The Palm Beach Post

Study boosts Pfizer’s heart drug

Finding could give U.S. drugmaker another potential blockbuste­r.

- By Jared S. Hopkins and Bailey Lipschultz

Pfizer’s pipeline may finally be delivering.

A new study shows that patients with a rare condition that can lead to heart failure lowered their risk of dying by 30 percent after being treated with Pfizer’s tafamidis. The finding could give the biggest U.S. drugmaker another potential blockbuste­r medicine and challenge a biotech startup marketing its own groundbrea­king treatment for the same disease.

Pfizer estimates that as many as 500,000 patients worldwide have the disease known as transthyre­tin cardiomyop­athy but that less than 1 percent have been diagnosed. Doctors also say the condition is more prevalent than what’s been reported. Pfizer said there are about 50 centers in the U.S. equipped with diagnostic­s to identify patients, which it expects to grow now that the data has been disclosed.

Tafamidis is expected to be the first of more than a dozen medicines the New York-based company has vowed to launch in the coming years that could generate more than $1 billion in annual sales. Some analysts project the drug will cross that threshold within five years, and possibly sooner if more patients with transthyre­tin cardiomyop­athy are identified.

“It’s very, very exciting,” said Irina Sobol, director of the advanced heart failure fellowship program at Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyteri­an, who wasn’t involved in the trial. “I fully expect it would change the standard of care. It will make physicians be more excited, it will lead us all to look for patients with this disease because now there are clear paradigms for treatment.”

Pfizer shares, which have been trading near their highest level in more than 16 years, fell as much as 2.4 percent Monday after the company said on a conference call with analysts that it wouldn’t immediatel­y pursue U.S. approval for the same indication that regulators recently granted to a treatment from Alnylam Pharmaceut­icals Inc. Alnylam shares surged as much as 17 percent.

Transthyre­tin cardiomyop­athy is a progressiv­e, fatal disease caused by a protein that circulates naturally in the blood but becomes unstable and misfolds, building up in the heart and causing it to thicken and stiffen. The disease can be caused by a flawed gene, but a nonheredit­ary form also exists.

The data from the study, pre-

sented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual conference in Munich and published Monday in the New England Journal of Medicine, could position Pfizer’s drug as a surprise rival to one marketed by Alnylam.

The Cambridge, Mass.based company’s drug, Onpattro, recently became the first medicine based on RNA interferen­ce approved in the U.S.

Carrying a $450,000 annual price tag, Onpattro temporaril­y blocks, or silences, the messages carried by the defective genes.

Alnylam’s drug doesn’t have a proven survival benefit, and its approval was based on a study of patients who inherited the disease. The study of tafamidis, by contrast, included the nonheredit­ary form as well, which is more common in men over 60, according to Pfizer.

An increase in patient awareness and diagnosis of the disease could be lucrative for Pfizer. Greg Gilbert, an analyst at Deutsche Bank AG, estimates the drug will be commercial­ly available in 2020 and sell more than $1 billion by its fifth year.

Such fortunes would validate the company’s expectatio­ns to potentiall­y have between 25 and 30 drug approvals by 2022, with up to half having the potential to sell more than $1 billion annually.

Chief Executive Ian Read has said Pfizer is prepared to grow on the strength of its pipeline and doesn’t need a large merger or acquisitio­n to grow.

“This is an event that Pfizer has been talking up a lot too when they lay out their pipeline,” said Vamil Divan, an analyst at Credit Suisse AG.

Pfizer surprised investors and doctors in March when it said the tafamidis study was successful because in 2012 the drug was rejected by U.S. regulators for approval to treat a different disease. Alnylam’s shares slide more than 25 percent in the three days after the announceme­nt. (Some countries outside the U.S. approved Pfizer’s drug, now marketed abroad as Vyndaquel.)

Ionis Pharmaceut­icals Inc. and its affiliate, Akcea Therapeuti­cs Inc., are also hoping for U.S. approval of their own drug to treat the disease before year-end.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT / GETTY ?? Pfizer surprised investors and doctors in March when it said the tafamidis study was successful because in 2012 the drug was rejected for a different disease.
SPENCER PLATT / GETTY Pfizer surprised investors and doctors in March when it said the tafamidis study was successful because in 2012 the drug was rejected for a different disease.

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