Astellas maintains lead over Daiichi Sankyo with CHMP okay for Xospata

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Xospata

Astellas’ FLT3 inhibitor for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) – Xospata – has been recommended for approval in Europe, giving it a further lead over a rival drug from Daiichi Sankyo.

The EMA’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) issued a positive opinion for Xospata (gilteritinib) as a treatment for adult patients with relapsed or refractory FLT3-positive AML at its meeting late last week, after an accelerated review.

The green light means that EMA approval is likely to follow within the next few weeks, and would be “one of the few advances for the treatment of AML in Europe over the past 40 years,” according to Astellas.

Xospata was cleared in the US and Japan last year, and the CHMP backing gives Astellas another leg up in the market over Daiichi Sankyo and its FLT3 inhibitor quizartinib.

The EMA is also in the midst of an accelerated review of quizartinib, but Daiichi Sankyo suffered a big setback last year when the FDA rejected its marketing application, just a few days after it claimed its first approval in Japan. The FDA verdict came after its advisory committee voted against the drug on the grounds that the clinical trial data in its marketing application may not be reliable.

The FLT3 mutation is expressed in about 30% of AML patients and is associated with a worse prognosis, higher relapse rate, faster progression and shorter overall survival, and FLT3 inhibitors have been pitched as a major advance in treatment for patients.

Xospata has been shown in the ADMIRAL clinical trial to improve overall survival compared to salvage chemotherapy, the standard second-line treatment option, with a median OS of 9.3 months for Astellas drug versus 5.6 months for chemo.

It has been shown to work in two FLT3 mutations – namely ITD and TKD – while quizartinib only targets ITD but has greater potency against that target.

Xospata and quizartinib have reached the market after Novartis’ first-to-market FLT3-targeting drug Rydapt (midostaurin), which was approved in both the US and Europe for newly-diagnosed FLT3-positive AML in combination with chemotherapy in 2017.

Astellas and Daiichi Sankyo’s drugs are being positioned initially as second-generation FLT3 inhibitors that build on the activity seen with Rydapt and extend the use of the class into second-line treatment.

However, both companies have aspirations to extend their use into the first-line setting and challenge Rydapt directly. There’s also more potential competition on the way from Arog Pharma, whose FLT3 inhibitor crenolanib is in late-stage development for newly-diagnosed as well as relapsed/refractory AML.

Sales of Novartis’ drug are too small to warrant their own line in the company’s quarterly results statements, but analysts have previously suggested that peak sales of the drug will be in the $250 to $300 million range.

Astellas reported sales of around $22 million for Xospata in the first quarter of fiscal 2019, and has said it expects that to increase to around $140m for the full-year.