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Orphan drugs: Pharma foundlings or wellsprings of future wealth? Prescient Healthcare Group - Market Access Marcus J. Healey, PhD, MBA, MSc [email protected] Krithika Venkataraman, PhD [email protected] February 22, 2016 Introduction Rare diseases are not rare collectively as 1 in 17 people worldwide will be affected by a rare disease in their lifetime. A synonym for rare diseases is “orphan diseases”; unsurprisingly, therefore, the drugs developed to treat rare disease are called “orphan drugs”, an important subset of specialty drugs. The definition of a rare disease is variable, as shown in Table 1. Given that rare diseases have small populations and that it would be difficult to commercially develop treatments for diseases with small populations, incentives have been granted. The World Health Organization, the US, the EU and Japan each have Collectively, rare diseases are not different prevalence-based definitions. There is no legal definition of an rare. It is ultra-rare disease, though the National Institute for Health and Clinical estimated that Excellence in the UK has developed such a sub-category. as many as 1 out of 17 people worldwide will be affected by a rare disease in their lifetime. However, given that individual rare diseases have small populations, incentives for drug development have been granted. Table 1: Definitions of rare disease and ultra-rare disease, worldwide WHO US EU Rare disease prevalence Afflicts 0.65– 1.0:1,000 Afflicts <250,000 patients or <5:10,000, based on an EU population of 506 million (5) Ultra-rare disease prevalence No definition Afflicts <200,000 patients or <6.4:10,000, based on a US population of 314 million (4,5)† No legal definition No legal definition; subcategory defined as <1,000 cases in England and Wales or <1:50,000 (6) Japan Afflicts <50,000 patients or <4:10,000, based on a Japanese population of 128 million (5) No legal definition Abbreviations: EU, European Union; WHO, World Health Organization † 1983 US Orphan Drug Act (USC 360 Title 21) 1 The objective of this white paper is to delineate rare and ultra-rare diseases and to describe, in brief, the external and internal drivers for pharmaceutical manufacturers to develop therapies for orphan diseases. This paper attempts to group and characterize the different types of orphan drug manufacturers and describes, in broad strokes, some of the strategies, therapeutic foci, market products, competitive advantages, manufacturing, sales and marketing, mergers and acquisitions, partnerships, and notable strategic investments that serve to distinguish different firms. Since there are many excellent articles on orphan drugs in the literature (see, for example, Tordrup et al., 2014 and Gammie et al., 2015; Premier Research, 2015 (1-3)), we will not attempt to provide a comprehensive overview of orphan drugs in this paper. External drivers of orphan drug development Fundamentally, the cost of developing an orphan drug is the same as the average cost of developing a non-orphan drug; however, the potential treatable population is significantly smaller with orphan drugs. In response to this price-volume conundrum, the US Congress passed the Orphan Drug Act in 1983 and the EU passed similar legislation in 2000 in order to entice pharmaceutical manufacturers to develop drugs for smaller populations of patients with rare diseases. Table 2 summarizes the regulatory, research and development, and commercial drivers for orphan drug development in the US. Table 2: Regulatory, research and development, and commercial drivers in rare diseases Regulatory Increased scientific advice Waived or reduced FDA fees Fewer approval hurdles Research and development Tax credits equal to 50% of expenditures during the clinical testing phase Direct funding (grants) Shorter development timelines Elevated chances for regulatory success Commercial Favorable reimbursement Longer market exclusivity Reduced marketing costs Possibility for premium pricing Acceptance of lower levels of evidence for licensing Source: (3,7) In the EU, an orphan drug designation application can be filed at any clinical development stage prior to the submission of the application for marketing authorization. Once a product receives an orphan designation from the EMA, this information is made public, which is not always advantageous to the product manufacturer (3). Table 3 more specifically outlines some of the competitive and 2 procedural advantages in the US versus the EU. Many firms submit joint FDA/EMA applications when seeking orphan drug designation. Table 3: Competitive and procedural advantages for orphan drugs in the US and EU US Incentives Exclusivity review Timeline Procedural 7 years’ market exclusivity in addition to current patent protections None No timelines (1–3 months) Not applicable EU 10 years’ market exclusivity After 5 years, if prevalence changes 90 days (COMP) + 30 days (EC) Centralized procedure and EU-wide approval Abbreviations: COMP, Committee of Orphan Medicinal Products; EC, European Commission; EU, European Union Source: (3) Internal drivers of orphan drug development Innovation in research and development, translational research, endpoint development, manufacturing, regulatory and