Media Release
Basel, 10 August 2004
Roche
gets European approval for MabThera in first line treatment of indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Vital
treatment option brings benefit to patients across Europe
Roche announced
today that the European Commission has approved MabThera (rituximab) for first line use in treatment
of indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) in combination with conventional chemotherapy.
The
European Commission’s decision was based on phase III study results which showed MabThera in combination
with CVP (cyclophosphamide, vincristine and prednisolone) chemotherapy to be significantly superior
to CVP chemotherapy alone:
• Time to treatment failure was significantly
prolonged by more than 1½ years: 26 months versus 7 months
• Freedom from disease progression
was nearly doubled: 27 months versus 15 months
• More patients responded to the combination
treatment: overall response rate was 81% versus 57 %, and complete response rate quadrupled to 41% from
10%
“This approval is excellent news for the many indolent NHL patients
suffering from this potentially fatal disease,” said William M. Burns, Head of Roche’s Pharmaceuticals
division. “MabThera in combination with chemotherapy is a vital treatment option, and making it available
to patients across Europe underlines its position as the standard of care in indolent NHL.”
MabThera
monotherapy was approved for the treatment of relapsed or refractory indolent NHL in June 1998 and in
combination with CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone) chemotherapy for treatment
of aggressive NHL in March 2002. Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma affects 1.5 million people worldwide. Indolent
NHL, representing about 45% of NHL patients, is a slow developing but serious cancer of the lymphatic
system, and patients are prone to relapse after treatment.
“This approval
for MabThera marks a major advance in the treatment of indolent NHL,” said Kapil Dhingra, Vice President
Roche Oncology. “By every criterion of effectiveness, whether time to progression, disease-free survival
or duration of response, patients who received MabThera in addition to chemotherapy had a superior outcome
as compared to those receiving conventional chemotherapy only. This is the first time that the addition
of a well tolerated biologic agent to chemotherapy has led to such a significant clinical benefit in
this condition."
About the study
The
filing for approval of MabThera in indolent NHL was based on final results from the multi-centre, phase
III randomised study, which involved 321 patients from 11 countries and compared a treatment regimen
of MabThera plus CVP chemotherapy with CVP chemotherapy alone. Patients were previously untreated and
were diagnosed with advanced stage, indolent (follicular) NHL. Of the 321 patients involved, 159 were
randomised into the CVP chemotherapy group and 162 into the MabThera plus CVP chemotherapy treatment
group.
About MabThera
MabThera is
a therapeutic antibody that binds to a particular protein - the CD20 antigen - on the surface of normal
and malignant B-cells. It then recruits the body's natural defence to attack and kill the marked B-cells.
Stem cells (B-cell progenitors) in bone marrow lack the CD20 antigen, allowing healthy B-cells to regenerate
after treatment and return to normal levels within several months. MabThera is known as Rituxan in the
United States, Japan and Canada. More than 300,000 patients have been treated with MabThera worldwide
to date. Genentech and BiogenIdec co-market MabThera in the United States, and Roche markets MabThera
in the rest of the world, except Japan, where MabThera is co-marketed by Chugai and Zenyaku Kogyo Co.
Ltd.
Roche in Oncology
Within the
last five years the Roche Group including its partners Genentech in the US and Chugai in Japan has become
the world’s leading provider of anti-cancer treatments, supportive care products and diagnostics. Its
oncology business includes an unprecedented four marketed products with survival benefit in different
major tumor indications: Xeloda and Herceptin in advanced stage breast cancer, MabThera in non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, and Avastin in colorectal carcinoma. In the United States Herceptin, MabThera and Avastin
are marketed either by Genentech alone or together with Biogen Idec Inc. Outside of the United States,
Roche and its Japanese partner Chugai are responsible for the marketing of these drugs.
The
Roche oncology portfolio also includes NeoRecormon (anaemia in various cancer settings), Bondronat (prevention
of skeletal events in breast cancer and bone metastases patients, hypercalcemia of malignancy), Kytril
(chemotherapy and radiotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting) and Roferon-A (hairy cell and chronic myeloid
leukaemia, Kaposi's sarcoma, malignant melanoma, renal cell carcinoma). CERA is the most recent demonstration
of the commitment to anaemia management. The Roche Group’s cancer medicines generated sales of more
than 6 billion Swiss francs in 2003.
In a recent phase III study Tarceva
met its primary endpoint of improving overall survival in patients with non-small cell lung cancer.
Tarceva is being developed by Roche, Genentech and OSI Pharmaceuticals. Chugai is pursuing its development
and regulatory approval for the Japanese market.
Roche is developing
new tests, which will have a significant impact on disease management for cancer patients in the future.
With a broad portfolio of tumor markers for prostate, colorectal, liver, ovarian, breast, stomach, pancreas
and lung cancer, as well as a range of molecular oncology tests, we will continue to be the leaders
in providing cancer focused treatments and diagnostics.
Roche Oncology
has four research sites (two in the US, Germany and Japan) and four Headquarter Development sites (two
in the US, UK and Switzerland).
About Roche
Headquartered
in Basel, Switzerland, Roche is one of the world’s leading innovation-driven healthcare groups. Its
core businesses are pharmaceuticals and diagnostics. Roche is number one in the global diagnostics market,
the leading supplier of pharmaceuticals for cancer and a leader in virology and transplantation. As
a supplier of products and services for the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of disease, the Group
contributes on a broad range of fronts to improving people’s health and quality of life. Roche employs
roughly 65,000 people in 150 countries. The Group has alliances and R&D agreements with numerous
partners, including majority ownership interests in Genentech and Chugai.
All trademarks used or mentioned in this release are legally protected.
Further information:
Cancer: www.health-kiosk.ch
World wide association of lymphoma groups: www.lymphomacoalition.org/home.htm
For free B-roll/video content about the study that led to the European Commission’s approval: www.thenewsmarket.com