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Wednesday, July 1, 2020

ADP jobs up 2.4M in June, May revised from big loss to 3M job gain

June ADP Jobs Report: +2.369M vs. +3.5M consensus, +3.065M prior. (revised from -2.76M).
Of note is the whopping change for May, which was revised to a gain of 3.065M jobs from the initially reported loss of 2.76M. For perspective, April’s job loss was just shy of 20M.
“As the economy slowly continues to recover, we are seeing a significant rebound in industries that once experienced the greatest job losses,” said Ahu Yildirmaz, cohead of the ADP Research Institute.
A couple of subsectors posted major job gains in June – Leisure and hospitality up 961K, Construction up 398K, while information, mining announced cuts.
The government’s nonfarm payroll data is due on Thursday morning, with economists expecting a job gain of 3M and the unemployment rate of 12.4%.

Germany has for now enough remdesivir for COVID-19 therapy: govt

July 1, 2020

Germany has secured enough supplies for now of remdesivir, which is set to become the first COVID-19 treatment approved in Europe, and is banking on developer Gilead to meet future needs, the country’s health ministry said on Wednesday.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) this week said it had secured all of Gilead’s projected production for July and 90% of its production in August and September, in addition to an allocation for clinical trials.
“The federal government has early on secured remdesivir for the treatment of coronavirus patients. Currently, there are still sufficient reserves,” Germany’s health ministry told Reuters in a written statement.
With a conditional market approval, which is expected to be issued by the EU Commission this week, comes an obligation to deliver sufficient quantities in the future, it added.
“We trust Gilead will meet this obligation,” the ministry said.
Once supplies are less constrained, HHS will stop managing the allocation, Gilead said at the time of the department’s statement.
Gilead has linked up with generic drugmakers based in India and Pakistan to supply remdesivir in 127 developing countries, but it has not discussed its supply strategy for developed nations outside the United States.

From Parkinson’s to peanut allergy, pandemic puts brakes on new drugs

Treatments for peanut allergy and Parkinson’s disease are among U.S. drug launches that have been postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic as drugmakers struggle with disruptions to business, a Reuters review of filings and interviews with executives show.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved more than 30 new medicines since January, but at least five drugmakers including Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY.N), Sanofi (SASY.PA), Neurocrine Biosciences (NBIX.O), Endo Pharmaceuticals (ENDP.O) and Aimmune (AIMT.O) have changed their launch plans.
More may be delayed as authorities battle to control a pandemic that has already claimed more than 125,000 U.S. lives.
“We don’t believe there will be any kind of ‘new normal’ until there are effective (COVID-19) vaccines,” said Barry Greene, president of Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Inc (ALNY.O), which makes treatments for genetic disorders.
“We are going to be in this interesting world for quite a while.”
Launching drugs is an expensive and complicated process that includes sales representatives talking to doctors, coordinating supplies and treatment with pharmacies and clinics, and advertising campaigns – many of which have become harder during lockdowns or other restrictions to tackle the pandemic.
That’s bad news for patients and drugmakers.
Delays altogether could cost companies over a quarter of the originally estimated more than $1 billion in 2020 sales for the products approved by the FDA since January, according to a Reuters estimate based on company and analyst sales forecasts.
Hold-ups are mainly affecting treatments for diseases that are less acute, or less profitable for drugmakers, as the industry prioritizes its most promising new medicines.
“Clearly diseases that are less severe will have more impact to sales,” Eli Lilly Chief Executive David Ricks said in an interview.
Lilly and rival Pfizer Inc (PFE.N) have moved forward with launches of recently approved cancer drug Retevmo and heart disease treatment Vyandeqel, respectively, the only available treatments for two rare and potentially deadly conditions.
That’s little consolation for patients waiting for delayed drugs, such as Neurocrine’s Parkinson’s treatment Ongentys.

