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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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FDA approvals rise 49% in 2023; CRISPR’s gene editing therapy sees light of day
In 2022, when the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was reeling under the impact of the pandemic, new drug approvals by the agency dropped by 26 percent. But last year, FDA’s new drug approvals rebounded by an impressive 49 percent, with the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) approving 55 new drugs in 2023. Of them, 36 percent were considered first-in-class, while small molecules made up for 62 percent of the total drugs approved (i.e. 34). FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) okayed 19 biologics in 2023 compared to eight in the previous year.The first half of 2023 saw the debut of vaccines for the all-too-common respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Among the other notable approvals in H1 was Biogen and Eisai’s Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi (lecanemab). Out of the total 55 drug approvals, 29 came in H2 2023. This includes Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics’ Casgevy that relies on the Nobel Prize-winning CRISPR gene-editing technology. Casgevy has been approved as a treatment for sickle-cell disease (SCD) and β-thalassemia.While FDA witnessed a sharp rise in approvals in 2023, many other drug regulators didn’t. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) granted marketing authorization to 32 novel drugs in 2023, a fall from 33 in 2022. Similarly, Health Canada’s approvals in 2023 decreased to 38, compared to 45 in the previous year.As usual, oncology topped the list of drug approvals by therapeutic area, at 39 (as opposed to 35 in 2022). Rare diseases was the second most popular therapeutic area for drug approvals. With drugmakers clearly paying heed to the unmet needs of patients suffering from rare diseases, this therapeutic area sprinted from a 9 percent share and the fourth position among new approvals in 2022 to an impressive 34 percent share in 2023. A quarter of the new drug approvals were in infectious diseases, followed by immunology (19 percent) and neurology (7 percent).View New Drug Approvals in 2023 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available) Casgevy, postpartum depression drug Zurzuvae emerge as potential blockbustersGene therapy Casgevy, postpartum depression (PPD) med Zurzuvae, blood cancer med Elrexfio and ulcerative colitis drug Velsipity were some of the prominent approvals of 2023.Britain’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency was the first to okay Casgevy in November as a cure for SCD and β-thalassemia. Soon, the FDA approved it for SCD. In January this year, the American agency also approved it for transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia (TDT). Analysts estimate Casgevy to generate US$ 2.6 billion in peak sales, says Nature. Biogen and Sage’s PPD therapy Zurzuvae became the first and only FDA-approved pill for the condition that can be life-threatening for both the mother and the child. Global sales of Zurzuvae are forecast to hit US$ 1.28 billion by 2028.In August, Pfizer’s Elrexfio (elranatamab) became the first “off-the-shelf” (ready-to-use) therapy in the US for multiple myeloma. The drug provides an option for patients with hard to treat or relapsed blood cancer and is estimated to bring in US$ 861 million in peak sales by 2028, says Nature.Pfizer also bagged another significant approval in October — its drug Velsipity (etrasimod) was greenlit by the FDA to treat adults with ulcerative colitis, an inflammatory bowel disease. Peak revenue for Velsipity is expected to come in at US$ 825 million, as per Evaluate.View New Drug Approvals in 2023 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available) Astra’s Truqap, GSK’s Ojjaara among top cancer therapies given FDA nod in H2In November, FDA approved AstraZeneca’s Truqap (capivasertib) in combination with the Anglo-Swedish drugmaker’s Faslodex (fulvestrant) for treating adult patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive, HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer with one or more biomarker alterations. Evaluate Pharma forecasts peak Truqap sales to come in at about US$ 690 million.In September, FDA approved GSK’s Ojjaara (momelotinib) as the first and only treatment for myelofibrosis with anemia. Nearly all myelofibrosis patients are estimated to develop anemia over the course of the disease. Ojjaara is taken orally once a day.Other notable oncology treatments okayed by FDA in H2 2023 include Daiichi’s Vanflyta (quizartinib) in July to treat an aggressive blood cancer known as acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In August, FDA approved Janssen’s bispecific antibody Talvey (talquetamab-tgvs) for difficult-to-treat blood cancer. The agency approved two cancer therapies in November — BMS’ Augtyro (repotrectinib) for ROS1-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and Takeda’s targeted oral therapy Fruzaqla (fruquintinib) for adult patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC).View New Drug Approvals in 2023 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available) Rare disease drugs Santhera-Catalyst’s Agamree, Novo’s Rivfloza bag approval in H2In October, FDA approved Santhera Pharmaceuticals and Catalyst Pharma’s Agamree (vamorolone), an oral suspension treatment for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) in patients two years of age and older. This makes it the first drug fully approved in both the US and Europe for the muscle degeneration disorder. Agamree acts in a manner similar to other steroids, which are the standard of care for the inherited rare disease. However, it causes fewer side effects.FDA also okayed Novo Nordisk’s once-a-month injection Rivfloza (nedosiran) in October to treat a rare genetic condition — primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1) — that causes recurring kidney stones.In November, the agency approved Takeda’s Adzynma (ADAMTS13, recombinant-krhn) as the first treatment for both adult and pediatric patients with congenital thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (cTTP), a rare genetic blood disorder. Other noteworthy FDA approvals in H2 2023 for rare blood diseases include Novartis’ Fabhalta and bluebird bio's Lyfgenia. Fabhalta is the first oral monotherapy for the treatment of adults with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, a rare disease that causes symptoms such as hemolytic anemia, hemoglobinuria (excretion of hemoglobin in the urine), fatigue, shortness of breath etc. Lyfgenia is the first cell-based gene therapy for the treatment of SCD in patients 12 years and older. Similarly, another rare disease drug — Regeneron’s Veopoz —  bagged FDA approval in August last. Veopoz treats CHAPLE disease, an ultra-rare disease in which patients have severe gastrointestinal problems.View New Drug Approvals in 2023 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available) Our viewAfter a lull in 2022, new drug approvals have finally gathered momentum. The good news is that this year, several pathbreaking drugs are coming up for approval, such as Madrigal Pharmaceuticals’ resmetirom (the first treatment for NASH with liver fibrosis), Merck’s sotatercept (a treatment for pulmonary arterial hypertension), Lilly’s donanemab for Alzheimer’s disease and Karuna Therapeutics’ drug to treat schizophrenia. Let’s hope 2024 turns out to be an even bigger year for new drug approvals.

