Britain’s GSK said on Friday it would limit the use of its ovarian cancer drug Zejula in the United States as a second treatment option to keep cancer at bay in patients whose tumors carry certain mutations.
The news marks a second setback for GSK’s oncology portfolio this week, after the company on Monday revealed its blood cancer drug Blenrep failed to outperform an older therapy in a key study, calling into question Blenrep’s existing U.S. approval.
The drugmaker’s shares were down nearly 5 percent on Friday afternoon.
Zejula belongs to a family of drugs called PARP inhibitors—which include AstraZeneca and Merck’s Lynparza and Clovis Oncology’s Rubraca.
The class of therapies have been plagued by safety setbacks, prompting their makers to limit their use in ovarian cancer patients, after clinical data suggested patients do not live as long as those given chemotherapy, in ‘later-line settings’, that is patients who initially have been treated with other drugs.
In September, GSK withdrew the use of Zejula in certain ovarian cancer patients who had previously undergone three or more chemotherapy regimens.
The move was in consultation with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and in line with data on the broader class of therapies that indicated the drugs could have a detrimental effect on survival rates in such patients, the company said.
Zejula Sales
Zejula won FDA approval in 2017 for use in the second-line setting—as a therapy to keep cancer at bay in patients who have already had a recurrence of epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer, but have had a complete or partial tumor response to platinum-based chemotherapy.But the Nov. 22 FDA meeting was cancelled in late October. On Friday, GSK said it had complied with the FDA’s request to restrict the use of Zejula as a second-line treatment only in patients whose tumours carry or are suspected to have certain mutations.
For GSK, Zejula’s use in the first-line setting—as a therapy designed to keep cancer at bay in ovarian cancer patients who have partially or fully benefited from platinum-based chemotherapy, remains a priority.
About 25 percent of U.S. sales for Zejula emanated from the second-line indication—before the imposition of this latest restriction—a GSK spokesperson told Reuters, adding there is no change to Zejula’s second-line indication outside the United States.
Zejula—which GSK acquired through its $5.1 billion acquisition of U.S. cancer specialist Tesaro in 2018—generated a total of 120 million pounds ($141.4 million) last quarter.
Barclays has forecast 697 million pounds in peak annual sales for the drug in 2026, following which analyst Emily Field expects sales to stay flat, before starting to decline in 2031.