What Will Separate The Winners And The Losers In The Immuno-Oncology R&D Race?
With the big cancer confab ASCO 2016 fading into memory, R&D teams everywhere are getting back to work on their cancer programs – and across the industry many of them will be doing the same work, on the same targets, supporting the exploding supernova known as immuno-oncology.
The rapid expansion of this space in the past five years has been exceptional to witness: catalyzed by striking clinical data, reflecting real changes in the survival curves of an ever-broader set of cancers, a huge number of I/O programs have advanced across the industry, fueled by prodigious amounts of capital. This is in many ways great news for patients and the industry.
The rapid expansion of this space in the past five years has been exceptional to witness: catalyzed by striking clinical data, reflecting real changes in the survival curves of an ever-broader set of cancers, a huge number of I/O programs have advanced across the industry, fueled by prodigious amounts of capital. This is in many ways great news for patients and the industry.