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Thursday, November 14, 2019

UCSF Team Blocks Enzyme That Contributes to Spread of Breast Cancer

A research team may have discovered a means to prevent breast cancer from spreading to other parts of the body through the blocking of a single enzyme.
Scientists from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) found that blocking an enzyme known as MMP9 could be the key. At least, so far that has been the case in mouse models. The enzyme, the researchers found, is an “essential component” in the “cancer’s metastasis-promoting machinery.” MMP9 provides the means for the cancer cells to form new metastatic tumors. By blocking the enzyme, the researchers believe that it could be a revolutionary advance in immuno-oncology treatments.
Vicki Plaks, an assistant adjunct professor in the Department of Orofacial Sciences at UCSF and the co-leader of the research team, said that when the team began to examine lung tissue in their mouse model, they found that MMP9 was a key to “remodeling” healthy tissue and making it more accessible to cancer cells. When the cancer cells colonize these sites with the help of MMP9, they’re able to start growing into new tumors, the researchers said.
“Metastasis is the biggest hurdle when it comes to successfully treating breast cancer and solid tumors in general. Once a cancer becomes metastatic, there’s really no cure, and the only option is to manage it as a chronic disease,” Plaks said in a statement.
Data from the study was published this week in the journal Life Science Alliance. The study suggests that the metastases can be stopped before they begin to develop through the administration of an antibody that specifically targets and disrupts MMP9 activity. The researchers found that interfering with MMP9 helped “recruit and activate cancer-fighting immune cells” to metastatic sites. It’s that result that could have important implications for treating certain types of metastatic breast cancer with immunotherapy.
Plaks said the work indicates a combination approach of immunotherapy with antibodies targeting MMP9 activity may have some success in treating metastatic breast cancers of the luminal B type, which was the type the UCSF team focused on in its studies.
However, the scientists discovered that disrupting the enzyme only affects the spread of the cancer and not the primary tumor. The researchers speculate that the enzyme’s primary role, at least in the cancer scenario, is “helping existing malignancies metastasize.”
Before this latest study, the UCSF team found that that MMP9 plays an “important role in remodeling the extracellular matrix (ECM),” which is a group of molecules that provide “structure and shape” organs and also help cells communicate with each other. The ECM also plays a role in promoting cellular health, the team discovered. While MMP9 was known to be involved in cancer, the team said its role in the earliest stages of metastasis had not been fully explored. The first hint that MMP9 might be involved in early-stage metastasis came from publicly available gene expression data from clinical breast cancer biopsies. When they examined this data, the researchers discovered that MMP9 levels were elevated in metastatic disease.

Biogen off 3% as MS Society takes issue with Vumerity cost

In a statement released yesterday, the National MS Society expressed disappointment with the wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) of Vumerity (diroximel fumarate), approved by FDA on October 30 for relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis (MS).
The Society considers the $88K WAC excessive, citing that the price is only $500 lower that the least expensive oral disease-modifying treatment and “does not show the commitment to affordable access that we had hoped.”
The compound was initially developed by Alkermes (ALKS +1.3%) and exclusively licensed to Biogen (BIIB -2.7%) in November 2017.
Biogen, like almost all other biotechs, has a track record of consistent price hikes for its medicines. For example, Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate), was approved in the U.S. for relapsing forms of MS in March 2013 at a WAC of $54,750 which has increased over $40K to today’s WAC of $94,991, a compounded increase of almost 10% annually.

Apple launches Research with three health studies

Apple (AAPL -0.8%) launches the app and the opportunity for users to sign up for three different healthcare studies: Apple Women’s Health Study, Apple Heart and Movement Study, and Apple Hearing Study.
Participants using Apple Watch and iPhone can contribute data captured during daily activities, including movement, heart levels, and ambient noise.
Users have the ability to control what data is shared with each study.
Healthcare is a large part of Apple’s Wearables push, especially with the rising competition from Google’s recent Fitbit acquisition.
In Q4, Apple’s Wearables, Home, and Accessories segment contributed $6.5B of the overall $64B in revenue.

