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Friday, May 31, 2019

J&J: Will appeal $300 million punitive damages ordered in NY talc suit

Johnson & Johnson was ordered Friday to pay $300 million in punitive damages to a woman who blamed her rare asbestos-related cancer on the company’s talc-based products, the company confirmed Friday.
Friday’s decision brings the total award in the case to $325 million. The New York state jury earlier this month awarded $25 million to the woman, Donna Olson, 66, and her husband in compensatory damages.
“With this verdict, yet another jury has rejected J&J’s misleading claims that its talc was free of asbestos,” said Jerome Block, the lead trial attorney in the New York case. “The internal J&J documents that the jury saw, once more laid bare the shocking truth of decades of cover-up, deception and concealment by J&J of the asbestos found in talc baby powder.”
J&J faces more than 13,000 talc-related lawsuits. The consumer products company, which makes everything from Tylenol to Aveeno lotions, denies allegations that its talc causes cancer. It said numerous studies and tests by regulators worldwide have shown that its talc is safe and asbestos-free.
“This trial suffered significant legal and evidentiary errors which Johnson & Johnson believes will warrant a reversal on appeal,” J&J said in a statement to CNBC. “Decades of tests by independent experts and academic institutions repeatedly confirm that Johnson’s Baby Powder does not contain asbestos or cause cancer.”
J&J relaunched its iconic namesake baby product line last summer to reverse a decline in J&J’s baby care unit. While trusted for decades, the 124-year-old brand had fallen out of touch with consumers, namely millennial moms, who opted instead for cleaner, natural products from trendy upstart brands.

So-Young target raised at Canaccord

To $21 from $20; maintains Buy.

Reata Pharmaceuticals target hiked by Citi

To $190 from $185; maintains Buy.

Ascendis Pharma target raised by Canaccord

To $144 from $133; maintains Buy.

Acadia Pharmaceuticals target hiked by Raymond James

To $43 from $40, maintaining Strong Buy.

Novartis: Sandoz launches 1st generic of big AstraZeneca breast cancer med

Sandoz today announced that the first generic Fulvestrant Injection has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is immediately available in the US.
It is a fully substitutable AP rated generic version of AstraZeneca’s FASLODEX (fulvestrant) Injection.
This hormonal therapy medicine is recommended for the three quarters of women with advanced breast cancer whose tumor expresses the estrogen receptor (ER), and slows tumor growth by binding to and blocking the ER, a key driver of disease progression1.
‘Fulvestrant is an important treatment option for women with advanced breast cancer and we will work to help those in the US who need this critical therapy have access to it at an affordable price,’ said Carol Lynch, President of Sandoz Inc. ‘This treatment fits well with our ongoing strategic focus on oncology, where Sandoz has substantial experience bringing important oncology medicines to hospitals, clinics, doctor’s offices and patients in the US.’
According to IQVIA, US sales for FASLODEX (fulvestrant injection) for the 12-month period ending March 2019 were USD 541 million (MAT: Moving Annual Total).

Celgene partner BeiGene plots post-merger course

Now that the $74 billion acquisition of Celgene by Bristol-Myers Squibb is more or less a done deal, one question remains for BeiGene: What does it plan to do with its Celgene-partnered checkpoint inhibitor, tislelizumab?
The short answer? If—or, most likely, when—BeiGene does end up flying solo with the PD-1 immunotherapy, the impact on clinical development would be “marginal,” and the financial hit would be “modest,” BeiGene Chief Adviser Eric Hedrick, M.D., told FiercePharma in an interview.
The concern isn’t so much about BeiGene’s path forward for tislelizumab in China, where it’s under priority review for classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL), but rather in the U.S., EU and Japan in solid tumors. Those are the areas where Celgene currently holds tiselelizumab rights.
“In the contract, there’s stipulation that they basically can’t hold two PD-1-class assets,” Hedrick said of BeiGene’s pact with Celgene. That means, once the merger closes as expected in the third quarter, there’s no reason for Opdivo seller BMS to hang onto tislelizumab. “We fully expect that the rights to our PD-1 inhibitor globally will be transferred back to us,” he said.
BeiGene made its name back in the summer of 2017 when it penned that unusual deal with Celgene. Under the agreement, Celgene made a $150 million investment in BeiGene and transferred its Chinese commercial operations, including rights to marketed drugs like Revlimid, to the Chinese biotech.
The BMS-Celgene merger will have “zero” effect on that part of the deal, Hedrick said. And the second part saw Celgene shell out $263 million upfront for tislelizumab rights.
At the time, BeiGene was just a small company. “One of the appealing aspects of doing this deal was for us to bolster our capability to develop that drug on a global basis,” Hedrick explained.
That has changed dramatically over the past two years, he said, and BeiGene’s in a good position now to run the show. Its ability to conduct clinical development globally has “increased exponentially,” he added.
Today, BeiGene’s clinical development team is more than 800 strong, with about half of those employees located outside of China. And that team is handling more than 50 ongoing or planned clinical studies as of January, the company said in its recent annual securities filing.

