Definition
Ovarian cancer is defined as a group of tumors that originate in the ovaries. Most ovarian cancers are epithelial carcinomas which begin in the tissue surrounding the ovary. Other less common types of ovarian tumors include primary peritoneal, fallopian tube, and malignant germ cell tumors. Ovarian cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women, and is the leading cause of gynecological cancer-related death in women.
Latest Key Takeaways
Ovarian cancer is defined as a group of tumors that originate in the ovaries. Most ovarian cancers are epithelial carcinomas which begin in the tissue surrounding the ovary. Other less common types of ovarian tumors include primary peritoneal, fallopian tube, and malignant germ cell tumors. Ovarian cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women, and is the leading cause of gynecological cancer-related death in women.
Latest Key Takeaways
- The publisher estimates that in 2018, there were 293,300 incident cases of ovarian cancer worldwide in females aged 15 years and older, and forecasts that number to increase to 319,500 cases by 2027.
- Highly genericized platinum-containing chemotherapies are still the standard of care for both newly diagnosed and recurrent platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer patients.
- The overall likelihood of approval of a Phase I ovarian cancer asset is 2.7%, and the average probability a drug advances from Phase III is 24%. Ovarian cancer drugs, on average, take 10.7 years from Phase I to approval, compared to 9.6 years in the overall oncology space.
- Avastin has become the drug of choice for the maintenance treatment of ovarian cancer patients who do not have a BRCA mutation. However, upcoming patent expiries and expected competition from label expansions for the PARP inhibitors and late-phase pipeline drugs will challenge Avastin’s position in the ovarian cancer market.
- The PARP inhibitor Lynparza has quickly become the standard-of-care first-line maintenance therapy for patients with BRCA-mutated ovarian cancer. However, fellow PARP inhibitor Zejula is now challenging Lynparza in this treatment setting. A third PARP inhibitor, veliparib, is expected to compete with both Lynparza and Zejula. Although all three PARP inhibitors have also demonstrated an advantage over chemotherapy in patients without a BRCA mutation or a homologous recombination deficiency (HRD), the primary benefit was derived in patients with BRCA or other HRD mutations, which may limit uptake in the broader patient population.
- Rubraca, another PARP inhibitor, has experienced only moderate uptake in the US and EU as a maintenance treatment for recurrent platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer, and in the US as a third-line or later treatment for BRCA mutation-positive (BRCAm+) patients. However, a potential combination with Opdivo in the first-line maintenance setting may expand Rubraca’s commercial potential.
- New product launches will play a pivotal part in future market dynamics over the next decade. Key new product launches will include checkpoint inhibitors, folate receptor alpha (FRα)-directed antibody-drug conjugate mirvetuximab soravtansine, and the targeted anti-cancer viral-based gene therapy agent ofranergene obadenovec.
- The inclusion of PARP inhibitors in the treatment paradigm has led to a subsequent increase in testing for germline and somatic BRCA1/2 mutations as well as genomic instability score (GIS). This trend of using biomarkers to inform treatment decisions will continue with the introduction of checkpoint inhibitors and mirvetuximab soravtansine, which will likely require PD-L1 and FRα testing, respectively.
- Several PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors - Jemperli, Opdivo, Keytruda, and Imfinzi - are in late-phase development in combination with carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without concurrent bevacizumab in the front-line and first-line maintenance settings. Because of the likely clinical similarities between drugs within this class, companies developing checkpoint inhibitors will seek to use label expansions into other treatment settings, such as to the recurrent setting, to differentiate their products and increase the size of the potential patient population.
- As platinum resistance continues to be the primary contributor to mortality in ovarian cancer patients, effective treatments for platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory ovarian cancer remain the largest unmet need within the indication. Treatment for platinum-resistant/refractory ovarian cancer is largely palliative, and patients currently have very limited treatment options.
- There are no routine screening methods recommended by medical or professional organizations because screening techniques using single tests or combined algorithms have not been shown to reduce all-cause or disease-specific morbidity or mortality. Research to address this unmet need through the development of reliable screening and diagnostic tools that detect early-stage ovarian cancer is ongoing.
- Key recent events include Zejula’s approval across therapy lines in Japan, a supplemental approval in the EU for Zejula as a monotherapy first-line maintenance treatment, and Tecentriq’s Phase III failure for newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer in IMagyn050.
Table of Contents
OVERVIEW
DISEASE BACKGROUND
TREATMENT
EPIDEMIOLOGY
KEY REGULATORY EVENTS
LICENSING AND ASSET ACQUISITION DEALS
CLINICAL TRIAL LANDSCAPE
FUTURE TRENDS
RECENT EVENTS AND ANALYST OPINION
UNMET NEEDS
LIST OF FIGURES
LIST OF TABLES