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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: 3830

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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Biotech indices inch up post SVB bloodbath; Covid drugmakers report drop in Q1 sales
In March, the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) had dragged the biotech indices down. SVB had made considerable investments in the biotech space, and its downfall had left many life sciences and healthcare companies vulnerable.Within a month of the SVB storm, biotech indices have bounced back. The Nasdaq Biotechnology Index (NBI) gained 1 percent to end April at US$ 4,187.32. It was down 1.3 percent in March. The S&P Biotechnology Select Industry Index (SPSIBI) was up 2 percent at US$ 6,094.82, and the SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) increased 4 percent to US$ 80.20. Both SPSIBI and XBI had dropped by 8.3 percent and 8.2 percent, respectively, in March.In April, several drugmakers announced their first quarter (Q1) results. The month also saw three major M&A deals — Merck’s US$ 10.8 billion buyout of Prometheus Biosciences, Astellas Pharma’s US$ 5.9 billion acquisition of Iveric Bio and GSK’s US$ 2 billion deal to buy Bellus Health.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel)Pfizer reports 29% drop in Q1 revenues, falls behind GSK in RSV vaccine raceWe have seen this happening for many months now, with Pfizer’s stock consistently falling since January. The Q1 results only echoed that sentiment — Pfizer’s revenues fell 29 percent to US$ 18.3 billion due to a 77 percent drop in sales of its Covid-19 vaccine Comirnaty. This led to a further 5 percent drop in the drug behemoth’s stock in April. What was going right for Pfizer was its experimental respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine. But GSK raced ahead of Pfizer this month when the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved its RSV vaccine — Arexvy — for adults aged 60 years and older. The Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) date for the Pfizer jab for older adults is this month too. GSK also announced the acquisition of Canada-based drug developer Bellus Health (up 114 percent) for US$ 2 billion.Among other Covid drugmakers, Moderna’s stock also suffered a 17 percent loss last month. What was worse, its experimental messenger RNA-based influenza vaccine failed to demonstrate effectiveness against influenza B. Moderna is planning to go ahead with a phase 3 study of mRNA-4157 (its investigational individualized neo-antigen therapy) and Keytruda combo in patients with adjuvant melanoma this year.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Wegovy helps boost Novo’s Q1 revenues; Vabysmo brings gains for RocheIn April, both Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly posted gains in the bourses. Wegovy’s success in the US helped Novo’s obesity care segment notch up a 131 percent increase in Q1 sales. Novo’s diabetes and obesity drug sales rose 33 percent and were at DKK 48.8 billion (US$ 7.11 billion). Overall, the Danish drugmaker posted an impressive 27 percent growth in its Q1 sales — which were at DKK 53.4 billion (US$ 7.7 billion) — while its stock rose 5 percent in April.Lilly is seeking to compete with Wegovy’s dominance in the obesity market with its own drug, Mounjaro. It recently posted favorable data from a late-stage trial, where Mounjaro achieved 21 percent weight reduction in non-diabetic patients, compared to 15 percent for Wegovy. Lilly is now conducting another Phase 3b trial to test Mounjaro against Wegovy. And in a separate trial, Mounjaro led to a 16 percent weight loss in patients with type 2 diabetes. The drugmaker‘s stock rose by a handsome 15 percent.Roche Group’s pharmaceutical division posted 9 percent growth in Q1 sales — at CHF 11.7 billion (US$ 12.7 billion) — due to strong demand for newer medicines. Eye diseases drug Vabysmo, approved last year, turned out to be the strongest growth driver, generating CHF 432 million (US$ 486 million) in global sales. Roche expects the drug to generate US$ 2 billion in revenue this year. The Swiss drugmaker also shared post-hoc analyses from four additional phase 3 studies showing Vabysmo to be more effective at drying retinal fluid than Regeneron’s Eylea in Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and Diabetic Macular Edema (DME). Roche’s stock gained 11 percent.In addition, FDA approved Roche’s Polivy as part of a five-drug combination for previously untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the first new treatment in nearly 20 years to significantly improve outcomes in first-line DLBCL. In Q1, Roche reported a decline of 3 percent in group sales due to lower demand for Covid tests.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel)Higher sales of key drugs take Novartis’ Q1 sales up 8%; J&J lowers 2023 guidanceNovartis’ Q1 sales grew 8 percent to US$ 12.95 billion, driven by strong performance of its heart failure drug Entresto, cancer meds Pluvicto and Kisqali, and multiple sclerosis drug Kesimpta. Based on higher Q1 sales, the Swiss drugmaker has raised its outlook for 2023.Novartis and partner BeiGene’s experimental drug tislelizumab showed promising results in treating certain types of gastric cancer in a late-stage trial. The partners hope this data will help make tislelizumab the first-line therapy for patients with advanced forms of gastric cancer. While Novartis’ stock went up 11 percent, BeiGene’s stock gained 17 percent in April.Though J&J’s Q1 results exceeded analyst expectations, the drugmaker lowered the 2023 guidance for its pharmaceutical business. Leaked data from a phase 3 trial showed that J&J and Legend’s cancer drug Carvykti performed better-than-expected in patients with multiple myeloma. J&J’s stock went up 4 percent. Legend’s stock rose 46 percent.Among small cap companies, Madrigal’s stock rose 24 percent in April on news of a breakthrough therapy designation for its drug Resmetirom as a treatment for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel)Merck acquires Prometheus for US$ 10.8 bn; Astellas buys Iveric Bio for US$ 5.9 bnApril proved to be a good month for both Merck and AstraZeneca, even though the two drugmakers reported a drop in their Q1 revenues due to decreased sales of their Covid-19 products.While Merck reported a 9 percent drop in Q1 sales (at US$ 14.5 billion), with sales of its Covid-19 antiviral pill Lagevrio (molnupiravir) dropping 88 percent, Astra reported a 4 percent decrease in revenue (at US$ 10.88 billion) in Q1. Stocks of both drugmakers rose by 6 percent.In early April, FDA had granted accelerated approval to Merck’s Keytruda in combination with Seagen and Astellas Pharma’s Padcev as a first-line treatment for adults with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma. Later in the month, Merck announced it is acquiring San Diego-based biotech Prometheus Biosciences for US$ 10.8 billion to strengthen its immunology pipeline. Prometheus’ stock skyrocketed 76 percent on the news.A combination of AstraZeneca's cancer drugs — Imfinzi and Lynparza — met its main goal in a late-stage trial for patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. Additionally, Astra’s Ultomiris also received a positive recommendation from the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for adult patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder.Japanese drugmaker Astellas Pharma announced its biggest deal last month when it acquired New Jersey-based eye drug developer Iveric Bio for US$ 5.9 billion, taking its stock up 9 percent. The deal will give Astellas access to Iveric Bio’s ophthalmology treatments, including its lead drug candidate for geographic atrophy — Zimura. Iveric Bio’s stock gained 22 percent.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel)Disappointing Q1 sales drag AbbVie, BMS stocks downBoth AbbVie and Bristol Myers Squibb reported a drop in Q1 sales. AbbVie was hit due to weaker-than-expected performance of its blockbuster drugs Skyrizi and Rinvoq and dwindling sales of Humira (which experienced a sales drop of 25.2 percent in the face of biosimilar competition in the US). Its Q1 sales fell by 9.7 percent to US$ 12.25 billion, and its stock was down 6 percent. In positive news, FDA expanded the approval of AbbVie’s Qulipta as a preventive treatment for chronic migraine in adults. Rinvoq also received an add-on authorization in the EU as a treatment for moderate-to-severe active Crohn’s disease.BMS’ Q1 sales dropped 3 percent to US$ 11.3 billion, primarily due to an erosion in Revlimid’s sales in the face of competition from generic drugs. Revlimid’s revenues fell by 37 percent in Q1 compared to the same period last year. BMS’ stock experienced a 4 percent drop.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel)Our viewThe collapse of three US banks over the last three months has dealt a blow to the US economy. Globally, the business scenario hasn’t improved much, with inflation, high interest rates, ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, supply chain kinks and other uncertainties continuing to pose challenges.If the biotech indices are able to hold up in these difficult times, it is an indication of strength and resilience within the sector.Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2023 Newsmakers (Free Excel)

