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Friday, October 1, 2021

Why Omeros Stock Is Tanking

 Shares of Omeros (NASDAQ:OMER), a biopharmaceutical company, are falling today after the company made a disclosure regarding narsoplimab, an experimental treatment to address side effects of stem cell transplants. Shares of the biotech were down 43.7% as of 11:25 a.m. EDT on Friday.


Omeros has just one revenue stream at the moment, Omidria, an expensive eye-drop solution that gets added to the bill when Medicare patients go under the knife for lens replacements and cataract removals. Omidria is convenient but hardly necessary for these procedures.

That's why investors are eager to see the company launch narsoplimab, an experimental treatment for thrombotic microangiopathy caused by hematopoietic stem cell transplants, or HSCT-TMA. The Food and Drug Administration has been reviewing an application from Omeros since January and was expected to issue a decision later this month.

Omeros stock is sinking today because the company told investors the FDA identified deficiencies that prevent the agency from taking the next step toward approving narsoplimab. This could be a minor case that isn't related to the drug candidate itself, but investors aren't taking any chances.


The FDA most likely asked Omeros to run another trial. The company submitted a biologics license application based on data from an open-label study that enrolled 28 adult HSCT-TMA patients.

Omeros could have included a control group in its attempt to prove narsoplimab was truly effective at treating HSCT-TMA but chose not to. That was a red flag that investors probably should have spotted a mile away. It was three years ago today that Omeros posted results from narsoplimab's first placebo-controlled study, and it was a total dud

Investors will want to watch this company from a safe distance until we see one of its experimental drugs achieve unequivocal success in a well-controlled study.

https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/10/01/heres-why-omeros-is-tanking-today/

Why Atea Pharmaceutical Stock Is Higher

 Shares of the mid-cap biopharma Atea Pharmaceutical (NASDAQ:AVIR) are up by a respectable 21.5% as of 11:44 a.m. EDT Friday morning. The biotech's shares are taking flight today in response to a successful interim analysis for Merck's oral COVID-19 pill, molnupiravir, in a late-stage trial.

Atea, for its part, is also trialing an oral COVID-19 medication, known as AT-527, with a broadly similar mechanism of action (they both interfere with viral replication). AT-527 is being evaluated as a treatment for patients who are already infected with COVID-19. 

While the idea that Merck's promising interim results are somehow a harbinger of things to come for AT-527 is a bit of a stretch, Wall Street is enthusiastic about its commercial prospects. Current peak sales estimates range from a low of $2.3 billion to a high of $4 billion. Either one of those way-too-early revenue forecasts would be an enormous payday for a company with a market cap under $4 billion right now. Investors, however, seem to be taking this Merck news as as positive sign that AT-527 will eventually become a key therapy in the fight against COVID-19.


Is Atea's stock a buy on this news? COVID-19 stocks -- especially ones with important new therapies -- can produce jaw-dropping returns in the blink of an eye. There's no doubt about that at this point in the pandemic. So it might not be a bad idea to buy a few shares of this red-hot biotech stock today. That said, it's probably best to keep your position small.

https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/10/01/why-atea-pharmaceutical-stock-is-ripping-higher-to/

Walmart Selling Biomerica Colorectal-Screening Test

 Biomerica  (BMRA) - Get Biomerica, Inc. Report shares soared on Friday after the medical-diagnostics provider said Walmart  (WMT) - Get Walmart Inc. Report has begun offering its EZ Detect colorectal-disease-screening test.

The stock of the Irvine, Calif., company recently traded at $5.86, up 30%. They've traded on Friday up as much as 43% at $6.42. The shares had gained 12% in the three months through Thursday.

“The company has now shipped its first orders of EZ Detect to Walmart, and beginning this week, Walmart has begun selling the product through its online sales channel,” Biomerica said.

It’s in the final phase of working with the Bentonville, Ark., retailing giant to sell the EZ Detect product on store shelves.

“In addition, the company is in negotiations with several large partners for distribution of EZ Detect in Asia, Europe and the Middle East,” Biomerica said in a statement.

https://www.thestreet.com/investing/biomerica-colorectal-screening-test-sold-via-walmart

Merck & Co justifies paying up for Acceleron

 Once Acceleron added clinical validation with sotatercept to a promising launch for its first drug, Reblozyl, it became an obvious takeover target. The big question today is why it should have fallen not to Bristol Myers Squibb but to Merck & Co.

It was Bristol, after all, that inherited a key deal with Acceleron – one of the few Celgene transactions to have truly delivered – and this should have given it first-mover M&A advantage. Bristol did feature in early speculation over who would buy Acceleron, but appears to have been unwilling to part with the $11.5bn that Merck today paid up.

Perhaps Acceleron is simply a case of a biotech whose market cap has always stayed ahead of sellside expectations. A year ago Evaluate Vantage had highlighted this disconnect, which might explain why Acceleron had not fallen prey to a takeover until now.

