
We're usually bad-news-first kind of bloggers, but that's not how the old spaghetti western poster reads, so you'll just have to wait. It was a bit of a mixed bag this week for the industry, with a couple of solid slugs of clinical data from Novartis (its mTOR inhibitor everolimus
impressed in a Phase III study) and Alnylam (
Phase II data for ALN-RSV01 were positive). AZ even got approval for
Nexium in kids aged 1-11 (
at $164 for 30 capsules those kids are gonna have to sell a lot of lemonade). Bad news, typically, seemed easier to come by: Lilly's long-acting
Zyprexa injection was deemed
not approvable, Elan and Biogen's warned docs of
Tysabri liver damage potential, FDA decided to scrap its anti-infectives panel meeting
to the chagrin of Basilea and Theravance, and AZ's lung cancer drug
Recentin failed its pivotal study. On top of all that, a few entire classes of drugs (
antidepressants,
EPOs) had pesky and problematic meta-analyses to contend with. Pfizer's pitchman Dr. Jarvik row, row, rowed gently down the stream (but not before
Pharmagossip unearthed this hilarious 1986 Playboy article about the artificial heart pioneer). And then there's the ugly:
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