Sanofi, Teva sign deal worth $1.5 billion to co-develop blockbuster inflammatory bowel disease drug

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from Pharmbiz:

“French drug maker Sanofi has announced that it is teaming up with Israel-based Teva Pharmaceuticals to co-develop an anti-TL1A therapeutic for inflammatory bowel disease in a deal worth up to $1.5 billion.

Teva’s asset is already in Phase IIb clinical trials for two types of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease. TEV ‘574 is part of a newer class of therapies targeting TL1A, a member of the tumor necrosis factor family abnormally expressed in autoimmune diseases like IBD, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and other conditions. Recent studies have shown it’s involved in both the development and pathogenesis of these diseases.  

Sanofi is paying Teva $500 million upfront to co-develop and co-commercialize TEV ‘574, believing the therapy “could emerge as a best-in-class option for people living with serious gastrointestinal diseases,” CEO Paul Hudson said in a statement.

Another $1 billion is on the line for Teva in potential development and launch milestones. Sanofi will take the lead in development if the asset reaches Phase III. Interim results from the current Phase II study are expected in September 2024.

In the IBD space, competition is heating up among Big Pharma focused on therapeutics targeting TL1A.

A Phase II study of the mAb showed 26.5% of patients with moderately-to-severely active UC reached clinical remission after 12 weeks, compared to 1.5% of those on placebo. The Crohn’s trial posted even better response rates with nearly half of patients with moderately-to-severely active disease achieving clinical remission…”

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