Leukemia Has Largest Pipeline and Most
First-in-Class Innovation in Hematological Cancers Space
Of the three major indications within hematological
cancer, namely leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma, leukemia has the largest
pipeline, with 798 products in active development, while lymphoma has 552 and
myeloma has 396, according to New Research.
The company’s latest report states that there are
currently 1,234 pipeline products in active development in the hematological
cancer therapy area, and for each of the three key indications, the composition
by stage of development is relatively similar, although leukemia and myeloma
have more products in clinical development.
According to Senior Analyst explains: “Leukemia has
the most products in the hematological cancers pipeline, with 349 in clinical
development and 446 in early-stage development, while three products had an
undisclosed stage of development. In terms of individual stages, however,
Preclinical is the largest across leukemia and lymphoma, while Phase II is the
largest in myeloma. It is notable that Phase II also contains many products for
leukemia and lymphoma, which is a promising trend for product development.
“The leukemia indication contains the most
first-in-class products, with 195, while the lymphoma and myeloma pipelines
contain 186 and 82 first-in-class products, respectively.”
The report also states that considerable unmet
needs remain in hematological cancer, with acute myeloid leukemia (AML)
particularly ill-served, as there is a need for more efficacious targeted therapies
across all patient subtypes. The treatment of AML is still limited to
conventional DNA-targeted chemotherapy regimens, which achieve long-term
survival rates of 25-50% in patients below the age of 60, and only 5-15% in
older patients, indicating a clear need for more efficacious treatments.
Senior Analyst continues: “Across other forms of
hematological cancer, while some targeted therapies are already present in the
market, reducing the rates of relapse and improving survival rates among
patients who do relapse are particular areas of need.
“For example, across follicular lymphoma (FL),
mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLCL), first-line
treatment in patients is typically cytarabine-cased chemotherapy in combination
with rituximab. Despite largely positive response rates, almost all patients
ultimately relapse, with progression-free survival values of one to two years
in MCL and above three years in FL and DLCL, presenting a notable need across
the non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma pipeline for more effective maintenance therapies to
prevent disease relapse.”
Frontier Pharma: Hematological Cancers - Highly
Innovative Pipeline Continues Trend towards Targeted, Patient-Specific
Therapies report provides analysis of the hematological cancers treatment
pipeline, stratified by stage of development, molecule type and molecular
target. It includes information on the current clinical and commercial
landscape, and the composition of the hematological market in terms of dominant
molecule types and targets, as well as highlighting current unmet needs.
This report was built using data and information
sourced from proprietary databases, primary and secondary research, and
in-house analysis conducted by Publisher’s team of industry experts.
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more information Visit at: http://mrr.cm/JRQ
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