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How AZ and Amgen’s Tezspire respiratory data ups the ‘level of ambition’ in immunology
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What do you get when you combine the efforts of one of the world’s leading respiratory drugmakers with a global pioneer in biological medicines? You get a next-gen treatment like Tezspire, which according to pivotal results revealed this month, could become an important new therapy for an underserved respiratory condition.

Co-developed by biopharma giants AstraZeneca and Amgen, and approved in 2021 for severe asthma, Tezspire raked in combined sales of $1.2 billion for the full year 2024. Now, late-stage data in the respiratory condition chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, or CRSwNP, showed that the drug reduces the need for surgery by a startling 98% and the use of corticosteroids by 88%.

The results underscore a growing conversation about biologic treatments that offer a more comprehensive view of immunological pathways as disease targets. While competitors in CRSwNP include biologic blockbusters such as Dupixent from Sanofi and Regeneron, Novartis’ Xolair and GSK’s Nucala, Tezspire stands apart by aiming at a target higher in the immunological cascade, said Andrew Menzies-Gow, vice president of respiratory and immunology in global biopharmaceuticals medical at AstraZeneca.


“As we discover new mechanisms, our ambition will quite rightly improve — we will aim higher to achieve remission and prevent disease progression.”

Andrew Menzies-Gow

Vice president, respiratory and immunology, AstraZeneca


By reducing cytokine release in the airway’s first line of defense, the epithelium, Tezspire is potentially more versatile than other treatments on the market.

“It’s very logical to move from these first-generation biologics to now targeting the epithelial cytokine at the top, focusing on the key role of the epithelium in driving downstream disease,” Menzies-Gow said. “If we think about our epithelium in our airway and then in the nose, it has a really important barrier function. As we breathe in and out, it’s the first thing that comes into contact with viruses, pollution, cigarette smoke, allergens and more.”

And with Tezspire’s ability to reduce the need for invasive surgery or corticosteroids that carry a host of long-term side effects, AstraZeneca and Amgen are looking to carve out a new pocket in the respiratory landscape.

‘We will aim higher’

Dr. Alison Church, vice president of global development for inflammation at Amgen, recalls a time during her medical fellowship before biologics were introduced to the space, when she felt there must be a better way to address CRSwNP.


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