Pharmaceutical Industry’s Insatiable Demand for a Specific Type of Cancer Medications

Pharmaceutical Industry’s Insatiable Demand for a Specific Type of Cancer Medications



Big pharma can’t get enough of one class of cancer‌ drugs

AROUND THE world,‍ dealmaking is in a rut. A combination of⁣ higher interest rates, geopolitical tensions and economic ⁤uncertainty has put⁣ a hold on joint ventures, mergers and acquisitions. One exception is targets with AI in their name. Another, less obvious one, involves a⁢ less‌ catchy ‌initialism: ADCs.

Makers of these antibody-drug conjugates, to give them their full name, are‌ all the rage among the world’s biggest drugmakers.‍ Pfizer ⁣is paying $43bn for Seagen, which in turn has just ​teamed up with Nurix Therapeutics, a smaller biotechnology firm, to work on this class of drugs.⁤ Amgen, AstraZeneca ⁤and Merck have also placed ⁣billion-dollar ⁣bets on ADCs. In the past five ​years licensing deals worth bn have ⁢been signed for such therapies. The number of such deals tripled in that period, to 26. So far ‌this year 18 ⁢have been ⁣signed, outpacing similar deals involving other ​emerging cancer drugs.

ADCs aren’t new.⁣ The first‍ was⁣ approved⁢ in 2000 for types of leukaemia.​ They act like guided ⁣biological missiles: a payload ‍of toxic chemotherapy is carried by​ antibodies able to seek out‌ cancer ⁢cells directly. Because they‌ bypass normal tissue and ⁤go straight ‌for their targets, they ​let ‍patients receive higher doses that would otherwise cause too much collateral damage.

2023-09-21 07:51:46
Source from ⁤ www.economist.com
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