Impressions: 3321

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/fda-approvals-rise-49-in-2023-crispr-s-gene-editing-therapy-sees-light-of-day

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
01 Feb 2024

STOCK RECAP #PipelineProspector

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Pipeline Prospector April 2024: Indices dip amid muted Q1 results; Vertex acquires Alpine Immune for US$ 4.9 bn
Pharma indices had begun to recede in March. Their red streak accelerated in April with the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index (NBI) falling 6 percent from 4429.97 in March to 4162.33 last month and the SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) index tripping 10 percent from 94.34 to 84.62. Similarly, the S&P Biotechnology Select Industry Index (SPSIBI) was down 11 percent from 7402.50 to 6584.40 in April.This muted performance was also reflected in the first quarter (Q1) results. Biogen, Biomarin, Roche, Gilead, Merck, Sanofi, BMS and Johnson & Johnson announced their Q1 results in April. While Roche and Biogen reported a drop in revenues, BMS posted a loss in Q1, even though its revenues increased. And Sanofi reported a 14.7 percent drop in operating income due to competition from generics and currency fluctuations. BioMarin, Gilead and Merck reported a 9 percent, 5 percent and 9 percent increase, respectively, in their Q1 revenues over Q1 2023.There were a handful of deals announced last month, the biggest being Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ acquisition of Alpine Immune Sciences for US$ 4.9 billion. The deal gives Vertex access to Alpine’s protein-based immunotherapies for autoimmune diseases.Japanese drugmaker Ono Pharmaceutical agreed to acquire Massachusetts-based Deciphera Pharmaceuticals for US$ 2.4 billion. The acquisition gives Ono access to Deciphera's oncology pipeline. Denmark’s Genmab agreed to acquire privately-owned ProfoundBio for US$ 1.8 billion. ProfoundBio has three next-generation antibody drug conjugate (ADC) candidates in its pipeline that will now go to Genmab.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel)FDA okays ImmunityBio’s Anktiva, Day One’s Ojemda for bladder, brain cancerLike March, April too saw several significant drug approvals, especially in oncology. ImmunityBio (its stock was up 50 percent in April) won its first US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval as the agency greenlit Anktiva as part of a combination therapy to treat a type of bladder cancer. With this approval, Anktiva will compete with Merck’s Keytruda.AstraZeneca (stock up 12 percent) and Daiichi Sankyo’s Enhertu has been granted accelerated approval in the US to treat adult patients with HER2-positive solid tumors that have spread or cannot be surgically removed. These patients have undergone prior treatment and have no satisfactory alternatives available to them. J&J and Legend’s Carvykti has become the first and only BCMA-targeted therapy approved by the FDA for patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, who have received just one prior line of treatment. The approval is an important milestone in J&J’s plans to make Carvykti a US$ 5 billion-plus asset at peak yearly sales.Day One Biopharmaceuticals’ Ojemda has been granted FDA’s accelerated approval to treat certain types of pediatric brain cancer. The pan-RAF kinase inhibitor has been okayed for patients six months of age and older with relapsed or refractory pediatric low-grade glioma (LGG) harboring a BRAF fusion or rearrangement, or BRAF V600 mutation. This is the first FDA approval of a systemic therapy for treating what is the most common form of childhood brain tumor.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Basilea’s antibiotic bags FDA nod; Vanda’s Fanapt approved for bipolar disorderThe agency also approved Vanda Pharmaceuticals’ (stock up 25 percent) Fanapt tablets for treating manic or mixed episodes associated with bipolar-1 disorder in adults. The atypical antipsychotic agent has been used for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia since its FDA approval in 2009. This second approval for bipolar-1 disorder patients (who experience manic episodes that last at least seven days) could help revive Fanapt prescriptions.FDA has also approved Basilea Pharmaceutica’s Zevtera, an antibiotic for bacterial infections including multidrug-resistant strains. The US agency has okayed it for three conditions – treatment of adults with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, including those with right-sided infective endocarditis; adults with acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections; and adult and pediatric patients with community-acquired bacterial pneumonia.