Jerini - wohin des Wegs?


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44542 Postings, 8766 Tage Slater+ 10 %

 
  
    #126
1
27.05.08 17:30
schließt auf Tageshoch auf Xetra  

25589 Postings, 6539 Tage gruenelinieWeiß der Kuckuck warum

 
  
    #127
27.05.08 22:59
Vielleicht habebn die Charties ein Glücks-Bermudadreieck gefunden??  ;o)))  

51345 Postings, 8924 Tage eckigruenelinie, aufs Bermudadreieck habe ich das

 
  
    #128
1
28.05.08 08:57
copyright. ;)

Wenn diese Woche das Februartief als Unterstützung hält, dann sollte es auch zügig wieder bis 2,50 marschieren. Meine Meinung.  
Angehängte Grafik:
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27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaJerini: 2 Euro-Marke überschritten!!

 
  
    #129
1
28.05.08 12:25

25589 Postings, 6539 Tage gruenelinieImmerhin haben wirs überlebt

 
  
    #130
28.05.08 12:29
Hab am Katastrophentag (FED) bei L&S kurzzeitig (abends??) 0,16 € gesehen, wenn ich mich richtig erinnere.
;o)))
 

17 Postings, 6067 Tage alien08aus april ausgabe von Nature Biotech....

 
  
    #131
1
30.05.08 14:18

Companies line up for hereditary angioedema market

Brady Huggett

At the end of this month, the first therapeutic for hereditary angioedema (HAE) could receive approval for marketing in the US. By end of next year, there could be as many as five biotech products on the HAE market from separate companies. Being first to receive approval in a small, niche indication will ensure a competitive edge, but differences in mode of action, delivery and eligibility for orphan status for the different therapies, as well as the heterogeneity of the patient population itself, might mean later entrants could still be successful as the market becomes segmented.

Berlin-based Jerini is poised first in line to receive a decision from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The company's Icatibant, a synthetic peptidomimetic drug licensed from Paris-headquartered Sanofi Aventis, has a Prescription Drug User Fee Act date of April 26. Approval is by no means certain, however, as the HAE field has a history of late-stage regulatory setbacks (Box 1).

HAE is caused by low serum levels of C1 esterase inhibitor (C1-INH). As well as inhibiting components of the fibrinolytic, clotting and kinin pathways, C1-INH also blocks the activation of C1 and the rest of the classic complement pathway by binding to C1r and C1s (sub-components of C1). Low levels of C1-INH lead to unchecked complement activation that is important in inflammation and the clearance of pathogens from the body. There are two types of HAE patients: most are type 1 and have levels of C1-INH <35% lower than normal; those with type 2 have normal or elevated levels of C1-INH, but the protein is nonfunctional. Either way, both types suffer attacks that swell the hands, feet, larynx, facial features and genitals, with gastro-intestinal swelling that sometimes causes vomiting, diarrhea and severe pain. The condition is rare but autosomal dominant.

One key problem for drug developers is how to estimate the HAE market size. A "pretty standard" estimated prevalence is 1 person with HAE in every 30,000 people, says Samir Singh, president of US operations at Pharming (headquartered in Leiden, The Netherlands). This suggests about 10,000 people in the US and 22,000 people in the Western world with HAE. "When you look at the US, Europe and Japan, that's total treatable attacks of 200,000 [annually]," he estimates.

All the players think the market is set to grow and that the disease is often mis- or underdiagnosed. Cambridge, Massachusetts–based Dyax's general counsel and executive vice president of administration, Ivana Magovc acuteevic acute-Liebisch, says diagnosing the disease can take as long as ten years, as patients repeatedly leave hospitals after the attack resolves without a physician fingering HAE as the culprit.

"Patients look like they are having an allergic reaction," she says, and even as they suffer vomiting and diarrhea, doctors "can't find anything wrong." Eventually an allergist suggests HAE, and the patient begins mining the family history to discover a pattern of illness in relatives.

Once diagnosed, there is no consensus on whether those individuals should receive acute or prophylactic care, mostly because the frequency of attacks is also unclear. CSL Behring of King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, already markets its C1-INH product Berinert in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, where the drug has been administered >300,000 times. Published data from these European patients point to about seven attacks per year, though many assume it's higher and Pharming's Singh says certain surveys have it pegged as high as 20 annually.

If people with HAE are having 20 or more attacks yearly, then "one could make a case for prophylactic use," says Singh, though personally he's doubtful. In fact, only New York-based Lev is developing its product, Cinryze, to include the prophylactic market. Dyax's executive vice president and chief business officer, Gustav Christensen, doubts that market exists. Prophylactic treatment could mean two injections a week, driving the cost per patient to $250,000 annually, so insurance carriers would probably begin pushing cheaper acute treatment as preferred.

Three of the five drugs vying for approval aim to address HAE by supplementing the individual's endogenous C1-INH with a functional version of the human protein (Table 1). Lev and CSL Behring are both developing a purified plasma protein version, whereas Pharming has developed a recombinant C1-INH produced in transgenic rabbits.

