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						Lilly reports positive 
						interim data on breast cancer combo drug 
			
   
            
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		[April 25, 2017] (Reuters) 
		- Eli Lilly and Co said the combination of 
		its experimental breast cancer drug and a commonly used treatment met 
		the main goal of a late-stage study in an interim analysis, setting the 
		stage for a regulatory submission later this year. 
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			 Shares of Indianapolis-based Lilly, which is scheduled to report its 
			first-quarter results on Tuesday, were up 1.3 percent at $82.95 on 
			Monday. 
			 
			Lilly's drug, abemaciclib, is likely to compete with market leader 
			Pfizer Inc's Ibrance, which brought in $2.1 billion in 2016 sales, 
			and Novartis AG's newly approved Kisqali. 
			 
			"This is an unexpected win for Lilly," Leerink analyst Seamus 
			Fernandez said, adding that most investors expected the trial to go 
			to completion at its planned final analysis at the end of this year. 
			 
			The study, named Monarch-3, compared combined use of abemaciclib and 
			an aromatase inhibitor with the aromatase inhibitor alone. 
			 
			The interim analysis of the combination therapy showed statistically 
			significant improvement in slowing disease progression in patients 
			and was deemed as having the "potential to be best in class", the 
			company said. 
			 
			In March, Lilly said abemaciclib cleared another late-stage study. 
			 
			With Monday's positive news following close on the heels of last 
			month's news, Lilly is assured of a product label with the same 
			breadth as its rivals, Bernstein analyst Tim Anderson said in a 
			client note. 
			
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			Lilly said it intends to begin global submissions of these results 
			in the third quarter of 2017. 
			 
			(Reporting by Divya Grover in Bengaluru; Editing by Martina D'Couto) 
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