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Great News for Eisai and Biogen

Anonymous

Guest
Great news today on one of the four Alzheimer's compounds (2 Eisai and 2 Biogen) we're collaborating on with Biogen. Both stocks were up significantly.

Biogen Alzheimer's drug exceeds expectations
Meg Tirrell | @megtirrell
8 Hours Ago
CNBC.com

Biogen's stock surged Friday after the biotechnology company's experimental drug for Alzheimer's disease exceeded already high expectations in an early study.

The medicine, known as BIIB037, or aducanumab, showed both reductions in levels of the amyloid plaques in the brain associated with Alzheimer's, and a significant slowing of the disease's hallmark cognitive declines, Biogen reported at a conference in Nice, France.(Tweet This)

On one measure of cognition, known as CDR, for Clinical Dementia Rating, Biogen's drug showed a 71 percent reduction in declines on the highest dose. Analysts said they were looking for 20 percent to 30 percent reductions to qualify as a success.

"This is the first time an investigational drug for Alzheimer's disease has demonstrated a statistically significant reduction on amyloid plaque as well as a statistically significant slowing of clinical impairment in patients with prodromal or mild disease," Biogen Chief Medical Officer Dr. Al Sandrock said in a statement.

Read MoreBig Alzheimer's news from Biogen

The company said it's moving the drug into a late-stage study, with planned enrollment in the trial starting later this year. Even though there remains risks in the later stages of the drug's development, analysts expect that if all goes well, the drug could reach the market as early as 2018.

More than 5 million Americans are estimated to have Alzheimer's, a number that could triple by 2050, according to the Alzheimer's Association. It's the sixth-leading cause of death in the U.S.

Biogen's stock surged Friday after the biotechnology company's experimental drug for Alzheimer's disease exceeded already high expectations in an early study.

The medicine, known as BIIB037, or aducanumab, showed both reductions in levels of the amyloid plaques in the brain associated with Alzheimer's, and a significant slowing of the disease's hallmark cognitive declines, Biogen reported at a conference in Nice, France.(Tweet This)

On one measure of cognition, known as CDR, for Clinical Dementia Rating, Biogen's drug showed a 71 percent reduction in declines on the highest dose. Analysts said they were looking for 20 percent to 30 percent reductions to qualify as a success.

"This is the first time an investigational drug for Alzheimer's disease has demonstrated a statistically significant reduction on amyloid plaque as well as a statistically significant slowing of clinical impairment in patients with prodromal or mild disease," Biogen Chief Medical Officer Dr. Al Sandrock said in a statement.

Read MoreBig Alzheimer's news from Biogen

The company said it's moving the drug into a late-stage study, with planned enrollment in the trial starting later this year. Even though there remains risks in the later stages of the drug's development, analysts expect that if all goes well, the drug could reach the market as early as 2018.

More than 5 million Americans are estimated to have Alzheimer's, a number that could triple by 2050, according to the Alzheimer's Association. It's the sixth-leading cause of death in the U.S.

Biogen's drug was tested in patients at earlier stages of the disease, as previous studies indicated that's when drugs aiming to clear amyloid plaques may be most helpful.

"Reactions to the clinical data ranged from 'encouraging but still early' to 'a game-changer,'" Wells Fargo analyst Brian Abrahams wrote in a Friday research note from the conference in Nice. "Bottom line, physicians seem encouraged by BIIB037's benefit/risk."

Expectations were sky-high leading into Friday's presentation; Biogen shares had gained 40 percent since the company shocked investors in December with initial positive results from the study. It was in the first phase of clinical trials, and the study's primary goal was to assess safety. So the stock shot up when Biogen presented initial signs of efficacy as well.

Biogen shares were trading at $461.88 late Friday morning, up more than 6 percent. (Click here to get a real-time stock quote.)
Potential for $10 billion in annual sales

Three analysts raised their price targets on the stock on the data: Robert W. Baird's Chris Raymond increased his to $498 from $445; Cowen's Eric Schmidt upped his to $500 from $425; and Citi's Yaron Werber raised his to $512 from $410. Analysts say the drug could draw $10 billion in annual sales if successful.

The analysis Friday included data on 166 patients up to 54 weeks, Biogen said. It presented the results at the International Conference on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases and Related Neurological Disorders.

Analysts were most impressed by the drug's effects on cognition. Biogen reported results on two measures: CDR and MMSE, or the mini mental state exam. Both are used as a way for physicians to gauge memory loss and other aspects of dementia. On the MMSE scale, patients taking placebo declined an average of 3.14 at one year, Biogen said. That compared with a decline of 0.75 in the 3 milligram per kilogram arm, and 0.58 in the 10 milligram per kilogram, both statistically significant.

On the CDR scale, patients on placebo declined by an average of 2.04 at one year, compared with 0.59 for the 10 milligram per kilogram group, also statistically significant, Biogen said.

The company also tested doses of 1 and 6 milligrams per kilogram; it didn't say the lowest dose reached statistical significance, and the 6 milligram per kilogram dose group had only showed 30 weeks of data.

Read MoreThis fast food ban hasn't cut obesity

"The reduction in the level of cognitive decline was higher than we had expected, strongly dose dependent, and exceeded the 20 to 30 percent hurdle rate we had previously suggested might be meaningful," Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Geoff Porges wrote in a Friday research note.

