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						 Actelion 
						sees Uptravi price of $160,000-170,000/patient 
			
   
            
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		[January 06, 2016] 
		By John Miller 
			
		ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss drug company 
		Actelion expects an average annual per-patient price for its new 
		pulmonary arterial hypertension medicine in the United States of 
		$160,000 to $170,000, before rebates, Chief Operating Officer Otto 
		Schwarz told analysts on Tuesday. 
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			 The drug, Uptravi, won approval from the U.S. Food and Drug 
			Administration last month and went on sale this week, giving doctors 
			another option to treat the deadly disease that kills victims within 
			a few years. 
			 
			Actelion declined to give forecasts for Uptravi's average price 
			after rebates or say how many patients could be eligible annually 
			for the treatment to open pulmonary arteries, easing pressure on the 
			heart. 
			 
			However, Schwarz said Uptravi will likely compete for treating a 
			group of intermediate-stage disease sufferers who number around 
			3,800 people in the United States and now get inhaled treatments. 
			 
			"There is an influx of new patients in this segment," Schwarz said, 
			predicting physicians will prescribe Uptravi for them before 
			progressing to an inhaled treatment. 
			
			  
			Analysts have said Uptravi could reap more than $1 billion in global 
			sales annually at its peak. 
			 
			Even at $160,000 to $170,000 Schwarz said Uptravi is priced more 
			cheaply than other inhalable pulmonary arterial hypertension 
			treatments including United Therapeutics's Tyvaso and, consequently, 
			unlikely to spawn significant payer resistance. 
			 
			"Uptravi is priced - and this is why I think it is responsible 
			pricing - below all inhaled prostacyclin therapies currently on the 
			market," Schwarz said. 
			 
			Chief Executive Officer Jean-Paul Clozel, on the same call, said the 
			addition of Uptravi to Actelion's stable of drugs following the 2015 
			patent expiry of its blockbuster Tracleer drug will be sufficient to 
			fund expansion for the next decade, including into new treatment 
			areas. 
			
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			"The revenues generated will enable us to fuel our research and 
			development efforts outside the pulmonary arterial hypertension 
			franchise and to transform our company," he said. 
			 
			Clozell is counting on internal growth after being beaten out last 
			year by AstraZeneca on the purchase of U.S biotech company ZS Pharma 
			for $2.7 billion. 
			 
			Suitable merger targets are rare, he said, especially if it must 
			compete with larger companies with "deeper pockets." 
			 
			"We have to count on our ability to discover for ourselves or 
			licensing products," Clozell said. "But for M&A, I'm not very 
			optimistic that we can find large, very good deals." 
			 
			Actelion shares last traded up 1.68 percent at 139 francs, giving it 
			a market value of 15.6 billion Swiss francs ($15.42 billion), about 
			a quarter of the value of AstraZeneca's stock. 
			 
			(Editing by Michael Shields, Greg Mahlich) 
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