GSK blood cancer drug nearly halves risk of death in late-stage trial
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[June 03, 2024]
By Pratik Jain
(Reuters) - GSK's multiple myeloma drug Blenrep nearly halved the risk
of disease progression or death compared to standard-of-care treatments
for the incurable blood cancer, according to data from a late-stage
study presented at a medical meeting on Sunday.
In the trial of 302 patients with relapsed or difficult-to-treat
multiple myeloma, 71% of those who received Blenrep in combination with
the steroid dexamethasone and pomalidomide were alive without their
disease worsening at the end of a year.
That compared with progression-free survival (PFS) of 51% of those who
were treated with pomalidomide, dexamethasone and bortezomib.
Pomalidomide is a generic version of Bristol Myers Squibb's Pomalyst,
while bortezomib is the generic of Takeda Pharmaceuticals' Velcade.
"The ability to be able to offer a drug like Blenrep potentially that is
administered on an outpatient basis, does not require hospitalization,
can be available in a community setting and is not restricted by
manufacturing challenges, like cell therapies, is really important," GSK
oncology executive Hesham Abdullah said in an interview.
Detailed data from the trial was presented at the American Society of
Clinical Oncology meeting in Chicago on Sunday.
Blenrep has had setbacks over the last couple of years, including being
pulled from the lucrative U.S. market in 2022 after it failed to show
superiority over an existing treatment in a separate late-stage study.
The top-line data from this trial released in March showing it had met
the main goal of significantly improving PFS over a current standard
treatment regimen appeared to signal a comeback for the drug.
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A view shows GlaxoSmithKline headquarters in London, Britain,
January 17, 2022.REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo
More than half of the Blenrep
patients were alive without disease progression after a median
follow-up of 21.8 months compared with 12.7 months PFS for the
standard of care, the company said.
"The PFS benefit seen in the trial shows the potential of the
Blenrep combo, if approved, to redefine the treatment of multiple
myeloma for these patients," GSK said in a statement.
The British drugmaker plans to file marketing applications with
global regulators in the second half of 2024.
Treatments for multiple myeloma include Johnson & Johnson's Darzalex
and other generic cancer drugs. The U.S. FDA in April approved two
cell therapies - J&J's Carvykti, and Bristol Myers' Abecma - as
earlier lines of treatment in less severe multiple myeloma.
Eye-related side effects led to a 9% treatment discontinuation rate
from the study but were generally reversible and manageable through
dose modifications, GSK said.
Multiple myeloma, the world's second-most common blood cancer,
starts in plasma cells in bone marrow and ultimately disrupts
production of normal blood cells.
Roughly 35,780 new multiple myeloma cases are likely to be
diagnosed, with 12,540 deaths expected to occur in the United States
this year, according to the American Cancer Society.
(Reporting by Pratik Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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