Regeneron
secures more coverage for cholesterol drug Praluent
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[May 06, 2016]
By Amrutha Penumudi
(Reuters) - Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc,
facing slowing sales of blockbuster eye drug Eylea, said it was making
substantial progress in securing more insurance coverage for cholesterol
drug Praluent, its other key product.
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Shares of the company, which reported better-than-expected
first-quarter revenue, rose as much 5.8 percent on Thursday.
Praluent, which is co-owned by Sanofi SA, has often been touted as
the company's next blockbuster but the cholesterol-lowering drug has
been slow to take off in the market with insurers resisting its high
cost.
Regeneron said on Thursday about 74 percent of commercially insured
lives and 91 percent of Medicare insured lives had access to
Praluent, as of April 1.
Unprecedented utilization criteria for the drug and tedious
paperwork put in place by pharmacy benefit managers and health
insurers had made access to Praluent difficult, Regeneron said on a
call with analysts.
However, the company said it had seen a recent improvement in the
number of Praluent prescriptions that were filled.
RBC Capital Markets analyst Adnan Butt said upcoming data from
trials on Praluent's cardiovascular benefits will likely make
insurers loosen their restrictions on the drug.
"That's the big catalyst the buyside is looking for - statistically
significant difference that makes it difficult for payers to deny
the benefit this class of drugs is showing."
The list price of Praluent is about $14,600 per year. Rival drug
Repatha, made by Amgen Inc, has a list price of $14,100 per year.
A federal jury ruled in March that Praluent infringes two Amgen
patents, making matters worse for Regeneron.
Praluent's first-quarter sales were about $13 million, falling short
of the average analyst estimate of $15.6 million, JP Morgan analyst
Cory Kasimov said.
HOPE FOR EYLEA
Regeneron raised sales growth forecast for Eylea, the success of
which has powered much of Regeneron's explosive growth since late
2011.
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However, the drug's slowing sales in recent quarters have raised
concerns about Regeneron's prospects, erasing a quarter of the
company's market value in the past year.
Regeneron said it expected sales of Eylea, which treats wet
age-related macular degeneration among other eye disorders, to
increase by 20-25 percent this year, compared with its previous
estimate of about 20 percent. The drug's sales surged 54 percent
last year.
Regeneron's net income more than doubled to $165.7 million in the
quarter ended March 31.
Excluding items, Regeneron earned $2.57 per share, just missing the
average analyst estimate of $2.58 according to Thomson Reuters
I/B/E/S.
Revenue rose to $1.20 billion, beating the average Wall Street
estimate of $1.18 billion.
Regeneron's shares were up 5.2 percent at $379.42 in late afternoon
trading.
(Reporting by Amrutha Penumudi in Bengaluru; Editing by Saumyadeb
Chakrabarty)
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