Roche says drug combo cuts breast cancer deaths in key trial

Reuters  |  ZURICH 

ZURICH (Reuters) - Combining Roche's Perjeta and Herceptin drugs with chemotherapy reduced recurrence of aggressive breast or death compared to Herceptin and chemo, the Swiss drugmaker said on Thursday.

hopes the important outcome will help shield its oncology franchise from cheaper copies.

"These results from the positive study represent an important addition to the body of data for Perjeta in the treatment of people with HER2-positive early breast cancer," Sandra Horning, Roche's chief medical officer, said.

Analysts from Deutsche Bank have estimated around $2 billion in annual sales in 2018 hinged on the trial's outcome.

Herceptin brought in $6.75 billion in sales last year for but is losing patent protection, exposing it to competition from a biosimilar version that Mylan and its partner Biocon may introduce in Europe later this year.

By showing Herceptin, Perjeta and chemo helped people who had undergone surgery live longer without their disease returning compared with the previous regimen of Herceptin and chemotherapy, the Basel-based drugmaker aims to make the case for doctors to switch to this new combination.

Herceptin was initially approved in 1998, while follow-on Perjeta won the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's blessing in 2013.

The drugs are already approved in combination for those suffering from metastatic disease, but tested Perjeta's ability to keep from returning in women who had undergone surgery.

has said its 2017 guidance of sales and profit rising at a low- to mid-single digit percentage rate was issued irrespective of the outcome, but analysts including those at Jefferies contend this will likely be a catalyst for shares.

"We estimate a positive top line result could drive stock price upside of about 15-20 francs versus downside of about 25-35 francs if the study fails," Jefferies' Jeffrey Holford wrote earlier this year.

(Reporting by John Miller; Editing by Michael Shields)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Roche says drug combo cuts breast cancer deaths in key trial

ZURICH (Reuters) - Combining Roche's Perjeta and Herceptin drugs with chemotherapy reduced recurrence of aggressive breast cancer or death compared to Herceptin and chemo, the Swiss drugmaker said on Thursday.

ZURICH (Reuters) - Combining Roche's Perjeta and Herceptin drugs with chemotherapy reduced recurrence of aggressive breast or death compared to Herceptin and chemo, the Swiss drugmaker said on Thursday.

hopes the important outcome will help shield its oncology franchise from cheaper copies.

"These results from the positive study represent an important addition to the body of data for Perjeta in the treatment of people with HER2-positive early breast cancer," Sandra Horning, Roche's chief medical officer, said.

Analysts from Deutsche Bank have estimated around $2 billion in annual sales in 2018 hinged on the trial's outcome.

Herceptin brought in $6.75 billion in sales last year for but is losing patent protection, exposing it to competition from a biosimilar version that Mylan and its partner Biocon may introduce in Europe later this year.

By showing Herceptin, Perjeta and chemo helped people who had undergone surgery live longer without their disease returning compared with the previous regimen of Herceptin and chemotherapy, the Basel-based drugmaker aims to make the case for doctors to switch to this new combination.

Herceptin was initially approved in 1998, while follow-on Perjeta won the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's blessing in 2013.

The drugs are already approved in combination for those suffering from metastatic disease, but tested Perjeta's ability to keep from returning in women who had undergone surgery.

has said its 2017 guidance of sales and profit rising at a low- to mid-single digit percentage rate was issued irrespective of the outcome, but analysts including those at Jefferies contend this will likely be a catalyst for shares.

"We estimate a positive top line result could drive stock price upside of about 15-20 francs versus downside of about 25-35 francs if the study fails," Jefferies' Jeffrey Holford wrote earlier this year.

(Reporting by John Miller; Editing by Michael Shields)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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