US regulators reject Sanofi’s MS treatment

Posted: Published on December 30th, 2013

This post was added by Dr Simmons

The FDA ruling could impact the value of Sanofi's Genzyme takeover, since the latter's shareholders had received so-called contingent value rights (CVRs) entitling them to future payments of up to $14 a share if certain goals were met.

Sanofi said on Monday it did not expect to meet the CVR milestone of U.S. approval for Lemtrada by the end of March. Other milestones are related to the drug's sales and would likely be hard to reach without the U.S. market.

Analysts on average had expected Lemtrada to generate annual sales of $707 million by 2018, according to forecasts compiled by Thomson Reuters.

"Genzyme's takeover was about catching up in biologics, having a greater footprint in the United States, and also largely for Lemtrada,'' said Eric Le Berrigaud, analyst at Bryan Garnier & Co. "This is unquestionably a setback, as without a U.S. market such a product doesn't have the same potential.''

Costly Process

The brokerage, which had forecast peak Lemtrada sales of $400 million in the United States, said it was scrapping the U.S. market from its forecasts. It argued it would take Sanofi at least three years to conduct the studies demanded by the FDA, and that, given an increasingly crowded market for MS drugs, it could opt out of what could be a lengthy and costly process.

But Renaud Murail, a fund manager at Barclays Bourse, said Monday's development was no big surprise for investors who had already factored in the risk of U.S. rejection. "Genzyme remains Sanofi's gem and this is only a half-defeat,'' he said.

A Sanofi spokesman said it was reviewing the FDA letter and evaluating its next steps, including the appeal timeline.

Genzyme chief David Meeker said: "We strongly believe that the clinical development program, which was designed to demonstrate how Lemtrada compares against an active comparator as opposed to placebo, provides robust evidence of efficacy and a favorable benefit-risk profile.''

The CVRs, which fell 7.6 percent to 82 cents on Friday, had slumped as low as 46 cents in November following a review by an advisory panel to the FDA which raised questions over the design of the clinical trial and Lemtrada's potential to cause cancer and other serious conditions.

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US regulators reject Sanofi's MS treatment

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