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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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Top Pharma Companies & Drugs in 2024: Merck’s Keytruda maintains top spot as Novo’s semaglutide nips at its heels
In 2024, Big Pharma players consolidated and maintained their dominance, even as innovation continued to reshape the pharmaceutical landscape. The primary change last year was the meteoric rise of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists that treat diabetes and help in weight loss.Amongst drugmakers, Pfizer retained its numero uno spot with an impressive US$ 63.6 billion in prescription drug sales (up 7 percent from US$ 59.56 billion reported in 2023), despite ever-shrinking Comirnaty sales, which settled at US$ 5.35 billion in 2024 (from US$ 11.22 billion in 2023).Merck secured the second position with revenues of US$ 57.4 billion, a growth of 7 percent over 2023. This performance was predominantly fueled by Keytruda, which now accounts for more than half of Merck’s total pharmaceutical revenue. Johnson & Johnson came a close third with US$ 57 billion in prescription drug sales (up from US$ 54.76 billion in 2023).AbbVie held the fourth position with US$ 56.33 billion in sales, achieving 3.7 percent growth despite the ongoing erosion of Humira revenue. This flagship immunology drug saw sales plummet 37.6 percent to approximately US$ 9 billion, a US$ 5.4 billion reduction compared to 2023. Humira’s loss was offset by AbbVie’s newer immunology assets, particularly Skyrizi and Rinvoq, both of which demonstrated exceptional growth trajectories. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2024 by Sales (Free Excel Available)European giants Astra, Roche, Novartis, Sanofi round out top 10 list; Novo, Lilly see astounding growthWhile the top four positions were dominated by American drugmakers, European giants dominated the lower half of the top 10 list.AstraZeneca secured the fifth spot with US$ 54.1 billion in sales, thereby posting impressive growth of 18.1 percent over 2023. Roche claimed the sixth position with US$ 50.9 billion in sales while Novartis ranked seventh — with sales of US$ 50.3 billion. Novartis' impressive 10.8 percent sales growth is attributed to its innovative medicines portfolio. Oncology therapies remained a cornerstone for both these Swiss drugmakers.Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) secured eighth position with revenues of US$ 48.3 billion, representing 7.3 percent growth over the previous year. At US$ 45 billion, Eli Lilly posted 32 percent revenue growth last year. Its GLP-1 drug Mounjaro helped Lilly move up from the tenth in 2023 to the ninth spot last year.Sanofi landed the tenth position with US$ 42.6 billion in sales, propelled largely by the expanding indications of Dupixent. The French multinational has increasingly focused on this immunology blockbuster, while also garnering more sales from its vaccine and rare disease portfolios.Novo Nordisk merits a mention as it posted an incredible 26 percent year-on-year growth. It retained its eleventh spot with US$ 40.25 billion in sales. Novo’s growth was driven almost exclusively by the extraordinary success of its GLP-1 receptor agonist portfolio. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2024 by Sales (Free Excel Available)       Merck’s Keytruda retains throne with US$ 29.5 bn in sales, as Novo’s semaglutide nips at its heelsMoving on to drugs, Merck’s Keytruda (pembrolizumab) solidified its position as the world’s top-selling pharmaceutical product with sales exceeding US$ 29.5 billion and year-on-year growth of 17.88 percent (US$ 4.5 billion). This remarkable performance was driven by steady sales growth across more than 40 indications in the US. In 2024 alone, Keytruda secured four new approvals from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).However, Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide sales (Ozempic, Wegovy and Rybelsus) gave Keytruda a run for its money. Across the three blockbuster drugs, semaglutide earned the Danish drugmaker around US$ 28 billion — i.e. a year-on-year increase of 38 percent.Novo’s Ozempic (semaglutide) reached over US$ 16.7 billion in sales — a 20 percent increase from 2023. Originally approved in 2017 to improve glycemic control, Ozempic bagged additional approvals in 2020, and in January 2025. It is now approved to reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events, as well as to reduce cardiovascular risk and to lower the likelihood of chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes patients.Sales of Wegovy (semaglutide), the other blockbuster GLP-1 drug from Novo, grew by a whopping 85.7 percent to over US$ 8 billion.Sanofi and Regeneron’s Dupixent (dupilumab) secured the number three spot with sales of US$ 13.6 billion, representing an impressive 17.2 percent year-on-year growth. In 2024, Dupixent received three new approvals and one label update. Notably, it became the first-ever biologic medicine approved for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2024 by Sales (Free Excel Available) AbbVie’s post-Humira strategy pays off as Skyrizi surges 51%; Lilly’s Mounjaro posts 124% growthGilead Sciences’ HIV treatment Biktarvy (bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide) showed robust growth of 13.27 percent, touching sales of US$ 13.42 billion in 2024 and emerging as the fourth largest selling drug. Biktarvy now commands over 50 percent of the US HIV treatment market. Unlike many other drugs on this list, Biktarvy faces no immediate patent challenges, with key protections expected to remain intact until 2033.BMS and Pfizer’s anticoagulant Eliquis (apixaban) claimed the fifth position with US$ 13.33 billion in sales, representing a 9.21 percent year-on-year increase. AbbVie’s Skyrizi (risankizumab) emerged as one of the fastest-growing assets with a 50.95 percent year-on-year increase, generating US$ 11.71 billion in 2024 sales, thereby surpassing Humira’s (adalimumab) diminished sales.This impressive performance, combined with Rinvoq’s (upadacitinib) growth, has prompted  AbbVie to raise its long-term outlook for these products. The company now expects combined Skyrizi and Rinvoq revenues to exceed US$ 31 billion by 2027, with Skyrizi alone projected to generate over US$ 20 billion.Johnson & Johnson’s Darzalex (daratumumab) claimed the seventh position with US$ 11.67 billion in sales, representing 19.77 percent growth over 2023.Lilly’s Mounjaro (tirzepatide) demonstrated dramatic growth with sales increasing 123.51 percent to US$ 11.54 billion. This performance was complemented by Zepbound (tirzepatide, for weight loss), which contributed US$ 4.9 billion to Lilly’s revenue. By the end of 2024, Mounjaro received FDA approval for a new indication in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), becoming the first and only prescription medicine for moderate-to-severe OSA in adults with obesity.Stelara (ustekinumab) ranked ninth, bringing J&J sales of US$ 10.36 billion, showing a modest decline of 4.91 percent from its 2023 sales.Vertex’s triple-combination therapy Trikafta (elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor) for treating cystic fibrosis rounded out the top ten list with sales of US$ 10.2 billion, up 14 percent from the previous year. View Our Interactive Dashboard on Top Drugs in 2024 by Sales (Free Excel Available) Our viewIn 2024, transformative therapies like GLP-1 receptor agonists drove growth in the pharmaceutical industry. This year, we expect GLP-1 drugs to dethrone Keytruda from the number one spot. Along with novel immunology agents, we expect GLP-1 drugs to realign the pharmaceutical market.  

