sokol
2 years ago
After more reading and reflection, I think you are right that the license payments do not matter. Relative to the cost of treatment, for whatever it is worth, this is what one commentator had to say:
“Provention along with several advocacy groups is working to expand disease awareness and screening. This will help drive the second wave of sales to the broader at-risk population.
After months of working with key opinion leaders, advocacy groups, payers, doctors, and patients, Provention has settled on a wholesale acquisition cost of $13,850 per vial of TZIELD. Its 14-day treatment regimen is administered to patients through an IV in an outpatient setting to start, and will eventually be available at home too. The total cost of one treatment regimen is $193,900.
This price point reflects the perceived value from all of the stakeholders, including the payers that were receptive to covering it at this cost, that this game-changing medicine brings to patients.”
adamp
2 years ago
I've been following this a VERY long time.. took a massive loss when it use to trade at $20. I've very impressed that it got approved, i wasn't expecting that. I think you're right that there are probably some restrictions involved, but this shouldn't take away from the simple fact that this drug is going prime-time. PRVB is a ripe buyout candidate, as well. Options will create massive volatility in the very near short term, but in the end, this should be priced at several times what it is now. I hope the drug works. I listened to the FDA meeting a while back and wasn't overly impressed. It looks like enough people are optimistic about this to give it a green light. Again, I hope it does what it's supposed to do, and then some. Diabetes is a killer. The medical community, patients included, are desperate for some kind of breakthrough in this field. I hope this is it.
crudeoil24
2 years ago
PRVB shares up after the company said it has entered into a co-promotion agreement with Sanofi U.S. for the launch of Provention's lead investigational drug candidate teplizumab.
The agreement enables Provention Bio to use Sanofi's expertise, capabilities and commercial resources to support the potential launch of teplizumab currently under review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, for the delay of clinical type 1 diabetes in at-risk individuals.
The company sees a user fee goal date of Nov. 17 for the Biologics License Application.
Under the terms of the agreement, Sanofi will commit commercial resources in the U.S, including diabetes field specialists, account directors, field-based reimbursement and medical science liaisons to expand the number of key healthcare professionals reached in the U.S. In exchange, Provention will reimburse field force-related expenses that Sanofi will incur in connection with commercializing teplizumab under the agreement.
Provention retains all rights to teplizumab and maintains responsibility for the commercialization strategy.
The company also granted Sanofi, in consideration of a one-time payment of $20 million, an exclusive, one-time right of first negotiation to obtain exclusive global rights to commercialize teplizumab for Type 1 diabetes indications in humans. Sanofi may exercise the ROFN, until June 30, 2023, with an option to extend within 2023 under certain conditions.
Write to Chris Wack at chris.wack@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
sokol
3 years ago
Provention Bio Appoints Jan Hillson, M.D., as Senior Vice President of Clinical Development - See announcement above. Clinical development includes the entire process of bringing a new drug to market. As best I can determine, the company has met most of the FDA’s concerns regarding teplizumab; however, it also needs to address the comparability of the drug being manufactured for commercial use and the product used in previous clinical trials. Provention, I think, plans to meet with the FDA in December about designing a study to resolve this issue. I feel confident this issue will be addressed to the FDA’s satisfaction, and the drug will eventually be approved. However, this last issue may take some time that takes us into the first quarter of 2022 before we definitely know for certain that all hurdles have been met.
sokol
4 years ago
“…. the FDA stated that a single, low-dose …. failed to show PK comparability.” What will multiple and/or higher doses show? “ The Company expects relevant additional PK/PD data being, or to be, collected from a substudy in patients receiving 12-days of therapy in the ongoing Phase 3 PROTECT trial in newly diagnosed T1D patients…”. The Seeking Alpha article indicated the company believes product quality has been addressed. Product quality should be easy to remedy. The only thing I am concerned about is what will the additional PK/PD data show? I will continue to hold for now. Biotech is volatile, and this is another example - look for anything that indicates that additional or higher doses may work?
It is often said that it is all about dosing. Designing the correct dosage regimen is important for achieving the desired therapeutic efficacy and avoiding undesired effects. Additionally, this is a biologic. Possibly the drug may work differently for different patients. The amount of dosing, dosing frequency, number of injections, and time to onset of effect, etc., are but a few factors involved in the administration of this biologic. Biologics, like many things, I think are complicated.
sokol
4 years ago
Gbola Amusa, MD, CFA Partner, Head of Healthcare Research at Chardan Capital Markets said Friday that there are too many uncertainties for the FDA to approve Teplizumab on July 2, and the FDA will want to see more results from the ongoing phase 111 study into 2022; However, he maintained a buy rating on the stock. I believe the share price of Provention will be volatile going forward.