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Daiichi Sankyo, AZ close on EU approval of Enhertu for breast cancer

Daiichi Sankyo, AZ close on EU approval of Enhertu for breast cancer

Daiichi Sankyo and AstraZeneca could be just weeks away from an EU approval for their antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) for breast cancer – Enhertu – which is tipped to become a multibillion-dollar blockbuster.

At its meeting last week, the EMA’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) recommended approval of Enhertu (trastuzumab deruxtecan) for patients with unresectable or metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer, who have been previously treated with other anti-HER2 drugs.

Enhertu has already been approved for third-line use in HER2-positive breast cancer in the US at the end of 2019 and in Japan earlier this year, based on the results of the phase 2 DESTINY-Breast01 trial in 184 patients, which revealed that the drug shrank tumours in 61% of recipients.

Revenues from the drug  in the first nine months of 2020 came in at $136 million – including $60 million in the third quarter.

Sales were recorded by Daiichi Sankyo, with AZ pocketing $63 million in profit sharing, and according to AZ the drug is now the most prescribed medicine in the third-line and fourth-line settings of HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer.

Enhertu consists of the antibody used in Roche’s blockbuster HER2 antibody Herceptin (trastuzumab), linked to a topoisomerase inhibitor that is toxic to cancer cells. Around one in five patients with breast cancer are considered HER2 positive, which is associated with aggressive disease, a high recurrence rate, and an increased risk of dying.

It works by latching on to HER2-positive cancer cells and delivering a payload to kill them, while ignoring healthy cells, in patients who have failed to respond to Roche’s HER2-targeting cancer drugs Herceptin, Perjeta (pertuzumab), and ADC Kadcyla (trastuzumab emtansine).

Kadcyla was once tipped to become the go-to treatment HER2-posiitve breast cancer when first line drugs like Herceptin/Perjeta had failed, but failed to meet the mark in pivotal trials, truncating its sales growth although it still managed to break into the $1 billion-plus bracket.

Daiichi Sankyo is confident Enhertu can top Roche’s ADC, and also expand the use of HER2 drugs into new cancers like HER2-positive gastric cancer – an indication that is under review by the FDA with a verdict due early next year – and HER2-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

The intention is to gradually position the drug for earlier-line use in breast, gastric and lung cancer, and eventually to try to expand its use into certain low HER2-expressing tumours.

If all the pieces fall into place it reckons peak sales could reach $4.5 billion, and there are plenty of analysts predicting that the drug could quickly breach the $2 billion-a-year threshold.

AZ’s confidence in the potential of Enhertu is evidence from the terms of its late 2019 licensing deal with Daiichi Sankyo, which included a hefty $1.35 billion upfronting a deal that could be worth up to $6.9 billion if all the ADC’s development and sales objectives are achieved.

Published at Mon, 14 Dec 2020 09:00:00 +0000

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