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Roche’s multiple sclerosis drug fenebrutinib meets goal in late-stage trial

By Thomson Reuters Feb 7, 2026 | 2:44 PM

BERLIN, Feb 7 (Reuters) – Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche said on Saturday its experimental multiple sclerosis drug ‍fenebrutinib met the main goal in a late-stage trial in patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis, a rare form of the disease with few treatment ‌options.

In the Phase III study, ‌fenebrutinib cut the risk of worsening disability by 12% compared with Roche’s Ocrevus, the only approved therapy for PPMS, the ​Swiss drugmaker said.

Separation of the treatment curves was seen after 24 ‍weeks, and additional analyses ​suggested potential benefits in ​upper-limb function.

PPMS is the least common form ‍of multiple sclerosis and is marked by a steady progression of disability from the outset.

Roche said fenebrutinib was the first experimental therapy in ‍more than a decade to show a reduction in disability progression in a PPMS ‍study.

The ‍company said it plans to ​submit the drug for ​regulatory ⁠approval once additional Phase III ‌data from a relapsing MS trial are available, which it expects in the first half of 2026.

(Reporting by Patricia Weiss, writing by Maria Martinez, editing by ⁠Louise Heavens)