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) BMS’ schizo drug shows benefit sans weight gain; Imfinzi scores in lung cancer trialA common side effect associated with anti-psychotics is weight gain. However, interim results from a late-stage trial have shown that BMS’ schizophrenia drug KarXT continued to improve symptoms of the severe mental disease even at 52 weeks, and without weight gain.In another phase 3 trial, Imfinzi significantly improved overall survival and progression-free survival in patients with limited-stage small cell lung cancer. This makes this blockbuster drug the first and only immunotherapy to demonstrate survival benefit for this aggressive form of lung cancer. Imfinzi had posted sales of US$ 4.24 billion in 2023.Intra-Cellular Therapies said a phase 3 study of its drug Caplyta in people with major depressive disorder (MDD) met both its primary and key secondary endpoints. Given once daily as an adjunctive therapy to antidepressants, Caplyta 42 mg significantly beat the placebo at improving depression severity.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Zepbound shows benefit in sleep disorder; Novartis’ Fabhalta reduces proteinuriaEli Lilly’s popular weight-loss drug Zepbound cut irregular breathing episodes associated with a common sleep-related disorder – obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Treatment with Zepbound reduced the frequency of irregular breathing episodes by as much as 63 percent in adults with OSA and obesity across two late-stage trials. Lilly plans to submit the findings to FDA to expand Zepbound’s use for OSA. Roche’s Genentech said its drug Columvi, in combination with chemotherapy, demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in overall survival for people with relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). A late-stage study pitted the Columvi-chemotherapy combination against a rituximab-chemotherapy combination in patients who received at least one prior line of therapy and are not candidates for autologous stem cell transplant. Patients in the Columvi group lived longer.In another late-stage trial, Novartis' drug Fabhalta reduced proteinuria (protein in the urine) in patients with IgA nephropathy by 38.3 percent. The Swiss drugmaker filed for FDA’s accelerated approval using the data, and the agency has granted it priority review.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Our viewAt the start of 2024, the US market saw inflation falling and there were talks of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. But few months on, the outlook has darkened a bit with inflation refusing to let off steam and economic output slowing down in the US. This is getting reflected in the pharma indices and the Q1 results of several drugmakers. Though overall, we have faith in the pharma sector’s spirit of innovation and its zest for dealmaking. Despite the macroeconomic challenges, there is hope that the other three quarters of 2024 will look better.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2024 Newsmakers (Free Excel) 

Impressions: 1851

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pipeline-prospector-blog/pipeline-prospector-april-2024-indices-dip-amid-muted-q1-results-vertex-acquires-alpine-immune-for-us-4-9-bn

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
09 May 2024

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/first-shipment-of-henlius-trastuzumab-to-us-302318713.html

PR NEWSWIRE
02 Dec 2024

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-11-28/astrazeneca-s-enhertu-wins-china-reimbursement-despite-probe

BLOOMBERG
30 Nov 2024

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=761091

FDA
14 Nov 2024

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=761074

FDA
13 Nov 2024

https://pharmaphorum.com/news/daiichi-sankyo-partners-alteogen-subcutaneous-enhertu

PHARMAPHORUM
09 Nov 2024

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/pharmaceuticals/govt-asks-manufacturers-to-cut-price-of-3-anti-cancer-drugs/articleshow/114731895.cms

ECONOMICTIMES
29 Oct 2024