The other two companies—Dyax and Jerini—are developing proteins aimed at dampening the inflammatory cascade. Dyax's recombinant protein DX-88 (ecallantide) inhibits kallikrein, an enzyme that liberates bradykinin, which causes fluid to leak from blood vessels into the tissues. Jerini's Icatibant attacks one step further down the line; it's a competitive bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist. All five drugs are deemed comparably efficacious (though there have been no head-to-head clinical trials to help determine this), which means it's difficult to predict which product will have the competitive edge.

One differentiating factor is delivery. DX-88 is just 60 amino acids long and can be administered subcutaneously, as can Icatibant, but the C1-INH products must be given by intravenous (i.v.) infusion. Jerini CEO Jens Schneider-Mergener says that, based on feedback from physicians, his firm sees "a big advantage" in the subcutaneous route over the i.v. one. Bret Holley, analyst with New York-based Oppenheimer, which covers Lev but receives no compensation from the firm, tends to agree, venturing that i.v. infusion can be seen as a "killing handicap." But Holley also argues that attacks are foreseen by people with HAE, much like migraines, allowing them time to seek a physician for an infusion, and he points out that Dyax's DX-88 needs to be refrigerated anyway. So far, Jerini boasts the only subcutaneous administration that does not need to be refrigerated—the company has data showing sterility exceeding 18 months at room temperature. Dyax is working on a room-temperature formulation.

The final uncertainty is orphan drug status—all have it except CSL Behring. The FDA makes the final decision here, but it is assumed DX-88 and Icatibant will be viewed as independent molecules and thus each drug's orphan drug status will not block another from entering the market. Pharming's Samir says that his company's C1 inhibitor should stand alone, as it is a recombinant molecule. Whether the plasma-derived C1 inhibitors will be viewed as the same molecule isn't clear.

There is general consensus, however, on what's at risk: a $500 million-a-year market. The small patient population and unmet medical need means the community will tolerate a "Genzyme-like pricing," Holley says, referring to the empire Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Genzyme has built by developing niche products for rare diseases. The HAE market, Holley believes, will be shaped in much the same way as the one formed around Genzyme's products.

"Patients will be treated on a physician-by-physician basis," he says, so the first step is to "get a therapy out there." Only then, as patients choose the product that works best for them, physicians become comfortable and usage is bent to individual needs, will there be hints as to how these products will settle out.

 

 

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetajetzt anschnallen :-))

 
  
    #132
1
02.06.08 16:54

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetasuper nachrichten!!

 
  
    #133
02.06.08 16:56
allen der investiert hat gutes gelungen!!

9 Postings, 6236 Tage KlexxxGute News aber?

 
  
    #134
1
02.06.08 18:23
Gute Nachrichten aber die Aktie ging erstmal wieder runter wieso ?
Kann mir das einer erklären ?  

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaviele haben Gewinne mitgenommen!

 
  
    #135
02.06.08 20:16
deswegen ging der Kurs erst mal runther,,,

25589 Postings, 6539 Tage gruenelinieOder Biotech-Frust?

 
  
    #136
02.06.08 20:20
Egal, der Juni kann vielleicht mit ZWEI Highlights aufwarten:
- das FED-Gespräch Mitte des Monats;
- EU-Zulassung ggf. bis Ende Juni.

;o)  

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetasehr Interessanter Wert,

 
  
    #137
02.06.08 20:26

25589 Postings, 6539 Tage gruenelinieEin "Gute-Laune-Tach" ,o)

 
  
    #138
03.06.08 12:11

51345 Postings, 8924 Tage eckiStimmt.

 
  
    #139
03.06.08 15:13
 

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaMorgen 3,00 € Grenze

 
  
    #140
03.06.08 15:31
werden wir es schaffen, bin mir sicher!

9 Postings, 6236 Tage Klexxx3€

 
  
    #141
03.06.08 15:47
Wir werden es sehen.
Aber ich hoffe es mal das es klappt.  

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaich bin auch für 5,00 €

 
  
    #142
03.06.08 15:55
werden wir auch erreichen wenn wir die 3,20 grenze knacken!
Geduld!! Geduld!!   und dann abwarten die USA!!

44542 Postings, 8766 Tage Slater20 Cent heute sind schon mal nicht schlecht

 
  
    #143
03.06.08 16:08
 

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaes ist mehr drin!!

 
  
    #144
03.06.08 16:10
nur Geduld

44542 Postings, 8766 Tage Slaterder Chart-Widerstand bei 2,25

 
  
    #145
03.06.08 16:16
wurde jedenfalls klar durchbrochen, auch mit Volumen  

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaich denke Morgen werden die News kommen.

 
  
    #146
03.06.08 16:20
dann gehet es richtig ab!!

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetawiderstand bei 2,50

 
  
    #147
03.06.08 16:48
es ist Gut so!

27133 Postings, 6173 Tage brunnetaMorgen 3,00 Euro

 
  
    #148
03.06.08 16:56
geht wieder hoh,

51345 Postings, 8924 Tage eckiJerini verkauft sich selbst über die Credit suisse

 
  
    #149
03.06.08 17:10
Naja....  

26 Postings, 6152 Tage chingNaja...

 
  
    #150
03.06.08 18:49

solange dies für 5 € je Anteil geschieht soll es mir nur Recht sein :-)

 

Schade zwar für alle Langzeitinvestoren, insbesondere für die der 1. Stunde, aber so ist das nun einmal.

 

Glückwunsch an alle, die bei 1,60 zugeschlagen haben.  

 

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