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Writ­ing the Next Chap­ter in CLL Care: Bridg­ing Gaps Through In­no­va­tion and In­sights
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Drew Armstrong
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Today, we're introducing Signal, our new intelligence product. Here at Endpoints, we've talked for a long time about the intelligence and insight that our audience has, and how we could turn that into a useful product. Today is that day. We surveyed more than 1,000 biopharma leaders to develop what will be a quarterly index, giving detailed insight into how they think about the industry, about markets, about hiring and about competition. It's an incredible, exclusive analysis that we'll bring you each quarter and that we hope will be a data-driven guide to where we're going.

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Drew Armstrong
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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Writ­ing the Next Chap­ter in CLL Care: Bridg­ing Gaps Through In­no­va­tion and In­sights
by Eli Lilly and Company

While re­cent in­no­va­tions have broad­ened the chron­ic lym­pho­cyt­ic leukemia (CLL) treat­ment land­scape, pa­tients and clin­i­cians still face com­plex chal­lenges and con­tin­ue to need ad­di­tion­al treat­ment ad­vances. At Lil­ly, we are ded­i­cat­ed to de­liv­er­ing med­i­cines that help ad­dress un­met needs for peo­ple liv­ing with blood can­cer, in­clud­ing those af­fect­ed by CLL.

The evo­lu­tion of the CLL treat­ment land­scape

CLL is a form of slow-grow­ing non-Hodgkin lym­phoma that de­vel­ops from white blood cells known as lym­pho­cytes and is one of the most com­mon types of leukemias in adults.1 CLL ac­counts for ap­prox­i­mate­ly one-quar­ter of new leukemia cas­es in the U.S., with an es­ti­mat­ed 23,690 peo­ple who will be new­ly di­ag­nosed in 2025.1,2 The dis­ease pri­mar­i­ly af­fects old­er adults and is of­ten char­ac­ter­ized by a high­ly vari­able clin­i­cal course for pa­tients.1,3

Over the last decade, the pace of progress in the CLL treat­ment land­scape has been re­mark­able, trans­form­ing the dis­ease from what was once a life-al­ter­ing di­ag­no­sis in­to a more man­age­able chron­ic con­di­tion that peo­ple may live with for a long pe­ri­od of time.

Tar­get­ed ther­a­py break­throughs have re­shaped the treat­ment par­a­digm al­low­ing pa­tients to man­age their dis­ease over time and achieve pro­longed pe­ri­ods of dis­ease con­trol. Co­va­lent Bru­ton ty­ro­sine ki­nase (BTK) in­hibitors were among the first to trans­form care for B-cell ma­lig­nan­cies by ir­re­versibly bind­ing to the BTK en­zyme and dis­rupt­ing sig­nal­ing path­ways crit­i­cal for dis­ease pro­gres­sion. More re­cent­ly, the de­vel­op­ment of non-co­va­lent (re­versible) BTK in­hibitors rep­re­sents a sig­nif­i­cant ad­vance­ment, that can al­low for con­tin­ued tar­get­ing of the BTK path­way even in the pres­ence of cer­tain re­sis­tance mu­ta­tions. Along­side B-cell lym­phoma 2 (BCL-2) in­hibitors, mon­o­clon­al an­ti­bod­ies, and oth­er modal­i­ties, these in­no­va­tions have helped bring much need­ed treat­ment op­tions to peo­ple liv­ing with CLL.

Yet, de­spite this progress, many pa­tients go through mul­ti­ple peaks and val­leys, and clin­i­cians face tough de­ci­sions on which op­tion to choose for those who have pro­gressed on ini­tial treat­ments.

Ex­pand­ing ev­i­dence to close gaps in CLL care

While long-term man­age­ment of CLL has im­proved, evolv­ing treat­ment re­sis­tance and the need for ad­di­tion­al op­tions that pro­vide durable re­mis­sion and are well-tol­er­at­ed re­main un­met needs. Ad­di­tion­al­ly, as new treat­ments have evolved, there is lim­it­ed ev­i­dence avail­able to guide what is the next best treat­ment for each pa­tient. The un­cer­tain­ty that pa­tients and their health­care providers face in­di­cates there are still sub­stan­tial gaps in knowl­edge, and a con­tin­ued need for re­search.

To mean­ing­ful­ly im­prove CLL care, there is a crit­i­cal need for ev­i­dence-based guide­lines that ac­count for the in­tri­ca­cies of treat­ing re­al-world pa­tient pop­u­la­tions by study­ing ar­eas that haven’t tra­di­tion­al­ly been the fo­cus of clin­i­cal tri­als. At Lil­ly, we have de­signed clin­i­cal pro­grams to bridge some of these gaps by eval­u­at­ing ther­a­pies in dis­tinct pa­tient pop­u­la­tions and set­tings.

Our com­mit­ment to ex­pand­ing ev­i­dence has led to in­dus­try firsts, such as con­duct­ing a clin­i­cal tri­al that fo­cus­es on pa­tients with CLL not pre­vi­ous­ly in­ves­ti­gat­ed. Oth­er stud­ies in our blood can­cer pro­gram seek to solve unan­swered ques­tions around nov­el com­bi­na­tions and un­der­stand pat­terns of re­sis­tance mu­ta­tions to em­pow­er health­care providers and pa­tients in their treat­ment choic­es and max­i­mize their out­comes. By gen­er­at­ing new da­ta in these new­er ar­eas of re­search, we aim to pro­vide physi­cians with the in­for­ma­tion need­ed to op­ti­mize treat­ment de­ci­sions to meet pa­tients where they are on their jour­ney.

