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Biotech / Medical : PFE (Pfizer) How high will it go? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ibexx who wrote (6590)12/31/1998 6:38:00 PM
From: BigKNY3  Respond to of 9523
 
Pfizer's Viagra Requires Care in Prescribing, Heart Groups Say

Washington, Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Doctors should carefully evaluate heart patients before prescribing Pfizer Inc.'s top- selling impotence drug Viagra, two medical associations said in formal recommendations to doctors.

The American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology guidelines will appear in the two organizations' respective journals in January. The strongest recommendation the two groups make is that patients taking heart medicines known as nitrates should not be prescribed Viagra -- a risk already well- known and listed in the Pfizer drug's label.

The recommendations also caution against prescribing Viagra to patients who have restricted blood flow to the heart, congestive heart failure, or who are taking several blood pressure medications or drugs that might prolong Viagra's action in the body.

While the recommendations are in line with precautions already publicized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and New York-based Pfizer, they mark the first formal expert guidance directed at doctors treating heart patients, the groups said.

''We formulated these recommendations to appropriately caution, and not to unduly alarm, physicians who may wish to prescribe the drug to their patients with cardiovascular disease,'' said Melvin Cheitlin, an emeritus professor from the University of California at San Francisco.

Last month, the FDA added new warnings to ensure the safe use of Viagra, which saw unprecedented demand in its first three months on the market. As men rushed to pharmacies to get Viagra, the FDA received reports of misuse and deaths among people who had taken the drug.

Both the FDA and Pfizer have repeatedly said the drug is safe and effective when used as prescribed.

Separately, a study published in the upcoming issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology found that cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins, which include Warner- Lambert Co.'s Lipitor and have multibillion dollar yearly sales, may not help all heart attack patients.

A previous study known as CARE found that patients who had suffered a heart attack and were given Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.'s statin Pravachol were 24 percent less likely to have another heart attack or die than patients given a placebo. When analyzing a subset of patients who already had low levels of the so-called bad LDL cholesterol, however, researchers found that Pravachol didn't make a significant difference.

The analysis was conducted by scientists from various universities and research centers around the U.S. and Canada. It was supported by a grant from Bristol-Myers.



To: Ibexx who wrote (6590)12/31/1998 6:44:00 PM
From: BigKNY3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9523
 
Monsanto Painkiller Approved; Label to Bear Warning

Washington, Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Monsanto Co. won U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval to sell the first drug in a new class of painkillers, but won't be allowed to make the safety claims it hoped for.

The FDA, in approving the drug Celebrex for arthritis pain, said the label needs to carry standard warnings about potential side effects including ulcers and bleeding. That's a blow to Monsanto's plans to market the drug as a safer alternative to current painkillers.

''That is not good news at all,'' said Hemant Shah, an independent drug-industry analyst. ''If you don't have a side effect advantage, why would anybody use a product that is 10 to 20 times more expensive?''

Still, the approval puts Monsanto's Searle pharmaceutical unit months ahead of its nearest competitor, Merck and Co., in introducing the first of the new painkillers, known as Cox-2 inhibitors. The Cox-2 drugs were expected to achieve annual sales of as much as $5 billion if their makers could claim a safety advantage over existing painkillers.

Shares of St. Louis-based Monsanto rose 1 3/16 to close at 47 1/2, after rising as high as 50 before the FDA announcement. Shares of marketing partner Pfizer Inc., the New York-based maker of the impotence pill Viagra, fell 1 1/8 to 125. Merck shares fell 1 5/16 to 147 1/2.

While the labeling is a disappointment for Monsanto, the FDA clearance to market the drug is still a plus for the company, said Ira Loss, an analyst with HSBC Washington Analysis.

''I think the game is whether or not people are going to use this drug, and in that, I think they are going to be big winners. People will use this drug,'' he said.

Warning Label

Like existing painkillers, Celebrex will carry a warning about ulcers and bleeding, noting that such problems occur in about 2 percent to 4 percent of patients treated for a year. The Celebrex label, however, will say it's ''unclear'' whether that rate will apply to patients who use Celebrex.

