Albuquerque Journal

Indian company ready to offer cheap HIV drugs

Patents are set to expire and generics will likely take over

- BY ARI ALTSTEDTER BLOOMBERG

Among the coconut plantation­s and beaches of South India, a factory the size of 35 football fields is preparing to churn out billions of generic pills for HIV patients and flood the United States market with the low-cost copycat medicines.

U.S. patents on key components for some important HIV therapies are poised to expire starting in December and Laurus Labs — the Hyderabad, India-based company which owns the facility — is gearing up to cash in.

Laurus is one of the world’s biggest suppliers of ingredient­s used in antiretrov­irals, thanks to novel chemistry that delivers cheaper production costs than anyone else. Now, its chief executive officer, Satyanaray­ana Chava, wants to use the same strategy selling his own finished drugs in the U.S. and Europe. He predicts some generics that Laurus produces will eventually sell for 90 percent less than branded HIV drugs in the U.S., slashing expenditur­es for a disease that’s among the costliest for many insurers.

“The savings for U.S. payers will be so huge when these generic combinatio­n drugs are available in the U.S.,” he said in an interview at the factory outside the Southern Indian city of Visakhapat­nam. Payers will save “billions of dollars,” he said.

The patent expiries are starting this month when Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.’s Sustiva loses protection. Gilead Sciences’s Viread follows next month. Neither company responded to requests for comment.

For generic manufactur­ers like Laurus, the U.S. market is alluring. With 1.1 million people infected with HIV in the U.S., and many of them living longer thanks to treatment, HIV drugs have become an $18.8 billion business for the pharmaceut­ical industry there, according to data provider IQVIA.

Part of that spending is due to the high cost of the medicines. For

instance, a combinatio­n of Viread, Sustiva and a third drug sold in pill form under the brand name of Atripla has an average wholesale price of almost $37,000 per person annually, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

But in the developing world the same combinatio­n can cost as little as $100 per person annually after years of brutal competitio­n between generic manufactur­ers drove prices down, according to Medecins Sans Frontières. Though Laurus doesn’t yet make the actual pills those patients take, it’s become a dominant supplier of the key ingredient­s that make them work.

The best way to fight HIV is with a combinatio­n of different drugs, and because Viread and Sustiva form key parts of some of the most effective combinatio­ns, the inclusion of generic versions of these chemicals could bring down the cost of the whole treatment.

One analysis cited by the Department of Health found that replacing a three-medicine, branded combinatio­n with multiple pills, including a generic version of Sustiva, could save the U.S. $900 million its first year.

In the U.S., Laurus will be going up against much larger companies, like Teva Pharmaceut­ical Industries — the world’s biggest generic drug company — which will beat it to market on generic Viread and so be the first to slash prices and lock down customers.

Other generic companies, both from India and elsewhere, many of whom are customers of Laurus, are expected to enter the market, too.

Meanwhile, the companies that hold the original patents, like Foster City, Calif.-based Gilead, have also been successful at switching patients to their newer therapies to limit the impact of generic competitio­n on the old ones, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Asthika Goonewarde­ne.

He doesn’t predict a big impact from generic competitio­n to the $2.6 billion Gilead gets from HIV drugs.

Cost savings that were an advantage in the developing world may also prove less useful in a less price-sensitive market like the U.S. Between government programs providing treatment for the uninsured and drug company funded ones helping the insured with their co-pays, HIV patients in the U.S. are often sheltered from the full cost of their medicines.

So patients themselves may have little incentive to switch to cheaper alternativ­es, said Tim Horn, the New York-based deputy executive director of Treatment Action Group, an AIDS policy think tank. Newer drugs offer medical advantages to the ones going off patent, including fewer side effects, and the switch from one daily brand name pill to a mix of two or three may feel like a step back for many, he said.

Still, Horn says private and public insurers, who pay the greater part of the full sticker price, and then spread those costs through the system in the form of higher premiums and health care costs, are likely to push for generics.

For his part, Chava maintains he will eventually be able to undercut bigger rivals like Teva on price and the magnitude of savings offered to insurers from generics will prove irresistib­le — particular­ly as more components of the older combinatio­ns go off patent in the next three years.

“We believe we’ll be able to bring cost-effective generic alternativ­es to the U.S. market,” he said. “We have the scale.”

That willingnes­s to compete on cost has made Laurus a bright spot in India’s pharmaceut­ical industry in a year when the U.S. generics market has been rocked by a protracted price war. Laurus’s stock has risen about 22 percent since its public market debut in 2016. Analysts are forecastin­g that its revenue will rise to about $339 million in the current fiscal year from $279 million in the previous year.

Laurus controls about 66 percent of the global market for efavirenz, the chemical name for Bristol-Myers Squibb’s Sustiva, and 33 percent for tenofovir, the chemical name for Gilead’s Viread, according to a report earlier this year by investment bank Jefferies Group.

A compact man of 54 with a trim mustache and rimless glasses, CEO Chava laughs enthusiast­ically as he recounts the scientific discoverie­s that helped give Laurus its edge. A chemist by training, he left his job as a C-suite executive at another Indian pharma company to found Laurus in 2005.

 ?? SARA HYLTON/BLOOMBERG ?? Containers move along a conveyor on the packaging line for metformin pills at a Laurus Labs pharmaceut­ical plant based in Visakhapat­nam, India, in November.
SARA HYLTON/BLOOMBERG Containers move along a conveyor on the packaging line for metformin pills at a Laurus Labs pharmaceut­ical plant based in Visakhapat­nam, India, in November.

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