Un­lock­ing new po­ten­tial in CLL to­geth­er

As part of our work in gen­er­at­ing new ev­i­dence, we are ad­vanc­ing mean­ing­ful treat­ments that ad­dress crit­i­cal un­met needs where op­tions are lim­it­ed and out­comes are poor for peo­ple liv­ing with blood can­cer. Our ap­proach in many can­cer types, in­clud­ing CLL, cen­ters on cre­at­ing med­i­cines that tar­get high con­fi­dence ar­eas of can­cer bi­ol­o­gy, show un­equiv­o­cal ear­ly signs of clin­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty and over­all mat­ter to pa­tients. We are fo­cused on de­vel­op­ing in­no­v­a­tive med­i­cines that not on­ly ad­dress the un­der­ly­ing dis­ease but al­so fit in­to pa­tients’ dai­ly lives by pri­or­i­tiz­ing tol­er­a­bil­i­ty and ad­min­is­tra­tion needs.

“Work­ing in the hema­tol­ogy/on­col­o­gy space for over 25 years, in clin­i­cal prac­tice and now at Lil­ly, I’ve seen first­hand how far the field has come thanks to the work of doc­tors, nurs­es, re­searchers and pa­tients. Yet, peo­ple with CLL still re­lapse, so it re­mains im­por­tant for us to con­tin­ue ad­vanc­ing the sci­ence and con­tribut­ing along­side oth­ers in the blood can­cer com­mu­ni­ty to chang­ing the nat­ur­al his­to­ry of this dis­ease,” said John Pagel, M.D., Ph.D., Se­nior Vice Pres­i­dent, Clin­i­cal De­vel­op­ment, Glob­al Head, Hema­tol­ogy, at Eli Lil­ly and Com­pa­ny. “I’m proud to be part of a team ded­i­cat­ed to bring­ing for­ward op­tions in CLL backed by ev­i­dence that can help pa­tients and their care teams nav­i­gate treat­ment choic­es and im­prove out­comes.”

Col­lab­o­ra­tion re­mains a cor­ner­stone of our progress. Lil­ly part­ners with aca­d­e­mics, clin­i­cians, and in­dus­try peers to ac­cel­er­ate the pace of in­no­va­tion and en­sure that break­throughs in sci­ence trans­late in­to mean­ing­ful ben­e­fits for peo­ple liv­ing with blood can­cer. In par­al­lel, we are work­ing with ad­vo­ca­cy or­ga­ni­za­tions and di­rect­ly with the blood can­cer com­mu­ni­ty to gath­er in­sights, raise aware­ness of un­met needs in blood can­cer through fund­ing re­search, ed­u­ca­tion and sup­port ser­vices to ad­dress chal­lenges pa­tients and care­givers face with the goal to im­prove over­all well­be­ing.

At Lil­ly, we are writ­ing the next chap­ter in CLL care by gen­er­at­ing new ev­i­dence to an­swer crit­i­cal ques­tions and pro­vid­ing physi­cians with in­no­v­a­tive, clin­i­cal­ly proven med­i­cines that can make a dif­fer­ence for peo­ple liv­ing with blood can­cer dur­ing their treat­ment jour­ney.

Ref­er­ences

  1. Mukka­mal­la SKR, Tane­ja A, Maliped­di D, et al. Chron­ic Lym­pho­cyt­ic Leukemia. . Stat­Pearls . Trea­sure Is­land (FL): Stat­Pearls Pub­lish­ing; 2023 Jan. Avail­able from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK470433/
  2. NCI SEER Pro­gram . Can­cer Stat Facts: Leukemia—Chron­ic Lym­pho­cyt­ic Leukemia (CLL). Ac­cessed on Sep­tem­ber 3, 2025. https://seer.can­cer.gov/stat­facts/html/clyl.html
  3. Qor­ri B, Geraci J, Tsay M, Cum­baa C, Alphs L, Pani L. Re­veal­ing het­ero­gene­ity in chron­ic lym­pho­cyt­ic leukemia: AI-dri­ven in­sights in­to ag­gres­sive and in­do­lent dis­ease sub­types. Jour­nal of Clin­i­cal On­col­o­gy. 2024;42(16_sup­pl). doi:10.1200/jco.2024.42.16_sup­pl.e19029
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by Anna Brown

The UK gov­ern­ment on Mon­day an­nounced a ma­jor drug pric­ing deal with the White House in which the UK will pay bil­lions more pounds for med­i­cines in ex­change for a re­prieve from phar­ma tar­iffs on US-bound ex­ports for three years.

Ne­go­ti­a­tions on the UK-US trade deal have been on­go­ing since at least Oc­to­ber. US trade en­voy Jamieson Greer was in Lon­don on Nov. 24 to fi­nal­ize the terms of the deal.

As part of the arrange­ment, the UK gov­ern­ment will raise its cost-ef­fec­tive­ness thresh­old for new drugs by 25%. That thresh­old de­ter­mines whether the UK’s Na­tion­al In­sti­tute for Health and Care Ex­cel­lence (NICE) will rec­om­mend a new drug to the NHS, and has been un­changed for two decades. In essence, NICE will be able to rec­om­mend more drugs that would have been pre­vi­ous­ly re­ject­ed be­cause they were be­lieved to be too ex­pen­sive.

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