FDA’s Rapid Approval of Esketamine for Severe Depression Questioned

While some experts have hailed intranasal esketamine (Spravato, Janssen) as a “game changer” for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), others are concerned over the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) rapid approval of the drug.
Dr Erick Turner
In an editorial published online October 31 in Lancet Psychiatry, Erick H. Turner, MD, who sits on one of the FDA advisory committees that recommended approval of Spravato, said the drug did not meet standard criteria for FDA approval and that there was little evidence to support its safety and efficacy based on data from three short-term, phase 3 trials and one withdrawal trial.
Turner, who is a psychiatrist at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, noted that only one of the three trials that led to the drug’s approval was positive.
“Accepting just one short-term trial as being enough is an historic break from precedent,” Turner told Medscape Medical News.
On February 12, at the conclusion of a joint meeting of the FDA’s Psychopharmacologic Drugs Advisory Committee and the Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee, esketamine was endorsed and the FDA approval quickly followed on March 5.
In his Lancet Psychiatry article, Turner outlined his concerns. He notes, among other issues, that the trials that served as the basis for the drug’s approval defined TRD as a failure of any two antidepressants, a definition that is “arguably lax.”
Another expert, Glen Spielmans, PhD, professor of psychology, Metropolitan State University in Saint Paul, Minnesota, agreed that patients in the esketamine studies “were not necessarily highly treatment-resistant.”
“Based on the evidence provided in Janssen’s application, the FDA should not have approved the drug,” Spielmans, who researches antidepressant medications, told Medscape Medical News.
The fact that esketamine was superior to placebo to a statistically significant extent in only one of the short-term trials “is unimpressive,” said Spielmans.
The FDA “lowered the bar” for approving esketamine, he added. “I don’t support the idea of approving a treatment with subpar efficacy because other medications for treatment-resistant depression don’t work very well and esketamine has a different mechanism of action,” he said.
Turner noted that there was a widespread assumption that a “breakthrough” drug with a novel mechanism of action is more effective than approved alternatives — a phenomenon he calls “breakthrough bias.”
“If you showed them the same data for an SSRI, they would ask, ‘What’s good about this?’ ”

Unmet Need in Seniors

Esketamine, a glutamatergic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, is an S-enantiomer of ketamine racemate. Both esketamine and ketamine appear to increase neurotrophic signaling that affects synaptic function.
Ketamine is approved in the US for inducing and maintaining anesthesia via intravenous (IV) infusion or intramuscular (IM) injection. It is not indicated for major depressive disorder (MDD), including TRD, though it is frequently used off-label for this indication.
In fact, as previously reported by Medscape Medical News, there is a rapid proliferation across the US of ketamine infusion clinics to treat depression that operate with little or no regulation.
In its briefing document submitted to the FDA, Janssen provided information on several studies, including three double-blind, controlled, short-term (28-day) phase 3 studies that evaluated the efficacy and safety of esketamine given concurrently with a newly initiated oral antidepressant.
One of these studies was conducted exclusively in patients age 65 years or older, and two were in adults under age 65; one was a fixed dose study, the other a flexible dose trial. Another trial was a double-blind randomized withdrawal study.
In patients with TRD, evidence showed that esketamine nasal spray combined with a newly initiated oral antidepressant “provided statistically significant, clinically meaningful, rapid and sustained improvement of depressive symptoms in this difficult-to-treat population,” the company said in a news release.
Janssen emphasized the “substantial need” to develop innovative treatments for this older population.
However, in defending the FDA’s rapid approval of esketamine, Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Yale Depression Research Program in New Haven, Connecticut, noted that it is very difficult to find patients in the community who meet the full — and strict — criteria for treatment failure required for these studies.
In addition, he pointed to evidence suggesting patients with three or more previous treatment failures may actually show an enhanced response to an antidepressant plus esketamine compared with an antidepressant plus placebo.
Participants in the studies assessed by the FDA advisory committees for esketamine’s potential approval were not required to have failed psychotherapy — another concern for Turner because it doesn’t reflect the “real world” of patients with TRD.
Turner also noted that the single trial involving older patients was nonsignificant, so the drug’s efficacy in this “important demographic” has not been established.

Stacking the Deck?