As investment cases go, Acceleron’s was pretty simple. The group was focused on TGF-β superfamily biology, with three assets that targeted it in slightly different ways: Reblozyl, approved for anaemia in beta-thalassaemia and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); sotatercept, in pivotal development for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH); and ACE-1334, an early project that did not feature in sellside models.

legacy Celgene deal concerned Reblozyl and sotatercept, resulting in Bristol owing Acceleron a low to mid-20% royalty on the former, and Acceleron owing Bristol a low-20% interest on the latter.

However, sellside forecasts never caught up with buyside expectations. Evaluate Pharma consensus suggests NPVs of $7.4bn for Reblozyl – only a fraction of which would accrue to Acceleron – and $1.7bn for sotatercept. Against this Acceleron reached a market cap of $8bn before rumours of a takeover surfaced this month, and the $180 a share Merck agreed today amounts to a valuation of $11.5bn.

Primary justification

Why this disconnect? While Reblozyl does have the potential to be expanded into front-line MDS, something Acceleron and Bristol have said will help turn it into a $4bn brand, Merck’s primary justification for the acquisition is sotatercept.

True, PAH is a crowded market, featuring approved endothelin receptor antagonists (for instance Tracleer and Opsumit), PDE5 inhibitors (Revatio and Adcirca) and prostacyclins (Uptravi and Remodulin). But all these are vasodilators, meaning that they target PAH symptoms, while sotatercept has been designed to hit the disease’s cause.

And phase 2 data have borne out this potential, especially on top of these standards of care, setting up the outcome of the registrational phase 3 Stellar trial in late 2022 as a major catalyst.

Beyond that lie three studies that are key to expanding the sotatercept opportunity beyond analysts’ current forecasts: Hyperion and Zenith, in newly diagnosed and high-risk PAH, and Cadence, in left heart disease. The last has no approved treatments, and could nearly equal the available PAH population.

What is Merck thinking? Potential Acceleron pipeline scenarios
ProjectTGF-β mechanism2026e sales ($m)*NPV ($m)*^StatusUpside?
Reblozyl (luspatercept)Activin type IIB receptor fusion protein1,6717,421**Launched for anaemia in beta-thalassaemia and MDS after failure on EPOsAnaemia in 1st-line MDS vs EPO (Commands trial)
SotaterceptActivin type IIA receptor fusion protein4891,920Ph3 for class II/III PAH (Stellar trial)Newly diagnosed intermediate/high-risk class II/III PAH (Hyperion trial)
Class III/IV PAH at high risk of mortality (Zenith trial)
Left heart disease (Cadence trial)
ACE-1334TGF-β 1 & 3 ligand trap00Ph1/2 for systemic sclerosis with/without interstitial lung diseaseAny clinical success
*Evaluate Pharma sellside consensus; ^risk-adjusted; **$1,743m accruing to Acceleron.

One caveat is that basic patents on Reblozyl and sotatercept expire in 2026, though Merck reckons extensions will cover both until 2031, and data exclusivity would protect sotatercept to 2036. As both assets are biologicals they will also be more difficult to copy than small molecules.

Merck also cites its cardiovascular expertise, given that it has rights to Bayer’s PAH drug Adempas and sells Verquvo for heart failure. It also has MK-5475m, an inhaled sCG stimulator (Verquvo’s mechanism), in phase 2/3 for PAH, and one risk is that some of these could cause antitrust issues.

Overall, Acceleron is the latest example of Merck putting to use the cash its Keytruda blockbuster is throwing off, following the acquisitions of Pandion, Peloton and Velosbio. The group told analysts today that Acceleron would provide growth when Keytruda loses patent exclusivity later this decade, though low-cost competition could come even earlier.

While Bristol did not pay up for Acceleron, the prospect of two blockbuster drugs sold by Merck with Bristol getting a royalty, or vice versa, does not seem too bad for either company.

https://www.evaluate.com/vantage/articles/news/deals/merck-co-justifies-paying-acceleron

Pharmacy chains face first trial in U.S. opioid litigation, judge urges settlement

 Four large pharmacy chains are set to face their first trial over the deadly U.S. opioid epidemic, creating new pressure to reach settlements with state and local governments who accuse them of contributing to the public health crisis.

The Ohio counties of Lake and Trumbull allege that oversight failures at pharmacies run by Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc (WBA.O), CVS Health Corp (CVS.N), Walmart Inc (WMT.N) and Giant Eagle Inc (GIAEG.UL) led to excessive amounts of opioid pills in their communities.

Lawyers for the counties and companies are set to deliver opening statements on Monday to a federal jury in Cleveland, where thousands of similar lawsuits against pharmaceutical companies, drug distributors and pharmacies are pending.

More than 3,300 cases have been brought largely by state and local governments seeking to hold the companies responsible for an opioid abuse epidemic that U.S. government data shows led to nearly 500,000 overdose deaths from 1999 to 2019.

Should a jury find the companies liable, U.S. District Judge Dan Polster will later determine how much they must pay to abate, or address, the epidemic in the communities.

Lawyers for the local governments have said the pharmacy chains are among their next targets for settlement.

