EyeTech: Primary Care Dollars for Specialty Pharma
Pfizer's $295 million deal for EyeTech's product for macular degeneration is one more example of the Big Pharma's evident belief in the increasing value of specialist, as opposed to primary care, markets. For Pfizer, co-promoting the drug with a start-up is less problematic than most such arrangements because of EyeTech's deep connections with thought leaders in the field and Pfizer's own inexperience in it.
Arbitrage may be the biggest game in biotech.
For $7 million up front and $25 million in milestones, plus the ability to buy a big chunk of stock...
Read the full article – start your free trial today!
Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on In Vivo for daily insights
Editor’s note: This is your final call to participate in the survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. The deadline is 20 September.
Mary Jane Hinrichs, Ipsen’s head of early development, talks to In Vivo about getting ahead of the competition by securing deals for candidates before they enter Phase I trials.
Editor’s note: We are conducting a survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. If there are any changes you’d like to see in the coverage topics, content format or the method in which you receive and access In Vivo, or if you love it how it is, now is the time to have your voice heard.
The cell and gene therapy (CGT) clinical trial landscape in general and CAR-T cell clinical trials in particular are a special focus for the FDA, EMA, and other regulatory agencies. The whole industry is thus aware of the recent FDA safety investigation and requirements for labeling CAR therapy products.
Jana Grieb, European regulatory and market access legal expert at McDermott Will & Emery, explains why the healthtech and pharma industries are warming to the new EU health commissioner as he faces calls to make the MDR more “user friendly.”
While big pharma pours billions into creating new anti-aging molecules, a Belgian startup has taken a different path: combining existing safe drugs with AI precision. The early results suggest it might be onto something revolutionary.
Bristol Myers Squibb executive Doxie Jordan discusses his path to global commercial leadership and the principles guiding pharmaceutical market strategy