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AstraZeneca says Imfinizi lowers mortality risk in bladder cancer

ALN

Astrazeneca PLC on Friday said that adding its Imfinzi drug to the treatment of bladder cancer was linked to lower mortality rates.

The Cambridge, England-based pharmaceutical company reported positive findings from a phase-three trial of Imfinzi, or durvalumab, which was added to a year of Bacillus Calmette-Guérin induction and maintenance therapy.

The result was ‘clinically meaningful improvement’ in survival of patients with ‘BCG-naïve, high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer’ when compared with BCG treatment only.

According to AstraZeneca, using Imfinzi reduced the risk of death, or high-risk disease recurrence, by 32%, based on a median follow-up of more than five years.

‘The early and sustained disease-free survival benefit observed in the POTOMAC trial demonstrates Imfinzi has the potential to change the course of high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer by extending the time patients live without high-risk disease recurrence or progression,’ said Susan Galbraith, AstraZeneca’s executive vice president of Oncology Haematology R&D.

She added that the findings ‘further validate our strategy to bring novel therapies into earlier-stage disease where they can have the greatest impact on patients’ lives.’

AstraZeneca shares traded 0.8% lower at 12,456.87 pence on Friday afternoon in London.

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