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воскресенье, 21 октября 2018 г.

New photo Roche takes on Loxo, Bayer in gene-defined cancer class

MUNICH, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Roche's entrectinib cancer pill was shown to shrink tumours in 57 percent of patients within a group that can only be identified via genetic profiling, as the Swiss drugmaker challenges an alliance of Bayer and Loxo Oncology in a new targeted treatment area.


The trial results on patients with a gene anomaly known as NTRK fusion, which occurs in less than 1 percent across a range of tumour types, were presented at the annual congress of the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) in Munich on Sunday.


Germany's Bayer and U.S. partner Loxo, in turn, released data for their rival compound larotrectinib, which slightly improved on previous high-efficacy readings in an enlarged trial.


Traditionally, oncologists have made treatment decisions based on where in the body a tumour started, increasingly helped by the growing knowledge of cancer's complex genetic drivers.


Under the tumour-agnostic approach, also known as pan-tumour, drugmakers skip the organ-of-origin perspective and regroup patients based only on signature genetic mutations, but success in real life will depend on the fast spread of comprehensive gene-sequencing tools for tissue samples.


Individually, the mutations are so rare that cancer units are seen as unlikely to run dedicated tests for each.


Roche's Foundation Medicine supplies the comprehensive kits, competing with Thermo Fisher Scientific and Caris Life Sciences.


"It's one of the reasons we acquired Foundation Medicine, to make this comprehensive genomic profiling routine and upfront in the course of the disease," said Daniel O'Day, the head of Roche's Pharmaceuticals division.


Loxo's larotrectinib pill, co-developed with Bayer, was last year shown to shrink tumours in 75 percent of patients with the NTRK fusion gene anomaly, occurring in the lung, pancreas, or more than a dozen other organs.


On Sunday, the response rate to larotrectinib within an enlarged group of 122 trial participants - up from 55 initially and now spanning 24 tumour types - was shown to be 81 percent.


Roche said the readings from the two NTRK fusion trials were not comparable because they are made up of different patient types. Loxo's study, for instance, included some cancers in children, while Roche plans to investigate those separately.


The Roche compound is designed to tackle several oncogenic mutations and last month, it unveiled data https://www.roche.com/media/releases/med-cor-2018-09-24c.htm on entrectinib pushing back tumours in 77 percent of lung cancer patients with a mutation called ROS1.


Merck & Co's Keytruda in May last year became the first drug to win approval for pan-tumour use, though that remains a relatively small market for the mega-selling drug. Bayer and Loxo are testing a second pan-tumour drug, LOXO-195.


Roche Pharmaceutical's O'Day welcomed a wider field.


"Both things have to happen: You need genomic profiling and you need enough targeted medicines to encourage physicians to make that diagnosis upfront very complete. This is the world we're entering," he said.


Though response rates could encourage a race for more such drugs, the need for suitable gene mutations or fusions will be a tall order, said oncologist Ulrik Lassen of Copenhagen's Rigshospitalet, who co-authored the larotrectinib study.


"You need to screen a lot of patients to find the needle in the haystack and the method is complicated, costly and time-consuming. When we get better at using these technologies, we can find more oncogenic fusions and companies will be smart enough to find the agents that target them."


Roche acquired entrectinib as part of its takeover deal with U.S. cancer drug specialist Ignyta Inc for $1.7 billion, agreed in December last year.


Immuno-oncology remains another major business area for Roche, which also released positive results on using its Tecentriq drug in a group of breast cancer patients with a particularly poor prognosis.


(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Dale Hudson)


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News Pictures Roche takes on Loxo, Bayer in gene-defined cancer class

You don’t have to pack away your bikini just because you’re the wrong side of 20. These body-beautiful stars reveal their secrets to staying in shape and prove you can smoulder in a two-piece, whatever your age. Read on and be bikini inspired!

TEENS
Hayden Panettiere
Size: 8
Age: 18
Height: 5ft 1in
Weight: 8st

To achieve her kick-ass figure, Hayden – who plays cheerleader Claire Bennet in Heroes – follows the ‘quartering’ rule. She eats only a quarter of the food on her plate, then waits 20 minutes before deciding whether she needs to eat again.

Hayden says: “I don’t have a model’s body, but I’m not one of those crazy girls who thinks that they’re fat. I’m OK with what I have.”

Nicollette says: “I don’t like diets – I see it, I eat it! I believe in eating healthily with lots of protein, vegetables and carbs to give you energy.”

kim cattrall

Size: 10-12
Age: 52
Height: 5ft 8in
Weight: 9st 4lb

SATC star Kim swears by gym sessions with Russian kettle bells (traditional cast-iron weights) and the South Beach Diet to give her the body she wants. To avoid overeating, Kim has a radical diet trick – squirting lemon juice on her leftovers – so she won’t carry on picking.

Kim says: “I am no super-thin Hollywood actress. I am built for men who like women to look like women.”
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