Privately-held Isotope Technologies Munich (ITM) has presented attention-grabbing positive Phase III results from a radiopharmaceutical trial.
The findings are from the COMPETE study in patients with inoperable, progressive grade one or grade two gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP-NETs).
These data showed that ITM-11 (n.c.a. 177Lu-edotreotide), a proprietary, synthetic, targeted radiotherapeutic agent, met the primary endpoint of prolonging progression-free survival (PFS) when compared to everolimus, a targeted molecular therapy that is a standard of care treatment.
This article is accessible to registered users, to continue reading please register for free. A free trial will give you access to exclusive features, interviews, round-ups and commentary from the sharpest minds in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology space for a week. If you are already a registered user please login. If your trial has come to an end, you can subscribe here.
Login to your accountTry before you buy
7 day trial access
Become a subscriber
Or £77 per month
The Pharma Letter is an extremely useful and valuable Life Sciences service that brings together a daily update on performance people and products. It’s part of the key information for keeping me informed
Chairman, Sanofi Aventis UK
Copyright © The Pharma Letter 2025 | Headless Content Management with Blaze