Drug developers take fresh aim at 'guided-missile' cancer drugs
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[January 06, 2020]
By Ludwig Burger and John Miller
FRANKFURT/ZURICH (Reuters) - Dozens of
drugmakers are conducting human trials for a record 89 therapies that
pair antibodies with toxic agents to fight cancer, evidence of renewed
confidence in an approach that has long fallen short of its promise, an
analysis compiled for Reuters shows.
These antibody-drug conjugates, or ADCs, from companies including
AztraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline, are described by researchers as "guided
missiles" packing a powerful anti-cancer punch.
They are engineered to zero in on tumors and then release cytotoxins
that deliver up to 10,000 times the potency of standard chemotherapy,
while minimizing damage to healthy tissue.
The approach has for decades been a major biotech industry focus. Many
experimental ADCs, however, failed due to the complexity of pairing the
right antibody with the appropriate toxic agent. Some were abandoned as
too weak; others were too harmful.
From 2000 to 2018, only five ADCs won approval. Just one, Roche's <ROG.S>
Kadcyla, approved in 2013 for breast cancer, has surpassed $1 billion in
annual sales after data last year showed it boosted disease-free
survival for some patients compared with the standard treatment, Roche's
Herceptin.
Over time, however, scientists devised better ways to connect payloads
and antibodies and more precisely reach tumors. There is a growing
understanding, too, of how to design ADCs to kill even surrounding
cancer cells that previously evaded destruction.
"What we're seeing now are the benefits of the science becoming mature,"
said ADC pioneer Chris Martin, CEO of Switzerland's ADC Therapeutics <ADCT.N>.
"It took at least a decade, probably more like 15 years, to really begin
to turn the art into a science."
In 2019, U.S. regulators approved three ADCs, the most ever in a single
year, as last-ditch treatments based on studies showing they helped
patients whose survival outlook was bleak.
They include AstraZeneca's <AZN.L> and Daiichi Sankyo's <4568.T> breast
cancer drug, Enhertu, which was shown to help patients who had failed
numerous previous treatments survive a median of more than 16 months
before their disease worsened.
Astellas' <4503.T> and Seattle Genetics' <SGEN.O> bladder cancer drug,
Padcev, also received expedited approval in December, based on evidence
that 44% of patients who had failed immunotherapy showed improvement,
and in some cases, no evidence of cancer, when they were assessed after
treatment.
Roche's <ROG.S> Polivy was green-lighted against lymphoma in June after
producing complete response rates, with no signs of disease, in 40% of
patients when combined with two other therapies.
NEW RECORD
While all three drugs must prove their mettle in further studies, the
industry is growing optimistic that ADCs' time may have arrived.
The number of ADC drug candidates is at unprecedented levels, according
to data from consultancy Beacon Targeted Therapies compiled for Reuters,
based on a review of companies' pipelines. Dozens more ADC prospects are
in pre-clinical review.
London-based Beacon advises drugmakers on targeted therapies, helping
them decide whether to pursue prospective drugs or redirect efforts,
based on industry trends.
Current ADC projects include GlaxoSmithKline <GSK.L> testing its
belantamab mafodotin against multiple myeloma.
ADC Therapeutics, part-owned by private equity firm Auven Therapeutics,
has several studies on experimental drugs, including with Danish partner
Genmab <GMAB.CO>, on blood cancers and solid tumors.
U.S. biotech Immunomedics' <IMMU.O> market capitalization gained more
than 60% to $4.3 billion in the last six months, ahead of the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration's late-December decision to review its ADC
against triple-negative breast cancer, which is hard to treat and has
poor prognosis.
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A scientist studies cancer cells inside white blood cells through a
microscope at the GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) research centre in Stevenage,
Britain November 26, 2019. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
Massachusetts-based ImmunoGen <IMGN.O>, hit by past trial failures,
got a lift in December for its ADC against ovarian cancer when the
FDA indicated it may become a candidate for accelerated approval.
The surge in ADC investment has been fueled, in part, by
improvements in the so-called "linker" technology that binds the
antibody to its cancer-killing toxins, keeping them stable in the
circulatory system until the poison can be unleashed on the targeted
tumour.
ADCs are generally delivered via repeated infusions, similar to
chemotherapy.
"There is a revival again because there is a new generation of
molecules in which the linker is more efficient," Giuseppe
Curigliano, clinical director of early drug development at Milan's
European Institute of Oncology, told Reuters.
BETTING ON GROWTH
This optimism has contract manufacturers like Merck KGaA <MRCG.DE>
and Lonza <LONN.S> ramping up facilities, in hopes drugmakers will
farm out complex ADC production.
Merck expects the overall ADC market to grow by more than 20% in
coming years, boosting its business, which includes manufacturing of
monoclonal antibodies, linkers and cytotoxic agents.
Rival Lonza, which helps make Roche's two ADCs and sees annual 9%
growth for the so-called bioconjugates market, is investing millions
of dollars in its Swiss site, where it produces ADCs for other
drugmakers.
"What we see over time at Lonza is a good request for capacity,"
said Iwan Bertholjotti, Lonza's bioconjugate commercial development
head. "That's a good sign that the market is booming."
Still, enthusiasm is not universal.
AbbVie <ABBV.N> in August abandoned its ADC candidate Rova-T after
flunking a lung cancer trial and wrote off most of the $5.8 billion
it paid for the drug's developer, Stemcentrx, in 2016.
Roche, which helped pioneer ADCs with Kadcyla and Polivy, has also
backed off. In 2013, the Basel-based company had about a dozen
experimental ADCs. Today, only one remains, and it is being
developed for Staph infections, not cancer.
"We have shifted our technology priorities," Roche CEO Severin
Schwan told Reuters. "Maybe others will be luckier, but we failed to
master the complexity."
AstraZeneca aims to do just that.
In March, the Cambridge, England-based drugmaker struck a $7 billion
deal with Japan's Daiichi Sankyo for rights to Enhertu, getting
$1.35 billion up-front, and more if it challenges Roche drugs'
dominance in breast cancer.
Some industry analysts see Enhertu sales eventually reaching up to
$7 billion annually.
"Our plan is to expand the number of studies in different tumor
types," said Gilles Gallant, head of oncology R&D at Daiichi Sankyo.
"This agent has potential."
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt and John Miller in Zurich;
Editing by Michele Gershberg and Dan Grebler)
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