Both Turner and Spielmans took issue with the company’s randomized withdrawal trial. Although this study was positive, “it does not compensate, in my opinion, for the lack of a second positive short-term trial,” said Turner.
He explained that this trial included only patients originally assigned to esketamine in a short-term trial and who had achieved stable remission, so esketamine nonresponders were essentially “weeded out.”
This, said Turner, resulted in an enriched population that was statistically more likely to respond to the drug.
“You’re testing whether the drug works within a subset of known esketamine responders,” said Turner. “That’s a way of stacking the deck. It’s like conducting a poll on the popularity of our fine president within a sample of people who you know already voted for him in 2016.”
In this study, there was a faster relapse in those on placebo than on esketamine (within 2-4 weeks compared with the typical 1 month or more).
Spielmans questioned this quick return of depression among patients switched to placebo. “Depression should not naturally return so rapidly after discontinuing successful treatment,” he said.
Esketamine “is not subtle”, added Spielmans. “It has characteristic properties. For example, it causes high rates of sedation and dissociation. People are going to notice if they stop taking it, which erases the ‘blindness’ of the study.”
Allowing a withdrawal study to count for evidence of esketamine’s efficacy “is ridiculous,” said Spielmans.
The placebo group at one site in the withdrawal trial had a 100% relapse rate, which drove the overall result, said Turner. He noted that by removing this outlier, the results change from significant to nonsignificant.
Spielmans had similar concerns. “If one outlier study site, especially one outside of the USA, is driving the results, that raises questions about the stability of the overall findings,” he said.

“Reverse Cherry-Picking”

However, Sanacora noted that the FDA found no reason to exclude data from this site.
“If we were to start excluding outliers from the analyses, we should make sure we are doing this in both directions. Selectively dropping the data from this study is a form of reverse cherry-picking,” said Sanacora.
A sensitivity analysis “done with the complete patient-level data to see how the study outcome is truly altered by this site,” would be “very interesting,” he added.
Yet another concern for Turner was that in one of the esketamine studies, only about 10% of patients who received the drug achieved a rapid clinical response. In another, the response for esketamine was even lower (8%) and, compared with placebo response (5%), was nonsignificant, he said.
Sanacora acknowledged that the rates of response do appear to be lower than those reported in other studies at very early time points. However, he said, certain factors related to these “unique phase 3 studies” of esketamine may have contributed to this.
“These participants were all simultaneously undergoing changes in their concomitant antidepressant medication regimens. They were all also made aware that this was an ongoing study with frequent dosing schedules that dramatically influence expectations,” Sanacora said.
He noted how “very difficult” it is to attempt head-to-head comparisons of speed of onset in different studies due to methodological differences.
“We should also keep in mind that the phase 3 studies in the subjects aged 18 to 65 did show a fairly consistent drop of approximately 8 MADRS [Montgomery-Ã…sberg Depression Rating Scale] points by day 2. That is not far from the total change from baseline after several weeks of treatment for several other approved antidepressant treatments,” Sanacora said.
Nevertheless, esketamine doesn’t appear to be any more effective than its less expensive alternatives. A meta-analysis using the primary outcome results of the three esketamine trials “yields a standardized mean difference of 0.28 (95% confidence interval, 0.11 – 0.44),” writes Turner.
He noted this is similar to that of the olanzapine-fluoxetine combination — the only other drug approved by the FDA for TRD — and less than the standardized mean differences of aripiprazole and quetiapine, the two drugs approved by the FDA for adjunctive treatment of depression.
Esketamine costs $500-$600 per low dose, and the price for the higher dose is significantly greater. Insurance companies “are really struggling right now” with coverage issues, said Turner.
Accessing the drug is somewhat complicated. For outpatients, it requires going to a doctor who has been “certified” to have the appropriate setting, said Turner. It also means staying for 2 hours after administration for monitoring. The drug is not dispensed directly to patients.
According to the FDA’s risk evaluation and mitigation strategies (REMS), patients prescribed esketamine are required to enroll in a registry to better characterize the associated risks of the drug.
At this point, “there is no good evidence that esketamine outperforms alternatives,” said Spielmans, who was lead author of a systematic review of relevant trials of atypical antipsychotics, which are widely used for TRD.

