Shionogi sinks in Tokyo trade after panel again delays COVID pill
approval
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[July 21, 2022]
TOKYO (Reuters) -Shares in Shionogi
& Co posted their steepest fall in three months on Thursday after a
health ministry panel again delayed emergency approval for the Japanese
drugmaker's oral treatment against COVID-19.
The stock dropped 8.5% to 6,901 yen as of 10:22 JST, the most since
April 13, leading decliners on the benchmark Nikkei index, which was
down 0.4%.
Health experts on the panel voted on Wednesday to await more data from
ongoing clinical trials and continue discussions on the drug, dealing
another blow to Shionogi's global ambitions for the antiviral pill.
"Shionogi bulls may now hang their hopes on new (Phase III) data that
may become available in August and new Phase II/III data that may become
available in September," Jefferies analyst Stephen Barker wrote in a
note.
Authorities had postponed a decision last month on the drug, known as
S-217622 and the brand name Xocova, which Shionogi hopes will compete
with products from U.S. drugmakers Pfizer and Merck & Co that have
already been approved in Japan and elsewhere.
The company has signed an agreement to sell about a million doses to the
Japanese government, pending the drug's approval.
Chief Executive Isao Teshirogi has said that annual production of the
drug could reach 10 million doses. It has received U.S. government
support for a global Phase III trial.
Speculation about the treatment has sent Shionogi's shares on a
rollercoaster ride.
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Japanese drugmaker Shionogi's COVID-19 pill Xocova, also known as
S-217622, is seen in this handout picture delivered to Reuters on
July 20, 2022. Shionogi & Co Ltd/Handout via REUTERS
Last month a health ministry panel postponed a ruling on the drug
because of uncertainty over its effectiveness, as well as animal studies
showing it could pose a risk to pregnancies.
Shionogi this month said it was preparing to seek approval in China for
the drug, shown in pre-clinical studies to display high antiviral
activity against the Omicron variants BA.4 and BA.5.
Some members of the health panel said that while trial data had not
proved the effectiveness of the drug, the results were positive enough
to grant emergency approval to help to tackle a seventh wave of
infections and possibly reduce the incidence of so-called "long COVID"
effects in patients.
New infections in Japan exceeded 150,000 on Wednesday, an all-time high,
the Nikkei newspaper reported.
($1 = 138.3700 yen)
(Reporting by Rocky SwiftEditing by Andrew Heavens, David Goodman and
Richard Pullin)
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