Cancer Biomarkers: Enhancing diagnostic, therapeutic and developmental strategies
Scope
Report Highlights
Reasons to Purchase
Table of Contents
- ABOUT DATAMONITOR HEALTHCARE - page 2
- CHAPTER 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY - page 7
- CHAPTER 2 BIOMARKER USE IN DRIVING EFFICIENCIES IN THE COMMERCIALIZATION OF NOVEL ONCOLOGY PHARMACOTHERAPY - page 10
- Defining biomarkers in relation to the diagnosis and treatment of cancer - page 10
- Using biomarkers to mitigate productivity-constraining challenges in oncology drug development - page 10
- Early changes in PSA may predict efficacy of novel developmental agents targeting prostate cancer - page 11
- Cancer biomarkers have the potential to greatly enhance the screening, diagnosis and treatment decision-making process - page 11
- Ideal biomarker requirements vary with their proposed clinical use - page 12
- Collaborative initiatives aim to facilitate biomarker discovery - page 14
- Defining prognostic and predictive biomarkers - page 15
- Prognostic biomarkers can be classified as 'biological progression biomarkers' or 'risk biomarkers' - page 16
- Predictive biomarkers provide a measure of the impact of drug and non-drug interventions - page 17
- FDA has designated 'Type 2' cancer biomarkers as valid surrogates of clinical benefit - page 19
- Biomarker validation remains a major challenge for the scientific community - page 21
- Lack of rigor and consistency in novel biomarker validation has resticted their acceptance among the scientific and clinical community - page 22
- Current biomarkers and their clinical and commercial use - page 23
- Many cancer biomarkers in current clinical use are used to guide the selection of novel targeted treatments - page 25
- Four biomarker assays dominate the marketplace and collectively generated global sales of $860m in 2003 - page 25
- CHAPTER 3 IMAGING BIOMARKERS ARE BEING ADOPTED WITH INCREASING FREQUENCY - page 30
- Functional imaging is generating the greatest interest as a tool to aid drug development - page 31
- Focus on F-18-deoxyglucose Positron-Emission Tomography imaging to facilitate early assessment of cancer drug efficacy - page 31
- Payer enthusiasm for PET scanning is shared by regulators - page 33
- Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging may provide an valuable early assessment of the efficacy of angiogenesis inhibitors - page 33
- Developers show early signs of adopting DCE-MRI to assess the antiangiogenic activity of novel developmental agents - page 34
- Developers will need to partner with functional imaging experts to ensure quality assurance in functional imaging applications - page 35
- Focus on F-18-deoxyglucose Positron-Emission Tomography imaging to facilitate early assessment of cancer drug efficacy - page 31
- Functional imaging is generating the greatest interest as a tool to aid drug development - page 31
- CHAPTER 4 NEXT GENERATION BIOMARKERS WILL FOCUS ON GENOMIC- AND PROTEOMIC-BASED APPROACHES - page 36
- Protein function rather than protein quantification may be the more salient approach - page 36
- Early demonstration of how protein expression profiles may help guide pharmacotherapy decisions - page 37
- Genomic biomarkers herald the future - page 37
- Affymetrix-Roche's Amplichip represents the first FDA-approved genomic-based prognostic tool - page 38
- Diagnostic biomarket market expected to reach $3 billion annually - page 38
- Single DNA-based biomarkers likely to be of little prognostic or predictive value - page 38
- Epigenetic changes and mutations in oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes and DNA mismatch repair genes are the focus of DNA-based biomarker approaches - page 39
- Epigenetic biomarker have the potential to guide treatment decisions for a number of marketed and developmental agents - page 42
- Viral biomarkers have clinical potential for predicting treatment response and prognosis following the diagnosis of virally-mediated tumors. - page 42
- Mitochondrial DNA analysis has huge potential - page 43
- Pattern-based RNA expression analysis has been demonstrated in a number of tumor types - page 44
- Commercial potential of RNA-expression arrays demonstrated by Genomic Health's Oncotype DX - page 46
- Predictive expression profiles also exist for diffuse large B-cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma - page 47
