Search This Blog

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Illumina and Pacific Biosciences nix merger

Facing persistent and potentially insurmountable headwinds from regulators, Illumina (NASDAQ:ILMN) and Pacific Biosciences of California (NASDAQ:PACB) have mutually agreed to terminate their merger agreement announced on November 1, 2018.
Under the terms of the contract, Illumina will pay Pacific Bio a $98M termination fee.

NY, facing $6B budget deficit, to slash Medicaid payments by 1%

The state Health Department is cutting Medicaid payments by 1% starting Wednesday as the Cuomo administration seeks ways to reduce a ballooning budget gap projected to exceed $6 billion.
A notice in the New York State Register published Tuesday said the move will reduce gross Medicaid payments, including federal matching aid, by $124 million in the final quarter of the current fiscal year and $496 million in following years.
“This reduction in spending growth was approved by the Legislature as part of the FY 2020 Budget and is being implemented in the fourth quarter of the State’s fiscal year as the Department of Health works with its partners to develop an overall plan to reduce Medicaid spending growth while continuing to provide high-quality care to over 6 million New Yorkers,” Health Department spokeswoman Erin Hammond said.
The cut applies to the majority of Medicaid spending, including payments to hospitals, nursing homes, doctors, pharmacists, home-care providers and Medicaid managed-care plans.
Fiscal watchdogs say the reductions will do little to alleviate the growing costs of New York’s Medicaid program, which covers more than six million state residents.
“It should be emphasized that these cost-cutting moves are about slowing growth,” the Empire Center’s Bill Hammond wrote in a blog post about the changes. “Even if they are fully implemented, overall spending on Medicaid will almost certainly increase in the year ahead.”
Cuomo and budget officials have repeatedly blamed Medicaid overruns on the state’s minimum wage increase for health care providers, cuts in federal funding and increases in enrollment and costs for long-term care.
The governor’s plan for dealing with the projected $6 billion gap includes pushing $2.2 billion worth of Medicaid costs into a future fiscal year, a move that has faced increasing criticism after it was revealed the state held $1.7 billion in spending over from last year.
Cuomo is also looking to impose a “savings plan” that reduces current-year Medicaid spending by $1.8 billion. Details of the plan won’t be available until the governor’s annual budget proposal is unveiled later this month.
A separate notice in the state Register this week revealed the Health Department plans to again attempt to revise reimbursements made under the Medicaid-supported Consumer-Directed Personal Assistance Program after a judge found the way the changes were implemented in 2019 to be unconstitutional.
Over 75,000 senior and disabled New Yorkers rely on the program, which allows disabled and older New Yorkers who don’t want to live in a nursing home or assisted-living facility the freedom to choose who takes care of them.
The program allows the elderly and people with disabilities and chronic illnesses to receive care in their homes by a person of their own choosing, often a friend or relative. The program employs over 100,000 caregivers.
Advocates battled the state last year after DOH first tried to change the way it pays “fiscal intermediaries,” the nonprofit agencies and companies that act as go-betweens for the CDPA. The revamped rate reimbursement methodology amounted to a $150 million reduction in funds.
While the state argued the rate cuts were necessary and would not impact consumers, the new rate equated to an 80% reduction in fiscal intermediaries’ administrative budgets, forcing them to cut wages and overtime for personal assistants, advocates argued.

Washington state sues J&J over role in opioid epidemic

Washington is the latest state to file litigation against Johnson & Johnson (JNJ -0.4%) over its role in the opioid crisis there.
trial in New York is set to begin in March although many observers expect a settlement beforehand.
The company also one of the targets in a federal probe to determine if it violated the Controlled Substances Act.

53% of veterans report chronic health issues

About half of veterans experience chronic health issues shortly after leaving active duty, according to a study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
For the study, researchers surveyed a national sample of 9,566 veterans who recently left active military service in 2016.
Researchers found health concerns were the most prominent issue for newly separated veterans. Fifty-three percent reported chronic physical issues, and 33 percent reported chronic mental health conditions. In contrast, most veterans reported high rates of vocational and social well-being in the first year after leaving active duty.
Researchers said the study’s findings demonstrate “the need for additional attention to the health of separating service members” to help ensure a smooth adjustment back into everyday life.

