Revolutionary Oral Drug Delays Myeloma Progression: A Bristol Myers Breakthrough

Bristol Myers Squibb's experimental oral drug, mezigdomide, showed promising results in delaying disease progression in patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma during a late-stage trial. The combination with standard treatment significantly reduced risk and improved progression-free survival, marking a major advance in myeloma therapeutics.


Devdiscourse News Desk | By Michael Erman May 29 (Reuters) - Bristol Myers Squibb Said On Friday That Its Experimental ​Oral Drug Mezigdomide Delayed Disease Progression In A Late-Stage ​Trial Of Multiple Myeloma Patients Whose Illness ‌Had ​Relapsed Or Not Responded To Other Treatments.The Drugmaker Said Its Successor-2 Trial Showed That Mezigdomide Added To A Standard Therapy Of Carfilzomib | Updated: 29-05-2026 17:30 IST | Created: 29-05-2026 17:30 IST
Revolutionary Oral Drug Delays Myeloma Progression: A Bristol Myers Breakthrough

Bristol Myers Squibb announced on Friday that its innovative oral drug, mezigdomide, demonstrated significant efficacy in delaying disease progression during a pivotal late-stage trial for multiple myeloma patients whose conditions had relapsed or not responded to prior treatments.

The SUCCESSOR-2 trial revealed that combining mezigdomide with carfilzomib and dexamethasone slashed the risk of disease progression or death by 52% compared to the standard treatment alone. Patients receiving the Bristol Myers drug enjoyed a median progression-free survival of 18 months versus 8.3 months for those on standard therapy.

Presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting, these findings underscore mezigdomide's potential as a groundbreaking addition to myeloma treatment, particularly in a challenging patient population. Despite manageable side effects, Bristol Myers aims to replace older therapies facing generic competition with this promising intervention.

(With inputs from agencies.)

Give Feedback