The inhaler, PT010, showed "statistically significant" improvement
in eight of nine main lung function goals in patients with moderate
to very severe COPD, the company said on Friday.
AstraZeneca said patients in the trial were given two inhalations
twice a day of PT010, which is a single inhaler, fixed-dose triple
combination therapy.
There were no unexpected safety or tolerability signals for PT010
identified in the 24-week trial, it added.
GSK's Trelegy Ellipta was the first once-daily triple medicine for
COPD to market, putting Britain's biggest drugmaker ahead of rivals
such as AstraZeneca and Novartis.
GSK's inhaler, which it developed with Innoviva, has already been
approved for sale in the United States and Europe.
"GSK is already on the market with its Trelegy Ellipta product so is
well ahead, nevertheless PT010 should still find a place in the
market," Liberum analysts said in a client note, adding the inhaler
was not a critical product for AstraZeneca.
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AstraZeneca said it anticipated making regulatory submissions in
Japan and China in the second half of this year, followed by
possibly submitting it in the United States and Europe next year.
AstraZeneca shares were up 0.5 percent at 0807 GMT.
(Reporting by Justin George Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Jason
Neely and Mark Potter)
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