Novartis
heart drug portfolio hit by failed serelaxin study
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[March 22, 2017] ZURICH
(Reuters) - Novartis's heart failure drug serelaxin flopped in a
late-stage trial by not cutting cardiovascular death or slowing disease
progression, marking the likely demise of a drug hopeful the Swiss firm
had promoted as a potential blockbuster.
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The company's shares fell as much as 2.2 percent following the
announcement on Wednesday, as analysts began downgrading their
long-term revenue estimates.
The failure will put pressure on Novartis to ramp up sales of its
Entresto heart failure drug that has got off to a slow start,
analysts said.
Serelaxin had a troubled trial history, having already failed in
2014 to win the approval of European and U.S. regulators. Novartis
pressed on in the hope of eventually gathering enough evidence to
change regulators' minds, but Wednesday's announcement that the drug
failed dashes those aims.
"We are disappointed this study did not confirm the efficacy of
RLX030," said Vas Narasimhan, Novartis's drugs development chief,
adding he will continue to analyze the results to help determine
where serelaxin went wrong.
With the failure, Novartis's stable of potential new blockbusters
has now been trimmed to 12 medicines.
Serelaxin was originally seen as a way for Novartis to fill the gap
left by expiries on heart drugs such as Diovan, which lost U.S.
patent rights in 2012.
An open submission to the FDA is now likely to be put on ice after
Novartis said on Wednesday after its RELAX-AHF-2 phase III study did
not meet its target of reducing cardiovascular deaths or worsening
heart failure in patients with acute heart failure when added to
standard therapy.
"This is a major disappointment: we viewed Serelaxin as one of the
major sources of upside to our long-term Novartis estimates," said
one Zurich trader, who estimated the drug could have had 2 billion
Swiss francs ($2.01 billion) in sales by 2020.
Acute heart failure is a medical emergency where patients become
short of breath as the heart struggles to pump blood.
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The condition is a major cause of hospitalization for people over
65, with around one in five patients not surviving the year
following hospitalization.
Serelaxin was meant to relax blood vessels to ease the burden on the
heart.
Analysts said the drug was always a risky proposition, given its
previous stumbles with regulators.
"The failure of serelaxin will refocus the importance of Entresto to
meet consensus long-term sales expectations as well as the
importance for management to bolster its pipeline," Deutsche Bank
analyst Tim Race wrote in a note to investors.
(Reporting by John Revill, additional reporting by Ruppert
Pretterklieber; editing by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi and Louise
Heavens)
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