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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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Top drugs and pharmaceutical companies of 2019 by revenues
Acquisitions and spin-offs dominated headlines in 2019 and the tone was set very early with Bristol-Myers Squibb acquiring New Jersey-based cancer drug company Celgene in a US$ 74 billion deal announced on January 3, 2019. After factoring in debt, the deal value ballooned to about US$ 95 billion, which according to data compiled by Refinitiv, made it the largest healthcare deal on record. In the summer, AbbVie Inc, which sells the world’s best-selling drug Humira, announced its acquisition of Allergan Plc, known for Botox and other cosmetic treatments, for US$ 63 billion. While the companies are still awaiting regulatory approval for their deal, with US$ 49 billion in combined 2019 revenues, the merged entity would rank amongst the biggest in the industry. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top drugs by sales in 2019 (Free Excel Available) The big five by pharmaceutical sales — Pfizer, Roche, J&J, Novartis and Merck Pfizer continued to lead companies by pharmaceutical sales by reporting annual 2019 revenues of US$ 51.8 billion, a decrease of US$ 1.9 billion, or 4 percent, compared to 2018. The decline was primarily attributed to the loss of exclusivity of Lyrica in 2019, which witnessed its sales drop from US$ 5 billion in 2018 to US$ 3.3 billion in 2019. In 2018, Pfizer’s then incoming CEO Albert Bourla had mentioned that the company did not see the need for any large-scale M&A activity as Pfizer had “the best pipeline” in its history, which needed the company to focus on deploying its capital to keep its pipeline flowing and execute on its drug launches. Bourla stayed true to his word and barring the acquisition of Array Biopharma for US$ 11.4 billion and a spin-off to merge Upjohn, Pfizer’s off-patent branded and generic established medicines business with Mylan, there weren’t any other big ticket deals which were announced. The Upjohn-Mylan merged entity will be called Viatris and is expected to have 2020 revenues between US$ 19 and US$ 20 billion and could outpace Teva to become the largest generic company in the world, in term of revenues.  Novartis, which had followed Pfizer with the second largest revenues in the pharmaceutical industry in 2018, reported its first full year earnings after spinning off its Alcon eye care devices business division that had US$ 7.15 billion in 2018 sales. In 2019, Novartis slipped two spots in the ranking after reporting total sales of US$ 47.4 billion and its CEO Vas Narasimhan continued his deal-making spree by buying New Jersey-headquartered The Medicines Company (MedCo) for US$ 9.7 billion to acquire a late-stage cholesterol-lowering therapy named inclisiran. As Takeda Pharmaceutical Co was busy in 2019 on working to reduce its debt burden incurred due to its US$ 62 billion purchase of Shire Plc, which was announced in 2018, Novartis also purchased the eye-disease medicine, Xiidra, from the Japanese drugmaker for US$ 5.3 billion. Novartis’ management also spent a considerable part of 2019 dealing with data-integrity concerns which emerged from its 2018 buyout of AveXis, the gene-therapy maker Novartis had acquired for US$ 8.7 billion. The deal gave Novartis rights to Zolgensma, a novel treatment intended for children less than two years of age with the most severe form of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Priced at US$ 2.1 million, Zolgensma is currently the world’s most expensive drug. However, in a shocking announcement, a month after approving the drug, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a press release on data accuracy issues as the agency was informed by AveXis that its personnel had manipulated data which the FDA used to evaluate product comparability and nonclinical (animal) pharmacology as part of the biologics license application (BLA), which was submitted and reviewed by the FDA. With US$ 50.0 billion (CHF 48.5 billion) in annual pharmaceutical sales, Swiss drugmaker Roche came in at number two position in 2019 as its sales grew 11 percent driven by its multiple sclerosis medicine Ocrevus, haemophilia drug Hemlibra and cancer medicines Tecentriq and Perjeta. Roche’s newly introduced medicines generated US$ 5.53 billion (CHF 5.4 billion) in growth, helping offset the impact of the competition from biosimilars for its three best-selling drugs MabThera/Rituxan, Herceptin and Avastin. In late 2019, after months of increased antitrust scrutiny, Roche completed its US$ 5.1 billion acquisition of Spark Therapeutics to strengthen its presence in gene therapy. Last year, J&J reported almost flat worldwide sales of US$ 82.1 billion. J&J’s pharmaceutical division generated US$ 42.20 billion and its medical devices and consumer health divisions brought in US$ 25.96 billion and US$ 13.89 billion respectively.  