With
new blood test, Roche dives deeper into personal cancer care
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[September 24, 2018]
ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss drugmaker Roche
upped its bet on personalized cancer treatment on Monday, saying it is
now ready to sell a blood test around the world that can identify common
gene mutations from solid tumors from a patient's blood.
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The blood test, called FoundationOne Liquid, is among initial
products to emerge from Foundation Medicine after Roche spent $2.4
billion on the U.S.-based genetic profiling company this year on the
conviction that future cancer treatment will be tailored to
individual characteristics of a patient's tumor.
Foundation's new blood test can identify circulating tumor DNA as 70
of the most commonly mutated genes in solid tumors, Roche said,
including features which may help identify patients most likely to
benefit from cancer immunotherapy.
While Roche is the biggest cancer drug maker, it has lost ground to
rivals like Merck in early rounds of cancer immunotherapy. Roche is
wagering that Foundation Medicine's tests will be needed by
oncologists to guide how they fight tumors that vary by patient,
regardless of which firm's drug they choose to use.
"Cancer is a disease of the genome and genomic profiling of every
patient's tumor at the start of their treatment journey will provide
transformative outcomes for patients," said Sandra Horning, Roche's
chief medical officer, in a statement.
Foundation Medicine already sells a cancer test, FoundationOne CDx,
to assess cancer-driving genomic alterations in 324 genes -- more
than four times those assessed with the new blood tests -- but it
requires a tumor biopsy.
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Such material is not available from everybody, including in
non-small cell lung cancer, where some 15 percent of patients are
not eligible for tissue biopsy and about 10 percent have samples too
small to evaluate.
With the new test, cancer doctors draw patients' blood and send it
to Foundation Medicine's laboratory.
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There, gene sequencing determines, among other things, if a tumor's
characteristics make it a prime candidate for immunotherapy drugs
that stimulate the body's T cells to go on the attack.
While sales of Merck's Keytruda immunotherapy have quickly
outstripped Roche's competing product, Tecentriq, in non-small cell
lung cancer treatment, Roche is seeking to benefit from its rival's
success: The two companies in May signed a pact to cooperate on
companion diagnostic tests from Foundation Medicine for Keytruda.
(Reporting by John Miller, editing by Silke Koltrowitz)
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