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GSK, Hansoh’s targeted cancer drug hits main survival goal in China trial

By Thomson Reuters Jul 10, 2026 | 6:38 AM

By Bhanvi Satija and Prerna Bedi

July 10 (Reuters) – GSK said on Friday that partner Hansoh Pharmaceutical’s experimental drug for advanced small-cell lung cancer met its main goal ​of improving survival in a late-stage trial, delivering an ‌early boost to GSK’s bet on the therapy.

GSK, which holds rights to the drug outside China, is accelerating development of the treatment, known as ris-rez, along with mo-rez, another experimental therapy licensed from Hansoh that it believes ‌also ​has blockbuster potential.

The British drugmaker is ⁠seeking to rebuild its oncology ⁠portfolio and broaden its focus beyond blood and gynaecological treatments into areas such as lung and prostate cancer under new CEO Luke Miels.

Last month, GSK agreed to buy U.S. ​cancer drug developer Nuvalent for $10.6 billion in its biggest ever deal.

In the China-based ARTEMIS-008 trial, ris-rez delivered “statistically significant and clinically ⁠meaningful” improvements in overall survival compared ⁠with the standard chemotherapy topotecan.

Secondary goals, including progression-free ​survival, also showed consistent benefits, with no new safety signals, Hansoh ​said. The Chinese drugmaker, which retains rights to ris-rez ‌in mainland China, plans to seek regulatory approval in the country soon.

“These results are an important milestone,” said Hesham Abdullah, GSK’s global head of oncology R&D, adding that the findings support the ⁠drug’s potential across lung cancer and other solid tumours.

Data from GSK’s global late-stage trial in relapsed small-cell lung cancer are expected next ⁠year. The company also ‌plans to begin a study in genitourinary ⁠cancers later this year.

Ris-rez is an antibody-drug conjugate, ​a ‌class of targeted cancer therapies often described as “guided ​missiles” because ⁠they deliver cell-killing drugs directly to tumours while largely sparing healthy tissue.

Most patients with extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer relapse after initial treatment, leaving limited options and a poor prognosis.

(Reporting by Prerna Bedi in Bengaluru and Bhanvi Satija in London. Editing by Shilpi Majumdar ​and Mark Potter)