Since J&J’s consumer health division sells analgesics, digestive health along with beauty and oral care products, the US$ 5.43 billion in consumer health sales from over-the-counter drugs and women’s health products was only used in our assessment of J&J’s total pharmaceutical revenues. With combined pharmaceutical sales of US$ 47.63 billion, J&J made it to number three on our list. While the sales of products like Stelara, Darzalex, Imbruvica, Invega Sustenna drove J&J’s pharmaceutical business to grow by 4 percent over 2018, the firm had to contend with generic competition against key revenue contributors Remicade and Zytiga. US-headquartered Merck, which is known as MSD (short for Merck Sharp & Dohme) outside the United States and Canada, is set to significantly move up the rankings next year fueled by its cancer drug Keytruda, which witnessed a 55 percent increase in sales to US$ 11.1 billion. Merck reported total revenues of US$ 41.75 billion and also announced it will spin off its women’s health drugs, biosimilar drugs and older products to create a new pharmaceutical company with US$ 6.5 billion in annual revenues. The firm had anticipated 2020 sales between US$ 48.8 billion and US$  50.3 billion however this week it announced that the coronavirus  pandemic will reduce 2020 sales by more than $2 billion. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top drugs by sales in 2019 (Free Excel Available)  Humira holds on to remain world’s best-selling drug AbbVie’s acquisition of Allergan comes as the firm faces the expiration of patent protection for Humira, which brought in a staggering US$ 19.2 billion in sales last year for the company. AbbVie has failed to successfully acquire or develop a major new product to replace the sales generated by its flagship drug. In 2019, Humira’s US revenues increased 8.6 percent to US$ 14.86 billion while internationally, due to biosimilar competition, the sales dropped 31.1 percent to US$ 4.30 billion. Bristol Myers Squibb’s Eliquis, which is also marketed by Pfizer, maintained its number two position and posted total sales of US$ 12.1 billion, a 23 percent increase over 2018. While Bristol Myers Squibb’s immunotherapy treatment Opdivo, sold in partnership with Ono in Japan, saw sales increase from US$ 7.57 billion to US$ 8.0 billion, the growth paled in comparison to the US$ 3.9 billion revenue increase of Opdivo’s key immunotherapy competitor Merck’s Keytruda. Keytruda took the number three spot in drug sales that previously belonged to Celgene’s Revlimid, which witnessed a sales decline from US$ 9.69 billion to US$ 9.4 billion. Cancer treatment Imbruvica, which is marketed by J&J and AbbVie, witnessed a 30 percent increase in sales. With US$ 8.1 billion in 2019 revenues, it took the number five position. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top drugs by sales in 2019 (Free Excel Available) Vaccines – Covid-19 turns competitors into partners This year has been dominated by the single biggest health emergency in years — the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. As drugs continue to fail to meet expectations, vaccine development has received a lot of attention.  GSK reported the highest vaccine sales of all drugmakers with total sales of US$ 8.4 billion (GBP 7.16 billion), a significant portion of its total sales of US$ 41.8 billion (GBP 33.754 billion).   US-based Merck’s vaccine division also reported a significant increase in sales to US$ 8.0 billion and in 2019 received FDA and EU approval to market its Ebola vaccine Ervebo. This is the first FDA-authorized vaccine against the deadly virus which causes hemorrhagic fever and spreads from person to person through direct contact with body fluids. Pfizer and Sanofi also reported an increase in their vaccine sales to US$ 6.4 billion and US$ 6.2 billion respectively and the Covid-19 pandemic has recently pushed drugmakers to move faster than ever before and has also converted competitors into partners. In a rare move, drug behemoths  — Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) —joined hands to develop a vaccine for the novel coronavirus. The two companies plan to start human trials in the second half of this year, and if things go right, they will file for potential approvals by the second half of 2021.  View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top drugs by sales in 2019 (Free Excel Available)  Our view Covid-19 has brought the world economy to a grinding halt and shifted the global attention to the pharmaceutical industry’s capability to deliver solutions to address this pandemic.  Our compilation shows that vaccines and drugs for infectious diseases currently form a tiny fraction of the total sales of pharmaceutical companies and few drugs against infectious diseases rank high on the sales list. This could well explain the limited range of options currently available to fight Covid-19. With the pandemic currently infecting over 3 million people spread across more than 200 countries, we can safely conclude that the scenario in 2020 will change substantially. And so should our compilation of top drugs for the year. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top drugs by sales in 2019 (Free Excel Available)   

