Tuesday, November 11, 2008

AstraZeneca - Crestor: PharmaGossip starts "Jupiter Watch"

As the pharma world continues to digest data from the JUPITER study on AstraZeneca’s Crestor, the firm’s chief executive is taking a cautious line on what effect it will have on sales of the cholesterol blockbuster.

In a teleconference with reporters, David Brennan said it is too early to predict how the data from the landmark study, which demonstrated a dramatic risk reduction of cardiovascular death in people with low to normal cholesterol levels, will affect sales of Crestor (rosuvastatin). He noted that there has been “a flurry of estimates” from analysts about the commercial impact of JUPITER, “some of them pretty bullish” but “I would urge caution when forecasting the speed of such changes".

The initial response to the study has been that it will transform the way statins are prescribed, ie to people with normal levels of cholesterol. Mr Brennan did add that it is "reasonable to think" the data will be considered when the American College of Cardiology and other such bodies update their treatment guidelines for heart disease next year.

However he stressed that AstraZeneca will not promote Crestor for use as a preventative in healthy patients who are at risk of heart problems until it obtains approval. The company will submit the findings of JUPITER to regulators on both sides of the Atlantic in the first half of 2009.

Mr Brennan also noted that the benefits of Crestor shown in the study, which for example demonstrated that the combined risk of heart attack, stroke or CV death was reduced by 47%, does not necessarily extend to similar cholesterol drugs. "We know all statins are not created equal," he added.

Dresdner Kleinwort analyst Tim Franklin issued a research note saying that while some doctors may opt to prescribe generic statins as a preventative, many will now choose to use Crestor on the basis of JUPITER. He added that “the surprising level of risk reduction observed with Crestor compared to previous statin studies also tells us that it is not always possible to extrapolate from one product to another or from one set of data to another quite so easily".

Although Mr Brennan is being cautious about sales forecasts for Crestor, which had third-quarter revenues of $922 million (up 28%), analysts seem convinced about the positive effect of the study. Morgan Stanley says they could reach as much as $8 billion in 2014, while UBS is predicting sales of at least $7 billion in 2012.

By Kevin Grogan
PharmaTimes

Insider says: Dave has said it plain and simple - no promotion of JUPITER until approval.

Please feel free to let PharmaGossip know if you spot this happening!

7 comments:

Lily said...

I looked up the price for Crestor 10 mg on drugstore.com. It was $111 for 30 tablets. With my RxDrugCard I can get 30 Simvastatin 10 mg for $8. If it turns out that one statin is as good as another, I'm going for the generic!!

Anonymous said...

...."YAY!!!! BUCKETS O' MONEY!!!!"....

Anonymous said...

What??? In Canada (where I am) 30 tablets of Crestor 10 mg is around 45$. It is cheaper than equivalent dose of lipitor and about the same price as generic simvastatin.

Anonymous said...

I think I saw an AZ rep talking to a doctor today about Jupiter. I was about 25 feet away, waiting on another doctor. The rep had a sheet of paper in his hand and seemed to me to be reviewing the results of a study. I did not hear him say Jupiter, but he was definitely discussing risk reductions.

Anonymous said...

Well, yes, Jupiter showed a substantial RELATIVE risk reduction, but what was the placebo subjects' ABSOLUTE risk in the trial? They may be demonstrating here a 40% reduction of what is really a miniscule risk, given the patient population.

Anonymous said...

330am, way to be a whistle-blower. It may or may not have been an AZ rep, who may or may not have been discussing a study, who didn't say Jupiter but who did say 'risk reduction'. Yikes! Somebody better call the Feds!

Anonymous said...

It appears that journalists have a short memory.

Only four year ago, Dr. David Graham, associate director in the FDA's Office of Drug Safety gave senate testimony that Crestor was one of five drugs with safety concerns. The drug causes muscle breakdown and renal failure.

To read more...
Crestor, Jupitor, CRP and Heart Attack by Jeffrey Dach MD