Log in | Register

Gilead Sciences Jumps on Hepatitis C Data

For the latest pharmaceutical news and updates - Sign up now!
Loading...

NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of Gilead Sciences Inc. jumped Friday after the company reported further progress of GS-7977, a newly-acquired hepatitis C treatment still in clinical testing.

THE SPARK: Gilead said Thursday that in a clinical trial, two groups of patients who were treated with GS-7977 had undetectable levels of the hepatitis C virus after four weeks. The patients took GSI-7977 and ribavirin, an older treatment for the virus, and they had either failed to respond to previous therapies or had not been treated before. In November, Pharmasset Inc. — which developed the drug and was acquired by Gilead in January — said 100 percent of patients in a study responded to the drug.

THE BIG PICTURE: Gilead, of Foster City, Calif., bought Pharmasset to get the rights to that drug and other compounds Pharmasset was developing. The GS-7977 pill may be the most promising of several experimental therapies for hepatitis C, which helps explain why Gilead paid $11.1 billion for Pharmasset — a figure that on a per-share basis amounted to more than twice what Pharmasset's stock was trading at before Gilead made its offer.

Gilead also reported its fourth-quarter results after the market closed on Thursday. Its profit of 97 cents per share fell short of Wall Street estimates, and the company also forecast disappointing revenue in 2012.

THE ANALYSIS: Cowen and Co. analyst Phil Nadeau said Gilead's quarterly results were somewhat disappointing because the company is spending more money on drug development, but key drugs like the HIV therapies Atripla, Viread, and Truvada met expectations. Nadeau said he believes that investors are paying more attention to Gilead's drug pipeline than its current results.

"With '7977 continuing to look like the next standard of care in hepatitis C, we think investors are less focused on Gilead's near-term fundamentals," he wrote.

The Food and Drug Administration is scheduled to make a decision on Gilead's four-in-one "Quad" HIV pill by Aug. 27.

 

 

Join the Discussion
Rate Article:  Average 0 out of 5
register or log in to comment on this article!

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

Blogs

The Tale of Two Deviations

The Tale of Two Deviations

Apr 23 | The QA Pharm

It stands to reason that pharmaceutical companies in compliance trouble also have problems with their Deviation Management and Corrective and Preventive Action (CAPA) System(s).

Can the Combination of Creative Destruction and “Steve Jobs’ Traits” Lead to a “Pharma QbD Spring”?

Can the Combination of Creative Destruction and “Steve Jobs’ Traits” Lead to a “Pharma QbD Spring”?

Apr 16 | Girish Malhotra, PE, President, EPCOT International

The answer is an unequivocal yes but we need some outsiders who can conspire with the insiders who will be the flag bearers within the companies. Outsiders can be the counsels/co-conspirators to the insiders for the coup d'etat.

Multimedia

Lung Cancer Drug Treats Rare Lymphoma Tumors

Lung Cancer Drug Treats Rare Lymphoma Tumors

May 17 | Video

A new study found Xalkori effective in treating anaplastic lymphoma among children, an encouraging development for gene-targeted therapy.

Merck - 2012 Facility of the Year Award - Facility Integration

Merck - 2012 Facility of the Year Award - Facility Integration

May 14 | Video

Brian Morrissey, Senior Project Engineer, Merck Manufacturing Division, talks to Pharmaceutical Processing's Editor In Chief Mike Auerbach during INTERPHEX 2012 about the company's Vaccine Bulk Manufacturing Facility Program of Projects. The facility has won the Facility Integration award in the 2012 Facility of the Year Award competition sponsored by ISPE, INTERPHEX and Pharmaceutical Processing magazine.

Medicine from a Vending Machine?

Medicine from a Vending Machine?

May 3 | Video

A Chinese company is pushing for acceptance of traditional Chinese medicine with a machine that can dispense herbs.

Taking Precautions to Prevent Contagion

Taking Precautions to Prevent Contagion

Apr 29 | Video

With the recent outbreak of viruses such as SARS, bird flu and swine flu, officials and travelers are being extra careful about preventing the illnesses from being transmitted.

Top Stories and Headlines
EVERY DAY!

FREE Email Newsletter