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https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/top-drugs-and-pharmaceutical-companies-of-2019-by-revenues

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
29 Apr 2020

STOCK RECAP #PipelineProspector

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Pipeline Prospector Feb 2020: Coronavirus Developments & Deal Updates
In February, PharmaCompass and SCORR Marketing had announced the launch of the Pipeline Prospector, a free-access database of global drug development deals and updates designed for executives in the drug development industry. While our recap of January had focused on the major deals announced in the pharma and biotech world, February was dominated by the single biggest health emergency in years — the novel coronavirus (Covid-19).  Although the industry is striving to make antiviral medicines available in months and a vaccine available by next year that can effectively target the infection caused by the novel coronavirus, since the end of January we have seen some of the biopharma industry’s biggest names as well as small startups announce steps they are undertaking to combat the disease. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates  Fujifilm, Zhejiang Hisun Pharmaceutical’s Favipiravir The Chinese National Medical Products Administration also approved the clinical trial to test the influenza drug Favipiravir, manufactured by Zhejiang Hisun Pharmaceutical, for pneumonia caused by the new coronavirus in an upcoming clinical trial being conducted in Shenzhen.  Favipiravir is a RdRP (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase) inhibitor which works as a broad spectrum antiviral agent that has been approved in Japan for novel or re-emergent influenza and it has also been used to treat Ebola patients in Guinea. On February 22, Japan’s Health Minister Katsunobu Kato said his ministry would recommend favipiravir (sold as Avigan in Japan), developed by Fujifilm-owned Toyama Chemical, for use as a coronavirus treatment after test dosages appeared effective in mild and asymptomatic cases in at least two medical institutions. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates This week, the director of China’s National Center of Biotechnology Development announced that a clinical trial completed in China has demonstrated that favipiravir has good clinical efficacy against Covid-19. However, South Korean health authorities announced they will not use the Japanese anti-influenza medication for treatment of Covid-19 due to doubts over its efficacy and potential side effects. Gilead’s remdesivir Gilead Sciences Inc announced it had started two late-stage studies with its experimental antiviral drug — remdesivir — to test it in patients with severe and moderate cases of the illness caused by the coronavirus. Remdesivir, Gilead’s experimental anti-viral treatment, had shown some positive results in a patient in the US with worsening symptoms of a confirmed Covid-19 infection. Remdesivir appeared effective as a throat swab tested negative for the virus just a few days after receiving the infusion, and no adverse events were reported. However, a paper subsequently published, without peer review, revealed that some hospitalized patients showed signs of worsening in the second week after illness onset. Wall Street analysts in a note to investors wrote that they “see a less than 50/50 possibility that the drug is ultimately proven effective”. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates Remdesivir is an investigational antiviral drug that was being developed to combat the Ebola virus, and is not currently approved for any indication globally. However, some patients with Covid-19 have received intravenous remdesivir for compassionate use outside of a clinical trial setting. In China, multiple clinical trials of investigational therapeutics have been implemented, including two controlled, randomized Phase III trials which are underway at the China-Japan Friendship Hospital. Gilead said these two new studies expand the drug’s research that are under way in China’s Hubei province led by the China-Japan Friendship Hospital and in the United States led by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. While results from such studies are bound to take months, the virology institute in Wuhan has applied for a patent on this experimental Gilead drug.  Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates 80-year-old malaria drug chloroquine Chinese scientists also reported that remdesivir and chloroquine, an 80-year-old malaria drug, were found to be highly effective in laboratory settings to thwart the novel coronavirus. There are several trials underway at Chinese facilities, some in combination with other agents like remdesivir. While the virology institute in Wuhan said the two drugs’ efficacies on humans required further clinical tests, no company has currently announced an active development program for this age-old treatment against Covid-19. Chloroquine, which has been taken for many decades as an antimalarial, has a number of common side effects which include muscle problems, loss of appetite and diarrhea. Some of its more serious side effects include problems with vision, muscle damage, seizures etc. Although Chloroquine features on the WHO’s List of Essential Medicines, its efficacy and safety against the novel coronavirus will need to be established as it is possible to do more harm with a rushed treatment. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates Roche’s tocilizumab China approved Swiss drugmaker Roche’s Actemra (tocilizumab), a biologic drug approved in 2010 in the United States for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), for patients who develop severe complications from Covid-19. Tocilizumab suppresses overreactions of the immune system and helps inhibit a deadly medical condition called a cytokine storm — an overproduction of immune cells that damage healthy tissues -- which is also one of the main causes of death for critically ill Covid-19 patients.  Last month, the Red Cross Society of China donated more than 30,000 injection solutions to help patients in Wuhan and around 270 severely ill patients were being treated with tocilizumab. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates In February, Israel-based Enlivex Therapeutics Limited, a clinical-stage immunotherapy company, announced it is initiating a plan to increase its manufacturing capacity of Allocetra, an experimental therapy being investigated for treatment of patients with organ failure associated with sepsis, a syndrome whose lethal pathophysiology (cytokine storm followed by organ failure) is similar to that of the coronavirus (Covid-19). Enlivex had announced its plan to initiate two clinical studies this year: (i) a Phase II/III clinical trial for sepsis later in the year; and (ii) a Phase II/III for the prevention of GvHD (graft versus host disease) in patients who undergo bone-marrow transplantations. The manufacturing capacity of Allocetra was initially planned to match the expected recruitment rate of patients in those two clinical trials. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates Vaccines February also saw companies like Sanofi and Johnson & Johnson (J&J) announce they were joining forces with a US Health and Human Services Department — BARDA (Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority) — to develop vaccines for Covid-19.  Sanofi will be investigating an advanced pre-clinical SARS vaccine it was working on in the early 2000s as a potential treatment for the novel coronavirus. Sanofi SA and its partner Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc also announced that they had started a clinical trial of their rheumatoid arthritis drug Kevzara as another potential treatment option. On February 24, Moderna, a Massachusetts-headquartered biotechnology firm, confirmed the shipment of its first batch of mRNA-1273 in a planned Phase I open-label, dose-ranging trial study, to evaluate the safety and reactogenicity of a two-dose vaccination schedule of mRNA-1273, given 28 days apart, across three doses in healthy adults in the United States. Manufacture of this batch was funded by the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI). CEPI agreed to fund the manufacturing of a 2019-nCoV vaccine that uses Moderna’s proprietary messenger RNA (mRNA) platform and this week Moderna announced that the first patient had been dosed with the vaccine. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates GlaxoSmithKline and CEPI also said they would work to accelerate the creation of a vaccine. The project will rely on GSK’s adjuvant system, designed to enhance the body’s immune response and create a stronger and longer lasting protection against the infection. However, developing a preventive and confirming that it is safe and useful in humans could take 12 to 18 months. US-based biotech company Inovio Pharmaceuticals and its partner Beijing Advaccine Biotechnology announced they were developing a ‘DNA vaccine’ called INO-4800. This nucleic acid-based vaccine is currently in preclinical trials and involves directly injecting genetic material into a person to trigger a strong immune response. Other companies which announced they would be working on vaccines for the novel coronavirus were Applied DNA Sciences, ImmunoPrecise Antibodies and Codagenix. Other developments There are several other known antiviral drugs under evaluation in China, such as oseltamivir (better known as Tamiflu), AbbVie Inc’s HIV combination therapy lopinavir and ritonavir (sold as brand drug Kaletra) and Johnson & Johnson’s darunavir (sold under brand name Prezista). Meanwhile, Johnson and Johnson has revealed that there is no evidence to support the use of darunavir for the treatment of COVID-19. With multiple clinical trials underway it remains to be seen if all these are desperate long shots or if they can become effective treatments against this novel coronavirus. Innovation Pharmaceuticals announced it was exploring Brilacidin as a potential treatment for Covid-19. According to the company, Brilacidin has already demonstrated widespread antibacterial, anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties in multiple FDA clinical trials. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates Bioxytran announced it is exploring partnering with international drug companies to develop its lead product BXT-25, originally formulated to treat hypoxia, to circulate oxygen in the bodies of patients suffering from the later stages of Covid-19. According to the company, most late-stage coronavirus patients develop acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), characterized by low blood oxygen levels due to fluid build up. They also asserted that the only treatment for ARDS is oxygen therapy along with ventilator support. A drug candidate developed by APEIRON Biologics named APN01 is being tested in China in a phase one pilot trial as a treatment for Covid-19 coordinated by Angalpharma and dMed Pharmaceutical. The APN01 drug candidate, formulated to treat lung and respiratory distress syndromes, builds on a previous discovery that ACE2 protein is the key receptor for the SARS virus.  Academic institutions have also been active as Emory University’s non-profit biotechnology company, Drug Innovation Ventures at Emory (DRIVE), launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise money for testing its antiviral drug candidate – EIDD-2801 — which has shown potential therapeutic effects against Covid-19.  Our view Covid-19, which was first detected in December in Wuhan, China, has already sickened more than 200,000 people worldwide and killed over 9,000. The exponential growth rate of the infections with limited breakthrough treatments in sight indicate a long development road ahead for the industry. The novel coronavirus has a mortality rate that ranges between 1 to 4 percent, which pales in comparison to the Ebola virus that killed 50 percent of the people infected by it. In fact, 53 percent of the people who took one of the lead treatments against Covid-19 -- Gilead’s remdesivir — had died during the Ebola study. On the other hand, Merck & Co won FDA approval for its Ebola vaccine last year but the company isn’t currently working on developing a vaccine against this novel coronavirus. Merck’s reasoning is that if the virus is as bad as everyone fears it to be, then almost everyone will need to be immunized. However, as everyone does not get seriously ill, giving a vaccine to healthy people requires a comprehensive safety assessment which will be a long process. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates As Julie Gerberding, who was director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the SARS outbreak and is now Merck’s chief patient officer, told Bloomberg: “We have never made a vaccine for the world.” The focus on drug development is constantly evolving and the Pipeline Prospector, our free access database of global drug development deals and development updates, is designed to provide the insights necessary for professionals to drive their business forward. Email us at support@pipelineprospector.com to learn more. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for All Deals & Development Updates  

Impressions: 5566

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pipeline-prospector-blog/pipeline-prospector-feb-2020-coronavirus-developments-deal-updates

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
19 Mar 2020

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2024/08/14/2930011/0/en/Cocrystal-Pharma-Reports-Second-Quarter-2024-Financial-Results-and-Provides-Updates-on-its-Antiviral-Drug-Development-Programs.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
14 Aug 2024

https://www.accesswire.com/viewarticle.aspx?id=883753&lang=en

ACCESSWIRE
01 Jul 2024

https://www.accesswire.com/viewarticle.aspx?id=880873&lang=en

ACCESSWIRE
24 Jun 2024

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=218565

FDA
01 May 2024

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pdf/news/enforcement-report-week-of-february-28-2024-59068.pdf

FDA
28 Feb 2024

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=215538

FDA
14 Feb 2023