Germany's Boehringer Ingelheim said on Thursday (Aug 17) it would conduct three late-stage studies for its obesity drug candidate after it showed up to
19 per cent weight loss after 46 weeks in a mid-stage trial.
The private company plans to start enrollments for the trial of the drug, survodutide, which it co-invented with Danish biotech company Zealand Pharma, before
the end of the year.
The trials will evaluate the drug's safety and efficacy, Boehringer said, and added that it would provide further details on the studies before initiation.
Boehringer and Zealand are among global drugmakers racing to grab a share of the potential $100 billion market for obesity treatments within a decade.
Survodutide works by mimicking a gut hormone called glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), which suppresses appetite, as well as imitating another gut hormone called
glucagon that helps break down fat.
Ceuta Group, a global brand building business providing end-to-end outsourcing services in the health and wellness industry has appointed David Wright as a
non-executive board director.
With extensive experience of leading global consumer healthcare companies, David joins Ceuta Group following five years as CEO/President of global pharmaceutical
company, HRA Pharma and six years as Global Head of Boehringer Ingelheim's consumer business.
During his time at HRA Pharma and Boehringer Ingelheim GmBH, David led both companies through substantial organisational and strategy re-design which led to
sustainable growth and profitability.
The company said: "David has a strong belief that combining the right structure, operational priorities and processes, with a strong focus on company culture, are
critical factors in building successful businesses. This approach saw him lead a period of transformation at HRA Pharma resulting in the company's successful
acquisition by Perrigo Company plc."
David will take an active role on the Ceuta Group Board supporting and building the company's strategic vision and priorities. He will also help shape the company's
growth plans on an operational level to ensure Ceuta Group continues to meet client's needs today and into the future.
Anglo-Swedish drugmaker AstraZeneca said on Monday (January 9) that it had struck a deal to buy US-based drug developer CinCor Pharma for up to $1.8 billion
to increase its stock of heart and kidney drugs.
Core to the deal is CinCor's experimental therapy baxdrostat, which is in development to treat conditions including high blood pressure and chronic kidney disease.
AstraZeneca aims to combine baxdrostat with its own Farxiga, a diabetes drug whose sales ballooned after it was also shown to benefit patients with heart failure
and kidney disease.
Farxiga, whose sales jumped by almost 50 per cent during the first nine months of 2022 to reach $3.2 billion, belongs to a highly competitive class of drugs that
includes rivals such as Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly's Jardiance.
AstraZeneca gets about a third of its revenue from cancer drugs, but its heart, kidney and diabetes medicines are its second most lucrative business by sales,
generating roughly $6.9 billion of the drugmaker's total revenue of more than $33 billion in the first three quarters of 2022.