Reductions in amyloid plaques in the brain were also strong, analysts said, and increased with higher doses of the drug. The correlation of plaque clearing and cognitive benefits is particularly important, "supporting the hypothesis that clearing amyloid more effectively can truly improve cognition/function," Wells Fargo's Abrahams said.

Safety was key as well, and at its higher doses, the medicine did show signals analysts highlighted as a potential concern. The drug was primarily associated with a side effect known as ARIA, or amyloid-related imaging abnormalities, related to removal of amyloid plaques from the brain. Biogen said it "demonstrated an acceptable safety and tolerability profile in this analysis," and that ARIA-E (associated with edema, or blood vessels becoming leaky as plaques are removed) generally was seen early in treatment and showed only mild symptoms.

"The majority of patients with ARIA-E continued treatment and did so at a lower dose," Biogen said.

The side effect was seen more in patients with a gene known as ApoE4, associated with Alzheimer's disease. On the highest, 10 milligram per kilogram dose, 55 percent of ApoE4 carriers developed ARIA-E, Biogen said, versus 17 percent for noncarriers. Of patients who experienced ARIA-E on that dose, those who were ApoE4 carriers discontinued at a rate of 35 percent. Among noncarriers, that rate was 8 percent, Biogen said.

The study also showed patients on the drug had headaches more frequently; 22 percent for those receiving aducanumab versus 5 percent on placebo.

"Bottom line, the data, in our view, are even better than we had hoped," Baird's Raymond wrote in a research note. They were "well worth the wait."
Meg TirrellReporter











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Eisai currently have no rights over BIIB037. They have options linked to the development of their in-house candidate BAN2401. By jumping from PhIb to PhIII Biogen have ensured that Eisai can only buy in post PhIII - at which point Eisai will have to pay the entire PhIII development costs + PhII milestone payments + additional costs. Biogen will book all sales and profits will be split between companies:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/no...anti-alzheimers-disease-treatments-2015-02-04

Seriously though, anyone who has an in-depth knowledge of the science (rather than the stock price of the respective companies) will tell you that BIIB037 is almost certain to fail at PhIII stage. The PhIb BIIB study was underpowered with potential flaws in patient cognitive state allocation at baseline. The placebo decline was higher than would normally be expected, making BIIB037 look better than it likely is. The ARIA AE was unacceptably high and may have unblinded the study. Data wasn't adjusted for multiple comparisons (as is the norm for a PhI) meaning that claims of statistical significance were invalid. Finally there's nothing in the target epitope or characteristics of BIIB037 which differentiate it from multiple failed amyloid mAb approaches (unlike BAN2401). The whole BIIB037 PhiB story is basically a PR spin exercise.
 












Thank you for some honest information. Stock price will re-adjust once the analysts start to dig into the details. Eisai screwed once again!

Actually Eisai did pretty well. The deal was only ever intended to help fund the ruinous development costs of the high-risk anti-amyloid Alzheimer's candidates BAN2401 and E2609 which Eisai couldn't afford. In terms of the BIIB candidates, I think Eisai were more interested in options on the BIIB tau immunisation program than BIIB037, which few expected to work long-term.

From BIIB's perspective they wanted a share of E2609 which, as a BACE inhibitor, is one of the final, untested anti-amyloid class of drugs in the clinic. Doubt they thought BIIB037 would work either.

Would be very expensive for Eisai to buy-in post PhIII if BIIB037 is successful, but not impossible. Profits would hugely outweigh costs. Problem is BIIB037 is very unlikely to pass PhIII. Conversely, Eisai take NO risk on that potential failure.

To summarise, Eisai got funding for internal high risk programs. At the same time they obtained an (expensive but still profitable) option to buy into BIIB037 on the slim chance of PhIII success. Looks win-win to me.

Don't forget that no-one has had any post Aricept/Memantine success in Alzheimer's disease. A focus on this area for the last decade-and-a-half of development has played a large part in Eisai's troubles. Eisai still has world-class knowledge in this field though. The BIIB deal wasn't just management desperation.
 




Oh yeah and I'm predicting early approval. 2018

Dumb ass...

Reuters; Mon Mar 23, 2015 12:51pm EDT

Biogen Chief Executive George Scangos says that going forward he will keep Biogen focused on developing drugs for some of the hardest-to-treat diseases. "Five years down the road, with some luck, we'll have an Alzheimer's drug that's getting approved,” Scangos told Reuters. "I hope we can transform the treatment of MS. By that time, we will have made substantial progress on ALS and other nerve degenerative diseases, spinal muscular atrophy in kids. All that stuff is on our plate," he said.

Do the math 5 years plus 2015=2020.
By then you have long been relieved of your duties here
 




Dumb ass...

Reuters; Mon Mar 23, 2015 12:51pm EDT

Biogen Chief Executive George Scangos says that going forward he will keep Biogen focused on developing drugs for some of the hardest-to-treat diseases. "Five years down the road, with some luck, we'll have an Alzheimer's drug that's getting approved,” Scangos told Reuters. "I hope we can transform the treatment of MS. By that time, we will have made substantial progress on ALS and other nerve degenerative diseases, spinal muscular atrophy in kids. All that stuff is on our plate," he said.

Do the math 5 years plus 2015=2020.
By then you have long been relieved of your duties here

Smart penis...

By then, I'll have stolen enough office supplies to retire in the Caymans.
 




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