“A Truly Unique Option”

“I am not a big fan” of the widespread use of atypical antipsychotics in depression, “but I don’t see evidence that esketamine is a better alternative,” said Spielmans.
Psychotherapy, which is safer than either antipsychotics or esketamine, should be considered as a viable treatment option, he said.
In light of the concerns he outlined in the Lancet Psychiatry article, “clinicians and patients might wish to temper their expectations” of esketamine nasal spray, Turner writes.
In contrast, Sanacora believes esketamine presents “a truly unique option” for TRD. He added that it’s “critical to examine the totality of the data available in formulating any decisions regarding the treatment risks and expected benefits.”
Sanacora believes this is what the FDA’s advisory committees did in arriving at the decision to approve esketamine.
However, considering the relatively limited use of this new drug in community samples so far, Sanacora acknowledged that “there is still a real need for additional high-quality data to be collected and analyzed in an unbiased fashion to help further guide the use of this medication.”
Turner reports no relevant financial interest in esketamine or competing treatments. Spielmans reports owning shares in Vanguard Healthcare, a mutual fund that invests heavily in drug firms.
Sanacora reports:
  • Consulting fees: He has received fees from Allergan, Alkermes, AstraZeneca, Avanier Pharmaceuticals, Axsome Therapeutics, Biohaven Pharmaceuticals, Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Clexio, EMA Wellness, Intra-Cellular Therapies, Janssen, Minerva, Merck, Naurex, Navitor Pharmaceuticals, NeuroRX, Novartis, Noven Pharmaceuticals, Otsuka, Perception Neurosciences, Praxis Therapeutics, Sage Pharmaceuticals, Servier Pharmaceuticals, Taisho Pharmaceuticals, Teva, Valeant, and Vistagen therapeutics over the last 36 months. 
  • Research contracts: AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly & Co, Johnson & Johnson (Janssen), Hoffmann La-Roche, Merck & Co, Naurex, Servier, and Usona Institute over the last 5 years. Free medication was provided to Sanacora for an NIH sponsored study by sanofi-aventis.  
  • Sanacora holds equity in BioHaven Pharmaceuticals and is a co-inventor on a US patent held by Yale University, and is a co-inventor on a US Provisional Patent Application filed by the Yale University Office of Cooperative Research and others Combination Therapy for Treating or Preventing Depression or Other Mood Diseases.
  • Yale University, Sanacora’s employer, has a financial relationship with Janssen Pharmaceuticals and may in the future receive financial benefits from this relationship. The University has put multiple measures in place to mitigate this institutional conflict of interest.
Lancet Psychiatry. Published online October 31, 2019. Editorial

Curiosity, Skepticism Over New Algae-Derived Chinese Alzheimer’s Drug

US experts are curious and skeptical about a new Alzheimer’s disease (AD) drug (GV-971; oligomannate; Shanghai Green Valley PharmaceuticalsChina) that was conditionally approved earlier this month by China’s National Medical Products Administration for mild-to-moderate AD.
Oligomannate is a drug manufactured from an oligosaccharide extracted from marine algae and is the first novel drug approved for AD globally since 2003, the company said in a press release. It’s expected to be available in China by the end of the year.
The drug works on the gut microbiome. It reportedly reconditions dysbiosis of gut microbiota, inhibits the abnormal increase of intestinal flora metabolites, and modulates peripheral and central inflammation, thereby reducing amyloid protein deposition and tau hyperphosphorylation to improve cognitive function.
Most AD trials have used monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to target beta amyloid (Aβ) but these agents have failed to modify the disease course. MAbs typically bind to Aβ at limited sites in the brain, but the drug company claims this new agent affects multiple brain regions.
The conditional approval of oligomannate was based on results from a phase 3 multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 36-week study that was conducted in hospitals across China, as previously reported by Medscape Medical News. A total of 818 patients with mild to moderate AD completed the study.
Shanghai Green Valley Pharmaceuticals reported that the mean difference between the active drug and placebo groups on the Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale (ADAS-cog/12) score was 2.54 (P < .0001).
The company also reported sustained efficacy from the first month of treatment to the end of 9 months of treatment. Investigators found oligomannate was safe and well tolerated with side effects comparable to the placebo group.