reimbursement With the advent strategies, and market access strategies form the core internal drivers of enhanced targeting via the in many pharmaceutical firms that have undertaken the challenge of use of developing orphan drugs. For example, orphan drug research in companion neurodegenerative disorders such as Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy diagnostics, (DMD) and spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) has provided opportunities many diseases, to develop disease models for research that can be applied elsewhere particularly in within an organization (for example, gene expression studies and oncology, are systems biology). A common thread is that many diseases are now now considered moving toward the “rare” category due to the impact of personalized “rare”. medicine and the enhanced targeting options available through companion diagnostics, particularly in oncology. In the end, orphan drug development has benefitted greatly from the advent of genomics technologies. Another prominent internal driver of orphan drug development is more from a strategic perspective. Orphan drug research, development and commercialization may lead to the validation of new technologies (e.g., gene therapy, exon skipping and meganucleases) and therapeutic strategies (e.g., cell or gene therapy for central nervous system diseases) that can be applied to other disease states. Outcomes researchers may be called upon to craft a new endpoint (e.g., the sixminute walk test in DMD), in concert with internal and external experts, to validate and defend the new technologies and/or therapeutic strategies all the way through to final regulatory approval. This in turn helps the company successfully navigate 3 tortuous clinical and regulatory pathways and establishes a validated clinical endpoint that becomes a standard and can be used in other similar disease states. Yet another strategic internal driver is the pursuit of a multiple-indication strategy. For example, in oncology, most drugs receive their highest price point when they are first reimbursed. As new indications for a particular drug are added, the price of the drug rarely, if ever, rises. In oncology, companies have employed the strategy of obtaining approval in multiple indications in order to expand overall orphan drug revenue. In this realm, Novartis is noteworthy as it has successfully used Gleevec in multiple oncology indications, and Celgene has also used this strategy successfully with Revlimid (8). Interestingly, Alexion’s Soliris is unique in that it is the only marketed product with multiple indications for ultra-rare diseases (e.g., hemolytic uremic syndrome [aHUS] and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria [PNH]). One need not be prescient to understand the allure of orphan drug development, as pharmaceutical firms in rare and ultra-rare disease drug development face less competition from branded drugs and generic rivals. In addition, there are advantages that are conferred upon orphan drug developers in the commercial (i.e., statutory market exclusivity), research and development (i.e., tax incentives and direct funding), national (i.e., grants and tax reductions), licensing (i.e., acceptance of lower levels of evidence), pricing (i.e., recognition that firms have to recoup an investment in a disease with lower patient numbers), strategic (i.e., gaining familiarity with new platforms, drug mechanisms of action and manufacturing techniques), and regulatory (i.e., increased scientific advice and reduced fees) processes, and these advantages are difficult to ignore (3). Because of small population sizes in rare diseases, manufacturers seek premium pricing, if at all possible. Special efforts are undertaken to connect with patient advocacy groups that can provide political pressure for reimbursement and access to patients, as well as rare disease foundations that can provide funding and interaction with key opinion leaders and the physicians who must diagnose and treat patients with rare disease. In the rare disease community, networking with providers, patient organizations, foundations, and patients has replaced more traditional detailing or one-to-one sales and marketing which sought to educate providers about a firm’s products. On the other hand, payers worry about affordability and whether many new patients with the rare disease will be identified in the future. Orphan drug players 4 There appear to be at least seven different types of pharmaceutical firms in the orphan drug development industry. Any attempted classification of companies (see Figure 1) in the rare disease space is likely to be woefully incomplete when trying to compare and contrast the wide range of companies in this domain, as there are mature and newer players with differing levels of funding and focus. Though it is fraught with risk, we will attempt to broadly characterize the different types of firms that are seeking to commercialize products in this space. Table 4 in the Appendix summarizes orphan drug manufacturer characteristics. There appear to be at least seven different types of pharmaceutical firms in the orphan drug development industry. Shire typifies the grouping termed “acquisitors” based on its past mergers and inlicensing