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						 AstraZeneca's 
						Tagrisso helps lung cancer patients live longer: study
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		[August 09, 2019]  
		(Reuters) - AstraZeneca Plc said on Friday 
		a late-stage study showed its top-selling drug, Tagrisso, had 
		significantly helped patients with a type of lung cancer live longer 
		without the disease worsening. | 
        
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			 The British drugmaker announced overall positive survival results 
			from the study in patients with epidermal growth factor 
			receptor-mutated metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. 
 Tagrisso was the only medicine that had shown 
			statistically-significant overall survival benefit in this type of 
			disease setting, AstraZeneca said.
 
 The company has moved deeper into cancer therapy through 
			wide-ranging deals, including those for immunotherapy and targeted 
			therapy. Earlier this year, it agreed a multi-billion dollar 
			oncology deal with Japan's Daiichi Sankyo Co.
 
			
			 
			Sales from AstraZeneca's oncology unit had soared 57% to $2.17 
			billion in the second quarter, accounting for 38% of total product 
			sales, with revenue Tagrisso nearly doubling to $784 million.
 
 AstraZeneca had also raised its product sales forecast for 2019, 
			thanks in part to strong sales of cancer drugs.
 
 (Graphics: Oncology and China sales boost AstraZeneca png click, 
			https://tmsnrt.rs/2ybKVTI)
 
			
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			"Today's positive results show that Tagrisso provides an 
			unprecedented survival outcome versus previous standard-of-care ... 
			reaffirming Tagrisso as the 1st-line standard-of-care," José Baselga, 
			executive vice president, oncology R&D, said in a statement.
 Tagrisso is currently approved in 74 countries, including the United 
			States, Japan and the European Union, for treating the specific kind 
			of cancer.
 
 AstraZeneca had said on Wednesday its cancer drug, Lynparza, was 
			successful in helping patients with metastatic prostate cancer and 
			certain genetic mutations live longer without the disease worsening, 
			compared with the standard of care.
 
 (Reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil 
			D'Silva)
 
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