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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July
14, 2004.
Strategic
Analysis of the Breast Cancer Therapeutics Pipeline: Pharmaceutical-
Biotech Partnerships Generate Wave of Novel Breast Cancer Therapeutics.
Strategic partnerships between the pharmaceuticals industry and
the biotechnology sector are making breast cancer therapeutics one
of the most dynamic segments in the overall oncology market. Such
alliances are yielding novel, targeted biologic therapies that promise
an advance over existing chemotherapy and hormonal alternatives
and are poised to drive revenue generation in the breast cancer
therapeutic arena.
Over
recent years, 'anaemic' late-stage product pipelines and patent
expirations for blockbuster oncology therapeutics have troubled
the pharmaceutical industry. Biotech companies, in the meantime,
have had to contend with limited financial capital needed to push
their pipeline products through more expensive, larger scale, late-stage
development trials.
This
has set the stage for synergistic partnerships between the pharmaceuticals
industry and the biotechnology sector. "An alliance between
biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies establishes possible
licensing opportunities for both parties," remarks Curt A.
Herberts III, Research Analyst with Frost & Sullivan's pharmaceutical
and biotechnology group (http://pharma.frost.com). "While biotech
companies get the financial capital required to expand, pharmaceutical
companies profit from the innovative products developed by the biotechnology
companies."
Aggressive
clinical trials and extensive licensing activities between biotech
companies and large pharmaceutical companies are expected to rapidly
usher innovative therapies that specifically target cancerous tissue
and have less radical side effect profiles into the market.
A
strong pipeline of pioneering therapeutics- small molecules, monoclonal
antibodies, gene therapy, cancer vaccines, angiogenesis inhibitors,
third-generation hormonals, chemopotentiators and chemoprotectants
- is now set to strongly impact the market.
The
success of these new age therapies is, however, expected to hinge
on the ability of small biotech companies to surmount regulatory
hurdles. Demonstrating the enhanced clinical benefits of these expensive
options over existing treatments is also crucial to encouraging
uptake levels.
"These
new products are trying to achieve FDA approval into the metastatic
disease setting at first, and then eventually hope to move into
the adjuvant therapeutic setting," notes Mr. Herberts. "Adjuvant
therapy has substantially more revenue potential as patients are
on the therapy for a longer period of time and the treatment is
likely to actually cure the disease, instead of just prolonging
life expectancy."
Taxotere
and Xeloda are expected to be key growth drivers in the cytotoxic
market, since they are likely to be used in the adjuvant setting.
Novel chemopotentiators, chemoprotectants and iposomal formulations
are also likely to boost use of chemotherapy agents.
Chemopotentiators
such as YM Bio Sciences' Tesmilifene (in phase III clinical trials)
are set to revolutionise chemotherapy treatment regimens by boosting
the cytotoxic effect on tumour cells, while protecting healthy cells.
Amongst
hormonal therapeutics, aromatase inhibitors are expected to be deployed
in adjuvant, neo-adjuvant, and extended adjuvant therapeutic settings
for post-menopausal women. Together with new-age selective estrogen
receptor modulators (SERMs), aromatase inhibitors are poised to
energise market growth with increased preventative benefits and
decreased side-effects profile.
Currently,
aromatase inhibitors such as Arimidex (anastrozole), Aromasin (exemestane)
and Femara (letrozole) are being used to treat hormone receptor-positive
breast cancers in multiple indications. Tamoxifen (brand name Nolvadex),
the most widely prescribed SERM, has FDA approval for treatment
of both early and advanced stages of breast cancer.
The
success of Herceptin is reflective of the enormous profits that
pharmaceuticals companies stand to gain from investing in newer
biologic therapies developed by biotech companies. Herceptin is
expected to power the biologic market with likely employment in
the adjuvant therapeutics setting for women with HER2/neu early-stage
breast cancer.
A
large-scale adjuvant clinical trial with Herceptin is expected to
demonstrate results by 2006. Avastin is being employed in a clinical
trial for metastatic breast cancer to determine its clinical efficacy
as an anti-angiogenesis therapy.
"Such
new age medicines will undoubtedly impact not only the way we think
about disease, but also the manner in which women live their lives
in the treatment setting following the initial diagnosis,"
concludes Mr. Herbert.
If
you are interested in a virtual brochure, which provides manufacturers,
end-users and other industry participants an overview of the latest
analysis of the Strategic Analysis of the Global Breast Cancer Therapeutics
Pipeline - then send an email to Katja Feick - Corporate Communications
at katja.feick@frost.com with the following information: your full
name, company name, title, telephone number, fax number, and email.
Upon receipt of the above information, an overview will be sent
to you via e-mail.
Strategic
Analysis of the Global Breast Cancer Therapeutics Pipeline
A845
Background
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supporting clients' growth for over four decades. Our market expertise
covers a broad spectrum of industries, while our portfolio of advisory
competencies include strategic consultancy, market intelligence
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For
unlimited access to constantly updated pharmaceutical market news
written exclusively by Frost & Sullivan's team of industry experts
visit http://pharma.frost.com.
Contact:
Katja Feick
Public Relations Manager
Frost & Sullivan
Clemensstrasse 9
60487 Frankfurt/Main
Germany
Phone: +49-69-77033-12
Fax: +49-69-234566
Katja.feick@frost.com
http://frost.com
Americas:
Danielle White
Media Relations Executive, Healthcare
Frost & Sullivan
P: 210.247.2403
F: 210.348.1003
E: dwhite@frost.com
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