Urothelial carcinoma, a common cancer that occurs in cells lining the bladder, was one of the first tumor types for which immunotherapy drugs were approved, with early Food and Drug Administration approvals in 2016 and 2017 for Opdivo, Roche’s Tecentriq and Merck & Co.’s Keytruda.
But in the years following, data from follow-up testing showed patients given chemotherapy were living longer than those given immunotherapies in certain settings, leading the FDA to limit the latter drugs’ use only to patients whose tumors were positive for PD-L1.
Then, early last year, both Roche and AstraZeneca withdrew from market their immunotherapies for use in previously treated bladder cancer. And by April, Tecentriq’s and Keytruda’s approvals in first-line bladder cancer were being reviewed by FDA advisers in a meeting meant to assess whether the drugs should remain on market after negative data in confirmatory testing.
In each case, however, the advisers voted in favor of maintaining the drugs’ accelerated clearances. (The FDA later converted Keytruda’s accelerated approval to a full clearance, but narrowed the indication to patients with previously untreated bladder cancer who are ineligible for platinum-based chemotherapy or whose disease has progressed following neoadjuvant or adjuvant treatment.)
Bristol Myers did not release specific data from its trial, called CheckMate-901, which began in 2017.
“Opdivo plus Yervoy has demonstrated durable, long-term survival improvements in several challenging-to-treat advanced cancers, and we are disappointed that the final analysis of CheckMate-901 did not show this same benefit in urothelial carcinoma patients whose tumor cells express PD-L1 [of at least] 1%,” said Dana Walker, head of genitourinary cancer drug development at Bristol Myers, in the company’s statement.
The negative result relates to the primary portion of CheckMate-901, which enrolled 707 patients to receive either Opdivo plus Yervoy or chemotherapy. Researchers will continue to monitor the combination’s effects on survival for patients who are ineligible for cisplatin-based chemotherapy, one of the primary phase’s two main goals.
A sub-study of CheckMate-901 will evaluate Opdivo plus chemotherapy again chemotherapy alone in patients who are eligible for cisplatin-based chemotherapy.
While the bladder cancer results are a setback, Bristol Myers has recently had success in expanding Opdivo’s use before surgery in treating early lung cancer, an area that analysts expect will become a big part of the company’s business.
Shares in Bristol Myers rose by more than 1% in Monday morning trading.
– Ned Pagliarulo @
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Topics covered: Pharma, biotech, FDA, gene therapy, clinical trials, drug pricing and much more.
A prolonged market downturn has halted a yearslong run of momentum for startup drug companies and their backers. Despite the pullback, many still view the industry's foundations as strong.
The slowdown in new stock offerings has hit genetic medicine makers especially hard, as only two have gone public this year — both involved in cell therapy — compared to a record 19 in 2021.
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