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Daclizumab for Asthma: A Business Opportunity Assessment PDL’s Line of Business • Humanizing antibodies from animal populations (mice) – Non-exclusive out-licensing of patents • Development of humanized MAbs as therapeutic agents – Asthma, cancer, autoimmune disorders, antiinflammatory conditions PDL’s Development Portfolio Monoclonal Antibody Indication(s) Daclizumab Asthma Multiple sclerosis Type 1 diabetes Ulcerative colitis Nuvion Ulcerative colitis HuZAF (anti-gamma interferon) Crohn’s Disease Anti-51 Integrin Solid tumors Anti-51 Integrin Fab Age-related macular degeneration Asthma • • • • • Chronic inflammatory disorder of airways Coughing, wheezing, airway constriction Genetic and environmental factors Occur, regress, recur at any age Hypersensitivity to allergens – Inappropriate immune response Asthma Severity Groupings • Mild Intermittent (41.6 %) • Mild Persistent (19 %) • Moderate Persistent (20.4 %) – Symptom episode every day for 12 months • Severe Persistent (19 %) – 21 Symptom episodes in a typical week Global Initiatives for Asthma (GINA) Asthma Pharmaco Therapy • Controller (maintenance) therapy – Inhaled corticosteriods – Long-acting beta2 agonist (inhaled/oral) – Leukotriene antagonists (oral) – Sustained-release theophyline (oral) – Oral corticosteriod (severe cases only) • Reliever therapy – Short-acting beta2 agonist Diagnosed & Current Asthma United States 2001 2011 Mild Intermittent 4,636,500 4,961,100 Mild Persistent 2,117,600 2,265,900 Moderate Persistent 2,273,700 2,432,800 Severe Persistent 2,117,600 2,265,900 11,145,400 11,925,700 Total Most Accessible Segment • Refractory severe persistent asthma – 2 to 3 % of diagnosed AND current population – Poorly controlled by inhaled corticosteriods (ICS) • Potential population of – 223,000 to 334,000 – 0.076% to 0.114% of US population Unmet Medical Needs • Agents for refractory severe persistent asthma • Anti-inflammatory controller agents as effective as corticosteriods w/o side effects • More convenient dosage forms – depot, once daily inhaler, once daily tablet Daclizumab for Asthma • Humanized monoclonal antibody • Pharmacology – IL-2 receptor antagonist (immunosuppressive) – Inhibits T-cell migration and a cascade of events that increase severity of asthma • Dosage form – Concentrated solution diluted prior to injection • Patient administered drug at specialty pharmacies – Administered every two weeks • Marketed as Zenapax (H. La Roche) – Acute kidney transplant rejection drug Allergen IgE Mast Cell Daclizumab Release of Factors Allergic Reactions Recruitment of T Cells T Cells release more Factors Amplification of Allergic reaction Daclizumab for Asthma • Development status – Completed Phase II trial – 114 patients • Clinical study patient population – Chronic persistent asthma – Poorly controlled by inhaled corticosteriods • Results will be compared to Xolair efficacy Reference Technology: Xolair • Genentech – Approved June 2003 • First biotech for asthma • Moderate-to-severe persistent asthma – Same population as Daclizumab • Sub-cutaneous injection every 2 to 4 wks – Same administration as Daclizumab • Higher concentration of drug – In some instances, 5X higher Allergen IgE Xolair Mast Cell Daclizumab Release of Factors Allergic Reactions Recruitment of T Cells T Cells release more Factors Amplification of Allergic reaction Efficacy Comparison • Xolair: – Improved Fev1 by 3% – This decreased asthma exacerbations by about 30% • Daclizumab – Improved Fev1 by 2.9% – No measurement of exacerbation change, but can assume it’s similar • Same efficacy! – PDL Choices • Alter phase III to attain better efficacy – More frequent administration – Higher concentrations • Create a me-too drug • Alter phase III trials to test an easier form of administration – Self-administration – Longer time lengths between administrations Reference Technology: Xolair • Pricing – AWP of $541.25 per 150 mg vial – $8,000 to $12,000 per patient per year • Market penetration – Jan 2004 – 923 total Rx, $1.82 MM – Feb 2004 – 1,090 total Rx, $2.08 MM – March 2004 - 1,462 total Rx, not available Claims Data Statistics Claims Data Results (Non-Medicare population) N = 1402 Age Mean Median (50 %-ile) Range Std. Deviation 25 19 88 20.6 Source: HSI Network, LLC Total Inpatient Claims paid for Patient $ 7,275 $0 $ 553,000 $ 27,000 Total Physician Claims paid for Patient $ 2,040 $ 863 $ 178,000 $ 5,800 Total Pharmacy Claims paid for Patient $ 856 $ 323 $ 21,000 $ 1,600 Total Costs/ Patient (could include nonasthma costs) $ 10,200 $ 2,500 $ 569,000 $ 28,800 Claims Data Statistics Claims Data Results—Fifty Patient Cases, calendar year 2002 N = 50 Age Range Sex Avg. Number of Asthma-Related ER visits Avg. Number of Asthma-Related ER visits for patients visiting at least once Avg. Hospitalization Claims paid Avg. Physician Claims paid Avg. Pharmacy Claims paid Source: HSI Network, LLC 1 year-58 years 23 M, 27 F 0.84 2.10 $ 10,347 $ 1,624 $ 1,017 Cost Effectiveness Analysis Change in Costs Change in QALYs Cost Effectiveness Analysis Assumptions: – Improved QALY score with Zenapax – Less costly than Hospitalization (on a per incident basis) – More costly than Hospitalization considering the numbers of patients treated in order to capture those most at risk. (consider treating 50 patients to capture 20) Regulatory Factors • Predicate product (Xolair) [+] • New cGMP bio-manufactuing facility [+] • 2nd indication for approved product [+] – Zenapax for acute kidney transplant rejection • Predicate product reimbursed [+] Good regulatory position!