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Monday, October 8, 2018

Exelixis Cabozantinib to Be Featured in 13 Presentations at ESMO 2018 Congress


– Presentations to include results from the dose escalation stage of phase 1b COSMIC-021 study of cabozantinib in combination with atezolizumab in previously untreated advanced renal cell carcinoma –
Exelixis, Inc. (NASDAQ:EXEL) today announced that data from clinical trials of cabozantinib will be the subject of 13 presentations at the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) 2018 Congress, which is being held October 19-23, 2018 in Munich, Germany.
Poster presentations will include results from the dose escalation stage of the phase 1b COSMIC-021 study of cabozantinib in combination with atezolizumab in previously untreated advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Additionally, a poster discussion session will feature a late-breaking abstract evaluating the effect of PD-L1 status on clinical outcomes with cabozantinib in advanced RCC in the CABOSUN and METEOR trials.
“The data at ESMO showcase the potential of cabozantinib across a range of difficult-to-treat cancers,” said Gisela Schwab, M.D., President, Product Development and Medical Affairs and Chief Medical Officer, Exelixis. “We are especially excited to present results from the dose escalation stage of the COSMIC-021 trial evaluating the combination of cabozantinib and atezolizumab in advanced kidney cancer and look forward to sharing these data and more with the oncology community at this year’s ESMO Congress.”

Regeneron and Sanofi to provide data on Libtayo at ESMO


Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (REGN) and Sanofi (SNY) will present a diverse set of data from their joint clinical program investigating Libtayo (cemiplimab-rwlc) at the ESMO 2018 Congress (European Society for Medical Oncology) from October 19 to 23 in Munich, Germany. These data span six different tumor types, including non-small cell lung cancer , cervical cancer, cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC), hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and basal cell carcinoma. Libtayo is a fully-human monoclonal antibody targeting the immune checkpoint receptor PD-1 (programmed cell death protein-1). All six of the abstracts accepted at ESMO focus on ongoing Libtayo clinical trials. Among the joint Regeneron and Sanofi presentations are new clinical data from a Phase 1 expansion cohort investigating Libtayo in combination with radiotherapy in advanced NSCLC as well as longer-term follow-up data from the advanced CSCC expansion cohorts in the Phase 1 trial. Additional abstracts will feature initial data from Phase 1 expansion cohorts investigating Libtayo in cervical cancer, HCC and HNSCC, alongside a trial-in-progress update on the potentially pivotal Phase 2 trial in BCC.
https://thefly.com/landingPageNews.php?id=2801249

Merck initiated with a Buy at Guggenheim


Guggenheim analyst Seamus Fernandez started Merck with a Buy rating and $84 price target, citing the sales and EPS upside he sees as Keytruda growth expands in the U.S. and globally. He also sees some partner products, such as Lynparza and Lenvima, along with the company’s pipeline as being underappreciated, Fernandez tells investors.

Eli Lilly initiated with a Buy at Guggenheim


Guggenheim analyst Seamus Fernandez started Eli Lilly with a Buy rating and $132 price target, calling out the company’s “Impressive execution as the industry’s leading fast-follower.” He sees limited downside from current levels with the potential for revaluation around the Phase 3 study readout for tanezumab.

AstraZeneca initiated with a Buy at Guggenheim


AstraZeneca initiated with a Buy at Guggenheim Guggenheim analyst Seamus Fernandez started with a Buy rating and 7,018p price target, citing his belief that the company’s new product launches in oncology and severe asthma can drive the fastest sales and EPS growth in global pharma.

Allergan initiated with a Buy at Guggenheim


Guggenheim analyst Seamus Fernandez started Allergan with a Buy rating and $259 price target, citing his view of its sustained leadership in medical aesthetics with Botox, Juvederm, and Coolsculpting and its pipeline, including rapastinel for severe depression and abicipar for wet AMD.

Ionis’ Tegsedi launches head-to-head with Alnylam, but Pfizer’s waiting in the wings


It is game on between Ionis and Alnylam in hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis (hATTR), and to make the competition more interesting, Pfizer could soon join the party.
Not only has Ionis’ affiliate Akcea just won an FDA nod for Tegsedi in polyneuropathy ATTR—for which Onpattro was approved in August—but it’s pricing the RNA drug at the exact same price as the Alnylam therapy. “We’re ready to go,” Akcea CEO Paula Soteropoulos said on a Friday conference call, as the company rolled out a detailed commercial plan.
Tegsedi comes in a prefilled syringe, which patients can administer subcutaneously by themselves. At the recommended dosing of once weekly, its annual list price will be $450,000. In contrast, at the same annual list price, Alnylam’s Onpattro needs to be given intravenously by a trained medical professional once every three weeks.
Obviously, Tegsedi is more convenient for patients to take, and it does save on administration costs and drug wastage. But that advantage is compromised by a boxed warning slapped on its label.
The drug carries warnings for thrombocytopenia, or low platelet counts, and glomerulonephritis, which injures the kidney, said Akcea President Sarah Boyce on the call. The agency is asking doctors to take platelet counts every week and test kidney function every two weeks. If either of those numbers falls below its accepted threshold, the patient will be pulled off the treatment until the numbers return to normal.

Boyce noted that the FDA-required frequency is more stringent than what the company had proposed and what the European Medicines Agency and Health Canada have agreed to along with their recent approvals. But the company hopes to generate more data to support future adjustment to this schedule.
Nevertheless, in the eyes of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review the $450,000 tag for both drugs is way too high to be considered cost-effective. In a recent report (PDF), the drug cost watchdog suggests both of them will need to take more than 90% off their list price to reach the minimum threshold of $150,000 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. And it suggests insurers and other payers develop prior authorization criteria “to ensure prudent use of these treatments.”
Meanwhile, just as Alnylam said it would work out value-based pricing agreements with insurers, Akcea is considering “innovative access strategies such as value- and outcomes-based access arrangements in addition to other contracting strategies and risk-based approaches,” said Soteropoulos.
Akcea has partnered with Express Scripts’ specialty pharmacy Accredo to distribute Tegsedi “because of its experience supporting the unique needs of rare disease communities and its proven track record for simplifying access to therapy,” said the company. Accredo’s team of clinicians, pharmacists and more than 600 field-based nurses will also help Akcea’s own patient support team.

As Ionis and Alnylam go head-to-head in hATTR polyneuropathy, their fight will likely be complicated by a third player—a Big Pharma—that has also thrown its cap in the ring.
Pfizer just in August announced positive data for its ATTR candidate tafamidis in ATTR cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM). Although neuro and heart are two different indications within ATTR, these products will likely tap into each other’s territory. In fact, the Alnylam drug is already heading for cardiomyopathy, and Pfizer could eventually go the other way around, too, Evercore ISI and Credit Suisse analysts noted in separate memos to investors at the time.
Pfizer’s cardiomyopathy exceeded physicians’ and investors’ expectations, but as the analysts mentioned, the wrinkle in its case is that tafamidis’ high-dose version didn’t yield stronger results, which means it may not win over Onpattro in neuropathy. What’s more, it also didn’t show significant benefit in those with hereditary ATTR.