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						NASH: The next untapped 
						pharma market gives investors many options 
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		 [April 24, 2017] 
		By Bill Berkrot 
 (Reuters) -
		
		Large 
		drugmakers with piles of cash are on the hunt for promising medicines 
		being developed by small companies to treat NASH, a progressive fatty 
		liver disease poised to become the leading cause of liver transplants by 
		2020.
 
 The eventual market for the complex disease, formally known as 
		Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis, is forecast to be $20 billion to $35 
		billion as populations with fatty diets increasingly fall victim to a 
		condition with no approved treatments.
 
 With intense competition and pricing pressure eroding sales of medicines 
		for diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and other lucrative disease 
		categories, and an already crowded field for developmental cancer drugs, 
		big pharma sees NASH as an enormous new market for future profit that 
		will accelerate a wave of deal making.
 
 "We are actively looking on the outside for opportunities... to 
		complement our internal program," Morris Birnbaum, chief scientific 
		officer for internal medicine for Pfizer <PFE.N>, told Reuters.
 
 Pfizer currently has three early-stage drugs in the clinic aiming to 
		block or reverse fat accumulation in the liver. "We believe that even 
		though we're a bit behind, we still might come out with the 
		best-in-class molecules," Birnbaum said.
 
		
		 
		Bristol-Myers Squibb <BMY.N> also confirmed it is looking for additional 
		assets to enhance its internally-developed NASH drugs. It presented 
		promising data for its lead NASH candidate at the big European liver 
		meeting in Amsterdam that ended on Sunday.
 "It's early days, but keep your seatbelts fastened," said Dr. Scott 
		Friedman, dean for therapeutic discovery at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New 
		York and one of the world's leading liver disease experts.
 
 Estimates for the prevalence of NASH in nations with fatty diets range 
		from 5 to 20 percent of the population with up to 15 million potentially 
		affected in the United States alone.
 
 Driven by the obesity and diabetes epidemics, the disease guarantees an 
		enormous pool of patients for decades, making it a prime target for 
		deals for promising therapies for NASH and its consequences - advanced 
		fibrosis and liver-destroying cirrhosis. The very early stages of many 
		of the drugs, and the complicated nature of the disease itself, pose 
		risks for drug developers and their investors alike.
 
 But the upside potential is still enticing to Raghuram Selvaraju, 
		managing director and senior healthcare analyst at Rodman and Renshaw. 
		He calls NASH one of the hottest spaces in the healthcare sector.
 
 "We anticipate that there will be more transactions, more licensing 
		deals from big pharma involving emerging biotechnology companies," he 
		said.
 
 GILEAD A PIONEER
 
 Just a few years ago, Gilead Sciences was the lone large drugmaker 
		talking about NASH. It was undeterred after its most advanced 
		anti-fibrosis candidate failed, striking deals with two small companies 
		to acquire additional NASH programs.
 
 Liver disease experts were impressed last year by Phase II data from a 
		Gilead-developed drug that demonstrated fibrosis regression after just 
		six months.
 
		
		 
		Allergan <AGN.N> became a top NASH contender with its acquisition of 
		Tobira Therapeutics and a deal with private Akarna Therapeutics on the 
		same day last year.
 Other big drugmakers with licensing deals or options on future deals in 
		the space include Novartis, Merck & Co, Bristol-Myers and Johnson & 
		Johnson .
 
 While many of the drugs in development are two-to-five years from 
		reaching the market if they get that far, betting on the feverish deal 
		activity gives investors a chance to profit near term.
 
 Many small companies developing drugs with a wide variety of approaches 
		across the disease spectrum do not have partners. They include Intercept 
		Pharmaceuticals, Galectin Therapeutics, Genfit and Galmed 
		Pharmaceuticals, all with a chance to be among the first to market, as 
		well as Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Durect Corp and little-known U.K.-tradedTiziana 
		Life Sciences with assets much earlier indevelopment.
 
 Galectin, which expects key data in December, has commenced preliminary 
		partnership discussions, its chief operating officer told Reuters.
 
		
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			A researcher in a file photo. REUTERS/File 
            
			 
Len 
Yaffe, who runs the StockDoc Partners healthcare fund and has long followed the 
liver disease space, said investors with tolerance for risk could do well to buy 
shares in several small-cap and micro-cap companies with promising NASH drugs in 
early development. He said if any one has stellar data, or lands a deal, the 
payoff could be considerable.
 When Allergan announced the $1.7 billion deal for Tobira, for example, that 
company's shares jumped from under $5 to over $30.
 
 Yaffe, who had singled out Tobira to investors prior to its acquisition, said 
the Durect drug "looks incredibly promising as it relates to inflammation and 
fibrosis."
 
 Enanta has the advantage of cash flow from its hepatitis C partnership with 
AbbVie to fund its NASH program.
 
 "You want to bet on companies that can survive even if they don't get a 
partnership this year or next year," Selvaraju said.
 
Enanta 
Chief Executive Jay Luly said companies in earlier stages of development may 
have an advantage over the first wave of experimental treatments as regulators' 
thinking on clinical trial goals and what makes an approvable product in such a 
new market evolves.
 "When we get there, the development pathway could be not only more clearly 
defined, but more simplified," Luly said.
 
 MANY SHOTS ON GOAL
 
 Drugmakers are taking a wide range of approaches to treat the complex 
disease, given multiple health issues among NASH patients that contribute to the 
liver damage, such as heart disease and diabetes.
 
 
There are drugs targeting inflammation to prevent or reduce fibrotic scarring. 
Some address lipid regulation to reduce liver fat, while others attempt to 
directly halt or reverse fibrosis. And some companies are testing diabetes 
treatments to assess their ability to also improve NASH.
 "The big sea change from two years ago - apart from an increased number of 
players - is a fairly rapid acceptance of the fact that we're going to be 
seeking combination therapies since it's a disease that involves multiple 
pathways," said Mt. Sinai’s Friedman.
 
 "In the end, whatever the mechanism is, it needs to yield decreased fibrosis," 
he said, noting that progressing fibrosis is what ultimately causes serious 
health consequences.
 
The 
knowledge that multiple drugs will be needed for therapeutic combinations to 
treat NASH, and that most experimental drugs fail, are big drivers for deal 
activity. Drugmakers are looking to improve chances of success by amassing 
numerous experimental drugs for their NASH programs. Some experts said drugs 
that target late-stage fibrosis and cirrhosis, where the risk of cancer and 
liver failure is highest, are likely to gain earliest acceptance from insurers.
 That fits the strategy of tiny Conatus Pharmaceuticals <CNAT.O>, whose shares 
more than doubled when it signed a $50 million collaboration deal with Novartis. 
Conatus is targeting end-stage disease with the goal of preventing transplants.
 
 But given the millions of potential patients and expense of treating advanced 
disease, there should be incentive for insurers to embrace medicines that target 
earlier stage NASH as well.
 
 
"There's still a major role for drugs that work on the front end," said Dr. Arun 
Sanyal, a leading liver disease expert whose Virginia Commonwealth University 
lab discovered the compound being developed by Durect. "One size will not fit 
all."
 (Editing by Edward Tobin)
 
				 
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