If I had a drug that generated close to half a billion US$ last calendar year, but with a black box warning, and I heard of a drug that was being put through preclinical trials comparing it against my drug, and it was outperforming my drug by 100 miles, I would be fighting tooth and nail to secure it
There are 2 exciting prospects that some of the people might not appreciate
More than a year ago Starpharma published electrifying pieces of news that might have not been really understood by the average punter in the market place. If one can recognise the full implications of the announcement, then it would certainly let one can sleep well at night, knowing we are on a multi bagger.
Let us drill into the releases a little bit deeper
Cabazitaxel (trade name Jevtana) is on the market and manufactured by Sanofi Avantis with annual sales of $427 million (2015) – with growth from previous period of 18% as indicated in slide below.
You will also notice mind boggling results when Starpharma did preclinical trial with it’s own DEP CABAZITAXEL and compared it with JEVTANA
In graph one
After 60 days there was complete tumour regression in the DEP CABAZITAXEL compared to tumour regrowth in the JEVTANA
After 140 days, Starpharma’s DEP CABAZITAXEL mice were still completely tumour free
In graph two
After 80 days, with Sanofi Advantis’s JEVTANA drug, mortality (death) of the mice started occurring. At the end of
140 days, 80% had died. 20% had survived
Whereas with Starpharma’s DEP CABAZITAXEL drug, 100% of the mice had survived.
If this isn’t remarkable news, I don’t know what is.
For your information – Sanofi Avantis has a black box warning on it’s JEVTANA
For those that do not know what a black box warning is – IT COULD CAUSE DEATH
Starpharma’s DEP CABAZITAXEL has not shown any side effects in mice
Below is a link to the black box warning issued by FDA for use of JEVTANA
http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2010/201023lbl.pdf
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What is a black box warning
FDA Black Box Warnings
FDA Drug Warnings
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is charged with the responsibility of regulating most medicines used by the public in order to ensure that pharmaceutical products are safe. One of its most straightforward ways of doing this is by issuing black-box warnings.
The agency can require a pharmaceutical company to include a bold warning on the packaging and the patient instruction sheet if serious or life-threatening risks are associated with the drug. Black-box warnings take their name from the black border around the information and are the FDA’s most stringent warning a drug can carry before it is pulled from the shelves.
Once a drug receives a black-box warning, its manufacturer must also create a medication guide that describes how patients can safely use the drug. The guides are given out by pharmacists when prescriptions are filled and also are available online from the drug company and the FDA.
Although black-box warnings are one of the strongest tools used by the FDA to promote pharmaceutical safety, there is concern by many that they are not being used effectively and, therefore, are not protecting consumers.
If you were harmed by a dangerous drug or a defective medical device, you may have legal options.GET HELP NOW
Increased Use of Black-box Warnings
Although black-box warnings have been used for decades, in the last 10 years, there has been an explosion in the number issued.
Here’s how many black-box warnings are created: Before a drug is made available to the public, limited clinical trials are performed. After the release and widespread patient use, however, the FDA typically has more of an understanding of the drug and its potential adverse effects and may decide to add black-box warnings.
Between 2005 and 2008, about 14 percent of safety-labeling changes have been related to black-box warning additions or revisions, according to an editorial in Hospital Pharmacy.
Still, black-box warnings are not just for relatively new drugs. For example, Darvon/Darvocet, a widely used pain reliever for more than 50 years, was issued a black-box warning in July 2009 when it was linked to fatal overdoses. Yet it wasn’t until November 2010 that it was taken off the market because it was found to dangerously alter the electrical activity of the heart.
The petition asserts: “Compounding the problem of massive inappropriate use, recent evidence has documented several serious new safety problems with long-term PPI use. For some of these risks, current FDA-approved PPI labels do not mention the adverse effect at all, including the potential for developing dependence on the drugs, which results in rebound hypersecretion of stomach acid and recurrence of symptoms after stopping PPI use.”
The FDA has yet to rule on Public Citizen’s most recent petition.
Examples of Black-Box Warnings
Drug Illness Warning
Abilify Depression, bipolar disorder Suicidial thoughts in youth
Accutane Severe acne Birth defects
Actos Type 2 diabetes Heart failure risk
Avandia Type 2 diabetes Congestive heart failure
Benicar High blood pressure Fetal toxicity
Cipro, Levaquin and Avelox Antibiotics Tendon rupture
Cymbalta Depression, anxiety Suicide risk
Depakote Epilepsy Birth defects
Invokamet Type 2 diabetes Lactic acidosis
Janumet Type 2 diabetes Lactic acidosis
Kazano Type 2 diabetes Lactic acidosis
Power morcellators Fibroids Risk of spreading cancer
SSRIs and SNRIs Depression Suicide risk in children
Testosterone Hypogonadism Exposure to women, children
Risperdal Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder Death risk in elderly
Victoza Type 2 diabetes Thyroid cancer
Yaz Birth Control Heart risk for smokers
Public Scrutiny
Recently, the watchdog group Public Citizen petitioned the FDA to include more substantial warnings on two high-profile and popular drugs: injectable botulinum toxins, such as Botox, and proton pump inhibitors, such as Nexium, used to treat acid reflux disease.
In January 2008, Public Citizen, which represents 100,000 consumers, requested regulatory action in the form of “Dear Doctor letters” and black-box warnings for injectable botulinum toxins. The petition explains:
“Botulinum toxin acts by blocking the transmission of nerve impulses to muscles, causing those muscles to relax and resulting in a loss of muscle control. … Subsequent paralysis of respiratory muscles can lead to death. In the case of injected therapeutic or cosmetic use of botulinum toxin, if the product spreads from the injection site to another area of the body, this loss of muscle control can be similarly harmful.”
Public Citizen also cited the series of warnings the European Union posted regarding the spread of toxins and subsequent studies of adverse effects and fatalities linked to the drugs.
The FDA granted the petition in April 2009, clearing the way for black-box warnings on botulinum toxins (Botox, Myobloc, Dysport).
In August 2011, Public Citizen pursued the addition of black-box warnings for prescription and over-the-counter proton pump inhibitors, which are used to treat acid reflux disease, gastric ulcers and erosive esophagitis, and upper-gastrointestinal bleeding from nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) use.
Confusing Use of Black-box Warnings
In at least one instance that the FDA has aggressively issued a black-box warning and then an expanded black-box warning, it has been roundly criticized, including in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Since October 2004, antidepressants, like Zoloft and others, have been required to have a black-box warning indicating that they are associated with an increased risk of suicide in children and adolescents. In May 2007, however, the FDA changed the warning to specify the risk was for young adults between ages 18 and 24, and it stated that the disease itself — depression — carries a risk of suicide. That was the first time a black-box warning implied there was a risk to not using the drug that might outweigh the drug warning itself.
“Whether the new warning will do more good than harm is not clear. There are already some signs that the warning will discourage depressed patients and their families from seeking treatment and frighten physicians away from prescribing antidepressants,” wrote doctors Richard A. Friedman and Andrew C. Leon.
These are just a few examples of how the FDA’s black-box warnings are applied. Although the warnings are designed to protect consumers, it’s easy to see from these few case studies that black-box warnings aren’t always applied in a non-arbitrary way or a consistently effective manner.
Last modified: August 16, 2016
Kadcyla owned by Roche has an estimated revenue earnings stream of 2.55 billion dollars for calendar year 2018
I would suggest that Roche and Sanofi Advantis are the two players that are collaborating with Starpharma are antibody-drug-conjugate players that were signed off in August 2016
The second graph says it all
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