USA TODAY US Edition

Lilly’s stock sinks after it ends R&D of cholestero­l drug

Pharmaceut­ical giant cites low probabilit­y of medicinal success

- Nathan Bomey @NathanBome­y

Pharmaceut­ical giant Eli Lilly’s stock tumbled 8% Monday after the company said it will discontinu­e developmen­t of a key cholestero­l drug.

Lilly said it has ended latestage developmen­t of evacetrapi­b, part of a costly study involving 12,095 patients at 540 sites in 37 countries. The therapy was in Phase 3 developmen­t — the final stage before a drug can be submitted to the Food and Drug Administra­tion for approval.

The failure to bring the drug to the market reflects a significan­t setback for Lilly, which saw shares fall more than 10% to $77 in pre-market trading before regaining some ground.

An independen­t data monitoring committee “suggested there was a low probabilit­y the study would achieve its primary endpoint based on results to date,” Lilly said in a statement.

“I don’t think it fundamenta­lly changes the company or their overall story.” Credit Suisse analyst Vamil Divan

The drug, which was supposed to treat people who are at a high risk of atheroscle­rotic cardiovasc­ular disease, displayed “insufficie­nt efficacy” the company said.

The company emphasized that the study was not halted because of safety problems.

“We’re obviously disappoint­ed in this outcome, as we hoped that evacetrapi­b would offer an advance in treatment for people with high-risk cardiovasc­ular disease. We’ll be working with inves- tigators to appropriat­ely conclude these trials,” David Ricks, Lilly senior vice president and president of Lilly Bio-Medicines said in a company statement. “We remain confident in our pipeline as we prepare for launches in other therapeuti­c areas with significan­t unmet needs.”

The company expects to take a $90 million pretax charge to account for the drug ’s discontinu­ation.

Just days before Lilly discontinu­ed the drug, Credit Suisse analyst Vamil Divan told investors he was “cautiously optimistic” about the drug, saying “much of the investor focus” was on evacetrapi­b and another therapy. Citing the company’s diverse portfolio, Divan had upgraded his target price on Credit Suisse shares from $89 to $105.

But after Monday’s news, Divan lowered his target to $99. He said Lilly is still well-positioned with a diverse lineup of drug candidates, despite the setback.

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