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AstraZeneca Lupus Drug Fails to Meet Main Goal in Study

Reuters Staff  |  August 31, 2018

(Reuters)—AstraZeneca’s experimental drug anifrolumab failed to meet its main target in a late-stage clinical study treating patients with moderate to severe lupus, the British drugmaker said on Friday.

AstraZeneca said the drug did not meet the main goal in the final-stage of one of the two clinical trials under the TULIP program, failing to show a statistically-significant reduction in disease activity in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, commonly known as SLE.

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“The result of this trial is disappointing for patients and the lupus community,” says Sean Bohen, AstraZeneca’s Chief Medical Officer.

AstraZeneca has been in a race with GlaxoSmithKline and French biotech company Neovacs to create new treatments for lupus, which affects about 5 million people globally.

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Anifrolumab, which is given intravenously, is designed for patients with moderate to severe lupus and works in a different way to GlaxoSmithKline’s Benlysta (belimumab) by targeting interferon, a protein involved in inflammation.

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Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:anifrolumabLupussystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

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