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						Roche's lung cancer drug 
						wins U.S. approval 
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		[October 19, 2016] 
		By John Miller 
		(Reuters) - Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding 
		AG's new immunotherapy, Tecentriq, won approval on Tuesday from U.S. 
		health regulators as a second-line lung cancer treatment, a decision 
		seen likely to erode Bristol-Myers Squibb's position in this hotly 
		contested market. | 
        
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			 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Tecentriq to be used 
			in non-small cell lung cancer patients previously treated with 
			chemotherapy, regardless of whether their tumors express a protein 
			called PD-L1. People with high PD-L1 levels are generally more 
			receptive to immunotherapy. 
 In study results released this month, patients getting Tecentriq 
			lived on average 4.2 months longer than those taking chemotherapy.
 
 Tecentriq is aiming for a share of the treatment market now 
			dominated by Bristol's Opdivo, a drug which doctors can also 
			prescribe for patients regardless of their levels of immune-system 
			suppressing PD-L1 expression.
 
			 
			In the first half, Opdivo sales hit $1.58 billion, about three times 
			that of Merck & Co's drug, Keytruda, that is prescribed only for 
			people who express a certain level of PD-L1.
 Analysts estimate Tecentriq's annual sales across all cancers - it 
			is already approved for bladder cancer and will seek approval for 
			more indications - will reach $4 billion in 2021, according to 
			consensus figures compiled by Thomson Reuters.
 
			
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			Tecentriq, Opdivo and Keytruda are the initial entrants in a highly 
			promising class of immunotherapy drugs now transforming cancer 
			treatment and are jockeying for pole position, either for use alone 
			or in combination with other drugs. 
			Lung cancer, responsible for 20 percent of the annual 8 million 
			annual cancer deaths worldwide, is the top commercial opportunity.
 (Reporting by John Miller in Zurich; additional reporting by Dipika 
			Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)
 
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