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Akeso’s lung cancer drug reduced the risk of death by 34% compared to standard care in previously untreated Chinese patients — a huge win in a hotly contested class of drugs. Max Gelman reports on the results, as well as the caveats that mean it won’t change practice in the US, at least not yet. |
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Karen Weintraub |
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
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by Max Gelman
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CHICAGO —The leading drug in biopharma's hottest immunotherapy race reduced the risk of death by 34% in previously untreated Chinese lung cancer patients, compared... | |
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by Lei Lei Wu
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CHICAGO— When oncologist Brian Wolpin saw the positive results from Revolution Medicines' pivotal pancreatic cancer study for the first time, he was rendered speechless... | |
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by Ryan Cross
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Personalized cancer vaccinesmight make notoriously deadly brain cancers more susceptible to immunotherapy and possibly prolong survival for some patients, according to new research
from... | |
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by Lei Lei Wu
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CHICAGO— Grail's blood test, which it has pitched as a way to spot a variety of cancers early in their growth, still isn't ready... | |
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Worldwide made. Thanks for reading.
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