Is It Game Over for AbbVie's Promising Cancer Drug?

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AbbVie Inc. (NYSE: ABBV) is racing against time. Patents protecting its best-selling drug, Humira, expire in the EU later this year, and management is scrambling to develop new drugs that can make up for any lost sales when biosimilars launch in the U.S. in 2023. The company's plans to diversify its revenue away from Humira, however, were dealt a big blow on Thursday, when management reported discouraging phase 2 trials for one of its most anticipated drugs, Rova-T.

Does this data mark the end for Rova-T? And what does it mean for AbbVie's future?

A big bet could be a big flop

There's a big need for new drugs that can successfully battle back against relapsing and recurring solid tumor cancers. Up until now, AbbVie believed that big need could allow it to file for an accelerated approval of Rova-T in small-cell lung cancer patients who've received at least two previous treatment regimens, including at least one platinum-based regimen. The company's confidence in Rova-T's potential was so high that it paid $5.8 billion to acquire the drug in 2016.

A man raises his hands as he stares at a laptop computer.
A man raises his hands as he stares at a laptop computer.

Image source: Getty Images.

Unfortunately, management might have been too confident. After discussing Rova-T's midstage trial results with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), AbbVie is abandoning plans to file for an early approval. In its trial, only 16% of third-line small-cell lung cancer patients expressing DLL3, a protein found on the surface of about 80% of cancer cells in small-cell lung cancer patients, responded to it.

That's far shy of what people were hoping for. Because Rova-T specifically delivers a toxic payload to DLL3-expressing cancer cells, it was thought it could generate an overall response rate closer to 40%. Since the trial was a single-arm study without a comparator, the 16% rate simply doesn't offer enough proof of its efficacy to win over the FDA.

The lackluster performance raises the stakes considerably for Rova-T's remaining studies, including phase 3 trials for first-line and second-line small-cell lung cancer. A combination study involving Rova-T's use alongside the checkpoint inhibitor Opdivo and trials evaluating its use in other solid tumor types should begin trickling out later this year and into 2019.

All's not lost

Yes, this is discouraging news -- no question. However, Rova-T still has a chance to make its way to market.

Small-cell lung cancer is plagued by poor outcomes and limited treatment choices, so the efficacy bar is set pretty low. For instance, the five-year survival rate for stage I cancer is only 31%. Rates drop off considerably to just 2% for stage IV cancer. That makes it conceivable that even middling response rates in placebo-controlled studies could allow it to win a go-ahead, especially since the drug's side effects appear manageable.