Wall Street must wait a while longer to find out if Gilead Sciences Inc. will exercise its $275 million option for Arcus Biosciences Inc.’s TIGIT binder, domvanalimab. Meanwhile, investors took heart from an optimistic – albeit vague – interim report on the phase II ARC-7 trial.
Hutchmed Ltd.’s savolitinib became the first selective MET inhibitor approved in China to treat patients with non-small-cell lung cancer with MET exon 14 skipping alterations who have progressed following prior systemic therapy or are unable to receive chemotherapy.
Oncohost Ltd. has opened eight U.K. trial sites in the study assessing the ability of its artificial intelligence (AI)-driven proteomics profiling technology to single out which cancer patients will respond to treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors. The sites will carry out proteomic analyses of blood samples from patients with late-stage melanoma or non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), to predict their likely response to immunotherapy.
Shares of Cullinan Oncology Inc. (NASDAQ:CGEM) rose 11.3% to close at $33.11 on June 4 as an update on its EGFR inhibitor, CLN-081, suggested it may prove competitive with Johnson & Johnson's recently approved treatment, Rybrevant (amivantamab), for adults with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumors bear EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations.
In reporting positive data from a phase III study of sugemalimab in treating stage III non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Cstone Pharmaceuticals Co. Ltd. and Eqrx Inc. have the first anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody demonstrating progression-free survival in patients with concurrent or sequential chemoradiotherapy. The data built on positive data released in August from another phase III study showing sugemalimab (CS-1001) prolonged PFS when used as a first-line treatment for stage IV squamous and nonsquamous NSCLC plus standard-of-care chemotherapy, hitting the study’s primary endpoint.
Amgen Inc.’s Merdo Gordon, head of commercial global operations, said just-approved Lumakras (sotorasib) is “priced very well compared to other targeted medicines available in the market” for cancers driven by specific mutations. “Just characterizing the launch broadly, look, it’s really hard to tell because of the variability of our reach to customers right now” – a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Well ahead of the assigned Aug. 16 PDUFA date, Amgen Inc. bagged accelerated clearance from the FDA for Lumakras (sotorasib), the first targeted therapy for adults with KRAS G12C-mutated locally advanced or metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), as determined by an FDA-approved test.
Locust Walk Acquisition Corp. CEO and biotech veteran Chris Ehrlich said his firm sifted through more than 90 prospects before setting on a merger with Effector Therapeutics Inc., focused on selective translation regulation inhibitors (STRIs) in cancer.
The FDA’s approval for Johnson & Johnson (J&J) of Rybrevant (amivantamab-vmjw) not only brings the first treatment for adults with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumors bear EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations, but also sets a high overall response rate bar for other developers in the space.
Suzhou-China based Cstone Pharmaceuticals Co. Ltd., which in-licensed RET inhibitor pralsetinib from Blueprint Medicines Corp. in 2018, has won Chinese approval for the drug to treat adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic RET fusion-positive non-small-cell lung cancer after platinum-based chemotherapy. Already approved as Gavreto in the U.S., the drug is Cstone’s first product approved in China and the country’s first selective RET inhibitor.