When Pfizer laid out the ambitious vision for its new oncology division in February, it announced that it was taking the antibody-drug conjugate sigvotatug vedotin directly from Phase 1 to Phase 3. Now the drugmaker is releasing the updated data that convinced it to accelerate the drug acquired from its $43 billion deal for Seagen last year.
In updated results released Thursday, Pfizer said that about one-fifth of lung cancer patients who received sigvotatug vedotin saw their tumors shrink by at least 30%. And in 40 patients with non-squamous, non-small cell lung cancer, which includes forms of lung cancer that typically start from the periphery of the lungs, 13 patients saw their tumors shrink by at least that amount, a 32.5% response rate.
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