AstraZeneca
scores win as diabetes drug shown to slow kidney disease
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[March 30, 2020]
(Reuters) - AstraZeneca's diabetes treatment Farxiga has proven to be
"overwhelmingly" effective at slowing chronic kidney disease ahead of
the scheduled end of a drug trial, the British drugmaker said,
potentially opening a new area of treatment outside diabetes.
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An
interim study analysis showed that patients on Farxiga, known as
Forxiga outside North America, had better renal function and were
less likely to die from heart of kidney disease than a control group
on placebo, the company said on in a statement on Monday.
An independent monitoring committee stopped the trial early as it
was no longer justifiable to keep patients on placebo.
Farxiga, among AstraZeneca's top five drugs by sales, was first
developed as a diabetes drug as it causes the kidneys to expel blood
sugar from the body through urine but it has shown promise as a
heart failure treatment, even among non-diabetic patients.
"Farxiga is moving from diabetes into the larger and more attractive
(cardiovascular)/metabolism field where it may distinguish itself
more easily from the rest of the antidiabetics," said Eric Le
Berrigaud, an analyst at brokerage Bryan Garnier.
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Analysts on average expect the drug to generate $3 billion in sales in 2024, up
from $1.5 billion last year.
The company said details of how well the drug did against chronic kidney disease
would be presented at an as yet undisclosed medical conference. It will also
start talking to regulators about an early request for market approval for the
new use, Astra added.
Farxiga is part of the SGLT2-inhibitor class of antidiabetics which includes Eli
Lilly and Boehringer Ingelheim's Jardiance as well as Johnson & Johnson's
Invokana.
U.S. regulators this month granted fast track designation to Jardiance for the
treatment of chronic kidney disease.
(Reporting by Aakash Jagadeesh Babu in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta
and Louise Heavens)
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