Novartis
breast cancer drug Kisqali wins European panel backing
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[June 23, 2017] By
John Miller
ZURICH (Reuters) - A European Medicines
Agency (EMA) panel recommended on Friday approving Novartis's Kisqali
drug, bolstering the Swiss drugmaker's bid to challenge rival Pfizer's
Ibrance against tough-to-treat breast cancer.
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The EMA's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP)
backed Kisqali in combination with hormone therapy as a first-line
treatment for hormone receptor positive, human epidermal growth
factor receptor-2 negative locally advanced or metastatic breast
cancer.
Kisqali got the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's blessing in
March. This latest CHMP opinion sets the stage for likely European
Commission approval this year.
Friday's announcement, while expected, underscores Novartis's push
to strengthen an oncology portfolio hurt last year by the patent
expiration on blood cancer drug Glivec, exposing what was once its
top-selling medicine to growing generic competition.
The recommendation is also the latest in a wave of upbeat news on
the Basel-based drugmaker whose CEO, Joe Jimenez, has pledged to
restore growth in 2018.
In recent weeks, Novartis has released positive data on cancer cell
therapy CTL019, its eye drug RTH258 and Thursday's surprise
announcement that anti-inflammatory canakinumab benefited heart
attack survivors.
Novartis also won a U.S. Supreme Court ruling this month that will
speed its biosimilar copies of other name-brand drugs to market.
Novartis considers Kisqali to be among a dozen new medicines with
blockbuster potential. Analysts see global annual sales reaching
$1.5 billion by 2022, Thomson Reuters data shows.
Its shares fell about 0.9 percent by midday after hitting a 17-month
high on Thursday.
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HEAD-TO-HEAD
Ibrance, on the market since winning accelerated approval from the
FDA in 2015 and European approval last November, hit about $2.1
billion in sales in 2016.
Novartis has priced Kisqali competitively with Ibrance in the United
States and is offering co-packaging with hormone therapy letrozole,
which it also sells, to kick-start sales.
Ibrance and Kisqali block enzymes known as cyclin-dependent kinases
4 and 6. They are designed for use in combination with existing
drugs in women whose tumors grow in response to oestrogen and whose
cancer is not caused by the HER2 protein.
Still, some analysts have expressed concern that additional patient
monitoring required by the FDA on concern over heart and liver
problems linked to Kisqali could dent uptake.
(Reporting by John Miller; Editing by Michael Shields)
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