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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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Top Pharma Companies & Drugs in 2023: Merck’s Keytruda emerges as top-selling drug; Novo, Lilly sales skyrocket
The pharma industry clearly recalibrated itself in 2023, turning its focus away from Covid and onto two of the biggest threats to human health – obesity and cancer. The top lines of the major pharma companies reflect this shift in focus.We always knew that Pfizer’s record US$ 100 billion revenue for 2022 wasn’t sustainable. Even though Pfizer’s 2023 sales were lower by nearly 42 percent against its 2022 sales, the New York-headquartered drugmaker managed to retain its pole position. The two main reasons behind its ‘top of the charts’ sales of US$ 58.5 billion were Pfizer’s record nine new molecular entity approvals by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the launch of its vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).Johnson & Johnson came second with sales of US$ 54.8 billion (excluding its consumer business and MedTech units). AbbVie took bronze despite Humira being subject to biosimilar competition and Merck maintained its fourth position. Roche nabbed the fifth position from Novartis (which stood sixth). Bristol Myers Squibb maintained its position at seven, as did AstraZeneca (eighth) and Sanofi (ninth). And Eli Lilly bumped into the tenth spot, knocking out GSK.View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2023 by Sales (Free Excel Available)Keytruda, Eliquis, Humira top charts; Novo’s Ozempic debuts top 10 list at number fourMerck’s Keytruda became the number one selling drug in the world, a position that was held by AbbVie’s Humira for long, and Pfizer’s Comirnaty in the Covid years. This oncology drug raked in a whopping US$ 25 billion, with sales increasing 19 percent last year. In fact, Keytruda accounted for 46.7 percent of Merck’s pharmaceutical sales, which grew 3 percent in 2023 to US$ 53.6 billion.At number two was Pfizer and BMS’ anticoagulant Eliquis — it posted global sales of US$ 18.95 billion (marking a growth of 4 percent on 2022 sales). With competition from generics, Humira’s sales fell by 32 percent to US$ 14.5 billion. As a result, this blockbuster anti-rheumatic drug fell to the third rank.The fourth spot was taken up by Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic, the wonder drug that treats type 2 diabetes. Gilead’s Biktarvy, a med that treats HIV-1, saw sales jump 14 percent — from US$ 10.39 billion posted in 2022 to US$ 11.85 billion last year. This way, Biktarvy emerged as the fifth largest selling drug of 2023.At number six was Sanofi and Regeneron’s Dupixent. This allergic diseases med posted 11-figure sales in 2023, netting € 10.72 billion (US$ 11.59 billion) globally, a growth of 34 percent over 2022 numbers.At number seven was J&J’s biggest blockbuster immunology drug Stelara that raked in US$ 11.3 billion in 2023. Coming a close eighth was Pfizer-BioNTech’s Covid-19 vaccine Comirnaty — its sales fell by over 70 percent to US$ 11.22 billion in 2023. At the ninth spot was Lilly and Boehringer’s diabetes drug Jardiance that saw a 27.7 percent increase in total global sales at US$ 10.6 billion. And rounding off the list at number 10 is BMS’s Opdivo, a Keytruda rival. Opdivo hauled in US$ 10 billion in total global sales in 2023, a year-on-year increase of 8 percent.View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2023 by Sales (Free Excel Available)Driven by diabetes, obesity care meds, Novo, Lilly post double-digit sales growthDemand for diabetes and new weight-loss drugs catapulted Novo Nordisk to emerge as the most valuable public company in Europe. Its net sales zoomed 31 percent to DKK 232.3 billion (US$ 33.75 billion) compared to DKK 177 billion (US$ 25.8 billion) in 2022. Net profit jumped 51 percent to DKK 83.68 billion (US$ 12.51 billion) in 2023 from DKK 55.5 billion (US$ 8.32 billion) in 2022 — the highest annual profit for the Danish drugmaker in over three decades.The growth was driven by Ozempic, whose sales spiked 60 percent in 2023 to DKK 95.7 billion (US$ 13.91 billion), from DKK 59.8 billion (US$ 8.71 billion) the year before.Rival Eli Lilly’s revenue grew 20 percent in 2023 to US$ 34.1 billion from US$ 28.5 billion in 2022. Mounjaro turned out to be a star for the Indianapolis drugmaker with its sales rocketing 970 percent in 2023 to US$ 5.16 billion. FDA also approved it to treat obesity under the brand name Zepbound in November, which brought in additional revenues of US$ 176 million.View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2023 by Sales (Free Excel Available) GSK’s RSV jab makes strong debut; AbbVie’s immunology drugs post steep growthGSK’s Arexvy was the first RSV vaccine approved by the FDA. It made a strong debut — Arexvy contributed £ 1.2 billion (US$ 1.5 billion) to GSK’s sales in just four months.AbbVie posted another solid financial year. Though the drop in Humira revenue was offset by two newer immunology blockbuster drugs, Skyrizi and Rinvoq, the Illinois-headquartered drugmaker did posted a marginal decrease in revenue of 6.4 percent to US$ 54.3 billion. However, revenue from Skyrizi soared 50 percent to US$ 7.8 billion, while Rinvoq’s sales increased 57 percent to US$ 4 billion. AbbVie expects a combined US$ 16 billion from Skyrizi (US$ 10.5 billion) and Rinvoq (US$ 5.5 billion) sales in 2024. BMS attributed its 2 percent decrease in revenue (of US$ 45 billion) to lower sales of Revlimid in the US due to competition from generics. Sales of the multiple myeloma treatment dropped 39 percent to US$ 6.1 billion. Ophthalmology drug Eylea saw a drop in sales  of 4 percent, at US$ 9.21 billion (from US$ 9.65 billion), as competition from Roche’s Vabysmo triggered a price cut by Regeneron. Vabysmo saw sales balloon 324 percent from CHF 591 million (US$ 685.56 million) to CHF 2.4 billion (US$ 2.78 billion) in 2023.View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2023 by Sales (Free Excel Available) Our viewAccording to data analytics company GlobalData, GLP-1 agonist drugs (such as Ozempic and Mounjaro that treat type 2 diabetes) are slated to overtake PD-1 antagonists (such as oncology drugs Keytruda and Opdivo) as the top-selling drugs on the market in 2024. It estimates a robust compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 19.2 percent from 2023 to 2029 for GLP-1 drugs that seem to have more benefits besides bringing down blood sugar levels (such as weight management, benefits to the heart etc).The market size for GLP-1 is likely to increase to US$ 105 billion by 2029. In contrast, the data firm projects a CAGR of 4.7 percent in the PD-1 antagonist market, with its market size projected to be around US$ 51 billion in 2029. Given these projections, we are likely to see more movers and shakers in our top 10 drug list this year.

