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Friday, October 05, 2007

How Much Does Pfizer Want to Succeed?

Yesterday, Pfizer’s Jeff Kindler ended the speculation around what we think is his most important appointment, elevating development chief Martin Mackay to the top R&D job (an appointment, by the way, which we predicted--here).

As the WSJ’s health blog pointed out, Kindler has chosen managerial continuity. If Mackay does some of the requisite R&D reforming, it will at least come from within the Pfizer context – and theoretically won’t generate the antibody response an outsider’s initiative would (like Peter Corr’s attempts when the former Warner-Lambert chief was briefly R&D boss).

Second, Mackay is not John LaMattina. He clearly recognizes the need to change Pfizer—as he’s noted to IN VIVO and as he’ll explain at Windhover’s FDA/CMS Summit on December 6.

But two big issues will determine how successful Mackay can be—one more or less in his control; the other out of it.

The first: just how far is he willing to go in reforming Pfizer R&D? A $7.5 billion annual cost, it is vastly too expensive for what it produces. And it’s got too many people working on too many projects to manage effectively.

To succeed—our view, of course--Mackay will have to reduce headcount; start and objectively judge experiments in development (like its Project Fisher, a parallel to Lilly’s Chorus division); figure a way to push biologics into the mainstream of Pfizer’s discovery and development and create systems for monitoring the likely but as yet unknown safety challenges they’ll present; push for independent (and probably independently traded) R&D organizations, on the models of Genentech or Theravance, to whose output Pfizer will have post-Phase II options; and figure out ways of partnering Pfizer’s own de-prioritized drug candidates.

Among other things. But that’s enough for right now.

Problem is: Pfizer’s commercial and financial sides (including its CEO) will have to accept and adapt to the kind of output a revitalized Pfizer R&D must generate—high-value specialty drugs, including biologics. That will mean a smaller, more focused commercial Pfizer--or even Pfizers (we’re all for disaggregation and spinouts—therapeutically focused mini-Pfizers, for example). When Pfizer has followed its instincts, taking a mass-market approach to specialty drugs, it’s failed: witness the disappointing performance of Rebif in multiple sclerosis or the disaster of its inhaled insulin, Exubera.

We know and respect Martin Mackay. And we know he has his work cut out for him. But if he does his bit, Pfizer then needs to let him succeed.

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