Novartis
drops asthma drug fevipiprant after trial failures
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[December 16, 2019]
ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss drugmaker Novartis on Monday said it is
jettisoning what it had hoped would be a billion-dollar-selling asthma
drug, fevipiprant, from its development program after the medicine
failed another set of key trials.
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The drug's star fell in October when the Basel-based company
announced it had failed a pair of trials in moderate asthmatic
patients.
Now, fevipiprant has flopped in two additional studies in
moderate-to-severe patients, spelling the end to its development for
asthma.
Novartis chief drug developer John Tsai had continued to hold out
hope that the trial failures in moderate patients were a fluke and
that the drug would be more effective in patients hit harder by the
respiratory disorder.
Instead, fevipiprant failed to reduce exacerbations -- an acute
episode of symptoms growing worse -- compared to a placebo over a
52-week treatment period for either the 150 mg or 450 mg dose of the
drug.
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"The totality of these results do not support further development of
fevipiprant in asthma," said Novartis, which had hoped the medicine
would become an alternative for patients for whom existing therapies
like inhaled corticosteroids did not bring sufficient improvement.
Despite the failure, Novartis continues to hold out hope that it has
about two dozen potential blockbuster medicines -- those that will
exceed $1 billion in annual sales -- in its pipeline.
(Reporting by John Miller; editing by Tassilo Hummel and Jason
Neely)
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