Biogen leans on new Alzheimer’s drug to calm investor worries

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Biogen

Biogen leans on new Alzheimer’s drug to calm investor worries

By Manas Mishra

July 20 (Reuters) – Biogen Inc. (BIIB.O) on Wednesday tried to assuage investor worries by laying out a plan for its Alzheimer’s disease drug being developed with Eisai Co. Ltd. (4523.T) and promising to draw lessons from the setbacks to its treatment Aduhelm.

The new drug, lecanemab, is crucial for the growth of the drugmaker as it faces competition for several of its blockbuster drugs, including multiple sclerosis treatment Tecfidera.

Company executives said data from a trial of lecanemab is expected in the fall. Biogen and Eisai have filed for an accelerated approval and the U.S. regulator has set a January deadline.

“We’ll take learnings from Aduhelm as necessary and as where we can and we’ll resource (the launch) at each phase of its commercialization very gradually,” Chief Financial Officer Michael McDonnell said.

Biogen

A sign marks a Biogen facility in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. January 26, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo

Last year, Aduhelm became the first treatment for Alzheimer’s disease to be approved in the United States in decades, but Medicare, the government health plan for people over age 65, sharply curtailed its use on efficacy concerns.

Biogen in May had to significantly pull back the sale of Aduhelm, which generated $100,000 in the second quarter.

Since the approval of the drug in June last year, the value of Biogen shares have nearly halved.

On Tuesday, the shares were trading 2% lower even as the drugmaker raised its full-year profit forecast by relying on the sales of Tecfidera. Its sales fell 18% to $397.9 million, but was above expectations of $367.7 million.

“We suspect investors are not likely to be satisfied by upside from such legacy products,” Piper Sandler analyst Christopher Raymond said.

Biogen now expects annual profit to be in the range of $15.25 to $16.75 per share compared to prior forecast of $14.25 to $16.

Excluding items, it earned $5.25 per share, above estimates of $4.06. The profit was helped by a $500 million share repurchase program, Wedbush analyst Laura Chico said.

Reporting by Manas Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source: Reuters