Moderna and Merck will jointly develop a cancer vaccine for high-risk melanoma patients

Moderna and Merck will jointly develop a cancer vaccine for high-risk melanoma patients


Pipettes are seen at the Moderna Therapeutics Inc. lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2017. Moderna this week started testing

Adam Glanzman | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Moderna and Merck will jointly develop and sell a cancer vaccine that is personalized for individual patients, the companies announced on Wednesday.

Moderna’s vaccine, based on its messenger RNA technology, is being studied in combination with Merck’s Keytruda to treat patients with high-risk melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, in a phase 2 trial. The companies expect to report data in the fourth quarter of this year.

Moderna’s stock jumped 16% in morning trading.

Moderna’s vaccine is designed to trigger the immune system to deploy killer T cells that target the specific mutations of a patient’s tumors. Merck’s Keytruda is a monoclonal antibody, administered as an injection, that prevents certain cell proteins from stopping T cells from going on the attack.

The companies originally entered the agreement in 2016, but Merck is now exercising its option through a $250 million payment to Moderna. Merck will collaborate on the development and commercialization of the product. The companies will share all costs and profits equally.

Moderna became a household name during the pandemic after developing one of the most successful vaccines against Covid-19 in collaboration with the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

But the Covid vaccine is Moderna’s only commercially available product. The Boston biotech company is under growing pressure to demonstrate how its messenger RNA technology can be deployed against other diseases.

Moderna expects $21 billion in Covid vaccine sales this year as it rolls out new booster shots that target the omicron variant.

Keytruda is Merck’s biggest drug making up 35% of the company’s total sales in the second quarter. It has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat several different types of cancer.

CNBC Health & Science

Read CNBC’s latest global health coverage:



Source

OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to  billion
Health

OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to $12 billion

A startup widely known as “ChatGPT for doctors” raised a new funding round that values the company at $12 billion. OpenEvidence, based in Miami, Florida, closed a $250 million financing, led by Thrive Capital and DST, the company told CNBC. The startup first raised outside capital in February, when it reeled in $75 million from […]

Read More
Another alliance of health care and AI signals why pharma stocks should be back in favor
Health

Another alliance of health care and AI signals why pharma stocks should be back in favor

Bristol Myers Squibb and Microsoft ‘s new partnership aimed at accelerating early detection of lung cancer marks the latest way health care and artificial intelligence are rapidly intersecting. Bristol Myers said on Tuesday it will work with Microsoft’s AI-powered radiology platform to develop and launch imaging algorithms. These new tools, which can be used to […]

Read More
Drug pricing, patent losses and deals: Here’s what pharma execs see ahead in the industry
Health

Drug pricing, patent losses and deals: Here’s what pharma execs see ahead in the industry

US President Donald Trump arrives for an announcement in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025. Will Oliver | Bloomberg | Getty Images Drug pricing. Looming patent cliffs. Dealmaking. The first year of Trump 2.0. Those are among the themes that dominated conversations last week as drugmakers […]

Read More