Polster, who oversees most of the opioid lawsuits, on Tuesday renewed his long-running push for a global settlement by the companies. "Use this trial as an opportunity to engage in the kind of meaningful discussions that have not happened over the last couple of years, all right?" he said.

At trial, the two counties are expected to argue the pharmacies created a public nuisance by failing to identify red flags and ensure prescriptions were valid, causing an oversupply of pills, overdoses and deaths.

"The national chain pharmacies in our case refused to give their pharmacists the necessary tools and opportunities to follow the law and stop the diversion and improper sale of opiates," said Mark Lanier, the counties' lawyer.

The companies deny wrongdoing, saying criminals were more likely to obtain opioids illegally from other sources, including pill mills, crooked doctors and drug traffickers.

"Opioid prescriptions are written by doctors, not pharmacists," CVS said in a statement. "Our pharmacies fill legitimate prescriptions written by licensed doctors."

Giant Eagle said Ohio regulators inspected its pharmacies in the two counties nearly 100 times during the relevant time period and concluded it complied with the law. The other defendants did not respond to requests for comment.

The trial comes after the three largest U.S. distributors that supply pharmacies - McKesson Corp (MCK.N), Cardinal Health Inc (CAH.N) and AmerisourceBergen Corp (ABC.N) - and the drugmaker Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N) in July proposed paying up to $26 billion to settle cases against them. read more

A bankruptcy judge in August approved a settlement by OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma LP and its wealthy Sackler family owners that the company values at more than $10 billion. read more

The pharmacy chains in the Ohio case have only settled one case nationally. Ahead of a trial in New York, they and Rite Aid Corp (RAD.N) agreed pay $26 million to settle with two counties.

Rite Aid settled pre-trial in Ohio and agreed to pay Trumbull at least $1.5 million. Lake County has not disclosed its recovery.

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/pharmacy-chains-face-first-trial-us-opioid-litigation-judge-urges-settlement-2021-10-01/

U.S. Judge upholds COVID-19 vaccine requirement for those with 'natural immunity'

 A U.S. judge upheld the University of California's COVID-19 vaccine requirement against a challenge by a professor who alleged he had immunity due to a prior coronavirus infection, in what appears to be the first ruling on the issue.

U.S. District Court Judge James Selna in Santa Ana, California, said the university system acted rationally to protect public health by mandating the vaccine and not exempting individuals with some level of immunity from an infection.

More than 43 million Americans have had confirmed cases of COVID-19 and some opponents of vaccinations have argued that immunity from an infection negates the need for an inoculation.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Aug. 6 that a study showed vaccines offer better protection than natural immunity gained from prior infection, which wanes over time.

On Wednesday, a group of physicians who are Republican members of Congress wrote to the CDC to urge the agency to acknowledge natural immunity.

The lawmakers said if the growing number of vaccine mandates ignore natural immunity it could lead to labor shortages as people are fired for failing to get a shot. Their letter said such mandates could even trigger a security crisis because up to 20% of the military faces "separation" and many of them "likely have natural immunity."

Selna's ruling denied a motion for a preliminary injunction by Aaron Kheriaty. And while Selna said the professor at the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine did not show a likelihood of success, Kheriaty said he plans to continue the litigation.

He told Reuters he plans to use the discovery process to determine how the policy was formulated and to question the university's expert witnesses about their reasoning for rejecting his arguments on natural immunity.

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-judge-upholds-covid-19-vaccine-requirement-those-with-natural-immunity-2021-09-30/

BioNTech: 1st Patient Dosed in Phase 2 Trial of mRNA Colorectal Cancer Immunotherapy

 Second Phase 2 trial initiated from BioNTech's proprietary individualized

      mRNA-based cancer vaccine platform iNeST 
 
   -- Randomized Phase 2 trial will enroll approximately 200 patients with 
      high-risk colorectal cancer that are circulating tumor DNA positive after 
      adjuvant treatment 
 
   -- BioNTech-sponsored trial is initiated in the United States, Germany, 
      Spain and Belgium and is enrolling patients immediately 
 
   -- BioNTech will continue joint development of BNT122 (autogene cevumeran, 
      RO7198457) with Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, in other trials 

BioNTech SE (NASDAQ: BNTX, "BioNTech" or "the Company"), announced today that the first colorectal cancer patient has been treated with its individualized mRNA cancer vaccine BNT122 (autogene cevumeran, RO7198457) in a Phase 2 clinical trial. The trial has been initiated in the United States, Germany, Spain and Belgium. It is planned to enroll about 200 patients to evaluate the efficacy of RO7198457 (BNT122) compared to watchful waiting after surgery and chemotherapy, the current standard of care for these high-risk patients. As the second deadliest cancer worldwide, the medical need for novel therapies to treat colorectal cancer remains high.
https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/BIONTECH-SE-66771992/news/Press-Release-BioNTech-Expands-Clinical-Oncology-Portfolio-with-First-Patient-Dosed-in-Phase-2-Tri-36566210/