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			 Earlier this month, BioMarin hosted 25 teenagers and their 
			chaperones for an all-expenses paid trip to New York City, where 
			they performed a Broadway-style musical based on their own 
			experiences with bleeding disorders. Some came from as far away as 
			Hawaii to work with a professional theater crew, have their 
			headshots taken and meet members of the show Hamilton. 
 During breaks, some stopped to infuse the blood-clotting 
			medications, with a nurse on hand to attend to any health needs.
 
 Well beyond a feel-good philanthropic effort, BioMarin’s business 
			strategy here is to build a long-term relationship with hemophilia 
			patients who it wants to one day use its gene therapy. If approved, 
			it is expected to be one of the most expensive on the market at well 
			over $1 million per person.
 
 BioMarin’s sponsorship of “Hemophilia: The Musical” – conceived more 
			than a year ago while its own experimental hemophilia gene therapy 
			will not reach the market until at least mid-2020 - stands out in a 
			drug industry known for pulling out all the stops to convince 
			doctors and patients to use their medicines. U.S. regulations allow 
			companies to discuss diseases and care with patients, but they 
			cannot advertise products before they are accepted by health 
			regulators.
 
			 
			
 BioMarin’s long-term strategy is geared to take market share from 
			Bayer AG <BAYGn.DE>, Shire Plc <SHP.L> and Novo Nordisk <NOVOb.CO>, 
			who dominate the $10 billion market for blood clotting treatments. 
			These players have also provided hemophilia patients with summer 
			camps and other events such as a kayak trip in Washington State’s 
			Puget Sound from Switzerland’s Octapharma AG.
 
 Another likely rival is Roche Holding AG <ROG.S>, whose Hemlibra 
			treatment helps hard-to-treat hemophilia patients keep their 
			condition under control and requires fewer infusions.
 
 "What the hemophilia community has said to us is, 'Who is BioMarin. 
			Gene therapy, that looks interesting, but who is BioMarin? We've got 
			to get to know BioMarin. We need to know you and trust you before 
			your product shows up," BioMarin Chief Commercial Officer Jeff Ajer 
			said in an interview.
 
 With that in mind, BioMarin turned to Patrick James Lynch, who runs 
			the Los Angeles-based marketing and production agency Believe Ltd 
			that specializes in bleeding disorders. Lynch, who has hemophilia, 
			recruited the applicants, managed the details and led the group - in 
			matching black jackets with Hemophilia the Musical and BioMarin 
			logos - to Times Square.
 
 For Porus Pavri, 14, the three-day weekend represented a rare 
			opportunity to kick back with teenagers who understand his daily 
			challenges. Acting, he said in the play, was like his life at home: 
			“It is one of the only activities I can do where I can go all out 
			without worrying about my health.”
 
 Concerns he will be hurt has put activities such as sports, or even 
			the school marching band, off limits to Porus, who has coped with an 
			especially severe form of hemophilia for most of his life.
 
 "At one point I had lost full faith in the American medical system. 
			That faith, with a lot of difficulty, has been restored," Yasmin 
			Pavri, Porus’ mother, said.
 
 Earlier this year, Porus switched to Roche’s Hemlibra, which has 
			reduced the bleeding and pain. Without it, he could not have 
			participated in the musical, Pavri said. An earlier experience in 
			switching medications made her reluctant to consider the Roche 
			therapy. She would like to see several years of data on a gene 
			therapy, whose effects are likely irreversible, before contemplating 
			it for her son.
 
			
			 
			
 But after the weekend workshop, she said she felt more comfortable 
			with BioMarin above the other companies working on gene therapies.
 
 Unlike most countries, the United States allows drug companies to 
			market their FDA-approved products directly to consumers. In recent 
			years, new laws have curbed drugmaker gifts to doctors, based on 
			studies showing that even small items, such as a pen, can influence 
			behavior.
 
			
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			The relationships that pharma companies have with patients are 
			“potentially problematic” because their influence may not align with 
			the effectiveness of a treatment, said Alyssa Burgart, a clinical 
			ethicist at the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford 
			University.
 “This is planting a very early seed for adolescents” given that the 
			drug is still in trials, she said.
 
 BioMarin disagreed with her assessment, and said that the project 
			aimed to create an environment for teens with bleeding disorders to 
			connect art and wellness, and is consistent with the company’s 
			history in expanding care for people with rare genetic diseases.
 
 “When we first started working with Believe Limited, we shared a 
			strong principle that this should not be a marketing effort,” 
			spokeswoman Debra Charlesworth said.
 
			“NORTH OF $1 MILLION”
 There are about 20,000 U.S. patients with hemophilia, 16,000 of 
			which suffer from hemophilia A which BioMarin and others are 
			targeting. The current standard therapy requires patients to infuse 
			factor proteins into their bloodstream several times a week for 
			life, costing hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Some develop 
			an immune response, like Porus, and their costs rise to more than $1 
			million per year, making hemophilia patients among some of the most 
			expensive for the U.S. healthcare system.
 
 BioMarin sees that price tag as an opening for its own experimental 
			gene therapy – which if successful will cure the disorder in 
			patients and justify the price.
 
			"We haven't decided what we are going to price it at, but it's going 
			to be for sure north of $1 million," BioMarin CEO Jean-Jacques 
			Bienaime he said in an interview. "We are not trying to introduce a 
			new therapy that is going to cost substantially more per year," he 
			said, adding that it would allow a deferred payment plan over two to 
			five years if needed.
 Other drugmakers see the market potential for hemophilia gene 
			therapies, but have a longer road ahead. Pfizer Inc <PFE.N> has 
			licensing agreements with Spark Therapeutics Inc <ONCE.O>, which 
			began enrolling patients in clinical trial in July, and Sangamo 
			Therapeutics Inc <SGMO.O>, which has not begun human testing.
 
			
			 
			
 BioMarin is aiming to submit the therapy to regulators in the fourth 
			quarter of 2019, and has the capacity to produce 4,000 gene therapy 
			doses a year at its Navato, California factory.
 
 DIFFERENT APPROACH
 
 BioMarin’s approach differs from Roche, which launched Hemlibra for 
			difficult-to-treat hemophilia patients in late 2017 and more broadly 
			in October. The drug’s price is about $492,000 per year for a 140 
			pound person. Roche has made donations to sponsor patient advocacy 
			organizations, and provided information to physicians and others 
			about Hemlibra, Roche spokeswoman Ulrike Engels-Lange said. It has 
			not directly sponsored an event.
 
 By contrast BioMarin executives, including the head of research and 
			development and a hemophilia business head, attended a parents 
			breakfast during the New York weekend, BioMarin’s Charlesworth said.
 
 Its general counsel gave introductory remarks at the musical and at 
			the end of the production, Charlesworth enlisted caregivers give 
			each teenager a small Tony Award-like trophy in areas such as 
			“Biggest Heart” and “Unbreakable Spirit.”
 
 She encouraged participants to fill out a survey to help the company 
			decide on the program’s future and for longer-term research around 
			the connection between art and health that BioMarin plans to fund.
 
 “I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship,” she said.
 
 (Reporting by Caroline Humer; additional reporting by John Miller in 
			Zurich; editing by Michele Gershberg and Edward Tobin)
 
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