- Advances in gene expression profiling need to be matched by improvements in patient outcomes - page 49
- microRNA approaches offer a novel approach to molecular profiling - page 50
- But challenges still cloud the path to the commerciazation of novel RNA-based biomarker approaches - page 50
- Affymetrix-Roche's Amplichip represents the first FDA-approved genomic-based prognostic tool - page 38
- Protein function rather than protein quantification may be the more salient approach - page 36
- CHAPTER 5 REGULATORY ISSUES PROVIDE CHALLENGES TO CANCER BIOMARKER DEVELOPMENT - page 51
- Regulatory procedures for cancer biomarkers can be onerous - page 51
- Anylate-specific reagent designation facilitates laboratory use of novel biomarkers but prohibits payer reimbursement - page 51
- Case study of Affymetrix-Roche's AmpliChip illustrates impact of regulatory hurdles - page 52
- Industry guidance on pharmacogenomics aims to build expertise and foundation for developing scientifically sound regulatory policies - page 52
- Ambiguities and developer concerns persist despite guidance - page 54
- New drug test co-development guidance aims to change existing paradigms - page 55
- Scientific, business and regulatory challenges hinder drug-diagnostic co-launches - page 55
- Drug-test co-development concept paper focuses on technical/analytical issues rather than clinical aspects - page 56
- Drug-test co-development may ultimately be a mandatory rather than an elective path for developers to follow - page 57
- Regulatory procedures for cancer biomarkers can be onerous - page 51
- CHAPTER 6 BENEFITS AND RISKS OF PURSUING INCREASED MARKET SEGMENTATION - page 58
- Risk of increased market segmentation in the era of 'personalized medicine' countered by need for developers to demonstrate cost-effectiveness of new high-cost treatments - page 58
- Case study of HER-2/neu testing illustrates potential commercial rewards of biomarker testing - page 59
- Fragmentation of cancer staging sytems may limit their clinical utility - page 63
- Industry anxiety related to relabelling of existing drugs - page 64
- But could the availability of epidermal growth factor receptor mutational analysis have mitigated the failure of AstraZeneca's Iressa? - page 64
- Pharmacoeconomic challenges to the implementation of biomarkers - page 65
- Risk of increased market segmentation in the era of 'personalized medicine' countered by need for developers to demonstrate cost-effectiveness of new high-cost treatments - page 58
- CHAPTER 7 APPENDIX - page 67
- Bibliography - page 67
- Research methodology - page 70
- About Datamonitor - page 70
- About Datamonitor Healthcare - page 70
- Datamonitor Healthcare's research and analysis methodologies - page 71
- Datamonitor Healthcare's therapy area capabilities - page 71
- About the Oncology analysis team - page 72
- Key therapy team members - page 73
- Nish Saini, Lead Oncology Analyst - page 73
- Disclaimer - page 73
- List of Tables
- Table 1: Prognostic and predictive biomarkers used in oncology - page 18
- Table 2: NIH-FDA classification of biomarkers - page 20
- Table 3: FDA-approved cancer biomarkers - page 23
- Table 4: Biomarkers to guide prognosis and treatment decisions - page 25
- Table 5: Selected FDA-approved biomarker assays, test systems and kits for BTA, CEA, CA125 and CA27.19 - page 27
- Table 6: Medical imaging techniques in oncology - page 30
- Table 7: DNA-based biomarkers - page 40
- Table 8: Viral biomarkers in oncology - page 43
- Table 9: Prognostic and predictive utility of RNA-expression analysis - page 45
- Table 10: Selected HER-2 tests available in the US - page 60
- Table 11: Crude incidence rates of female breast cancer (per 100,000) in the seven major markets, 2006 - page 61
- Table 12: Female breast cancer incidence forecast in the seven major markets, 2002-16 - page 62
- Table 13: Forecast sales of HER2/neu testing (FISH alone) in the 7 major pharmaceutical markets 2006-2016 - page 62
- Table 14: Forecast sales of HER2/neu testing (IHC followed by FISH in IHC positive patients) in the 7 major pharmaceutical markets, 2006-2016 - page 63
- List of Figures
- Figure 1: Prognostic biomarkers - page 15
- Figure 2: Predictive biomarkers - page 16
- Figure 3: Development of biomarkers for clinical use - page 56
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