The pressures that Schering-Plough has been suffering amid the criticism of its cholesteriol drugs Vytorin and Zetia, sold through a joint venture with Merck & Co, has led the firm to announce major job cuts and plant closures.
S-P has unveiled what it calls a “productivity transformation programme”, which targets $1.5 billion in annual savings and includes previously-announced synergy targets of $500 million from the November 2007 acquisition of Organon BioSciences from Akzo Nobel.
The company said the move is a response to “dramatically intensifying pressures on the pharmaceutical industry, especially new pressures in the USA, and also to the confusion in the US market around cholesterol management”. It is expected that around 10% of its 55,000 workforce will be laid off.
This specifically refers to the results of the controversial ENHANCE study confirmed at the American College of Cardiology meeting in Chicago which demonstrated that Vytorin, a combination of Zetia (ezetimibe) and Zocor (simvastatin), may not be any more effective than cheaper statins, notably generic Zocor, in preventing heart disease. As a result, panellists at the ACC recommended that widespread use of Vytorin and Zetia should be curtailed.
Specific details of the programme have not yet been finalised but S-P said that more than 80%, of the planned savings are targeted to be accomplished by the end of 2010. As well as the reduction of the number of facilities across the world, it will create “more focused and high-efficiency plants by 2012”.
Chief executive Fred Hassan said “savings and productivity improvements will be realised across the company and around the world. No area will be exempt”. He added that the first step will be to reduce “higher management levels in the company's headquarters and elsewhere”, noting that “a major focus will be the USA, where the most intense new pressures on our industry and our company are centred."
Mr Hassan, claiming that S-P will “not engage in across-the-board cost-cutting” and “will avoid unwise short term actions”, said the firm is progressing well, citing the Organon purchase. He insisted that “we now have perhaps the most impressive late-stage pipeline in our peer group -- including cutting edge projects as TRA for deadly blood clots, and sugammadex in anaesthesiology".
However the firm has seen its stock plummet in the past few months and "hard new realities are requiring the hard new actions" he added, claiming that “the reality is that we face today a new political and overall environment in the USA that is increasingly discouraging pharmaceutical innovation." An example of this, Mr Hassan said, "has been the confusion in the cholesterol market largely caused by the overreaction to conflicting results of the relatively small ENHANCE clinical trial, involving Vytorin”.
He continued: “This confusion, in the absence of an open and balanced scientific discussion of this clinical trial, have caused an unwarranted concern among millions of patients who need to get to their cholesterol goals". The Vytorin tale “has been a case study of the impact of the hard new realities," he added.
Source: PharmaTimes
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