Impressions: 1939

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pipeline-prospector-blog/biotech-indices-inch-up-post-svb-bloodbath-covid-drugmakers-report-drop-in-q1-sales

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
11 May 2023

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://news.abbvie.com/2024-07-12-AbbVie-Submits-Regulatory-Applications-to-FDA-and-EMA-for-Upadacitinib-RINVOQ-R-in-Giant-Cell-Arteritis

PRESS RELEASE
13 Jul 2024

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/rinvoq-upadacitinib-now-available-for-pediatric-patients-two-years-and-older-with-polyarticular-juvenile-idiopathic-arthritis-and-psoriatic-arthritis-302162639.html

PR NEWSWIRE
04 Jun 2024

https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/johnson-johnson-numab-yellow-jersey-bispecific-atopic-dermatitis-eczema/717179/

Ben Fidler BIOPHARMADIVE
29 May 2024

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/new-data-show-rinvoq-upadacitinib-demonstrated-superiority-versus-dupixent-dupilumab-across-primary-and-all-secondary-endpoints-in-an-open-label-head-to-head-atopic-dermatitis-study-302126897.html

PR NEWSWIRE
25 Apr 2024

https://www.indianpharmapost.com/news/abbvies-phase-3-select-gca-study-of-upadacitinib-showed-positive-results-in-patients-with-giant-cell-arteritis-15560

INDINPHARMAPOST
23 Apr 2024
AbbVie's Rinvoq passes muster in yet another autoimmune disease
AbbVie's Rinvoq passes muster in yet another autoimmune disease

18 Apr 2024

// Eric Sagonowsky FIERCE PHARMA

https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/abbvie-touts-rinvoq-win-giant-cell-arteritis-potentially-teeing-another-label-expansion

Eric Sagonowsky FIERCE PHARMA
18 Apr 2024