Where Will Iovance Biotherapeutics Be in 5 Years?

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Iovance Biotherapeutics (NASDAQ: IOVA), a small-cap biotech company, has an innovative approach to treating cancer that relies on harnessing patients' cancer-fighting capabilities. Though the company has encountered some success, including a crucial regulatory approval coming down last year, that hasn't been enough to seduce investors. Iovance's shares are down by 71% in the past five years.

Can the company turn things around and perform much better through the end of the decade? Let's find out.

Amtagvi will make progress

First, a little more detail on Iovance's approach. The company seeks to develop therapies that enhance patients' cancer-fighting cells, specifically tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). Iovance collects these cells from a patient and uses them to manufacture treatments before reinserting them back into the patient. That's the procedure behind the company's Amtagvi, a medicine for advanced melanoma that was approved in February 2024.

One issue with Iovance's treatments is that they take a while to manufacture and administer -- 34 days in the case of Amtagvi -- and they can only be produced in specialized centers. This factor will affect Iovance Biotherapeutics' progress in the next five years. The company is currently seeking approval for Amtagvi in advanced melanoma in several other countries, including Canada, the European Union, the U.K., Australia, and Switzerland.

By 2030, Iovance will likely have earned the green light in these regions and will have made significant progress in activating the specialized centers where Amtagvi has to be manufactured, as well as actually treating patients. In the third quarter, Iovance's revenue was $58.6 million. Not particularly impressive, but as of the end of that period, it had treated just 146 patients.

Iovance sees the potential to treat 20,000 annually in the U.S., and many more in the other territories where it expects to earn approval for Amtagvi. Considering Iovance's top-line guidance for 2025 of between $450 million and $475 million, the company's total revenue should be in the neighborhood of $1 billion by the end of the decade thanks to Amtagvi progress.

We can count on the pipeline, too

Amtagvi is also undergoing clinical trials across a range of new potential indications. Iovance could earn label expansions for its leading medicine in the next several years. One particularly exciting market the company is targeting is non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the world, and about 87% of these patients suffer from the NSCLC variety. Iovance is targeting U.S. approval by 2027 for Amtagvi to treat NSCLC.