GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK ) and its partner Theravance (NASDAQ: THRX ) recently scored a second victory in their quest to treat chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, commonly abbreviated as COPD — an umbrella term that includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis. The disease affects approximately 210 million people globally, and is expected to be the third leading cause of death by 2020.
GSK’s COPD drug candidate, Anoro Ellipta, received a favorable 11 to 2 advisory vote from the Pulmonary-Allergy Drugs Advisory Committee of the U.S. FDA, putting it on track for a possible final approval by the end of the year.
A second victory in the COPD combo race
Back in May, Glaxo and Theravance obtained FDA approval for Breo Ellipta, a long-term maintenance therapy for COPD. If Anoro Ellipta is also approved, Glaxo will have a pair of blockbusters as Breo is forecast to hit peak sales of $1.3 billion while Anoro should reach $1.4 billion.
Anoro Ellipta combines umeclidinium, which improves lung function, with vilanterol, which relaxes the muscles in the airways. By comparison, Breo Ellipta combines fluticasone, an inflammation-reducing corticosteroid, with vilanterol. Anoro is intended for all COPD patients who have trouble breathing, while Breo is intended for patients who are at risk of the disease worsening.
Will this pair offset the loss of Advair?
Those two potential blockbusters could offset the loss of patent exclusivity for GSK’s former top seller Advair, an older COPD and asthma treatment that lost patent protection in the U.S. in 2010 and will lose patent protection in Europe later this year.
Advair, known as Seretide globally, accounted for a fifth of Glaxo’s top line last quarter and generated $7.8 billion in sales last year. Although Advair’s patent has expired in the United States, its largest market, the drug must be dispensed via a device known as a Diskus. The Diskus, which is patent protected until 2016, has proven difficult for other companies like Teva Pharmaceuticals (NYSE: TEVA ) and Mylan to replicate.
As a result, generic Advair still hasn’t appeared on the market yet. Glaxo knows that it’s only a matter of time before one arrives, however, and it is preparing for that inevitability with Breo and Anoro Ellipta.
What the victory means for Theravance
Theravance will gain 6.5% to 10% in tiered royalty payments if Anoro is approved. Theravance already has an agreement with Glaxo for 15% of royalties from sales of Revlar, Ellipta, Breo Ellipta, and vilanterol monotherapy before global sales hit $3 billion. That cut declines to 5% after $3 billion is achieved.
Theravance decided earlier this year to split into two companies — Royalty Management Company and Theravance Biopharma — with the former retaining the development of its respiratory treatments and the latter focusing on the development and commercialization of small-molecule therapies in untapped markets.
The market is still crowded with old players
Due to the rising prevalence of COPD, the market is getting increasingly crowded with treatments.
AstraZeneca‘s (NYSE: AZN ) Symbicort, which generated $3.2 billion in sales in 2012, is another top-selling treatment being eyed by generic manufacturers. Symbicort combines formoterol, a bronchodilator, with a corticosteroid known as budesonide to reduce inflammation in severe COPD cases.
Similar to Advair, Symbicort also consists of a medication and one of two inhalation devices — a pMDI (metered dose) device in the United States and a Turbuhaler in the rest of the world. Like Advair, the patents for the medication will expire earlier (2014-2018) than those for the devices.
That hasn’t stopped Teva from also trying its hand at producing a generic version, however. In January, Teva filed for EU approval of its generic version of Symbicort, which uses its own proprietary Spiromax device to dispense the medication.
Novartis still wants a piece of the pie
Last but not least is Novartis (NYSE: NVS ) , which is developing a once-daily bronchodilator inhaler known as the Ultibro Breezhaler (QVA149). Novartis’ inhaler is a combination of two brochodilators — indacaterol and glycopyrronium bromide. The former relaxes the airway muscles as the latter dilates them.
The Ultibro Breezhaler is still an investigational treatment, but it is notably the first once-daily inhaled treatment for COPD that has received a positive endorsement from the European Committee of Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP). Initial results from its phase 3 clinical trial program have also been positive, with patients reporting reduced shortness of breath in comparison to open-label 18 mcg doses of tiotropium and 50 mcg doses of glycopyrronium.
The Foolish bottom line
Novartis is expected to submit a filing to the FDA by the end of 2014, making it a very late entrant into a COPD market that might be dramatically altered by Breo and Anoro Ellipta, or by generic versions of best-selling treatments like Advair and Symbicort.
However, even as the market is getting crowded with competitors, there might still be room for all of these treatments to co-exist.
According to GBI Research, the COPD market, which is currently worth $11.3 billion, could soar to $15.6 billion by 2019. Rising rates of COPD cases around the world, treated with more effective medications, could make these treatments the ones to watch over the next decade.
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