- Moderna and Merck's experimental cancer vaccine, when used in combination with Keytruda, reduced the risk of death or relapse in patients with the most deadly form of skin cancer after three years, according to midstage trial data.
- Those results build on midstage trial data the companies released earlier this year, which examined the efficacy of the combination over a shorter period.
- Moderna and Merck are also testing the vaccine with Keytruda against other tumor types, including non-small cell lung cancer.
Moderna and Merck's experimental cancer vaccine, when used in combination with Merck's blockbuster therapy Keytruda, reduced the risk of death or relapse in patients with the most deadly form of skin cancer by half after roughly three years, according to midstage trial data released Thursday.
The vaccine could win regulatory approvals and launch in some countries as early as 2025, Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel said on CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Thursday.
Shares of Moderna jumped more than 10% in morning trading Thursday following the data release, while Merck's stock dipped slightly.
The combination specifically slashed the risk of death or recurrence of the cancer, known as melanoma, by 49% in patients in later stages of the disease compared to those who received Keytruda alone after three years. The cancer vaccine in combination with Keytruda also reduced the risk of melanoma spreading to other parts of the body by 62%.
Those results build on midstage trial data the companies released earlier this year, which showed the efficacy of the combination in the same patients over a shorter period. After around two years, the vaccine and Keytruda cut the risk of death or relapse by 44% in melanoma patients, and reduced the risk of the cancer spreading in the body by 65%, according to the earlier trial data.
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The most common side effects of the vaccine were fatigue, injection site pain and chills, according to Thursday's data.
The new results suggest that the cancer shot used with the immunotherapy continues to provide meaningful health benefits to melanoma patients after they stay on the treatment for a longer period of time.
Bancel said he is eager to see four and five-year data on the vaccine because "the melanoma curve is flattening, people are not dying anymore" after going through the treatment.
The two drugmakers are studying the combination as a treatment for late-stage melanoma in a phase-three trial, which began in July. Bancel also said the companies are studying the vaccine in patients at earlier stages of melanoma.
"We believe that the earlier you go in disease, the stronger the immune system of a patient is, meaning our individualized treatment should work even better," Bancel said.
The vaccine, which uses the same mRNA technology as Moderna's Covid vaccine, is custom-built based on an analysis of a patient's tumors after surgical removal. The shot is designed to train the immune system to recognize and attack specific mutations in cancer cells.
Merck's Keytruda, which is approved to treat melanoma and other cancers, belongs to a class of widely used immunotherapies that are designed to disable a certain protein that helps cancer evade the immune system.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave breakthrough therapy designation to the cancer vaccine for the treatment of melanoma in February, which is intended to speed up the development and review of treatments for serious and life-threatening diseases.
Moderna and Merck are also testing the vaccine with Keytruda against other tumor types. On Monday, the drugmakers started a late-stage trial on the combination as a treatment for non-small cell lung cancer.
Melanoma is responsible for the large majority of skin cancer deaths, according to the American Cancer Society. The rate of melanoma has increased rapidly over the past few decades, according to the organization.
About 100,000 people will be diagnosed with melanoma in the U.S. this year and nearly 8,000 people are expected to die from the disease, according to the American Cancer Society.
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