deals, as well as the recently proposed acquisition of Baxalta (a biopharmaceutical spinoff from Baxter). Shire has become the largest biotechnology firm exclusively focused on rare diseases, with six commercialized orphan drugs. With the purchase of Baxalta’s Advate, Shire has acquired a top-ten orphan drug, based on 2014 US sales (5). The original orphan disease “pioneer” is Genzyme, which was acquired by Sanofi in 2006 and has become a rare disease grownup with ten commercialized orphan drugs. Both Shire and Genzyme/Sanofi appear to be almost exclusively focused on rare diseases. Figure 1: Different types of firms in the orphan drug development industry Ultra-rare disease pure plays (Alexion) Acquisitors (Shire) Laser-like antisense focus (IONIS) Pioneers (Genzyme/ Sanofi) Small company/big strategy (PTC Therapeutics) Repurposers (Novartis, Roche, Celgene) Organic growers (BioMarin) 5 Novartis and Roche are classic “big pharma” companies with long histories in pharmaceutical drug development that also can be categorized as “Repurposers”. These firms have important orphan drugs in their respective portfolios, not as a result of focus on orphan drug development but as a byproduct of their deep understanding of molecular pathways and drug development for cancer, and the translation of these oncology drugs to rarer tumors. Celgene is both an in-licensor and a translational specialist and has succeeded in the orphan drug arena by recognizing opportunity, further developing that opportunity, and capitalizing on it. Novartis has ten commercialized rare-disease drugs; Roche has three marketed orphan drugs and Celgene has two. Celgene acquired the rights to thalidomide and then further developed next-generation analogs (Revlimid [lenalidomide] and Pomalyst [pomalidomide]), which are used as backbone therapy drugs in a number of different, rarer cancers, and are big moneymakers. Novartis, Roche, and Celgene are global and sophisticated, insofar as sales and marketing, mergers and acquisitions, and the formation of strategic partnerships are concerned. Thus, all three firms are rare disease opportunists or translational specialists and represent the current and near-future (in the next five years) leaders in orphan drug sales. BMS is likely to climb into this pack as a result of sales of Opdivo (nivolumab) in many different tumor types. Some of the anti-PD-1 manufacturers (like Merck with Keytruda [pembrolizumab]) and other oncology small-molecule manufacturers (like BMS [Sprycel, dasatinib; CML, Ph+ ALL], J&J/AbbVie [Imbruvica, ibrutinib; CLL] and Pfizer [with 22 molecules classified as orphan]) are also predicted to remain in the top five in orphan drug sales in 2020 (5). As traditional pharmaceutical firms struggle for differentiation (in order to justify price), the orphan drug arena has continued to be a dynamic cauldron of innovation. BioMarin is a company that has grown organically in the rare-disease area and may be an acquisition target, despite already having five commercialized rare-disease products. BioMarin is seeking approval for drisapersen (exon skipping) in DMD, which was acquired from Prosensa in November 2014. Its product line is diverse, though it has yet to turn a profit (Some analysts are predicting 2017 as BioMarin’s year to turn a profit.). PTC Therapeutics is an interesting smaller company with a big strategy – post-transcriptional control – but no commercialized products, as yet. PTC Therapeutic’s strategy is to focus on the discovery of agents that promote premature termination codon (i.e., nonsense mutation) readthrough. Many diseases, including neuromuscular disorders (e.g., cystic fibrosis or DMD), hemoglobinopathies (e.g., β-thalassemia) and many types of cancers, are caused by the presence of premature termination mutations in mRNAs. Approximately 10–15% of an estimated 2,000 monogenetic 6 diseases are caused by a nonsense mutation, so PTC Therapeutics’ strategy is a bold play, though it has not yet met with commercial success (9,10). IONIS Pharmaceuticals, which recently (January 2016) changed its name from ISIS Pharmaceuticals, is an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) specialist company with two commercialized products and more than thirty products in the pipeline. IONIS possesses an antisense drug discovery and ASO oligonucleotide manufacturing platform. The company is interesting because it is at the vanguard of new RNAbased technologies that are starting to emerge. Alexion Pharmaceuticals has a sharp focus on the development of transformative (not incremental) therapies in the ultra-rare disease arena. Its strategy is to focus on being the science leader in complement inhibitors and ultra-rare metabolic diseases, and to focus on regulatory and reimbursement pathways to commercialization over its 50-country platform. To date, Alexion has commercialized three products and has been spectacularly successful in commanding a high price for its lead drug, Soliris, in aHUS and PNH. Achievement of the company’s commercial goals was grounded in superior clinical performance within two ultra-rare disease states where there were inferior standards of care, and its willingness to slog through the necessary regulatory and country-specific reimbursement hurdles without sacrificing