One
very important event that happened late last month was the possible discovery
of a drug that could prevent metastatic cancers. The drug would work by making the body
train special immune system cells that would guard against cancer relapse. This could have a very large potential
impact on the industry as a whole or whichever company ends up getting the
patent for this drug. Cancer is
one of the prevalent diseases in the US today and if one company discovered a
cure or a better way of treating it the market could be worth tens of billions
of dollars.
Another
important event that is ongoing is the recall of all lots of Omontys Injections. The
lots are used to treat anemia in adult dialysis patients, however it has been
found that there have been over 19 cases of anaphylaxis from patients taking
the drugs and three of the cases have resulted in the death of the
patient. Due to this the FDA has
had no choice but to issue a recall for the drug to prevent any more cases like
this occurring. This will have a
major effect on Affymax, Inc. as it is means that all
the research into these drugs was a waste of money.
A collaboration that just comes to
light today is the strategic alliance between Merck and Nordic Bioscience on the drug sprifermin, which is used
to treat osteoarthritis in the knee. Nordic Bioscience will provide Merck with clinical development services
on a “on a shared-risk basis in exchange for a payment structure that includes
service fees and potential milestone and royalty payments on the program.” Currently it looks like
the drug is going be successful but by combining with Nordic Bioscience it offers Merck a
greater amount of expertise and resources. Like the development of all new drugs it could be a billion
dollar drug line.
http://www.worldpharmanews.com/
Hi Matt,
ReplyDeleteReally interesting post! It's amazing to see the current events of the pharmaceutical industry! I would like to see more analysis. For example, with death cases and serious illness cases, do you think Affymax, Inc will be able to recover from this? How can other companies keep themselves from making this mistake in future R&D? Also, remember to post at least 2 comments/blog post!