Call for More Data, Information

Weighing in on the drug’s conditional approval by Chinese regulatory authorities, Alzheimer’s expert Ronald Petersen, MD, PhD, who directs the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging in Rochester, Minnesota, told Medscape Medical News that the gut microbiome and its relationship with inflammation and immune response “is an interesting area of research in Alzheimer’s disease.”
However, he urged caution about the new drug and the related study.
“It’s interesting and worthy of further study, but clearly, there needs to be an international study, not just a Chinese study,” he said.
Justin M. Long, MD, PhD, postdoctoral clinical fellow, Knight Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, has examined some of the animal studies showing that changes in the composition of the microbiome alter pathology.
“It’s plausible that changing the microbiome of a patient could also change pathology, so it doesn’t seem like science fiction to me at this point,” he said.
However, he emphasized that he needs to learn more about the drug and the studies surrounding it, as he now has only “peripheral” knowledge.
“If it’s effective at slowing cognitive decline in patients, that’s exciting,” Long told Medscape Medical News. “But I would want to see more data related to the phase 3 trial to understand how significant the benefit is, and I need to understand more about the mechanism of action.”

Plausible Mechanism?

In a recent article published in the journal Cell Research, David M. Holtzman, MD, chair of the Department of Neurology and scientific director of the Hope Center for Neurological Diseases at Washington University, and colleagues note there is an increasing focus on potential links between gut microbial dysbiosis, colonization with maladaptive or pathogenic microbiota, and AD pathogenesis.
In an article written by Xinyi Wang and colleagues, also published in Cell Research, the researchers write that given “carbohydrates, in the forms of monosaccharide or oligosaccharide, are the primary nutrient source for bacteria and have shown diverse modulatory effects on bacteria, we were interested to explore whether GV-971 could affect the gut microbiota.”
They also point out that a mouse model showed that after 1 month of oral administration of GV-971, the composition of gut microbiota was “markedly altered.”
In line with the gut microbiota alteration, GV-971 treatment disrupted the correlation previously seen between brain lymphocytes and gut bacterial change, decreased brain Th1 cells, significantly reduced microglial activation, and decreased levels of multiple brain cytokines.
“In parallel, GV-971 treatment significantly reduced the Aβ plaque deposition, tau phosphorylation, and ameliorated the decline in discrimination learning,” in the mice, Wang and colleagues note.
For its part, the Alzheimer’s Association welcomes the announcement of the drug’s conditional approval, Maria C. Carrillo, PhD, chief science officer, Alzheimer’s Association, said in a statement.
“We are intrigued by the possibility that this drug may work through the gut-brain axis and immune system to benefit cognitive function, reduce amyloid build-up in the brain, and protect tau proteins, as is suggested by the company.
“That said, little is known at this point about exactly how the drug works. We look forward to seeing the results of international phase 3 studies in larger and more diverse populations.”
At this point, the Alzheimer’s Association can’t recommend that people in the US take this drug until it has met the safety and efficacy standards of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), added Carrillo.
Shanghai Green Valley Pharmaceuticals has announced it will launch a multicenter global phase 3 clinical trial with sites in the US, Europe, and Asia in early 2020.
Petersen, Long and Holtzman have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
Cell Res. (Wang et al). Published online September 6, 2019. Full text
Cell Res. (Holtzman et al). Published online September 6, 2019. Full text

