St. Louis police protesters begin picking up checks in $4.9 million settlement

FILE-ProtestersgatherinSt.Louis,Sept.15,2017,afterajudgefoundawhiteformerSt.Louispoliceofficer,Jason 1:19Ademonstratorrunsonthethirdnightofprotestssparkedbythefatalpoliceshootingofa17-year-olddriverint




Wikipedia

author:comprehensive    Page View:284
Roche HQ
SEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP via Getty Images

The multibillion-dollar hunt for what many drugmakers hope will be the next big immunotherapy target has had no shortage of twists and tea-leaf-reading. In the wee hours of Wednesday morning, it got another.

Roche confirmed it accidentally released interim data from a closely watched clinical trial testing whether blocking that target — a protein on T cells known as TIGIT — can enable non-small lung cancer patients to live longer than standard immunotherapy alone.

advertisement

The announcement release came hours after Evercore analyst Umer Raffat emailed investors that he had found a presentation on a Roche media portal, presumably uploaded by accident.

Unlock this article by subscribing to STAT+ and enjoy your first 30 days free!

GET STARTED Log In