Fresenius taps pre-dialysis kidney care as drugs promise treatment
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[October 05, 2022]
By Ludwig Burger
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The world’s largest
dialysis company is seeking out kidney disease patients long before they
need the most acute form of care as it plans for growth of new drugs
that attack the condition’s causes early on.
For decades, Germany's Fresenius Medical Care (FMC) has been the biggest
player in the $50 billion U.S. market providing dialysis and related
machines that help filter out blood toxins for people whose kidneys have
failed to function.
The company’s 17.6 billion euros ($17.6 billion) in annual revenue has
been sustained for decades by high rates of obesity and diabetes, which
contribute to kidney damage.
But the dialysis market is changing as new medications have been shown
to dramatically improve the conditions that lead to kidney failure.
FMC anticipates that the introduction of these drugs could be a drag on
its patient population growth for at least some years. To diversify its
revenue base it is pushing to expand beyond its core dialysis business
into the care of earlier stage kidney disease.
The new drugs include AstraZeneca's Farxiga diabetes pill that also
delivers benefits for non-diabetics as an approved treatment to slow
chronic kidney disease (CKD).
Germany’s Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly's Jardiance diabetes drug
is expected to be used for the same purpose, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy
injection offers a new treatment option for obesity. Other similar new
treatments such as Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro are also expected to offer new
weight loss options.
They all add pressure to the dialysis industry which faces rising costs
and a temporary shrinking of its patient pool, particularly in the
United States.
More than 15,000 people on dialysis are estimated to have died of COVID
in 2020 alone, according to the U.S. Renal Data System. A labour
shortage in the U.S. healthcare market has pushed wages higher and
forced FMC, which derives about 70% of its revenue from the United
States, and other dialysis providers to rely more on temporary staff.
A U.S. Supreme Court ruling has also shifted how much kidney care
coverage private insurers and the government must offer.
The pressures have pushed FMC's shares to a near 13-year low and
analysts expect the company’s adjusted net income to decline 14.5% to
870 million euros this year.
Parent company Fresenius SE has said a sale of FMC could not be ruled
out.
For now though, FMC is trying to reposition itself in the market and
sees hope for the company and patients alike: the new drugs, by slowing
the progression of disease, should prolong the lives of those who do
eventually need dialysis, keeping patients in FMC's care for longer,
Frank Maddux, FMC's global chief medical officer, told Reuters.
“In the short run, we'll see the impact of some delayed (chronic kidney
disease) progression but in the longer run, we're probably going to see
an expansion of the number of people with chronic kidney disease that
survive to live with the disease," said Maddux.
Sabastien Buch, a fund manager at Union Investment in Frankfurt,
Germany, which holds FMC shares, agreed that even if fewer people end up
needing dialysis, those who do are likely to live longer, thanks to the
new drugs.
"Patients that start dialysis in better health will not pass away after
four or five years, but will be part of a group that remain on therapy
for maybe seven or eight years, which are rather rare cases today," said
Buch.
DOCTORS BACK NEW DRUGS
FMC's expansion into earlier care includes services that will integrate
the new drugs, and the company says it plans to capitalize on a growing
trend in which health insurers reward care providers financially for
keeping patients in good health.
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Diabetes drug Farxiga (dapagliflozin) is
displayed at a pharmacy in Provo, Utah, U.S. May 28, 2020.
REUTERS/George Frey/File Photo
In March it purchased Cricket
Health, one of several U.S. companies that specialize in managing
kidney patient care.
FMC said the new kidney care market it is targeting is worth $120
billion. The company’s closest rival, Davita has said it is also
trying to expand in the market. It did not respond to requests for
comment.
Daniel Grigat, an analyst at brokerage Stifel, said the drugs could
reduce growth in FMC’s traditional dialysis business in the United
States and Europe by 20% in the next five to 10 years depending on
how quickly the use of drugs picks up.
However, growth in emerging markets, where the drugs are not
expected to be widely used, could offset half of the decline in U.S.
and European sales, he said.
FMC declined to give specific estimates about the drugs’ impact on
its sales.
While use of AstraZeneca’s Farxiga has been limited so far, Farxiga
and potentially Jardiance are expected to be used more widely as
their benefits become more appreciated and if U.S. insurers lower
barriers to use, doctors said.
It is not yet known to what extent these and the obesity drugs will
prevent people from needing dialysis altogether.
Drugs like Farxiga reduce the risk of progressing to kidney failure
about 40% of the time, said nephrologist Katherine Tuttle, a
professor at the University of Washington in Seattle. Current drugs
are less effective, and are also prescribed only to a minority of
patients, she said.
Anjay Rastogi, director of the University of California at Los
Angeles kidney health programme, said "every one" of his patients
who is eligible is being prescribed drugs like Farxiga or Jardiance
that are known as SLGT2 inhibitors.
LOWER COSTS
By delaying the onset of kidney failure, such drugs will decrease
health spending in the long run, says Phil McEwan, a predictive
modelling expert and chief executive of health economics consultancy
Heor Ltd. based in Cardiff, Wales.
Monthly U.S. spending per dialysis patient was over $14,000, or 33
times more than on those without end-stage renal disease, according
to University of Southern California research based on 2016 data.
Farxiga’s list price is around $500 per month, though it may be less
with discounts.
McEwan and Dan Lyons, who manages healthcare-focused funds at Janus
Henderson Investors in Denver, Colorado, said trial results expected
later this year on the cardiovascular benefits from losing weight
while taking Wegovy will likely boost prescriptions of that drug.
Wegovy has already been shown to help overweight people shed 35
pounds or more.
"The growth rate in dialysis patients is probably not what was
anticipated 10 years ago when we didn't see these drugs," said FMC's
Maddux. "We saw a steeper curve than what we now think it probably
will be."
($1 = 1.0188 euros)
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Additional reporting by Deena Beasley
in Los Angeles; Editing by Caroline Humer and Susan Fenton)
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