Pfizer's blood cancer therapy Adcetris succeeds in late-stage trial
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[March 13, 2024]
(Reuters) -Pfizer said on Tuesday its drug, Adcetris, extended
survival in patients with the most common type of lymphoma in a
late-stage study, bolstering efforts to expand the use of the treatment
gained through its $43 billion purchase of Seagen.
The New York-based drugmaker last year struck a deal to acquire Seagen
and its targeted cancer therapies to reinforce its pipeline in the face
of a steep fall in COVID-19 product sales and generic competition for
some top-selling drugs.
The company, which has U.S. and Canadian commercialization rights for
Adcetris, reported total sales of $46 million from the drug last year.
Pfizer said on Tuesday it plans to discuss with regulators a submission
for approval to treat these patients.
A potential greenlight for Adcetris for the most common type of lymphoma
will pave the way for the eighth approval for the drug and beef up an
oncology portfolio that already has more than 25 approved therapies.
The combination therapy consisting of Adcetris and two other drugs was
statistically significant compared to a placebo in extending survival in
patients with lymphoma known as diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
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Pfizer company logo is seen at a Pfizer office in Puurs, Belgium,
December 2, 2022. REUTERS/Johanna Geron/File Photo
The trial tested 230 patients whose
cancer does not express a protein known as CD30 and returns after a
period of remission or does not respond to treatment.
The drug, when compared to a combination of two other drugs plus
placebo, also showed improvements in both secondary study goals of
progression-free survival, or how long before the disease begins to
worsen.
It also showed improvements in overall response rate, or proportion
of patients who have a partial or complete response to the therapy.
(Reporting by Pratik Jain; Editing by Shailesh Kuber and Sriraj
Kalluvila)
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