Study Shows Weekly Byetta Diabetes Drug Outdoes Competitors
07 June 2009 - 5:22AM
Dow Jones News
A once-a-week version of the diabetes drug Byetta by Amylin
Pharmaceuticals Inc. (AMLN) was better at controlling blood glucose
levels and reducing weight in patients with diabetes, according to
a study released Saturday.
The 26-week study, released at the annual American Diabetes
Association conference, compared patients taking Byetta and an
older diabetes drug to those taking Takeda Pharmaceutical Co.'s
(4502.TO) Actos and Merck & Co.'s (MRK) Januvia in combination
with an older diabetes drug.
The study said 70% of patients taking Byetta had improved
glucose control and loss in weight compared to about 50% in
patients taking Januvia and 14% taking Actos.
Representatives from Merck and Takeda weren't immediately
available to comment.
A version of Byetta that is injected twice a day is already
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Amylin
co-develops the drug with Eli Lilly & Co. (LLY) and Alkermes
Inc. (ALKS), and is seeking FDA approval for the once-a-week
version.
If approved, it would be the first weekly diabetes drug and
analysts predict the convenience of the medicine could push the
drug to multibillion-dollar sales within several years.
The study may also help answers safety questions that have been
overshadowing Byetta. The study shows none of the more than 100
patients who took the weekly version of Byetta suffered from an
inflamed pancreas, also known as pancreatitis. Two patients on
Actos reported suffering from pancreatitis, while none did who took
Januvia.
Amylin management has been under pressure from activist investor
Carl Icahn and others who say the company hasn't properly handled
Byetta. They say the drug hasn't lived up to its sales potential,
though the once-a-week version could change that.
-By Jared A. Favole, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9207;
jared.favole@dowjones.com