An Italian pharma company engineered a nearly $850 million buyout last week looking to expand its rare disease portfolio and further soak up parts of the US market, but questions remain over the drugs involved and when they could see patient uptake stateside.
Recordati shelled out the cash to acquire EUSA Pharma and its portfolio of four rare disease drugs, the companies announced Friday, allowing Recordati to position itself — by its own account — for growth in the US. EUSA’s top candidate for expansion is ostensibly the neuroblastoma drug Qarziba, approved in the EU for high-risk, newly-diagnosed individuals.
During an investor call, Recordati execs touted a US approval for Qarziba as a possible key value driver in this deal. But when a Credit Suisse analyst pointed out EUSA previously stated in press releases it expected to file Qarziba’s US approval in 2017, an OK still hadn’t come through and there don’t appear to be any ongoing clinical trials, the company had few answers for when it would approach the FDA.
Chairman Andrea Recordati largely demurred, saying he couldn’t give any definitive timelines because the deal isn’t expected to close until next year.
‘We’re still in between the signing and closing handling situations, so we need to discuss this, closing EUSA, and it’s not really appropriate to give them more details at this stage,’ Recordati said on the call.
He went on to say while Qarziba is expected to be an ‘important’ part of the company’s plans, Recordati is also looking at the rare lymph node disorder drug Sylvant as another growth driver, currently approved in the US and EU.
The other two drugs in the deal are Fotivda, a monotherapy TKI for renal cell carcinoma approved in the EU, and Caphosol, a medical device used to treat mouth swelling after chemotherapy. Qarziba was also approved by Chinese regulators in August, with EUSA’s partner BeiGene, and Sylvant also won a China approval Friday.
EUSA also has 200 employees and it remained unclear on the call whether Recordati would be bringing all of them on board. Freshly minted CEO Rob Koremans, responding to another question from the Credit Suisse analyst, noted Recordati does not have ‘very specific deep therapeutic know-how in rare disease oncology’ and that EUSA’s R&D team is a good fit for the company.
‘Our objective is to retain the know-how and the organization,’ Koremans said. ‘This is not a synergist driven deal. This is a growth driven deal. And also, obviously, a diversification deal, because it allows us to enter a new and very attractive, underserved therapeutic area where we don’t have the asset expertise.’
Overall, Recordati expects the portfolio additions to bring in about $170 million in sales by 2023, with potential peak sales of just over $282 million — though the company again declined to elaborate on the exact timeline.
Outside Friday’s acquisition, Recordati also owns a subsidiary that focuses primarily on rare diseases. One of these drugs, Carbaglu, treats rare cases of N-acetylglutamate synthase deficiency and frequently appears near the top of the world’s most expensive drugs list. In 2017, the drug cost more than $585,000.
https://endpts.com/recordati-acquires-eusa-pharma-and-its-4-rare-disease-drugs-but-analysts-question-strategy-behind-the-deal/