LA’s Cedars-Sinai widens charity care eligibility

Los Angeles-based Cedars-Sinai is expanding its financial assistance policy to patients who make nearly $50,000 a year, according to the Los Angeles Times.
The change means Cedars-Sinai patients will have access to one of the most generous charity care policies offered by California’s 10 biggest nonprofit hospitals. This is a reversal from recent years: Cedars-Sinai spent only 0.19 percent of its operating expenses on charity care in 2018, compared to an average 0.9 percent among other California nonprofit hospitals.
Cedars-Sinai notes the charity care percentage does not account for grants for low-income patients and the number of patients it serves with Medicaid and other public insurance, which reflects 16.5 percent of its revenue.
The change, effective Jan. 1, will raise the hospital’s threshold for charity care from 200 percent of the federal poverty level — or an annual income of $24,980 per individual — to 400 percent of the poverty level — or $49,960 a person. Additionally, patients with incomes up to 600 percent of the poverty level can access discounted care.
In a statement to the Los Angeles Times, the hospital said the policy change aims to address a growing underinsured population, whose high deductibles and other out-of-pocket payments have made care unaffordable.
“More of our patients are having financial difficulties, so we want to help them,” Cedars-Sinai told the publication in an emailed statement.

5 FDA approval decisions to watch in the 1st quarter

The Food and Drug Administration cleared for market 48 new drugs through its main review office last year. Though that’s lower than the 59 approvals seen in 2018, the agency’s decisions still provided more treatment options for patients living with cystic fibrosis, sickle cell disease and rare muscular disorders.
Notably, the agency ended 2019 with a flurry of earlier-than-expected decisions, bolstering the 2018 count with several drugs it was scheduled to finish review on this year.
It’s unclear how or if the approval stream will change in the new year and decade. The first quarter of 2020, though, may prove a bellwether in the near term. Between January and March, the FDA is slated to make calls on a handful of impactful drugs, including these five.

1. Aimmune Therapeutics’ Palforzia for peanut allergy

The odds are good that, before January closes out, Aimmune’s Palforzia will receive approval to treat one of the most common food allergies. That’s because the committee responsible for advising the FDA on whether or not to approve new allergy medicines recently voted in favor of the drug’s effectiveness and safety. While the agency doesn’t have to follow the guidance of advisory committees, it typically does.
Getting to market isn’t the last hurdle for Aimmune, however. The company needs to secure insurance coverage, a task analysts expect will be more difficult if the company sets a high list price for its drug. Consensus on Wall Street seems to be that the company will set a list price somewhere in the range of $5,000 to $10,000 for the first six months of therapy, with lower costs thereafter.
Aimmune’s case could also be complicated by clinical results that showed patients on Palforzia needed epinephrine injections about twice as frequently as those on placebo. The drug’s labeling and risk mitigation strategy will therefore be closely watched.
“Overall, we remain cautious on the peanut category as a whole and believe out year consensus sales estimates for Palforzia seem overly optimistic given the complexity of the therapy and tolerability profile for a preventative treatment,” Stifel analyst Derek Archila wrote in an early November investor note. The investment bank expects Palforzia sales to hit $65 million in 2020 and $800 million in 2025.

