AstraZeneca's Enhertu wins keenly-anticipated U.S. breast cancer nod
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[August 06, 2022]
By Natalie Grover
LONDON (Reuters) -AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo on Friday secured U.S.
approval that broadens the use of their therapy Enhertu, for patients
with breast cancer, and paves the way for billions in sales.
This is the first-ever U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval
for a medicine specifically targeting patients with so-called HER2-low
breast cancer, the agency said.
Breast cancer can express, at varying levels, a protein called HER2 that
contributes to its growth and spread. HER2-low tumours are defined as
those whose cells contain lower levels of the HER2 protein on their
surface.
The U.S. approval is based on data from a late-stage trial involving
over 550 patients with HER2-low breast cancer - most with tumours that
were hormone-sensitive - whose disease had spread and who had undergone
at least one round of chemotherapy.
The data, unveiled at a scientific conference in June that prompted a
standing ovation from the audience, showed Enhertu prolonged survival by
an additional 6.4 months in patients with hormone-sensitive tumours.
In the small group of patients with hormone-insensitive tumours,
patients on Enhertu lived 6.3 months longer.
The therapy also nearly doubled the time before patients with
hormone-sensitive disease began to worsen - a measure known as
progression free survival (PFS).
However, Enhertu carries some significant safety concerns.
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Enhertu should carry a boxed warning
- the FDA's most serious - to highlight the the risk of a type of
lung scarring and fetal toxicity, the regulator said on Friday,
adding that the therapy is not recommended for pregnant women.
The drug belongs to class of therapies called antibody drug
conjugates (ADC). Enhertu comprises a monoclonal antibody - in this
case trastuzumab (also known as Herceptin) - chemically linked to a
cell-killing chemotherapy drug.
Enhertu originally won U.S. approval in late 2019 as a third-line
treatment for the 15% of breast cancer patients with HER2-positive
disease.
This fresh approval - which has come months ahead of the FDA's
expected decision date - opens up a large new patient population and
the prospect of billions in additional revenue for its makers.
Enhertu generated sales of $214 million in 2021. AstraZeneca secured
partial rights to the Daiichi Sankyo compound three years ago in a
deal worth up to $6.9 billion.
About 287,850 new cases of female breast cancer will be diagnosed
this year in the United States, the FDA estimates.
Roughly 80% to 85% of those new cases will include patients who
express little or no HER2. Of those, 60% are considered as HER2-low.
(Reporting by Natalie Grover in London; Additional reporting by
Manas Mishra in Bangalore; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Christina
Fincher)
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