news

Diverse pipeline could transform liver cancer treatment, says GBI Research

Posted: 7 April 2015 |

Liver cancer treatment has the potential to undergo a major transformation over the next 10 years according to business intelligence provider GBI Research…

liver cancer

Liver cancer treatment has the potential to undergo an impressive transformation over the next 10 years, with a diverse pipeline of 218 products targeting several major needs that are unmet by the current market, according to business intelligence provider GBI Research.

liver cancer

The company’s latest report states that the liver cancer pipeline contains a large amount of first-in-class innovation, contrasting heavily to the market landscape, which has shown little in the way of therapeutic innovation in recent years, with the exception of Nexavar (sorafenib).

Liver cancer is the sixth most common cancer worldwide

While liver cancer is the sixth most common cancer worldwide, its poor prognosis makes it the second leading cause of cancer death. Rising prevalence in developed economies and the success of targeted oncology therapies are factors driving interest in drug development.

Joshua Libberton, Analyst for GBI Research, says: “The liver cancer treatment market is highly segmented in terms of its needs, as early-stage patients have access to curative therapies, such as surgical resection, and have a relatively strong outlook.

“However, for patients diagnosed in later stages, who represent the majority of the patient population, treatment is limited to chemotherapy, which does not provide an appreciable benefit to Overall Survival (OS), and the targeted therapy Nexavar, which does offer a limited OS benefit.”

Compared to the 62 currently marketed therapies, there are 218 products in active development in the liver cancer pipeline, 76 of which are acting on 61 first-in-class targets. This represents a remarkable 49% of the pipeline with a disclosed molecular target, somewhat higher than the 43% first-in-class average across the entire oncology pipeline, according to GBI Research.

Libberton continues: “The early stages of clinical development are host to the majority of first-in-class products, although there is a significant degree of first-in-class development in the later stages, particularly in the signal transduction target family.

“With each major target family showing at least some degree of first-in-class development, the future liver cancer treatment market has a high likelihood of gaining an array of new therapy types and targets, broadening the scope of potential benefits for patients. This trend will lead to the approval of more targeted therapies over the coming decade.”

Related organisations