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						 Gilead 
						misses key goal in NASH liver disease trial, shares sink 
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		[February 12, 2019]  
		By Julie Steenhuysen
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - Gilead Sciences Inc 
		said on Monday that a late-stage study of a key experimental drug aimed 
		at treating NASH, a progressive fatty liver disease, failed to meet its 
		main goal, sending the company's shares down 4.6 percent in after-hours 
		trading.
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			 The study compared the drug, called selonsertib, with a placebo 
			treatment in a trial of nearly 900 patients with compensated 
			cirrhosis, an advanced form of Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis, or 
			NASH. 
 “While we are disappointed that the STELLAR-4 study did not achieve 
			its primary endpoint, we remain committed to advancing therapies for 
			patients with advanced fibrosis due to NASH, where there is a 
			significant unmet need for effective and well-tolerated treatments," 
			Dr. John McHutchison, Gilead's chief scientific officer, said in a 
			statement.
 
			
			 
			
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			Analysts have projected the market for NASH treatments to reach $20 
			billion to $35 billion as populations with fatty diets increasingly 
			develop the disease.
 (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Dan Grebler)
 
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