Novartis wins U.S. approval for targeted cancer drug combination
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[June 23, 2022]
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A targeted oral drug combination by
Novartis won U.S. approval for use in a wide range of advanced solid
tumours that are driven by a certain genetic contributor, widening the
use of a novel treatment approach that is known as tumour agnostic.
The Food and Drug Administration early on Thursday granted accelerated
approval for the combination of the two drugs Tafinlar and Mekinist for
adults and children as young as six with inoperable or metastatic solid
tumours with a mutation known as BRAF V600, who have exhausted other
treatment options.
The approval may be changed or withdrawn, depending on the results of
later confirmatory trials, the Swiss drugmaker said in a statement.
Earlier this month, the oral drug combination showed promise in treating
a subgroup of patients suffering from a common childhood brain cancer in
a trial.
The participants in that trial, aged 1 to 17 years, were suffering from
low-grade gliomas (LGG), the most common childhood brain cancer. Here
too, the trial only included those who were found to have the BRAF V600
mutation, a genetic contributor in about 15% to 20% of pediatric LGG
cases.
Tafinlar and Mekinist, a pill combination with $1.7 billion in 2021
sales, up 10%, had previously won approvals to treat certain skin, lung
and thyroid cancer patients who have the BRAF V600 genetic change.
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The company's logo is seen at the new cell and gene therapy factory
of Swiss drugmaker Novartis in Stein, Switzerland, November 28,
2019. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo
The treatment is an important growth
driver in Novartis's oncology business, a key therapeutic area for
the Swiss group, which relies on drug development as it considers
the sale of its Sandoz business with off-patent generic drugs.
Other tumour agnostic drugs, which are typically
used on solid tumours regardless of where in the body they started,
are Bayer's Vitrakvi and Roche's Rozlytrek, which target the TRK
mutation, a genetic driver in less than 1% of cancers. Due to its
rarity it often goes untested.
Bayer has said it was struggling to encourage physicians to diagnose
patients that qualify for the niche drug.
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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