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Merck Serono Receives European Approval For Broader Usage Of Erbitux In Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Including 1st-Line Treatment

August 4th, 2008 by allsoch

Colorectal Cancer. Source topnews.inMerck KGaA announced today that it has been granted approval by the European Commission for Erbitux® (cetuximab), to update its license for the treatment of patients with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-expressing, KRAS wild-type mCRC (metastatic colorectal cancer) in combination with chemotherapy, and as a single agent in patients who have failed oxaliplatin- and irinotecan-based therapy and who are intolerant to irinotecan.

“This broad approval of Erbitux in metastatic colorectal cancer is welcomed by the oncology community as it provides us with another treatment option for our patients in the 1st-line setting,” commented Professor Eric Van Cutsem, Professor of Medicine and Digestive Oncology at the University Hospital Gasthuisberg in Leuven, Belgium. “We are excited by the data supporting this approval as it demonstrates the increased efficacy of Erbitux in patients who have KRAS wild-type tumors. The broadened approval of Erbitux is also a big step towards offering tailored therapies to patients with metastatic colorectal cancer.”

The approval was granted following review of data from randomized, controlled Phase III (CRYSTALa) and Phase II (OPUSb) trials that demonstrated the superior efficacy of Erbitux in combination with standard chemotherapy in the 1st-line treatment of patients with mCRC compared to chemotherapy alone.1,2 Further analyses of these trials, investigating the efficacy of Erbitux in patients with KRAS wild-type tumors, was also submitted to the authorities and recently presented at major scientific conferences - American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and World Congress on Gastro-Intestinal Cancers (WCGIC).3,4,5,6 These analyses found that patients with KRAS wild-type tumors experienced substantially increased efficacy with Erbitux and had statistically significant higher response rates (CRYSTAL: 59% vs 43%; OPUS: 61% vs 37%) and decreased risk of progression (CRYSTAL: by 32%; OPUS by 43%) than patients receiving chemotherapy alone.3,4,5,6

“Erbitux is a key new treatment option for two-thirds of all metastatic colorectal cancer patients because the KRAS status of their tumors is predictive for the efficacy of Erbitux,” said Wolfgang Wein, Executive Vice President, Oncology, Merck Serono. “These findings are an important step forward in the development of tailored therapies.”

Up to 65% of patients with mCRC have normal or non-mutated KRAS tumors, also scientifically known as wild-type.3 KRAS is a gene that codes for a protein involved in the EGFR pathway. In KRAS wild-type tumors, the KRAS protein is tightly regulated and only activated in response to certain stimuli such as EGFR signaling. In patients with normal KRAS status, Erbitux blocks a signaling pathway, preventing growth of a tumor. The KRAS mutation overrules this effect of Erbitux, thus allowing the tumor to continue to grow, proliferate and spread.

Erbitux has been licensed for the treatment of mCRC since June 2004 and locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) since April 2006. So far, more than 120,000 patients have been treated with commercially available Erbitux worldwide. A submission to the European authorities to broaden the use of Erbitux in SCCHN to include 1st-line treatment of patients with recurrent and/or metastatic SCCHN was made in June 2008 by Merck Serono.

More than 370,000 people develop colorectal cancer in Europe every year, accounting for 13% of the total cancer burden and around 200,000 deaths annually.7 Approximately 25% of patients present with metastatic disease.8 Five-year survival rates for patients with mCRC are as low as 5%.9

a CRYSTAL: Cetuximab combined with iRinotecan in first line therapY for metaSTatic colorectAL cancer
b OPUS: OxaliPlatin and cetUximab in firSt-line treatment of mCRC
References:
1. Van Cutsem E, et al. ASCO 2007; Abstract No: 4000
2. Bokemeyer C, et al. ASCO 2007; Abstract No: 4035
3. Van Cutsem E, et al. ASCO 2008; Abstract No: 2
4. Bokemeyer C, et al. ASCO 2008; Abstract No: 4000
5. Van Cutsem E, et al. WCGIC 2008; Abstract No: 471
6. Schuch G, et al. WCGIC 2008; Abstract No: 385
7. Parkin DM et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2005; 55: 72-108.
8. Cunningham D and Findley M. Eur J Cancer 1993;29A(15);2077-2079
9. Macdonald JS. CA Cancer J Clin 1999;49(4),202-219.

Source:

1. Merck Serono Receives European Approval For Broader Usage Of Erbitux In Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Including 1st-Line Treatment

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