too much in terms of price. Many traditional pharmaceutical firms have struggled to differentiate their products in order to justify price in an industry that is becoming heavily commoditized. The orphan drug arena has continued to be a dynamic cauldron of innovation for pharmaceutical and biotechnology firms. Which firms are the winners in the near term? Drug value is often measured by efficacy, safety, unmet medical need and magnitude of benefit. Some firms struggle to master this metric, while others have flourished. Drug value is oftentimes measured by efficacy, safety, unmet medical need and magnitude of benefit of a therapeutic over current standard of care. Some firms struggle to master this metric, while others have flourished. Since oncology products are so well represented in the rare disease/ orphan drug arena, repurposers like Novartis, Roche, and Celgene are well positioned for revenue growth now and in the future. Alexion has demonstrated an ability to develop a product (Soliris) in ultra-rare disease states (aHUS and PNH) with such superior efficacy and safety characteristics compared to standard of care that it was clear to virtually all reviewers that there were sufficient cost offsets from reduced spending in other healthcare settings (e.g., reduced transfusions and hospitalizations for patients with aHUS or PNH) to 7 make it well worth its high cost. In addition ‒ and perhaps more importantly ‒ Alexion has pursued a regulatory and reimbursement strategy across 50 markets that have permitted it to not sacrifice price at the altar of reimbursement and market access. Genzyme has the scale, marketing muscle and backing of Sanofi, so its survival in the orphan drug area seems to be certain for now. Shire has 28 pipeline assets in development for rare disease and appears to be well positioned in the orphan drug area through acquisitions, though only Advate (from the recently acquired Baxalta) is a top revenue producer. BioMarin has grown more organically and, as it has yet to be commercially successful, it may well be acquired. Acquiring a company with assets, or being acquired, appears to be part and parcel of the pharmaceutical and orphan drug industries, so it is possible that BioMarin will be an acquisition target in the not-toodistant future. Insofar as revenue is concerned, BioMarin’s organic growth appears to be less fruitful than that of repurposers as exemplified by big pharma. This may be due to the ability of repurposers to develop multiple indications for the same drug. There are three different camps in the pharmaceutical industry that are beginning to emerge: small-molecule drug makers, specialty pharmaceutical companies, and the RNA-based technology creators. Sarepta and Moderna are examples of the third camp with specific technologies like antisense, RNA interference and microRNA therapy, which seek to precisely alter disease processes at the molecular level (11). IONIS is interesting because it is at the vanguard of this third camp and already has two commercialized products, with 30 others in the pipeline. It is doubtful that in the near term IONIS will supplant the oncology orphan drug producers as revenue leader, though it might well be successful in providing meaningful treatments for diseases like DMD and SMA. PTC Therapeutics is also interesting in that it focuses on the discovery of small molecules as treatments for diseases that are caused by nonsense mutations. Both IONIS and PTC Therapeutics are eager to partner with other players and may well be attractive acquisition targets as their product lines mature. Summary In this paper we have outlined some of the external (i.e., regulatory, research and development, and commercial) and internal (i.e., the pursuit of innovation, new technologies, therapeutic modalities and multiple indications) drivers in the orphan 8 disease world. We have focused on mainline pharmaceutical firms that have entered the orphan drug market as a result of a deep understanding of molecular pathways in oncology. These molecular pathways have been naturally extended to rare tumor types as cancer has become more personalized in the last two decades. To some payers, this approach constituted a form of “salami slicing”, but to the cognoscenti in oncology, cancer is not a monolithic disorder and personalized care within cancer subtypes addresses our unique genomes, which have different susceptibilities to different cancers. We have also included some of the older orphan drug pioneers and younger firms that have yet to turn a profit in the orphan drug space. Other firms that we could easily have included are Vertex (Orkambi [lumacaftor; ivacaftor] in cystic fibrosis), Teva Pharmaceuticals (Copaxone [glatiramer acetate] in multiple sclerosis), and Merck KGaA (Rebif [interferon beta1a]) in multiple sclerosis. Interestingly, according to Evaluate Pharma’s Orphan Drug Report, the preponderance of the predicted global top-twenty medicines in sales in the year 2020 will be oncology drugs (18 of 20 drugs). Therefore, the orphan drug area is a natural destination for mainline science-driven specialty-pharmaceutical firms, which entered oncology because differentiation from the competition appeared to have a higher probability of commercial success. The orphan drug world is also considered a safe haven - with lower costs and reduced competition - which in turn might serve as a driver of research and development and a wellspring of sustained revenue. The orphan drug world also provides fertile grounds for more established pharmaceutical firms to partner with, or in-license compounds from, smaller biotechnology firms with fresh ideas about new mechanisms of action, druggable targets and development platforms, thereby offering several beneficial commercial opportunities. 