Interesting stuff from GS this morning on SGP, Roche and Hep C treatments:
<Schering-Plough currently enjoys near 100% market share for the treatment of hepatitis C as its recently launched (October 2001) Peg Intron is the highest standard of care currently approved. However, we are expecting Roche to launch a formidable competitor, Pegasys, by the end of 2002. Last week during its R&D sessions, Roche updated the timing and profile of Pegasys. With competition expected later this year, we project 10% growth for SGP's franchise in 2003. Competitive threats in the Hep C business combined with the loss of Rx Claritin in December 2002 gives us concerns about the consensus earnings estimates for Schering-Plough. Details
INVESTMENT CONCLUSION: MAINTAIN MP ON SGP SHARES We are cautious on SGP shares and would not be adding to positions. The company's lower profitability level in 2003 will be driven by the expiration of Claritin's exclusivity, reflected in our below consensus earnings estimates ($1.57 GS vs. $1.67 FC). Although the OTC market for Claritin will help somewhat, the company still has to build a business in a new marketplace with lower margins.
One of the bright spots for Schering recently is its strong Hep C franchise. Peg-Intron will face new competition this year and is still supply constrained. We believe our current Intron franchise estimates of $2.5 billion in 2002 (up 75%) and $2.8 billion in 2003 (up 10% and up from $1.4 billion in 2001) reflect an optimistic scenario for Schering and could face downwards pressure if Roche's Pegasys takes significant market share.
KEY COMPETITIVE POINTS FOR PEGASYS INCLUDE: -Viral responses seem similar -Single dose, not weight based dosing -Pre-mixed -Roche supplied ribavirin.
ROCHE R&D DAY: REITERATING TIMELINE FOR PEGASYS Last week Roche hosted R&D sessions in Germany for investors. Part of the event included an update concerning Roche's second generation hepatitis C product, Pegasys, which is currently registered with FDA for approval. The competitive profile of this market is extremely important for Schering as this franchise could represent 25% of total company sales this year and we are currently modeling this product line to be larger than the Claritin/Clarinex franchise in 2003. Additionally, the hepatitis C franchise is now one of Schering's few areas of strong prescription and sales growth.
SCHERING HAS HISTORICALLY DOMINATED THIS MARKET... While this upcoming competitive threat is legitimate, it should be noted that Schering-Plough currently, and has historically, dominated this market owing to its first mover advantage. Schering's most advanced treatment, Peg-Intron + ribavirin, is unequivocally the best treatment option on the market; patients waited for the product's approval throughout 2001 creating extra demand for the drug.
...BUT SUPPLY CONSTRAINTS COULD OPEN THE DOOR A CRACK The problem is that recently Peg-Intron has been limited by supply constraints as this complex biologic is not quickly produced. The manufacturing yield should increase this year, but if any patient backlog exists when Pegasys is approved, it could be to Roche's gain. Prescription trends indicate that the franchise is reaching a plateau, likely owing to limited supply.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM ROCHE R&D UPDATE -Roche continues to assert that it will manufacture its own version of ribavirin that does not violate intellectual property claims of other companies.
-Pegasys mono-therapy is currently registered with FDA and in May or June of this year combination data (Pegasys + ribavirin) will be filed. Roche's ribavirin data will be filed with the combo data at this time.
-If Roche only receives approval for mono-therapy (or legal challenges to ribavirin do not allow for a timely combination launch), Roche will launch Pegasys alone, since ribavirin is available in unbundled form in the US.
-According to Roche, Pegasys may have a stronger effect in patients with the Type 1 genotype (generally tougher to treat).
-Roche has not completed large scale head-to-head trials with Pegasys and Peg-Intron, citing a likely trial time of 2 years as a rate limiting factor.
-We could expect to see combination data for Pegasys and ribavirin at the AASLD meeting in Boston this November.
