Biopharma’s targeted approach to growth
A new drug targeting a common mutation found in tumours represents a breakthrough in cancer therapy. Portfolio Manager Andy Acker and Research Analyst Agustin Mohedas explain how the science could benefit patients and biopharma alike.

5 minute read
Key takeaways:
- The approval of the first oncology drug targeting so-called KRAS mutations represents a milestone in cancer treatment.
- The drug belongs to a growing class of targeted cancer therapies with the potential to dramatically improve patient outcomes.
- For biopharma, these medicines could be a significant source of revenue growth as patent expirations and generic competition weigh on sales of older drugs.
It has been described as the Death Star of cancer mutations, and the quest for a drug to address it as the Holy Grail of cancer research. But finally, last month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first therapy that targets KRAS, among the most frequently mutated oncogenes in human cancers. The mutation is often present in lung and colorectal cancers and is a signature of pancreatic cancer, which has among the lowest five-year survival rates of all cancers. In short, this medical breakthrough – pursued for roughly four decades – is a big deal.
Cancer research dominates
It also represents a broader trend occurring in biopharma. As more areas of medicine face generic competition, research efforts have pivoted toward oncology and other disease categories with high, unmet medical needs. At the same time, the cost of genetic sequencing has dropped from roughly $1 billion in the early 2000s (when the first human genome was mapped) to a few hundred dollars today, leading to a boom in genetic disease research, including cancer. The net result has been a dramatic rise in new cancer therapies, which made up more than 30% of all novel drugs approved by the FDA in recent years (see chart).
FDA novel drug approvals (2015-2021)
It has been described as the Death Star of cancer mutations, and the quest for a drug to address it as the Holy Grail of cancer research. But finally, last month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first therapy that targets KRAS, among the most frequently mutated oncogenes in human cancers. The mutation is often present in lung and colorectal cancers and is a signature of pancreatic cancer, which has among the lowest five-year survival rates of all cancers. In short, this medical breakthrough – pursued for roughly four decades – is a big deal.
Exhibit 1:FDA novel drug approvals (2015-2021)

We believe this pattern is likely to continue, with important implications for biopharma. Cancer treatments are evolving from the blunt approach of chemotherapy and radiation, which attempt to kill all rapidly dividing cells and distinguish poorly between healthy tissue and tumors. Instead, new therapies target specific driver mutations in cancer, such as KRAS, leading to more effective and better tolerated medicines that can prolong both survival and quality of life.
A more targeted approach
In healthy cells, KRAS serves as an on-off switch that regulates cell growth. When the gene mutates, KRAS can become stuck in the “on” position, allowing cells to multiply uncontrollably. The KRAS-targeting drug approved by the FDA, Lumakras (sotorasib), treats adult patients with non-small cell lung cancer, the most common type of lung cancer (roughly 200,000 people diagnosed each year in the U.S.1) For those in advanced stages of the disease, there typically is no cure. In clinical trials, more than a third of patients who received Lumakras saw their tumors shrink significantly. Of those patients, more than half saw the effect last six months or longer, representing a remarkable improvement in progression-free survival.
Lumakras targets one specific type of mutation, KRASG12C, which occurs in about 13% of non-small cell lung cancer patients, but other variations of the mutation exist. All told, KRAS mutations are present in approximately 25% of all tumors, creating a significant market opportunity.2 As such, a number of other companies are developing KRAS-targeted drugs, with at least one expected to go for FDA approval later this year.
Until recently, KRAS remained an elusive target because of the nature of the protein encoded by the gene: it lacked an obvious entry point for a drug. But after years of screening thousands of molecules, biochemists succeeded in finding not only an entry point but also a characteristic that occurs only with KRAS-mutated proteins. This has made it possible for scientists to develop a highly targeted treatment – one affecting only cancerous cells while sparing healthy ones.
Driving biopharma revenue growth
At the same time, the pharmaceutical industry is recognizing the growth potential, spending billions of dollars on research and development, partnering with developers and acquiring biotech firms pioneering much of the research. As a result, while revenues for some blockbuster drugs4 have started to decline as generic competition ramps up, biopharma oncology sales have exploded.
Exhibit 2:Total franchise sales of top medicines for select pharmaceutical and biotech companies

We expect the trend could continue over the next decade, particularly as big data and machine learning capabilities improve, new drug targets are discovered, and a growing middle class around the globe – much of which is aging – increasingly seeks new cancer treatments. In our view, large pharmaceutical and biotech companies that integrate targeted cancer approaches into a diversified pipeline of new medicines could bolster their growth, offsetting the negative impacts of patent expirations and potentially surprising investors.
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