Astra's Farxiga results
may open up type 1 diabetes opportunity
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[September 14, 2017]
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - AstraZeneca's Farxiga was shown to help
type-1 diabetics when added to standard insulin therapy, possibly
opening up a additional market opportunity for the type-2 diabetes drug,
the British drugmaker said in a statement on Thursday.
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Adding Farxiga, also known as dapagliflozin, helped reduce excess
glucose levels in the blood, led to some weight loss and allowed
patients to lower their insulin dose, when compared to a control
group that received insulin only, the group said, citing interim
results from a late-stage trial.
Type 1, which accounts for 5-10 percent of all diabetes cases, is
typically diagnosed during childhood while type 2 is linked to
factors such as obesity and high blood pressure later in life.
The results were gathered a little less than half a year into the
study but AstraZeneca will await figures for a full year before
deciding on a request for approval to widen the use to type 1
diabetes.
Farxiga, which analysts expect to generate close to $2 billion in
annual revenues in 5-6 years' time, belongs to a relatively new
class of type 2 diabetes drugs called SGLT-2 inhibitors, which help
remove excess blood sugar through urine.
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Others in the class include Eli Lilly and Boehringer Ingelheim's
Jardiance and Johnson & Johnson's Invokana.
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Christoph Steitz)
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