2. Esperion Therapeutics’ bempedoic acid for high cholesterol

Lowering so-called bad cholesterol has been a profitable endeavor for some pharmaceutical companies. At its peak, Pfizer’s Lipitor, now generic, was bringing in revenue of nearly $13 billion a year.
Lipitor is part of a drug class called statins, which continue to hold a significant portion of the cholesterol drug market despite the entry of newer medicines. Amgen’s Repatha and Sanofi and Regeneron’s Praluent, each a member of another drug class called PCSK9 inhibitors, have continued to fall short of sales expectations because of their relatively high cost.
Yet with roughly a third of the U.S. population having high levels of bad cholesterol, and statins being insufficient for some patients, companies remain interested in carving out market share for statin alternatives or additions. Amgen, Sanofi and Regeneron have shaved down the list price on their medicines, while Novartis in November agreed to shell out almost $10 billion to acquire The Medicines Company and its experimental PCSK9 drug.
Esperion may provide an additional option with bempedoic acid, a prodrug that inhibits an enzyme involved in cholesterol production. The Michigan-based company should find out by Feb. 21 whether regulators have cleared its drug. Another approval application for the combination of bempedoic acid and ezetimibe — the active ingredient in Merck & Co.’s Zetia — has a review deadline of Feb. 26.
Though Esperion’s drug raised some safety concerns, a series of five late-stage trials support its efficacy. The FDA also didn’t require an advisory committee meeting for the drug, which analysts said bodes well for its chances of approval.

3. Blueprint Medicine’s avapritinib for cancer

Blueprint may get its first marketable drug with avapritinib, a treatment for patients who have certain kinds of gastrointestinal stromal tumors. The FDA is scheduled to make an approval decision by Feb. 14.
If approved, Blueprint’s drug would join a growing wave of targeted cancer therapies to reach market. That field has experienced an uptick in investment as well as big pharma interest, as evidenced by the recent buyouts of Loxo OncologyArray BioPharma and Ignyta.
Avapritinib, however, has been the cause of some investor worries over the last few months. In late October, Blueprint disclosed that the FDA had split the drug’s approval application — which was going after two different portions of the adult gastrointestinal cancer population — into two parts. The decision keeps one approval decision on track for the Feb. 14 deadline, but pushes the other back three months.
Analysts at SVB Leerink noted how this delay is problematic for Blueprint, as it could narrow the amount of time avapritinib has on market before the potential entry of a rival medicine from Deciphera Pharmaceuticals.

4. Biohaven Pharmaceutical’s rimegepant for migraine

Allergan achieved an industry first last month, when its drug Ubrelvy — part of a drug class known as CGRP inhibitors — gained approval as an oral acute treatment for episodic migraine. Until that point, the FDA had only approved CGRP inhibitors like Amgen’s Aimovig and Eli Lilly’s Emgality, both injections, to prevent these severe headaches from happening.
But Ubrelvy may not have much time without direct competition. Biohaven’s rimegepant, which, like Ubrelvy, is an oral CGRP inhibitor, could also gain approval in episodic migraine treatment before the end of the first quarter.
Piper Jaffray analyst Tyler Van Buren wrote in a recent note that, in light of Ubrelvy’s approval, regulators are likely to sign off on Biohaven’s drug as well. The investment bank models $40 million in rimegepant ​sales next year and more than $1 billion by 2024.

5. Bristol-Myers Squibb’s ozanimod for multiple sclerosis

Bristol-Myers may have closed on its historic $74 billion Celgene acquisition, but its payments aren’t yet complete. Former Celgene shareholders may still take home an additional $9 per share if three of the biotech’s experimental drugs secure approval over the next two years.
One of those drugs is ozanimod, which targets the same receptor protein as Novartis’ blockbuster multiple sclerosis medicine Gilenya.
Ozanimod has already faced one setback, when the FDA initially refused to review its application because of incomplete non-clinical pharmacology sections. Celgene resubmitted the application a year later, in March 2018, and expects to see an approval decision by March 25.
Despite the longer-than-expected regulatory timeline, ozanimod remains supported by positive clinical readouts. Salim Syed of Mizuho Securities USA contends that, “based on the data in the public domain, we don’t see a reason for the drug to not get approved.”

Cumberland Pharma to host investor update January 7

Cumberland Pharmaceuticals (CPIX +4.7%) will host a conference call on Tuesday, January 7, at 4:30 pm ET to discuss its activities and plans for pain med Caldolor (ibuprofen) injection and RediTrex (methotrexate) (FDA action date on the marketing application for the latter was last month).
2020 guidance will also be provided.