Gilead

Trodelvy: A New Option for Later Lines TNBC

Conclusion: Trodelvy offers moderate clinical innovation in relapsed/refractory triple-negative breast cancer (R/R TNBC), suggesting it will be prescribed to a large share of patients in this population.  We compare the results with other recent launches in breast cancers.   

In April 2020, the FDA granted accelerated approval to Trodelvy (sacituzumab govitecan-hziy, Gilead) in patients with metastatic TNBC who have failed two prior lines of therapy. Now, a year later, the FDA has granted full approval to Trodelvy for women with TNBC who have had received two or more systemic therapies, at least one for metastatic disease. Our analysis is based on phase III clinical data (NCT02574455).

TNBC makes up 15-20% of metastatic breast cancer incidence and remains an area of high unmet need. Patients at later lines have historically had few options—all of which offered short time to progression and poor survival rates.

Trodelvy boasts a significant increase in both median progression-free survival (mPFS) and median overall survival (mOS) when compared to physician’s choice chemotherapy. In the phase III ASCENT trial, Trodelvy patients without brain metastasis had an average PFS of 5.6 months, compared to 1.7 months for chemotherapy; mOS almost doubled, going from 6.7 months to 12.1. Trodelvy’s efficacy in patients with brain metastasis was only marginally less impressive. When modeled in Equinox’s framework, these results yield a Clinical Innovation score for Trodelvy of 9.3%, which is moderately differentiated (defined as 5-10% improvement), based on a large set of historical examples.

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To put into context Trodelvy’s commercial outlook in R/R TNBC, we can compare it with other breast cancer therapies launched in recent years, regarding:

  • Sizes of the populations (bubble size)

  • Level of medical need (Y-axis)

  • Clinical improvement over the previous standard of care (Equinox Group’s “Clinical Innovation” metric, on the X-axis)

Green bubbles represent drugs with a clinical innovation score greater than 10% (highly innovative drugs)Yellow bubbles represent drugs with a clinical innovation score of 5-10% (moderately innovative drugs)Orange bubbles represent drugs with a clinical innovation score of less than 5% (low innovation drugs)

Green bubbles represent drugs with a clinical innovation score greater than 10% (highly innovative drugs)

Yellow bubbles represent drugs with a clinical innovation score of 5-10% (moderately innovative drugs)

Orange bubbles represent drugs with a clinical innovation score of less than 5% (low innovation drugs)

The level of unmet medical need in R/R TNBC treated with chemotherapy is extraordinarily high at 4.22 on Equinox Group’s 0-5 unmet need scoring system.  Need is driven by the excess risk of mortality: 50 times higher than in an age-matched population. 

Our analysis suggests Trodelvy will achieve good patient share in this small population.  Its Clinical Innovation is only slightly lower than that achieved by Perjeta (in combination with trastuzumab + docetaxel) in 1st line HER2+ metastatic breast cancer – a regimen that dominates treatment in its population.

Enhertu in 3rd line HER2+ mBC addresses the second highest level of medical need among the indications here; it offers strong clinical innovation of 26%, suggesting it has strong patient share potential.

Trodelvy’s modest revenue of $72 million in Q1 2021 reflects its initial launches in small patient populations.  In contrast, Ibrance is targeted to a much larger, lower-need population, offers high clinical innovation (15.7%) and has achieved a substantial patient share and sales ($5.4 billion in 2020).  Kisqali’s more modest sales of $687 million in 2020 are explained by its lack of meaningful improvement vs. Ibrance and a launch that was two years later.

Trodelvy is in development in larger populations, including early lines of TNBC, HR+/HER 2- metastatic breast cancer and metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer. Its commercial outlook in those indications, including patient share and pricing potential, will depend on the level of Clinical Innovation it delivers.