STAT+: Erasca touts strong, though preliminary, results in trial of pancreatic and lung cancer therapy
Erasca has reported preliminary results showing its experimental drug ERAS-0015 shrank tumors in 40% of advanced pancreatic cancer patients and 62% of advanced non-small cell lung cancer patients. The company says the drug's performance and safety profile compare favorably to Revolution Medicines' competing RAS-targeting therapy. CEO Jonathan Lim described the lung cancer data as more definitive, while pancreatic cancer results are still maturing but promising. The findings come from early-stage trials conducted in the U.S. and China.
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STAT PlusBiotech Erasca touts strong, though preliminary, results in trial of pancreatic and lung cancer therapy Drugmaker hopes its treatment can outperform Revolution Medicines pill being closely tracked Manage alerts for this article Email this article Share this article NIH By Adam FeuersteinApril 27, 2026 Adam Feuerstein, a senior writer and biotech columnist, is the author of Adam’s Biotech Scorecard, a subscriber-only newsletter about the crossroads of drug development, business, Wall Street, and biotechnology. Adam Feuerstein[email protected]Adam Feuerstein is a senior writer and biotech columnist, reporting on the crossroads of drug development, business, Wall Street, and biotechnology. He is also a co-host of the weekly biotech podcast The Readout Loud and author of the newsletter Adam’s Biotech Scorecard. You can reach Adam on Signal at stataf.54. The drugmaker Erasca said Monday that its RAS-targeting pill shrank tumors in 40% of patients with advanced pancreatic cancer and 62% of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, results that the company said exceeded its expectations. The new data, collected from studies done in the U.S. and China, are still preliminary. However, Erasca said the clinical benefit and tolerability of its drug, called ERAS-0015, compared favorably to daraxonrasib, a similar RAS-targeting drug from Revolution Medicines that recently showed a doubling of overall survival in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. Advertisement “I’m excited about both datasets, but I think lung is more definitive at this point. The pancreatic results are maturing, but are very, very promising,” Erasca CEO Jonathan Lim told STAT. “All options are on the table.” STAT+ Exclusive Story Already have an account? Log in This article is exclusive to STAT+ subscribers Unlock this article — plus daily coverage and analysis of the biotech sector — by subscribing to STAT+. Already have an account? Log in Individual plans Group plans Monthly $39 Totals $468 per year $39/month Get Started Totals $468 per year Starter $30 for 3 months, then $399/year $30 for 3 months Get Started Then $399/year Annual $399 Save 15% $399/year Get Started Save 15% 11+ Users Custom Savings start at 25%! Request A Quote Request A Quote Savings start at 25%! 2-10 Users $300 Annually per user $300/year Get Started $300 Annually per user View All Plans To read the rest of this story subscribe to STAT+. Subscribe Log In biotechnology, Cancer, drug development, Pharmaceuticals, STAT+ Submit a correction requestReprints Adam Feuerstein Senior Writer, Biotech Adam Feuerstein is a senior writer and biotech columnist, reporting on the crossroads of drug development, business, Wall Street, and biotechnology. He is also a co-host of the weekly biotech podcast The Readout Loud and author of the newsletter Adam’s Biotech Scorecard. You can reach Adam on Signal at stataf.54. STAT+ Newsletter Senior writer Adam Feuerstein's unfiltered, uncompromising analysis on the biotech world Please enter a valid email address. Sign Up Your data will be processed in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. You may opt out of receiving STAT communications at any time. Recommended The Readout The Readout April 27, 2026 STAT Plus: Astellas retries XLMTM gene therapy after deaths By Meghana Keshavan Biotech Biotech April 27, 2026 STAT Plus: Intellia says CRISPR-based treatment for rare disease reduced swelling attacks in pivotal trial By Jason Mast…
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