For tislelizumab specifically, 90% of the registrational trials are already in BeiGene’s hands, so “the operational impact for us is negligible,” Hedrick said, adding that the company doesn’t expect any major hiring or organizational changes. The only major study conducted by Celgene is testing tislelizumab alongside chemo and radiation as a post-surgery treatment for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer.
“The financial aspects of us getting rights back would be mitigated by the fact that all the trials that we’re getting reimbursed by Celgene will complete accrual by the end of the year,” he said.
That said, development is only part of the picture, and merely pushing the drug to approval doesn’t necessarily translate into commercial success. Without help from an oncology bigwig, marketing neophyte BeiGene might have a tough time launching, especially in the U.S. where Merck & Co.’s Keytruda, BMS’ Opdivo and Roche’s Tecentriq have secured footholds in many major indications.
BeiGene could take a page from Sanofi and Regeneron, though. The pair first went after a small niche market with their sixth-to-market Libatyo.
“If you look at the first wave of registrational trials, a lot of those are in the cancer types that are prevalent in Asia,” Hedrick said. Lung cancer is of course part of that cohort, as it’s the most common cancer type in China as well as in the U.S. But many studies are in gastrointestinal-related malignancies, such as liver, stomach and esophageal cancers, that are also common on the continent.

“The China part of that commercialization is going to be a major focus,” Hedrick said. “That’s how we think we can be competitive.”
By focusing on Asia-prevalent cancers, BeiGene could stake a claim in Asia and other parts of the world. Just consider gastric cancer, where Keytruda has failed phase 3 studies in both newly diagnosed and previously treated patients.
For now, BeiGene is building its global commercialization presence “step-wise,” Hedrick said. It has brought in a senior team to handle U.S. sales and marketing for its BTK inhibitor zanubrutinib, for instance, which recently became the first China-developed drug to win an FDA breakthrough designation.
The first U.S. filing for that drug, in Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, will happen in the first half of next year, and it will be another year before it’s tislelizumab’s turn, according to Hedrick.
While in the long term BeiGene aims to be a global commercialization force in its own right, in the near term for tislelizumab, it might scout for new partners if the BMS-Celgene transaction goes through as planned, Hedrick said.
The Chinese approval is more imminent: It’s expected later this year. Five PD-1s are already approved in China, including Keytruda, Opdivo and three local rivals. Jiangsu Hengrui Medicine’s camrelizumab just won a nod in Hodgkin lymphoma—the same initial indication tislelizumab is after. For China, BeiGene’s plan is to run a broad development program and get “as many approved indications as possible listed for national reimbursement,” he said.
Compared to what Merck executives has touted as Keytruda’s “wall of data,” the data tislelizumab has yielded so far are quite thin. They’re mostly phase 2 results in small trial groups and only comprise overall response stats.
But BeiGene plans to build a wall of data of its own, and it has a good start. In its single-arm China phase 2 trial in 70 patients with relapsed/refractory cHL, tislelizumab achieved a complete response rate of 61%, about two times that of other PD-1 inhibitors, Hedrick touted.