Bio & Pharma

Yuhan’s lung cancer drug clears FDA hurdle for global debut

Yu-Rim Kim and Young-Ae Lee

4 HOURS AGO

Yuhan's Lazertinib, or Lazcluze, is marketed under the brand name Leclaza in South Korea

A new lung cancer treatment developed by South Korea’s Yuhan Corp. has secured approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a combination therapy with Johnson & Johnson’s (J&J) antibiotic drug, the US pharmaceutical company said on Tuesday.

Lazertinib, sold by Yuhan under the brand name Leclaza in South Korea, and J&J’s Rybrevant got the nod from the FDA as a first-line combination treatment of adult patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), based on their phase 3 clinical test results, according to J&J.

With the approval, Lazertinib became the first antibiotic drug developed by a South Korean company and is poised to become the country's first blockbuster drug with annual sales of over 1 trillion won ($750 million).

In 2018, Yuhan signed a licensing-out agreement of up to $1.25 billion for Lazertinib with Janssen Biotech Inc. of J&J for clinical trials and global approval. It is an oral, third-generation epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI).

In 2015, Yuhan purchased the Lazertinib substance license from Genosco, a Boston-based R&D arm of Oscotec Inc. in the phase of the substance development.

Lazertinib is also called Lazcluze.

“With this milestone, Rybrevant plus Lazcluze becomes the first and only multitargeted, chemotherapy-free combination regimen with demonstrated superiority versus osimertinib approved for the first-line treatment of patients with EGFR-mutated NSCLC,” J&J said in a statement.

Osimertinib, developed by AstraZeneca, is sold under the brand name Tagrisso. It dominates the EGFR-mutated NSCLC medication market.

NSCLC accounts for 80 to 85 percent of lung cancers, according to the American Cancer Society.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


In clinical trials, the combination therapy of Rybrevant and Lazertinib reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 30 percent versus osimertinib with a nine-month-longer progression-free survival period, J&J added.

Yuhan had invested a total of 500 billion won in some 50 non-listed biopharmaceutical companies with new drug candidates.

But it has changed its strategy late last year to directly purchase innovative drug candidates and develop another blockbuster medicines. Out of its 33 drug candidates in the pipeline, it has obtained 16 from outside companies.

Cho Wook-je, chief executive of Yuhan


FINANCIAL TARGETS

In an interview with The Korea Economic Daily on Wednesday, Yuhan CEO Cho Wook-je said it aims to double its sales to 4 trillion won by 2026 from 1.9 trillion won in 2023 to join the ranks of the world's 50 leading pharmaceutical companies.

It targets about a ninefold jump in operating profit to 500 billion won by 2026, from 56.8 billion won in 2023.

BIOSIMILAR MARKET

South Korea’s innovative drug development is in its infancy. But it has built its strong presence in the biosimilar market, developing an average of 1.5 new biosimilars annually, led by Celltrion Inc.

Celltrion's Remsima, referencing Remicade, was approved by Europe as the world's first antibody biosimilar in 2013 and got the nod from the FDA in 2016

Among the 56 biosimilars approved by the FDA in the first half of this year, South Korea claimed 12 to rank second in the market after the US with 24.

(Updated with comments from Yuhan CEO Cho Wook-je)

Write to Yu-Rim Kim and Young-Ae Lee at youforest@hankyung.com
 

Yeonhee Kim edited this article

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