Impressions: 3423

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/top-pharma-companies-drugs-in-2023-merck-s-keytruda-emerges-as-top-selling-drug-novo-lilly-sales-skyrocket-due-to-glp-1-drugs

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
25 Apr 2024

STOCK RECAP #PipelineProspector

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Pipeline Prospector March 2024: FDA approves pathbreaking NASH drug from Madrigal, two meds for PAH
March was clearly a month of drug approvals, as the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) went on an overdrive, green-lighting several therapies before the close of the first quarter (Q1 2024). Amongst them was the first drug to treat non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and a breakthrough therapy that treats pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH).However, the buoyancy in drug approvals didn’t play out in the stock markets and most pharma indices witnessed a marginal dip. The Nasdaq Biotechnology index (NBI) fell marginally (-0.43 percent) to 4,429.97 from 4,449. The SPDR S&P Biotech ETF index (XBI) dropped 4.6 percent to 94.89 after ending February at 99.44. And the S&P Biotechnology Select Industry index (SPSIBI) was down by 3.4 percent from 7,662.14 to 7,402.47 in March.In deals, AstraZeneca bought two companies, shoring up its cancer and rare disease pipelines. The Anglo-Swedish drugmaker first bought France’s Amolyt, which focuses on rare endocrine diseases, for a total of US$ 1.05 billion and then acquired next-generation cancer drugmaker Fusion Pharmaceuticals for around US$ 2 billion. AstraZeneca’s stock was up 4.6 percent in March. Novo Nordisk (stock up 4.8 percent) agreed to acquire Cardior Pharmaceuticals for up to US$ 1.1 billion in order to boost its pipeline for cardiovascular diseases.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for March 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel)FDA okays first drug for NASH; Wegovy approved as med to reduce heart risksFor quite some time, the drug development field for the liver condition non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) has been a graveyard for failed programs. In March, the field celebrated a hurrah moment when Madrigal Pharmaceuticals (stock up 6 percent) won the race to have the first NASH treatment approved by the FDA. Madrigal’s oral drug Rezdiffra (resmetirom) treats adults with NASH, a disease that causes histologic liver damage and occurs in patients who are not alcoholics and are often obese or have type 2 diabetes. The approval has opened a multi-billion dollar opportunity for Madrigal.The GLP-1 agonist drugs that are used to treat diabetes and obesity have shown heart-related benefits too in clinical trials. Last month, FDA approved Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy (semaglutide) to reduce the risk of cardiovascular death, heart attack, and stroke in obese or overweight adults with cardiovascular disease (CVD). The move makes Wegovy the first weight-loss medication that is also approved to help prevent life-threatening cardiovascular events. The approval was hailed as a major advancement in public health.Another significant FDA approval was granted to Akebia’s anemia drug, vadadustat. After being turned down in March 2022, Akebia has now been approved to treat anemia caused by chronic kidney disease (CKD) in dialysis patients.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for March 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) FDA okays two meds for PAH; Italfarmaco’s Duvyzat approved for DMDFDA approved a breakthrough therapy from Merck, known as Winrevair (sotatercept-csrk), to treat adults with hypertension that is caused by constriction of the arteries in the lungs, known as pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). The agency also approved Johnson & Johnson’s Opsynvi – a single-tablet combination of macitentan and tadalafil – for the chronic treatment of adults with PAH. With this approval, Opsynvi became the only once-daily combination therapy for PAH.Apart from PAH, there was another significant approval for hypertension. FDA okayed Idorsia’s once-daily treatment Tryvio (aprocitentan) in combination with other antihypertensive drugs, to lower blood pressure in adult patients who are not able to adequately control their BP on other drugs. Idorsia’s stock was up 50 percent in March. Tryvio is the first oral anti-hypertensive therapy, which works via a new therapeutic pathway, to be approved in almost 40 years.The US agency also approved Italfarmaco Group’s oral medication Duvyzat (givinostat) for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) in patients six years of age and older. Duvyzat is the first nonsteroidal drug approved to treat patients with all variants of DMD, a genetic disorder characterized by progressive muscle degeneration.Orchard Therapeutics’ Lenmeldy was also greenlit by the FDA as the first gene therapy in the US for a debilitating and rare pediatric disorder, known as metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD).Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for March 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Breyanzi okayed for complex leukemia; Tevimbra approved for esophageal cancerAmong cancer treatments, FDA granted an accelerated approval to BMS’ Breyanzi, making it the first and only CAR-T cell therapy for adults with relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL). BMS’ stock was up 6 percent in March.BeiGene’s PD-1 blocker Tevimbra (tislelizumab) finally got the go ahead from the FDA as a treatment for adult patients with unresectable or metastatic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) after prior systemic chemotherapy that did not include a PD-(L)1 inhibitor.FDA also granted accelerated approval to Takeda’s Iclusig (ponatinib) to be used with chemotherapy for newly diagnosed patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL), a type of blood cancer of the bone marrow and blood.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for March 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Pfizer-Takeda’s Adcetris posts trial win in DLBCL; FDA defers donanemab approvalIn clinical trials, there was some positive news from a phase 3 trial on Pfizer and Takeda’s drug Adcetris, which is known as a standard of care in classical Hodgkin lymphoma. The med has now shown to be efficacious in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), a common type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, when used in combination with two other drugs — lenalidomide and rituximab.In a late-stage trial, Novo Nordisk’s broadly used blockbuster diabetes drug Ozempic (semaglutide) slashed the risk of kidney disease progression and death from cardiovascular or kidney complications by 24 percent in diabetic patients with CKD. In negative news from the trials, the much anticipated approval of Eli Lilly’s donanemab scheduled for March was deferred as FDA opted to convene a panel of independent experts to assess the drug’s safety and efficacy. Similarly, Amylyx’s Relyvrio (sodium phenylbutyrate and taurursodiol), a promising investigational treatment for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, failed to demonstrate it works better than a placebo in a 48-week long trial. ALS is a fatal motor neuron disease characterized by progressive degeneration of nerve cells.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for March 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Our viewWith so many drug approvals, March was a good month for the biopharma industry. While it may look like the markets didn’t cheer the approvals, all the three indices — the NBI, XBI, and SPSIBI — ended the quarter in the green, growing 2.1 percent, 7.3 percent, and 6.4 percent, respectively, between January 2 and March 28. As we enter the second quarter of 2024, we hope the buoyancy in drug approvals and the indices is maintained.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for March 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) 

Impressions: 1872

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pipeline-prospector-blog/march-sees-approvals-of-pathbreaking-nash-drug-from-madrigal-two-meds-for-pah

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
04 Apr 2024

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=215759

FDA
02 Aug 2024

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240620164912/en

BUSINESSWIRE
20 Jun 2024

https://www.pharmabiz.com/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=169364&sid=2

PHARMABIZ
27 May 2024

https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/markets/dr-reddys-healthy-q4-results-fail-to-impress-brokerages-amid-lack-of-growth-triggers-12717027.html

MONEYCONTROL
08 May 2024
Bristol Myers to cut 6% of workforce, trim drug pipeline
Bristol Myers to cut 6% of workforce, trim drug pipeline

25 Apr 2024

// Ned Pagliarulo BIOPHARMADIVE

https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/bristol-myers-layoffs-restructuring-cost-savings/714254/

Ned Pagliarulo BIOPHARMADIVE
25 Apr 2024

https://www.investor.jnj.com/files/doc_news/2024/Apr/22/carvykti_cartitude-4_ec-release_final.pdf

PRESS RELEASE
22 Apr 2024