J&J kicks back at Okla. politicians’ move to squeeze out more opioid payments

Johnson & Johnson was on the losing end of the nation’s first opioid trial in Oklahoma, and even though it’s appealing, the company is already fighting to limit its future liability as politicians put on a squeeze for more payments down the line.
After the August verdict against the company for $572 million, Gov. Kevin Stitt and two prominent Republican lawmakers filed a brief arguing that future costs beyond the first year shouldn’t go to taxpayers, Law.com reports. As it stands, J&J has been told to pay out $572 million for the first year of opioid crisis abatement. The company is appealing the verdict.
In an October filing, Stitt and lawmakers said J&J should pay billions in addition to the $572 million verdict over many years to fund crisis abatement, Reuters reported.
Now, J&J has hit back. A lawyer for the company wrote in a brief the argument is “unnecessary, redundant, and unpersuasive” because Oklahoma’s attorney general has represented the state’s interests for two years over the course of the litigation.
Originally, the state’s attorney general asked for $17.5 billion in damages to abate the crisis over decades. In the verdict, Judge Thad Balkman said there were “gaps in the state’s evidence” about costs beyond one year, J&J’s lawyer wrote in the new filing.
The exchanges come as J&J and other drugmakers seek to resolve the nationwide opioid litigation that’s centered in Cleveland federal court. J&J has offered $4 billion to resolve allegations against the company.
In the Oklahoma case, state prosecutors in 2017 sued J&J, Teva and Purdue Pharma for creating a public nuisance with their opioid marketing. Teva inked an $85 million settlement ahead of trial, and Purdue settled for $270 million.
In a completely different approach by state officials, New York’s insurance regulator this week informed drugmakers it plans to initiate an enforcement action against them for playing a role in rising insurance premiums, Reuters reports. A J&J spokesperson told the news service the company “acted as a responsible manufacturer and seller of its opioid pain medications, which play an important role in the lives of patients with severe pain.”

In crowded MS market, Merck KGaA’s Mavenclad now offsets Rebif decline

The multiple sclerosis market has seen several successful new launches lately. And Merck KGaA’s Mavenclad could be counted as one so far.
Approved by the FDA in late March, Mavenclad racked up €89 million ($98 million) in third-quarter sales, with about a third coming from the U.S., Merck KGaA Chief Financial Officer Marcus Kuhnert told investors during a call Thursday.
The oral MS drug’s haul grew a hefty 45% over the previous quarter, he said. And it proved enough to cover the loss from Merck’s older-generation MS injection Rebif, whose sales in the third quarter dropped 15.1% year over year at unchanged currencies to €318 million ($350 million).
Kuhnert said Rebif’s tumble falls in line with that of its peers in the interferon class, thanks to pressure from next-gen meds.
For Mavenclad, Merck has seen “a positive sales growth dynamic” in both the U.S. and Europe, he said. In Europe, where the drug was approved in August 2017, around 90% of Mavenclad patients are coming back in the second year, Kuhnert told investors.
Now, the German drugmaker expects Mavenclad’s 2019 full-year sales to hit €300 million.

Mavenclad is trying to carve its fair share out of the crowded MS market, and it’s a tough task. Its competitors include Roche’s Ocrevus, dubbed the most successful launch in the Swiss drugmaker’s history. The drug picked up CHF 929 million ($939 million) sales during the third quarter alone.
Novartis’ Mayzent is a different story so far, though. It landed an approval days before Mavenclad, also bearing blockbuster hopes, but it only returned $4 million in third-quarter sales, way below the Street’s forecast of $10 million.
During a conference call a few weeks ago, CEO Vas Narasimhan attributed the slow ramp-up to a 90-day lag in getting patients onto paid scripts. Both Mayzent and Mavenclad are specifically approved to treat secondary progressive MS, and Novartis is eyeing an EU nod for Mayzent this year.
“We have always said that the first 12 months with Mayzent would be about education,” Novartis’ pharma chief Marie-France Tschudin said on that call. “The challenges that [physicians] are not diagnosing SPMS, and that is because there’s been no effective therapies until now. So this means we need to change habits, and that takes time.”

Meanwhile, Biogen just nabbed an FDA nod for Vumerity, a follow-up to its blockbuster Tecfidera and a better-tolerated one than its predecessor. Despite the new entrants, Tecfidera’s sales in the third quarter only dropped 2% over the second quarter, reaching $1.12 billion. In a recent analysis of IQVIA prescription numbers, RBC Capital Markets analyst Brian Abrahams noted that Tecfidera erosion “appears negligible, suggesting reasonable resilience.”
Outside of neuroscience, Merck’s entire pharma business grew sales by 8% at unchanged foreign exchange rates, also thanks to its Pfizer-partnered PD-L1 Bavencio, which collected €29 million. Merck now expects the drug could reach €100 million this year.