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Thursday, 17 May 2007

Can P&G Stomach the Risk Even When It's Reduced?

Posted on 02:18 by Unknown
P&G Pharmaceuticals has been the Henny Youngman Rodney Dangerfield! of the drug industry: it couldn't get no respect. And so last year it remade itself, becoming what it calls a “search and development organization,” apparently on the model of Shire and Endo.

When it announced it was abandoning discovery, in February 2006, P&G was both admitting it couldn’t compete in research—and that it couldn’t stomach the risk. It laid off, or transferred, most of its researchers; it has spun off at least three research programs (more on that in another post); and now it’s got 45 people scouring the earth for licensable products in its chosen therapeutic areas: gastro-intestinal, musculo-skeletal and women’s health. Two key criteria: P&G only want drugs for patients that have “high involvement in their disease”; and they want products for which the development risk is “reduced.”

They’ve got some ambitious goals. To reach their growth targets, they want to launch one new product every 4-5 years – and that drug needs to become – echoing Jack Welch’s famous maxim for GE—number one or two in its category. To get to their launch target, P&G figures it will need to do 2-3 deals per year.

The question, however, is whether the kind of products that get to be #1 in their categories are also the kind of products that P&G management will be willing to pay for. It’s a challenge, admits Jeff Davis, who runs new business development. P&G has a shareholder base which demands 4-6% growth a year—that’s the kind of growth that justifies not reduced-risk research, but no-risk research, the sort that figures out how to get more or less pulp into orange juice or no-drip caps onto detergent bottles.

Moreover, while Big Pharma isn’t generally ponying up for reduced-risk development projects (in general, they still want NMEs), spec pharma is, and paying Big Pharma-sized upfronts. But P&G figures it can win these deals by emphasizing its consumer-focused marketing approach (it had an entire team of R&D, finance and marketing execs outfitted with an electronic system that, for a week, at all times of day, signaled them to react to the unpleasant gastrointestinal events of ulcerative colitis patients). And if—as this blogger believes--spec pharmas are going to be P&G’s biggest dealmaking competition, then P&G really will have an interesting advantage.

The pitch worked for Aryx Therapeutics, one of two companies with whom P&G has signed deals since its reorganization (the other is Nastech, for nasal-delivered parathyroid hormone). The Aryx drug, for GERD and gastroparesis, hit all the P&G criteria: a GI product (for GERD and gastroparesis) and risk-reduced (works like Propulsid but, apparently, avoids the drug-drug interactions which killed it). “We had three virtually identical term sheets,” says Aryx VP and COO John Varian but chose P&G because of their “focus on the consumer.”

Still, P&G is hardly burning up the dealmaking track. They’ve done two deals since their restructuring—the last in July 2006. Davis is confident that in ’07 his group will be able to get to terms sheets on 2-3 programs. There are plenty of biotechs who'll appreciate the P&G approach. But we wonder whether the Consumer King will tolerate the risk of signing them.
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