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Roche lymphoma drug halves risk of death
Roche lymphoma drug halves risk of death
Date published: 15/12/2005
Roche
trials on its indolent non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (NHL) treatment MabThera have
shown the risk of death is halved. The outcome of the clinical trial was
presented at the 47th annual meeting of the
American Society of
Haematology in Atlanta, and Roche has now filed with the European
authorities for a label extension for MabThera maintenance therapy for patients
suffering from indolent lymphoma.
The results are set to boost Roche's
income from MabThera even further. In the third quarter of this year the drug
alone gave revenue of $2.3 billion, with over 730,000 patients having been
treated with MabThera worldwide to date. William Burns, CEO of the
Pharmaceuticals Division at Roche, said: "We are conscious that these results
open a new era in the management of indolent NHL.
"Maintenance therapy
with MabThera showed unprecedented survival benefits in a serious cancer
disease which is currently considered incurable."
Professor Marinus van
Oers of the University of Amsterdam and lead investigator of the study said:
"Our trial confirms that MabThera maintenance therapy is highly beneficial for
all patients, including those who have already received MabThera as part of
their initial therapy.
"We have not seen such an impressive improvement
in progression free and overall survival for indolent NHL in the last 30 years.
Maintenance therapy with MabThera may well become the new standard of care for
these patients."
Each year around 40,000 people are treated in Europe
for NHL and internationally 1.5 million people are affected annually. Its
incidence has increased by 80 per cent since the early 1970s.
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