HIV Protease Drug Stocks Plummet As Potential New Therapy Emerges
Dow Jones Online News, Tuesday, June 30, 1998 at 19:05
NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- Shares of companies that make protease-inhibitor drugs to treat HIV patients plummeted Tuesday in the wake of a potential new therapy. A report in Tuesday's edition of The Wall Street Journal said researchers at the 12th World AIDS Conference in Geneva unveiled a combination drug therapy that could change the way HIV infections are treated. The therapy, built around an unapproved drug called Sustiva from DuPont Co. (DD), would reduce the number of HIV-fighting pills patients have to take to three a day from 10, the Journal reported. "If the new research holds up, many AIDS physicians and activists here believe it will be possible to treat people with HIV without using the so-called protease drugs that revolutionized treatment of the disease just two years ago," the article said. Potential competition to the companies that make and market protease drugs drove their shares downward Tuesday, several industry experts said. "We've known for a long time that there would be new competition for these protease inhibitors and it looks like today is the first day the market is realizing it," said Dr. Charles Engelberg, an analyst with AmeriCal Securities. Vector Securities International Inc. analyst Michael King, who is attending the AIDS Conference in Geneva, said the stock drop is an overreaction. "The death of protease inhibitors has been wildly exaggerated," King said, adding that he doesn't expect patients to stop taking protease inhibitors if Sustiva were approved. NationsBanc Montgomery Securities Inc. analyst David Crossen agreed, noting that while the news raises the possibility of using a nonprotease combination to treat HIV, this wouldn't eliminate protease usage altogether. The growth rate for protease drugs, however, could slow, which could affect the profits of companies that market them, he said. Agouron Pharmaceuticals Inc. (AGPH) is one such company. With a market share of about 34% in the protease-inhibitor industry, the La Jolla, Calif., biotechnology concern's shares were hit hard Tuesday, losing as much as 14% before closing at $30.313, down $3.63, or 9.2%, on Nasdaq volume of about 3.2 million shares, which was five times the daily average of about 653,000 shares. Cross said he downgraded Agouron, whose main product is Viracept, to "hold" last year in anticipation of increased competition in the protease-inhibitor market. Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. (VRTX) took an even worse hit, plunging as low as $21.50, compared with its previous 52-week low of $25.25, in December. The stock closed at $22.50, down $5.125, or 19%, on Nasdaq volume of about 3.9 million. The average daily volume is about 220,000 shares. Vertex's lead compound, amprenavir, is an HIV protease inhibitor making its way through the final stages of clinical development. The Cambridge, Mass., company's development and marketing partner for amprenavir is Glaxo Wellcome PLC (GLX). Crossen said Vertex's latecomer status in the industry - its drug hasn't yet been approved - makes the implications for the company "more severe." The potential new HIV therapy Sustiva can be taken as one pill once a day, the Journal reported. Researchers say the data show that a once-daily Sustiva pill used with a new twice-a-day pill combining two older drugs - AZT and 3TC from Glaxo Wellcome - can counter HIV as well or better than AIDS "drug cocktails" that requre 10 to 20 pills daily. NationsBanc's Crossen said there is a lot of resistance appearing in patients taking combination therapy. "Protease inhibitors are not the miracle drug," he said. The Journal article said there are researchers who say that because Sustiva works differently than the protease drugs, the new combination therapy may prove a much-needed alternative for some people who have developed protease resistance. But Vector Securities' King maintained it's premature to say exactly what Sustiva's role will be in the industry. Other biotechnolgy stocks that were down Tuesday were Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD), which has a potential HIV inhibitor Preveon. The shares closed at $32.63, down $3.63, or 8.7%. Biochem Pharma Inc. (BCHE) also closed lower in the day's session, at $26.50, down 50 cents, or 1.9%. - Melanie Trottman 201-938-5260 Copyright (c) 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Companies or Securities discussed in this article: |