9 Appendix Table 4: Summary of drug manufacturer categories’ characteristics Category nickname: Acquisitors Pioneers Repurposers Organic growers Small company/big strategy Laser antisense focus Ultra-rare disease pure plays Company Shire Genzyme/Sano fi Novartis, Roche, Celgene BioMarin PTC Therapeutics IONIS Alexion Strategy Largest biotech focused on RD; acquisitive RD grownup with ability to uncover niche opportunities due to savvy borne of experience RD opportunists; translational specialists (reposition/ repurpose oncology drugs; further develop older drugs) Organically develop new products; with diverse product line in RD; merger/ acquisition target? Specialize in disease states due to nonsense mutations (>2,000 diseases) ASO leaders with >30 compounds in pipeline Scientific leaders in ultra-rare diseases involving the complement system and metabolic disorders Tx focus 6 commerciallized RD products 10 commercialized RD products Commercialized RD products: Novartis - 10 Roche - 3 Celgene - 2 5 commercialized RD products 0 commercialized RD products 2 commercialized RD products 3 commercialized RD products 10 Marketed products Replagal, Elaprase, VPRIV, Firazyr, Gattex, Advate Aldurazyme, Cerdelga, Cerezyme, Cholestagel, Elaprase, Fabrazyme, Kynamro, Lumizyme, Myozyme, Thyrogen Novartis: Tasigna, Afinitor, Exjade/Jadenu, Gleevec, Sandostatin SC/Sandostatin LAR, Zykadia, Signifor, Farydak, Jakavi, Arzerra; Roche: Rituxan, Gazyva, Esbriet; Celgene: Revlimid, Pomalyst VIMIZIM, KUVAN, Naglazyme; Aldurazyme (codeveloped with Genzyme), Firdapse None KYNAMRO, oligo-TCS (partnered with Atlantic Pharmaceutical s) Soliris, Kanuma, Strensiq Competitive advantage Sophisticated, purposeful; skillful at inlicensing and identifying targets for acquisition Sophisticated, RD pioneer; scale and market muscle of Sanofi Sophisticated, with scale and market muscle Diversity of products; may not turn a profit until 2017 Laser focus on nonsense mutations; Alternative Splicing Technology program ASO drug discovery with mfg platform; large pipeline Sophisticated regulatory and reimbursement strategy; 50country platform; highpriced products in high UMN areas Manufacturing In-house, CMO In-house, CMO In-house, CMO CMO; mfg difficult for MPS products Mostly CMO Mostly inhouse In-house, CMO 11 Sales and marketing Both intensive detailing and patient advocacy (form of DTC?) Clinicianphysician network and direct to patients Clinicianphysician network and direct to patients Patient advocacy (form of DTC?) Patient advocacy (form of DTC?) Patient advocacy (form of DTC?) Patient advocacy (form of DTC?) Mergers and acquisitions Jerini, New River Pharmaceutical s, NPS Pharma, TKT, ViroPharma; recently acquired Baxalta Sanofi acquired Genzyme in 2006 2015 swap with GSK (vaccines to GSK; oncology to Novartis) Acquisition of Prosensa’s drisapersen, Nov 2014 None reported to date IONIS was formerly ISIS Pharmaceutical s Synageva, Moderna, Enobia, Blueprint, XChem, Ensemble, Genomics England, Selventa Partnerships Many partnerships; examples include Sangamo and UPMC Alnylam Alexion and Novartis partnered with Ensemble Tx in 2013. Roche partnered with PTC; Roche also with >150 partnerships worldwide; Celgene with large number of partnerships Myriad Genetics (Dx) Consortium with Roche and SMA Fdn in SMA Alnylam; Also partnering with AZ on CV, metabolic, and renal drugs (Aug 2015) Moderna Therapeutics (Sep 2014); XChem 12 Strategic investment Voyager Tx, a gene therapy company, Feb 2015 Voyager Therapeutics (Feb 2015), a gene therapy company seeking to commercialize novel gene therapies for severe CNS disorders Roche purchased Trophos (olesoxime for SMA); Celgene repurposed thalidomide for multiple myeloma and other oncology indications, and also developed 2nd- and 3rdgeneration analogs lenalidomide (Revlimid) and pomalidomide (Pomalyst) BioMarin is in patent litigation with Sarepta over exon 51 skipping oligonucleoti des RG7800 and RG7916 are being jointly developed by a consortium of Roche, PTC, and SMA Foundation Roche and IONIS (HD) Alexion and Moderna announced an agreement to develop messenger RNA therapeutics (Mar 3, 2015) Abbreviations: ASO, antisense oligonucleotide; AZ, AstraZeneca; CMO, contract manufacturing organization; CNS, central nervous system; CV, cardiovascular; DTC, direct to consumer; Dx, diagnostics; HD, Huntingdon’s disease; M&A, mergers and acquisitions; mfg, manufacturing; MPS, mucopolysaccharidosis; RD, rare disease; S&M, sales and marketing; SMA, spinal muscular atrophy; Tx, therapeutics; UMN, unmet medical need; UPMC, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center; URD, ultra-rare disease 13 References (1) Tordrup D, Tzouma V, Kanavos P. 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