Asthma drug by AstraZeneca fails

May 10, 2017 | Wednesday | News

AstraZeneca would now await the results from a second Phase III of tralokinumab in the second half of the year to see if the drug might help a sub-group of patients.

An experimental biotech drug for severe asthma from AstraZeneca failed to meet its goal of significantly reducing attacks in a late-stage study, dealing a blow to an approach that had already run into problems at Roche.

Asthma affects about 315 million people worldwide, with about 10 percent suffering from severe asthma.

AstraZeneca would now await the results from a second Phase III of tralokinumab in the second half of the year to see if the drug might help a sub-group of patients.

Tralokinumab had been viewed as a risky project after Roche reported disappointing results with its similar medicine lebrikizumab last year. Both drugs block a protein called interleukin-13.

AstraZeneca also has another experimental drug for severe asthma called benralizumab that works in a different way and is currently awaiting regulatory approval. It will compete with other recently approved treatments such as GlaxoSmithKline's Nucala.

Comments

× Your session has expired. Please click here to Sign-in or Sign-up

Have an Account?

Forgot your password?

First Name should not be empty!

Last Name should not be empty!

Email address should not be empty!

Show Password should not be empty!

Show Confirm Password should not be empty!

Newsletter

E-magazine

Biospectrum Infomercial

Bio Resource

I accept the terms & conditions & Privacy policy