NEW WORLD

“The sooner we get a new option, the better,” said Rachel Dolhun, vice president of medical communications at the Michael J Fox Foundation, an advocacy group for patients with Parkinson’s disease. There are already Parkinson’s drugs, but they don’t work well on all patients, she said.
The first U.S.-approved treatment for peanut allergy, Palforzia from Aimmune, was put on hold after COVID-19 stalled its launch in March. The launch of multiple sclerosis medicine Zeposia was delayed by Bristol Myers Squibb by about three months before the company launched it in June.
Neurocrine Chief Executive Kevin Gorman said in an interview that many neurologists had been redirected to fighting the pandemic, leading to delaying Ongentys until later in 2020. The delay to Palforzia, Aimmune’s sole approved drug, means the company will not generate any revenue until later this year, prompting it to halt new hires in a bid to preserve its $370 million of cash. “We assume that there is some kind of return to normal some point this year and that the launch will actually take place in late summer, early fall, and that we will start to generate revenues from then on out,” said Eric Bjerkholt, Aimmune’s chief financial officer, during an investor call.
Around half a dozen more drugs are scheduled to be reviewed by the FDA in the coming month, including Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical Inc’s (RARE.O) therapy for a group of genetic disorders and Endo’s skin-treatment Xiaflex, which it said it would delay launching until later in the year.
But their prospects may depend in part on the progress of the pandemic.
Prescriptions across the board have fallen as doctors offices have closed for non-emergency business, and the process of approving treatments for patients could also slow down. For some products, “every patient requires reams of prior authorizations and lots of tests to be done, and lot of paperwork to be shared. In the old world, that was hard. In this world, that would be impossible,” said Alnylam’s Greene.

BeiGene commercializes Xgeva in China

BeiGene (NASDAQ:BGNE) has begun commercializing XGEVA (denosumab) in China for the treatment of giant cell tumor of bone (GCTB).
This marks the first Amgen product transitioned to BeiGene since the commencement of the parties’ global strategic oncology collaboration in January 2020.
Amgen gained China approval for XGEVA in May 2019 for the treatment of adults and skeletally mature adolescents with GCTB that is unresectable or where surgical resection is likely to result in severe morbidity.
In addition, a sNDA for XGEVA as a prevention for skeletal-related events in patients with multiple myeloma and bone metastases from solid tumors has been accepted in China April 2020 and is currently under review.

FDA OKs Pfizer Bavencio for maintenance of bladder cancer that has not progressed

Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) and alliance partner Merck KGaA (OTCPK:MKGAF) announce the FDA nod for Bavencio (avelumab) for the first-line maintenance treatment of locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (UC), the most common type of bladder cancer, that has not progressed with first-line platinum-based chemo.
The agency approved the PD-L1 inhibitor in May 2017 for locally advanced or metastatic UC that has progressed during or following platinum-based chemo.

MediciNova on go with study of MN-166 in COVID-19

The FDA has accepted MediciNova’s (NASDAQ:MNOV) IND for MN-166 (ibudilast) for prevention of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) in COVID-19 and informs the company that it may proceed with the proposed clinical investigation of ibudilast.
The co-primary objectives of the Phase 2 clinical trial include the proportion of subjects free of respiratory failure, subjects’ change in clinical status measured by NIAID scale, and plasma cytokine levels after 7 days of treatment.
Secondary objectives include safety, tolerability, and the proportion of subjects free of respiratory failure on Day 14.

Trial underway testing Anavex 2-73 in rare inherited neurological disorder

The first patient has been dosed in a Phase 2/3 clinical trial, EXCELLENCE, evaluating Anavex Life Sciences’ (NASDAQ:AVXL) lead drug Anavex 2-73 (blarcamesine) in patient with Rett syndrome, a rare inherited neurological disorder occurring almost exclusively in girls that leads to severe impairments.
The primary endpoints of the 69-subject study are the changes from baseline to end of treatment in two metrics, Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire and CGI-I score.
The estimated completion date is July 2021.
Orally available blarcamesine is a sigma-1 receptor (S1R) agonist. S1Rs play a key role in the modulation of neurotransmission. It is also being investigated for the potential treatment of Parkinson’s disease dementia and mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s disease.