| 31 Août 2016
The company’s latest report states that the glioblastoma therapy pipeline, which includes 512  products active across all stages of development, is moderately sized  but highly innovative. Potential factors driving the pipeline include  vast unmet need, a growing patient pool if disease prognosis can be  improved, a lack of approved options in the market landscape, and a  recently improved understanding of the disease pathophysiology,  facilitating the development of novel compounds. Adam Bradbury, MSc,  Associate Analyst for GBI Research, explains: “Pipeline innovation has  far-reaching strategic implications for all market participants as,  despite the high attrition rate in glioblastoma, it is highly likely  that many of the numerous first-in-class products, a number of which are  supported by promising preclinical data, will reach the market over the  coming decade, potentially transforming the clinical and commercial  landscape.” For players in the market,  the case for investment in innovative products has not weakened as a  result of the challenging commercial environments in developed markets  and, increasingly, developed nations. On the contrary, despite higher  stakes and greater risks, the return on investment for innovative  products reaching the market remains attractive and could increase in  significance in years to come. Bradbury continues: “There  are many signaling pathways and cellular processes in glioblastoma that  remain untargeted by the limited number of associated marketed  products. While growth factor signaling, such as by vascular endothelial  growth factor, is inhibited in current glioblastoma treatments,  evidence is mounting for the importance of other parallel mechanisms,  such as cancer stem cell growth, and extracellular matrix remodeling.” In terms of the  glioblastoma deals landscape, activity is moderate and the mean value  for co-development deals is below the industry average at $196.2  million, although the mean value of licensing deals is above the  industry average at $168 million, according to GBI Research. Bradbury concludes: “One  of the most lucrative recent deals, a licensing agreement between  AstraZenenca and Targacept, involved a current first-in-class product,  and was valued at $1.2 billion. Despite the risk that can be associated  with first-in-class products, they have still been shown to be a highly  desirable investment option.”
London – 31 August 2016 - Glioblastoma, a  particularly aggressive form of brain tumor, has a promising treatment  pipeline, with 120 first-in-class programs acting on 86 first-in-class  molecular targets, according to business intelligence provider GBI  Research.