The label cites company research that shows only 0.04 percent of patients who took Celebrex for six months or less experienced ''significant'' gastrointestinal bleeding.

The company originally wanted to be able to sell the drug without any warning label, and still hopes to do so.

''We certainly expect to be able to get rid of that'' warning label eventually, said Al Heller, chief operating officer for Searle.

Heller said the label will explain how the drug works and will say it doesn't have an effect on tiny blood cells known as platelets which are important to the body's natural clotting process. Current drugs can affect platelets and cause bleeding.

Searle plans to introduce Celebrex in 16 countries in 1999 and in 35 countries by 2001, Richard De Schutter, CEO of Searle and vice chairman of Monsanto, told analysts earlier this month.

FDA Questions

FDA officials granted the drug a quicker-than-normal review because they thought the drug could have important safety advantages. At this point, however, the agency can't be sure that's true and will carefully monitor Searle's promotions, said Murray Lumpkin, deputy director in the FDA's drug branch.

If Searle were to claim ''this is definitively a safer product'' than other painkillers, ''we would come back and say you haven't shown that,'' Lumpkin said.

Searle will be allowed to describe studies using an endoscope, a device that allows doctors to look into patients' stomachs, that suggest a safety advantage for Celebrex. The company won't be able to make a specific safety advantage claim, however, because the FDA isn't sure how those benefits seen on endoscopes translate into reductions in actual events such as ulcers and bleeding, Lumpkin said.

''The question is what kind of clinical significance or clinical meaning does that data have?'' he said.

Worth the Money?

Monsanto may also face a challenge convincing health insurers that its drug has enough benefits to warrant a higher price than the generally cheap alternatives. Monsanto's Foster said the drug will offer important benefits and that it will be ''priced comparable'' to the current nonsteroidal anti- inflammatory drugs, or NSAIDS. These include Roche Holding AG's Toradol, American Home Products Corp.'s Orudis and SmithKline Beecham Plc's Relafen.

Monsanto will discuss the drug's price on Monday, Heller said.

One large health insurer, WellPoint Health Networks Inc., will limit its coverage of Cox-2 drugs largely to higher-risk patients, such as people over 65, rheumatoid arthritis patients and those who have already had a bad reaction to other painkillers.

''The Cox-2s are new. They will have a role in therapy, but their clear role is still to be defined,'' said Robert Seidman, vice president for pharmacy at Blue Cross of California, a WellPoint subsidiary.

Monsanto Strategy

Celebrex is a key part of Monsanto's bid to transform itself from a leading chemical company into a pharmaceutical powerhouse.

The company already has a head start on Merck in the race to market the first Cox-2 drug. If Merck has to undergo an FDA advisory panel meeting for its competing drug Vioxx as expected, it probably won't do so until April.

Searle, which filed for FDA approval five or six months ahead of Merck, won a favorable recommendation from an FDA panel on Dec. 1. In addition, Searle told the panel that new research shows its drug can work when taken once a day, matching an advantage Merck had claimed for Vioxx.

Merck and Searle are vying for shares of the estimated $8 billion arthritis painkiller market now controlled by NSAIDS painkillers.

How It Works

The drugs work by interfering with the production of an enzyme, cyclooxygenase-2, linked to pain and swelling. Unlike existing painkillers, a Cox-2 inhibitor doesn't suppress a related enzyme, Cox-1, that helps protect the stomach from its own acid.

As a result, researchers say, the Cox-2 drugs should offer the same benefits as NSAIDS with fewer side effects such as bleeding and ulcers for people who take pain medication for chronic conditions such as arthritis.



To: Ibexx who wrote (6590)1/3/1999 3:26:00 PM
From: Ibexx  Respond to of 9523
 
Thread,

Patent expiration dates for major pharmaceutical companies:
_____

labpuppy.com

Please note that Cardura (patent to expire in 2000) is relatively a minor product compared with the 3 biggies of Merck, whose patents are to expire within the next 2-3 years.

Ibexx



To: Ibexx who wrote (6590)1/3/1999 3:36:00 PM
From: Ibexx  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9523
 
Thread,

A "formal" victory for Pfizer....Kaiser's request denied by CA agency:

biz.yahoo.com

Ibexx