-Roche is also studying Pegasys in patients with HCV-HIV co-infection and specifically in African Americans with hepatitis C (historically a difficult to treat patient population.)
-Phase I trials with Pegasys + levovirin are on track. According to Roche, levovirin might offer a better adverse event profile than ribavirin especially with regard to anemia and mutagenicity.
HEPATITIS C BACKGROUND The disease is rapidly becoming a pandemic with an estimated 4.1-6.9 million patients infected in the US and 170 million patients infected worldwide. Treatment has improved with sustained-release products and add- on antivirals to levels so great that many patients were withheld from therapy until Schering-Plough's launch of Peg-Intron and ribavirin (Rebetol) together (October 3 launch).
DISEASE OVERVIEW Hepatitis C builds slowly toward liver failure and cancer, often without symptoms. The discovery of hepatitis C as a distinct disease is a relatively recent phenomenon: Prior to 1989, hepatitis C was known as non- A, non-B hepatitis. Transmission of hepatitis C is primarily through blood contact, usually through tainted blood products or by sharing contaminated needles, although sexual transmission and transmission from mother to newborn seems to be rarer occurrences.
Severe disease is rare, but silent progression leads to very poor outcomes. Progression of hepatitis C tends to be milder than hepatitis B during the acute phase but tends to become chronic more frequently. In general, the older a person is when he or she contracts hepatitis C, the worse the organ damage.
Additionally, alcohol, co-infection with hepatitis B and a poor immune status are significant contributors to cirrhosis. Hepatic failure in acute hepatitis C is relatively rare. The mean time from exposure to cirrhosis is 20.6 years. Mean time from exposure to liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma) is 28.3 years (as compared with 50 years in hepatitis B). Most but not all cases of liver cancer are preceded by cirrhosis.
INTERFERON TREATMENT OF HEPATITIS C The interferon franchise has been built on several cycles of innovation, with pegylated (long-duration) interferon and ribavirin the new standard of care. The early and sustained response rates have meaningfully improved over the years.
Interferon, the first treatment for hepatitis, needed improving. Interferons bind to receptors on target immune cells, inducing a wide variety of chemical responses and immunomodulation. Treatment of chronic hepatitis C patients elicited between 11% and 50% SVR (sustained viral response) rates, also dose dependent. The label for Intron A claims a 12% SVR in chronic hepatitis C with 48 weeks of therapy. Almost all treated patients complained of 'flu-like' symptoms with many complaining of other problems such as itching, rashes, diarrhea, and weight loss. The psychiatric effects of interferon are especially debilitating and include depression and irritability.
RECENT TREATMENT INNOVATIONS -Adding an antiviral boosts the response of an interferon. Ribavirin is an antiviral agent with activity against a broad range of both RNA and DNA viruses. Mode of action is unknown and mono-therapy with ribavirin is not successful in producing SVRs. In naive patients, treatment with ribavirin and interferon-a induced SVRs in 43%-60% of patients. When treating interferon-a relapse patients, SVRs of 75%-90% were achieved. In interferon a non-responders, SVR rates of 13%-30% are seen. Ribavirin's main side effect is causing a dose-dependent mild hemolytic anemia. -Longer-duration therapy. The hepatitis C virus has a half-life of three hours with a daily production of 12 billion virons. Interferon-a has a half life of six hours meaning that tri-weekly dosing regimens do not put sustained pressure on the virus. Pegylation (attachment of a polyethylene glycol molecule) of interferon is an attempt to increase the half-life and put sustained pressure on the virus. Pegylated interferon has a half-life of 72 hours and Phase III studies with ribavirin show a dramatic improvement over previous treatments with 56% SVRs for chronic patients.
-Rebetol and Peg-Intron plus Rebetol. On July 2001, Rebetol was approved for sale as a stand-alone product (previously it could only be sold together with Intron A). Because physicians were awaiting this approval, the treatment of many patients was being stalled until they could be placed on Peg-Intron plus Rebetol.>
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