Stock Markets April 12, 2026 10:11 AM

GSK says Mo-rez shows strong early results, executives see blockbuster potential

Early trial data show substantial tumor shrinkage in hard-to-treat gynecological cancers; further late-stage trials and additional studies planned

By Maya Rios GSK
GSK says Mo-rez shows strong early results, executives see blockbuster potential
GSK

GSK's experimental antibody-drug conjugate Mo-rez produced notable tumor shrinkage in early data from patients with advanced ovarian and endometrial cancers, prompting company executives to describe the asset as having blockbuster potential. The findings, being presented at a medical conference in Puerto Rico, have energized the drugmaker's oncology efforts even as analysts await more data and formal sales projections.

Key Points

  • Early data show Mo-rez achieved at least 30% tumor shrinkage in 62% of platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patients and 67% of endometrial cancer patients.
  • GSK is conducting two late-stage trials of Mo-rez and intends to start three more studies in the coming months; the asset has been described internally as a priority with blockbuster potential.
  • The development supports momentum in GSK's oncology business and aligns with the CEO's directive to speed up work on new medicines; sectors affected include pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and healthcare services.

GSK's experimental targeted cancer therapy Mo-rez has produced encouraging early results that prompted the drugmaker's head of oncology research to describe the candidate as having blockbuster potential.

Hesham Abdullah, GSK's head of oncology research, told reporters on a call that Mo-rez is "one of our priority assets at this stage." Discussing data due to be presented at a medical conference in Puerto Rico on Sunday, Abdullah added: "Do we think it would be a blockbuster? Yes, absolutely."

The initial readout focused on the proportion of patients achieving a predefined, meaningful reduction in tumor size - at least 30% shrinkage. In the early results, 62% of patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer reached that threshold. In endometrial cancer, 67% of patients met the same benchmark.

The early data have not yet led analysts to produce formal sales forecasts for Mo-rez, reflecting the preliminary nature of the findings. Still, company officials say the results provide momentum for GSK's growing oncology unit.

Luke Miels, who began his role as chief executive in January, has communicated a corporate priority to accelerate work on new medicines. Abdullah said that the shift in emphasis is already evident in the pace and conviction behind GSK's development programmes.

GSK currently has Mo-rez in two late-stage trials targeting ovarian and endometrial cancers, and the company plans to launch three additional studies in the coming months.

Mo-rez is an antibody-drug conjugate that targets the B7H4 protein, which the company says is present on gynecological cancer cells but largely absent from healthy tissue. The antibody-drug conjugate market has been projected to reach $31 billion by 2030, a market backdrop cited in connection with the programme. GSK licensed Mo-rez from Hansoh Pharma of China in 2023.


Context and implications

The topline tumor-shrinkage percentages provide an early signal of clinical activity in difficult-to-treat patient populations, and the programme's position in late-stage testing underscores its importance to GSK's oncology pipeline. Company leadership links the results to a broader strategic push to accelerate development of new medicines.

While the early findings are notable, further data from ongoing and planned trials will be required before definitive commercial or clinical conclusions can be drawn.

Risks

  • The results are preliminary and analysts have not produced sales projections for Mo-rez given the early-stage data - further trial evidence is needed to confirm efficacy and commercial prospects. (Impacted sectors: pharmaceuticals, biotech)
  • Planned additional studies and ongoing late-stage trials mean final outcomes and regulatory pathways remain uncertain until those trials report. (Impacted sectors: healthcare, clinical research)
  • Market projections for antibody-drug conjugates do not guarantee adoption or revenue for any single drug; licensing terms and trial outcomes will influence commercial returns. (Impacted sectors: pharmaceuticals, investment)

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