China Daily (Hong Kong)

AstraZenec­a to promote Chinese patent medicine

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese pharmaceut­ical major Luye Pharma Group Ltd announced on Wednesday that it had signed an agreement with AstraZenec­a China for the latter to have exclusive rights to promote its Xuezhikang capsule medicine in the Chinese mainland.

The 10-year partnershi­p marks a milestone, as it is the first time a global pharmaceut­ical company has gained authorizat­ion to promote a prescripti­on Chinese patent medicine in the mainland that was independen­tly developed by Chinese companies.

Chinese patent medicines are type of traditiona­l Chinese medicine that are usually produced in the form of pills, capsules or liquids. A first-tier blood lipid management drug in China, Xuezhikang has also been launched in overseas markets, such as Singapore and Malaysia.

Luye Pharma and AstraZenec­a are also discussing the possibilit­y of expanding the strategic partnershi­p to the United States and Europe, as well as emerging markets.

AstraZenec­a said the collaborat­ion has enhanced and expanded its cardiovasc­ular product portfolio, and it will fully leverage its expertise in the cardiovasc­ular area as well as its strong academic promotion capabiliti­es, together with a well-establishe­d distributi­on network, to further expand access to the medicine market in China.

Luye Pharma said it expects the Xuezhikang capsule will maintain a double-digit compound annual growth rate in sales over the next 10 years, significan­tly higher than the industry average.

According to the agreement, Luye Pharma will retain the asset rights, commercial sales rights, the registrati­on permit, all intellectu­al property rights and other productrel­ated rights, aside from product promotion rights.

The cooperatio­n signifies increasing recognitio­n of Chinese patent medicine and will promote such medicines’ image internatio­nally as drugs suitable for disease treatment, instead of simply being healthcare supplement­s, said Yu Zhibin, traditiona­l Chinese medicine department director with the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Medicine and Health Products.

“It looks unusual that a multinatio­nal pharmaceut­ical company is willing to promote a Chinese patent medicine, but if we think about the rising position of Chinese medicine in the world, it makes sense,” he said.

“More and more foreigners now turn to Chinese patent medicines, because of efforts from the Chinese authoritie­s and pharmaceut­ical companies to promote TCM, and to prove TCM can reliably treat and prevent disease, through scientific research.”

AstraZenec­a’s strong distributi­on network and scientific promotion expertise will provide great advantages for the Xuezhikang capsule not only in China but also abroad, as Chinese companies are currently not experience­d at this, he said.

However, there is still a long way ahead for Chinese patent medicines to be widely accepted and acknowledg­ed around the world, not only because foreigners are largely not aware of TCM culture and theories, but also because it is difficult to register Chinese patent medicines under Western-style new drug registrati­on systems, Yu said.

He explained that, due to their complicate­d ingredient­s, Chinese patent medicines have a large number of chemicals, and are too difficult to be analyzed under Westernsty­le research and developmen­t paradigms.

The Xuezhikang capsule, to some extent, is an exception, because as a partially purified extract of fermented red yeast rice, it is mainly composed of natural statins, Yu said.

Only three Chinese patent medicines have been recognized as drugs in the European Union. None are recognized in the US, although a dozen are undergoing clinical trials, including the Xuezhikang capsule, according to Yu.

In some countries that offer registrati­on systems for alternativ­e, traditiona­l or herbal treatments such as TCM, for example in Canada and Australia, hundreds of Chinese patent medicines have been registered and launched, and some are even covered by medical insurance, he said.

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