How GSK plans to replenish its depleted medicine cabinet
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[March 15, 2023]
By Maggie Fick
STEVENAGE, England (Reuters) - GSK's chief scientist says an overhaul of
the drugmaker's R&D unit has begun delivering results - citing an RSV
vaccine and promising hepatitis B and asthma treatments - and pledged a
tighter focus than his predecessor on infectious disease and HIV.
Tony Wood only took the helm of R&D last August. But in an interview
with Reuters he said he had worked closely since 2018 with his
predecessor Hal Barron to drive a culture shift that Chief Executive
Emma Walmsley had said was needed to improve performance after her
appointment in 2017.
Wood highlighted two changes they pushed through in the department's
operations: scientists are now encouraged to terminate research projects
months earlier if they are failing, and decision-making has been
simplified on issues like development plans for drugs in late-stage
trials, to minimize delays.
He also said that investments under Barron, such as a research
partnership with the University of California using CRISPR gene-editing
technology, had sharpened GSK's focus on using genetic evidence in drug
discovery. He cited the company's own research findings that medicines
with so-called "genetic validation" are nearly two times as likely to go
from clinical trials to market than those without it.
Today, he said, some 70% of the drugs in the company's development
pipeline are "genetically validated", compared with 20% in 2017 before
the R&D overhaul began.
In a major departure from his predecessor, however, Wood said he is
de-emphasizing R&D in oncology.
"Hal talked a lot about oncology. I’ll talk less about it," he said,
specifying that the R&D focus is now firmly on infectious disease and
HIV.
The company sold its marketed cancer drugs to Novartis in 2015 and under
Barron's leadership of R&D, sought to rebuild an oncology business, in
part through deals like the $5.1 billion purchase in 2019 of U.S.
biopharma firm Tesaro.
GSK has since suffered a series of clinical trial setbacks in its cancer
drugs portfolio, most recently last year involving ovarian cancer drug
Zejula and blood cancer drug Blenrep. In the case of Zejula, GSK said it
would limit use of the drug as a second treatment option in consultation
with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and in line with data
on the broader class of therapies that indicated the drugs could have a
detrimental effect on survival rates in such patients.
The foray into oncology contributed to negative comparisons by the
market to British peer AstraZeneca, which has built up a strong oncology
portfolio.
Barron, who left GSK to lead U.S. biotech start-up Altos Labs but took a
seat on GSK's board, declined an interview request for this story.
Wood said the R&D team had narrowed its work in oncology to developing
treatments for people with advanced states of cancer who are
unresponsive to other treatments. He cited ongoing trials for alternate
uses for its PD-1 inhibitor drug Jemperli, which is currently approved
in the United States and Europe for use on certain types of endometrial
cancer.
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Senior Scientist Alice Rockliffe works
with a robot, the Cellular Automated Screening Platform, which runs
cell-based screening assays, at the GSK Research and Development
centre in Stevenage, Britain, February 21, 2023. REUTERS/Anna Gordon
TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
BLOCKBUSTER POTENTIAL
Analysts say that despite a string of strong quarterly earnings,
lingering concerns over the company's drug pipeline reflect in GSK's
share price. It has fallen 20% since January 2020, compared with
Astra's stellar 42% rally, and in the so-called price-to-earnings
ratio for the stock, which fell from around 14 last June to below 10
- just over half the level of AstraZeneca.
One investor, whose health care-focused fund holds shares in
AstraZeneca but not in GSK, said the seemingly less-coherent
approach of GSK's R&D in recent years was a leading reason why the
market sees AstraZeneca as a more promising bet.
“AstraZeneca has momentum, so does Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk ... it’s
the long-term growth stories with exciting pipelines that drive
top-line growth, margin expansion and long-term returns," said the
investor. The investor said he does not see enough GSK drugs, either
on the market or in development, with potential to be a so-called
"blockbusters" with annual sales exceeding $1 billion. "Hopefully
they can achieve that through successful investment in the pipeline
over time."
But Wood said the overhauled R&D department has put GSK in a strong
position to meet growth targets.
That is crucial as GSK faces a combination of patent expiries and
declining revenues for its current bestsellers by the end of this
decade. Among the affected products are the Shingrix vaccine and
treatments containing HIV product dolutegravir, which last year made
up a combined 9 billion pounds ($10.94 billion) in sales, a third of
the company’s total.
GSK hopes its respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine could be its
next blockbuster, forecasting 3 billion pounds in future peak sales;
Credit Suisse analysts forecast 2.5 billion pounds. U.S. regulatory
approval on GSK's vaccine, and a rival vaccine developed by Pfizer,
is expected in May.
Wood said other potential bestsellers in late-stage development are
hepatitis B treatment bepirovirsen and severe asthma treatment
depemokimab, with the company forecasting both could be major growth
drivers by the end of the decade.
UBS analyst Michael Leuchten said Wood's claims about improvements
in the R&D unit thanks to better use of human genetics to identify
drug targets, and the use of AI/ML tools, were hard to evaluate.
"There are other companies doing this and the road to fruition is
long, whereas the replacement need in the pipeline is meaningful and
maybe more immediate."
($1 = 0.8414 pounds)
(Reporting by Maggie Fick; Editing by Susan Fenton)
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