August 31, 2007

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Nektar’s CEO: Exubera Inhaled Insulin “Not Strategically Relevant”


Howard Robin, Nektar CEOIn a startling revelation, the San Jose Mercury News revealed today that Nektar CEO Howard Robin told financial analysts that Exubera “is not strategically relevant to the future success of” the company.
Some analysts have called Exubera “a spectacular flop,” and that more than a few diabetes doctors are hesitant to prescribe the drug.

Dr. John Buse, American Diabetes Assocation president-elect“I see it as my job to talk people out of (using) it,”  Dr. John Buse (inset, left), the president-elect of the American Diabetes Association (’ADA’) told one New Jersey newspaper.

Buse is on a mission: to convince diabetics that Exubera is not worth the inhaled insulin’s potential safety risks.

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August 25, 2007

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Pfizer’s Senior Middle East Manager Discusses Exubera and Diabetes

Pfizer Middle East Dr. Ahmed El Hakim
Dr Ahmed El Hakim, the Senior Manager of Pfizer’s (NYSE:PFE) Middle East Arab Group, recently defended the drug company’s lackluster worldwide Exubera inhaled insulin sales.

Downplaying the diabetes drug’s widely known poor worldwide launch, El Hakim explained to ArabianBusiness.com that “this is the price you pay as an innovator - the concept [of using inhaled insulin] has not yet been established, and while we are now establishing the concept of using this convenient therapy, sales have not been up to the expectations of many people.”

A study published in the World Health Organization’s journal, the Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, concluded that diabetes was a growing problem in Saudi Arabia, citing the following factors:

  • A high prevalence of obesity;
  • A diet rich in carbohydrates (e.g., bread, dates, sugar, and potatoes);
  • Lack of exercise; and
  • Genetic factors

At the time the study was reported in 1998, it found that there was more than a 300% increase in Type 2 diabetics older than 30 in Central Saudi Arabia, from 6% in 1982 to more than 18.22% in 1998.  Pfizer’s El Hakim told a reporter that the country’s now approximately 25% of Saudis are diabetics.
That’s a huge potential market for the pharmaceutical company’s diabetes and cardiovascular drugs.

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August 5, 2007

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Pharma Equity Analyst Calls Exubera a ‘Sepctacular Flop’


According to Michael Krensavage, a pharmaceutical equity analyst at Raymond James Financial, Inc. (NYSE:RJF), the launch of Exubera inhaled insulin for diabetics “has been one of the most spectular flops in the pharmaceutical industry.”

Krensavage made this analysis when interviewed about Pfizer, Inc.’s (NYSE:PFE) difficulty in launching and maintaining profitable new drugs in a highly competitive market.  “No matter how you look at it,” Krensavage concluded, Pfizer’s drug research and development efforts have yielded “a disappointing pipeline.”
Pfizer’s 8K report to shareholders disclosed Exubera’s continued market failure. “Sales of Exubera continue to be disappointing, with $4 million of worldwide revenues in the second quarter of 2007.”
Generating only $4 million in revenue on a diabetes drug for which Pfizer paid Sanofi-Aventis $1.3 billion in January 2006 is an abysmal failure, there may still be a silver-lining for diabetics.

By sticking to proven diabetes medications that do not have unknown pulmonary and related risks for diabetics that are the subject of long-term FDA-mandated drug safety studies (as a condition of the drug’s approval), endocrinologists appear likely to give their patients trusted choices for managing their care.

Even given reported the Avandia heart attack risks for Type 2 diabetics, Pfizer doesn’t seem to have convinced endocrinologists that Exubera is a better diabetes drug.

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Disclaimer: This blog contains news and information about Exubera inhaled insulin,
but is neither written by nor on behalf of Pfizer and Nektar Therapeutics, Exubera inhaled insulin's makers. All
trademark rights to Exubera are owned by Pfizer and/or Nektar Therapeutics, and no express or implied rights to such
are claimed by this blog.

Medical warning: No medical advice is offered by this blog. All persons reading this blog,
whether diabetic or not, must consult with their respective doctors and medical
professionals for diabetes advice and insulin treatment options. If you believe that you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 and/or seek medical help immediately.

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