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GSK sees blockbuster potential in targeted cancer therapy after promising early data

By Thomson Reuters Apr 12, 2026 | 9:11 AM

By Bhanvi Satija

LONDON, April 12 (Reuters) – British drugmaker GSK’s experimental targeted cancer drug Mo-rez has blockbuster potential, its head of oncology research has told reporters, after ​early data showed the drug helped shrink tumors in ‌patients with advanced, hard-to-treat cancers.

“This is one of our priority assets at this stage,” GSK’s Hesham Abdullah said on a call with journalists discussing the early data, which is being presented at a medical conference ‌in ​Puerto Rico on Sunday.

“Do we think ⁠it would be a ⁠blockbuster? Yes, absolutely,” GSK’s Hesham Abdullah said on the call.

Initial results measured the proportion of patients who achieved a meaningful reduction in tumor size, defined as at least a ​30% shrinkage. In platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, 62% of patients met that threshold, while 67% did so in endometrial cancer.

DATA ⁠GIVE MOMENTUM TO GSK’S ONCOLOGY ⁠BUSINESS

Analysts have not yet projected future sales for ​mo-rez given early trial data.

The data give momentum to GSK’s fast-growing ​oncology business. CEO Luke Miels, who started in ‌the role in January, has said the company will speed up work on new medicines, a shift Abdullah said is already being reflected in its product development.

“I think it has been ⁠reflected in the type of pace that you are seeing and the type of conviction that we have in our programmes ⁠moving forward,” he ‌added.

GSK is testing Mo-rez in two late-stage trials ⁠in ovarian and endometrial cancers and plans ​to ‌start three additional studies in coming months.

Mo-rez, an ​antibody‑drug conjugate, ⁠targets the B7H4 protein found on gynaecological cancer cells but is largely absent from healthy tissue. The market for ADC treatments is projected to reach $31 billion by 2030.

GSK licensed the drug from China’s Hansoh Pharma in 2023.

(Reporting by Bhanvi Satija; Editing ​by David Holmes)