Pharma

Balance of power shifts with Merck’s Keytruda first-line therapy approval in lung cancer

The balance of power in the anti-PD-L1 therapy duel has once again shifted with a first-line therapy win by Keytruda for non-small cell lung cancer

Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty Images News

Merck’s immunotherapy drug Keytruda can now be sold as a first-line therapy for certain metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients  an industry-first that once again shifts the balance of power in the anti-PD-L1 therapy duel.

The news reverberated throughout the biopharma field, largely due to the backstory of the immunotherapies. Keytruda has long been jostling for market share with Opdivo, a PD-L1 inhibitor from Bristol-Myers Squibb. Both were approved for use in patients with melanoma just weeks apart in 2014.

Total sales of Keytruda in 2015 reached $566 million, compared to $942 million by Opdivo. However, following Monday’s announcement, Bernstein analysts forecast an additional $1 billion in sales for Keytruda in 2017.

Another analyst agreed.

“Keytruda 3Q sales were slightly below our and consensus estimates; however, we are raising our forecasts in expectation of a sharp acceleration following last night’s approval in the first-line non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) setting,” wrote,” wrote Leerink Partners analyst Seamus Fernandez in an investor note late Monday.

Both Keytruda and Opdivo are checkpoint inhibitors, which work to rally the patient’s immune system against certain tumor cells by blocking the immune-suppressing PD-L1 pathway. Not all tumor cells express PD-L1, which is why the FDA has outlined a number of restrictions for Keytruda’s use as a first-line therapy.

Chief among them is the need for a companion diagnostic to determine if the patient’s tumor has high levels of PD-L1 (>50%). Agilent Technologies supplies the companion diagnostic used by both Opdivo and Keytruda to quantify relative levels.

In a sign that we perhaps don’t know all that much about the mechanisms of action, the FDA has also approved Keytruda as a secondary treatment for patients with NSCLC that have unsuccessfully tried chemotherapy. The cut-off in this instance is a tumor proportion score (TPS) of greater than 1 percent.

In an interview with MedCity News in August, oncologist Timothy Byun of the Center for Cancer Prevention and Treatment at St. Joseph Hospital in Orange, California, described the lack of consensus.

“There’s three or four PD-L1 immunohistochemical probes and they are not all the same. Merck has one probe and BMS used their own probe that was different than the Merck probe,” he said. “And it’s not comparing apples to apples. You don’t know if the 50% staining on the tumor cells correlates to a 50% staining using another probe. And to further complicate the matter, you don’t know whether you should be testing and looking for the PD-L1 staining in the cancer cell or the immune cells or both.”

The PD-L1 variables can apparently go both ways. Keytruda’s approval comes just 80 days after news broke of Bristol-Myers’ failed phase III trial of Opdivo as a first-line therapy for NSCLC. The upset caused Bristol-Myers shares to plummet 16%, while Merck’s climbed 8.7% as its market opportunity expanded.

Interestingly, the FDA completed its review of Keytruda two months earlier than expected. For the industry, this is rare. However, as Fernandez of Leerink Partners pointed out in his investor note, Bristol-Myers Squibb gained a series of approvals for Opdivo more than 3 months before the reviews were due.

Kenilworth, New Jersey-based Merck now has an 11-year window to maximize sales while Keytruda remains under patent protection.

Photo: Kena Betancur, Getty Images

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