Succeeding in Heart Failure, Incrementally

Because of the heterogeneity of heart failure patients and causes, new drugs to treat heart failure haven't been a huge area of research or business development. Few heart failure drugs are likely to be blockbusters, and there are very few deals around truly novel targets. Biotech start-ups build on known approaches and innovate incrementally, in this market.

Heart failure (HF), like cancer, is a major killer--in the US alone, 5.2 million people die from it; another 550,000 are diagnosed with it each year. Younger patients can expect to die within five years of diagnosis; elderly within one.

But like cancer, HF is more a convenient description of a set of diseases and conditions than it is itself...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Scrip for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Strategy

Europe’s Drugmakers Lament EU Pharma Package

 
• By 

EFPIA says reforms make the continent less attractive for innovative firms.

Bayer Boosted By Third FDA Approval For Nubeqa

 
• By 

US green light will further expand sales of the prostate cancer blockbuster.

Atai/Beckley Merger Comes At A Transformative Time For Psychedelics

 
• By 

All eyes are on the upcoming readout of BPL-003 for treatment-resistant depression.

Bristol Will Pay BioNTech $1.5bn Up Front To Enter PD-L1xVEGF Space

 
• By 

BMS is guaranteeing BioNTech at least $3.5bn to share development costs and potential profits on the Phase III bispecific, to compete with Summit, Merck and Pfizer.

More from Business

Finance Watch: Is Six The Magic Number? May Sees Half Dozen VC Mega-Rounds

 
• By 

Private Company Edition: Six biopharma companies raised venture capital rounds totaling $100m or more in May, matching the number of mega-rounds in April and March. Among other recent financings, Syndeio launched with $90m and SpyGlass raised a $75m series D round.

Bayer Boosted By Third FDA Approval For Nubeqa

 
• By 

US green light will further expand sales of the prostate cancer blockbuster.

Kymera STAT6 Data Set The Bar For ‘Dupixent-In-A-Pill’ Race

 

Kymera will move KT-621 into Phase II trials later this year based on compelling data in healthy volunteers, validating the company’s protein-degradation platform.