Impressions: 4406

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/top-pharma-companies-drugs-in-2024-merck-s-keytruda-maintains-top-spot-as-novo-s-semaglutide-nips-at-its-heels

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
24 Apr 2025

STOCK RECAP #PipelineProspector

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Pipeline Prospector April 2025: Merck KGaA buys SpringWorks for US$ 3.9 bn; Swiss giants lead pharma migration to US soil
April witnessed considerable volatility in pharmaceutical stocks as the US President Donald Trump’s administration signaled major shifts in drug pricing policies and import regulations. These include Trump’s proposed international reference pricing to align US drug prices with lower costs in other developed countries, a national security investigation into pharmaceutical imports that could lead to tariffs of 25 percent or more on foreign-made drugs and, a sweeping executive order to reshape Medicare drug pricing. However, as the month drew to a close, key pharmaceutical indices rebounded and were back in the black. The Nasdaq Biotechnology Index (NBI) rose 0.44 percent from 4,241.91 to 4,260.42. The SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) rose 2.58 percent — from 80.86 to 82.95. And the S&P Biotechnology Select Industry Index (SPSIBI) increased 0.91 percent — from 6,319.47 to 6,376.95. However, stocks of most drugmakers ended the month in the red.  Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2025 Newsmakers (Free Excel) Trump’s tariff threats prompt drug majors to announce investments in US The unrest created by Trump’s tariff threat on drug imports was palpable across the world. In Europe, CEOs of nearly three dozen global drugmakers, including Pfizer, Eli Lilly, and AstraZeneca, warned European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen that without "rapid, radical policy change", over US$ 100 billion in pharma R&D and manufacturing could leave the European Union. These drugmakers are pushing for abandonment of price controls to match US pricing levels.  Global players are also rapidly reorienting their manufacturing strategies towards the US soil in order to avoid imminent tariffs on imported medicines. For instance, Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche has announced a massive US$ 50 billion investment in the US over the next five years. Another Swiss drugmaker, Novartis, has committed US$ 23 billion to expand its US operations over the next five years. Meanwhile, AstraZeneca has said it will be shifting the production of some drugs sold in America from Europe to the US in order to avoid Trump’s tariffs. Even American drugmaker AbbVie plans to invest US$ 10 billion in US manufacturing over the next decade to avoid tariffs. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals has taken a different approach by announcing an investment exceeding US$ 3 billion through a 10-year strategic partnership with Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies. This collaboration aims to nearly double Regeneron’s US production capacity for biologic medicines.  Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2025 Newsmakers (Free Excel)  Merck buys SpringWorks for US$ 3.9 bn; GSK inks US$ 2.7 bn deal with ABL Bio This was going to be a year of mergers and acquisitions. But with the imminent policy changes in America’s healthcare sector, M&A activity appears to have slowed down. However, the last days of April saw two M&A announcements — Merck KGaA entered into a deal to buy US biotech company SpringWorks Therapeutics for US$ 3.9 billion, and Novartis announced the acquisition of Regulus Therapeutics for up to US$ 1.7 billion. The month saw several licensing deals. GSK signed a licensing agreement valued at approximately £ 2.08 billion (US$ 2.66 billion) with South Korea’s ABL Bio for exclusive access to ABL’s innovative Grabody-B brain delivery platform, a technology designed to enhance the penetration of therapeutic antibodies across the notoriously selective blood-brain barrier (BBB). The BBB acts as the body’s natural defense to protect the brain from toxins and pathogens. Similarly, Eli Lilly inked a US$ 1.4 billion licensing agreement with Sangamo Therapeutics to gain access to Sangamo’s proprietary neurotropic adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsid, STAC-BBB, which has shown remarkable potential in crossing the BBB. In the autoimmune and immunology space, Sanofi signed an exclusive licensing agreement with US biotech Earendil Labs valued at up to US$ 1.8 billion. The agreement centers on two next-generation bispecific antibodies, HXN-1002 and HXN-1003, discovered through Earendil's AI-driven high-throughput protein modeling platform.  Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2025 Newsmakers (Free Excel)  Lilly’s obesity pill matches Ozempic in trial; Novo seeks FDA nod for semaglutide pill In the market for obesity meds, Eli Lilly’s experimental weight-loss pill, orforglipron, demonstrated efficacy that was comparable to its rival Novo Nordisk’s injectable Ozempic. Analysts view orforglipron pill as a potential game-changer in obesity treatment. Meanwhile, Novo Nordisk has sought FDA approval for a 25-mg pill version of its weight loss medication semaglutide. And Rhythm Pharmaceuticals’ drug, Imcivree (setmelanotide), achieved primary endpoint in a late-stage trial for acquired hypothalamic obesity, a rare condition resulting from damage to the brain’s hypothalamus. Meanwhile, in a high profile trial failure, Pfizer discontinued development of its experimental oral weight-loss pill, danuglipron, following a case of potential drug-induced liver injury in a clinical trial participant. Another significant disappointment came from BMS’ investigational schizophrenia drug, Cobenfy (xanomeline and trospium chloride) — it failed to meet the primary endpoint in a pivotal late-stage trial evaluating its use as an adjunctive treatment for patients who no longer respond to standard antipsychotics. Adding to the month’s disappointments, FDA declined to approve Aldeyra Therapeutics’ dry eye disease treatment, reproxalap, for the second time.  Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2025 Newsmakers (Free Excel)  Amgen’s Uplizna, Sanofi’s Dupixent among noteworthy FDA approvals Amgen received a groundbreaking approval for Uplizna (inebilizumab-cdon) as the first and only treatment for immunoglobulin G4-related disease (IgG4-RD), a rare and chronic immune-mediated inflammatory condition. Analysts estimate that Uplizna could generate global annual sales of US$ 1.3 billion by 2030 for the IgG4-RD indication alone.  Sanofi and Regeneron received FDA approval for Dupixent (dupilumab) to treat chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) in patients aged 12 and older who remain symptomatic despite antihistamine therapy. Sanofi’s bestselling drug is now FDA-approved for seven indications. As the month drew to a close, FDA approved Abeona Therapeutics’ gene therapy — Zevaskyn (prademagene zamikeracel) — for a rare skin disorder known as recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa. It also approved Johnson & Johnson’s Imaavy (nipocalimab-aahu), a drug that treats patients aged 12 years and older with a form of generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG) — an immunity-related disorder that weakens the skeletal muscles, especially those in the eyes, mouth, throat and limbs.  Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2025 Newsmakers (Free Excel)  Our view The US economy contracted by 0.3 percent during the first quarter of 2025, as businesses panicked and imported goods to avoid higher costs. The US dollar has been weakening, and has hit a fresh low against the euro, Japanese yen and the Swiss franc. This will reduce the profit of foreign companies from their US divisions once they remit their earnings back to their home country. A study undertaken by Ernst & Young has predicted that a 25 percent US tariff on drug imports would increase drug cost by nearly US$ 51 billion annually, thereby boosting drug prices in America by 12.9 percent. These and other cues only point to the fact that Trump administration’s policies will hurt the US. As of today, a rollback or a softening of stand looks like a distant possibility. Access the Pipeline Prospector Dashboard for April 2025 Newsmakers (Free Excel)  

