Eli Lilly's diabetes pill
takes market share from J&J, Astra
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[January 06, 2016]
By Ransdell Pierson
(Reuters) - Eli Lilly and Co's new
Jardiance diabetes treatment has begun stealing market share from rival
drugs in its class, the company said on Tuesday, bolstered by clinical
trial data showing it slashed deaths by 32 percent in patients with Type
2 diabetes.
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In a three-year study whose results were released last summer,
Jardiance became the first diabetes therapy to show robust ability
to reduce cardiovascular death.
Jardiance, which won U.S. approval last year, belongs to a new
family of treatments called SGLT2 inhibitors that include Johnson &
Johnson's $1.3 billion-a-year Invokana and AstraZeneca Plc's Farxiga.
They flush excess blood sugar from the kidneys.
Jardiance now accounts for 25 percent of new U.S. patients taking
SGLT2 inhibitors, up from a 15 percent share before the Jardiance
trial data were released in August, Lilly said on Tuesday.
In addition, use of sulfonylureas, a class of inexpensive generics
that patients typically try before being moved to a costlier newer
drug, has declined as Jardiance sales have taken off, Lilly said in
a conference call describing its 2016 earnings expectations.
Johnson & Johnson was not immediately available for comment.
The positive results of the trial have not yet been included in the
drug's label and it could take medical societies another year or
longer to draft new treatment guidelines incorporating the data.
"Once we get the label (change), we believe Jardiance will become
the leader in the SGLT2 class," Lilly diabetes head Enrique Conterno
said in an interview on Tuesday.
The details about Jardiance helped lift Lilly shares on Tuesday as
much as 3 percent.
There has been a push away from the sulfonylureas because of the
risk of hypoglycemia, or dangerously low blood sugar, said Dr. Jason
Gaglia of Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston.
Some insurers and pharmacy benefit managers have placed Jardiance
ahead of Invokana on their lists of preferred covered treatments
known as formularies, Gaglia said.
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Guggenheim Partners analyst Tony Butler said some payers have
discouraged use of Jardiance, whose $4,000 annual cost greatly
exceeds that of inexpensive generics that are mainstays of early
treatment.
But Butler said he expects them to relent once the label change is
made and medical societies endorse the drug. Jardiance could
generate annual sales of up to $5 billion, he said, with Lilly
splitting profits with its partner, Boehringer Ingelheim of Germany.
Data from Invokana's long-term heart safety study is not expected
until 2017, followed by Forxiga's data in 2019. Until then, Lilly
can boast that Jardiance is the only SGLT2 inhibitor shown to
improve survival.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson in New York; Additional reporting by
Bill Berkrot and Caroline Humer in New York; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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