors with
mutated forms of the KRAS gene, which make them poor candidates for
Vectibix. The rest have the non-mutated, or wild, forms and stand a
better chance of benefiting from the drug, which was approved in the
United States in 2006.
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt and Bill Berkrot in New
York. Editing by Andre Grenon)
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