Impressions: 3873

https://www.pharmacompass.com/pipeline-prospector-blog/pipeline-prospector-april-2025-merck-kgaa-buys-springwork-for-us-3-9-bn-swiss-giants-lead-pharma-migration-to-us-soil

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
01 May 2025

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/05/01/3072440/0/en/Dupixent-dupilumab-Data-Presented-at-ATS-Reinforce-Impact-of-Targeting-Key-Type-2-Inflammation-Drivers-to-Improve-Outcomes-for-Chronic-Respiratory-Diseases.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
01 May 2025

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/sanofis-quarterly-profit-beats-estimates-dupixent-boost-newer-products-2025-04-24/

REUTERS
25 Apr 2025

https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/sanofi-and-regenerons-dupixent-course-inflection-year-copd

FIERCE PHARMA
24 Apr 2025

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/sanofis-quarterly-profit-beats-estimates-dupixent-boost-newer-products-2025-04-24/

REUTERS
24 Apr 2025

https://www.sanofi.com/en/media-room/press-releases/2025/2025-04-18-15-15-00-3064131

PRESS RELEASE
21 Apr 2025

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/03/28/3051139/0/en/Dupixent-dupilumab-Approved-as-the-First-ever-Biologic-Medicine-in-Japan-for-Patients-with-Chronic-Obstructive-Pulmonary-Disease-COPD.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
28 Mar 2025