Basel, 16 October 2007
Strong
sales growth in the first nine months of 2007 - full-year outlook and Core Earnings per Share target
reaffirmed
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Roche Group - Group
sales up 12% in local currencies to 33.9 billion Swiss francs. As anticipated, Tamiflu sales decline
significantly in third quarter following completion of outstanding pandemic stockpiling orders
- Full-year
outlook reaffirmed: Group and Pharmaceuticals Division anticipate double-digit sales increases, and
both divisions expect above-market growth; target is for Core Earnings per Share to grow faster than
Group sales
Pharmaceuticals
Division - Nine-month pharmaceutical sales up
14% in local currencies and 13% in Swiss francs, more than twice the global market growth rate
- Third-quarter
sales growth, excluding pandemic Tamiflu, reaches 12%, continuing double digit-growth trend of recent
years
- All key cancer medicines post double-digit growth
- Positive
market response following EU launch of Avastin in advanced lung cancer
- Mircera
launched in EU for anemia – early uptake encouraging
- Four pivotal
phase III registration trials with Actemra in rheumatoid arthritis meet primary objectives, regulatory
filings on track for end of 2007.
- Phase III studies with Avastin
in important additional indications initiated (adjuvant non-small cell lung cancer, gastric cancer,
aggressive non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma)
- Phase III studies starting
with ocrelizumab in rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, and with pertuzumab in metastatic breast cancer
- Genentech
completes acquisition of Tanox, Inc.
Diagnostics
Division - Sales grow 5% in local currencies
and 6% in Swiss francs
- All regions contribute to higher sales,
with strong growth in Asia-Pacific (18%)
- Solid growth driven by
Professional Diagnostics (7%) and Applied Science (10%)
- Molecular
Diagnostics’ sales down as expected (-3%) due to a decline in industrial sales
- Contract
signed with Japanese Red Cross for blood-screening products
- NimbleGen
transaction completed
Unless
otherwise stated, all growth rates are based on local currencies.
Commenting
on the Group’s sales performance in the first nine months of 2007, Roche Chairman and CEO Franz B. Humer
said: ‘With its strong 9-month sales growth of 12%, the Roche Group continues to outperform the market.
Revenue growth in the second half of last year, as we all know, was also driven by a peak in stockpiling
orders for Tamiflu for use in the event of a pandemic. With those orders now filled, I am all the more
pleased to report that our Pharmaceuticals Division continued its double-digit growth*, with 12% in
the third quarter, fuelled by a broad and young portfolio of innovative medicines for cancer, hepatitis
and osteoporosis. Particularly important for our future growth is the progress being made in our broad
programme of clinical trials: several important projects are now entering or are ready to enter phase
III.’
* Without pandemic sales of Tamiflu to governments
and corporations
Roche
Group Double-digit growth for Roche Group and Pharmaceuticals
| 2007 | 2006 | % Change | % Change |
Sales from January to September | m CHF | mCHF | In CHF | In local currencies |
Pharmaceuticals Division | 27,124 | 23,912 | +13 | +14 |
Roche | 16,792 | 14,921 | +13 | +10 |
Genentech | 7,850 | 6,522 | +20 | +24 |
Chugai | 2,482 | 2,469 | +1 | +7 |
Diagnostics Division | 6,823 | 6,415 | +6 | +5 |
Roche Group | 33,947 | 30,327 | +12 | +12 |
See
attachment to this release for details on quarterly sales growth.
The
Roche Group posted sales of 33.9 billion Swiss francs in the first nine months of 2007, an increase
of 12% in both local currencies and Swiss francs (16% in US dollars) over the same period last year.
Sales by the Pharmaceuticals Division grew 14% in local currencies (13% in Swiss francs), with Roche
Pharma advancing 10%, Genentech 24% and Chugai 7%. The Diagnostics Division recorded a sales increase
of 5% in local currencies (6% in Swiss francs, 10% in US dollars).
Outlook
for 2007 reaffirmed For full-year 2007 Roche anticipates continued strong growth
and reaffirms its sales and Core Earnings per Share outlook: Roche expects the Group’s and the Pharmaceuticals
Division’s sales to grow at double-digit rates in local currencies. In both the Pharmaceuticals and
the Diagnostics Division Roche anticipates continued above-market sales growth. The target is for Core
Earnings per Share to grow faster than Group sales.
Pharmaceuticals
Division Strong
above-market performance sustained
In the first nine months of
2007 the Pharmaceuticals Division continued its strong double-digit growth, with sales advancing 14%
in local currencies (13% in Swiss francs; 17% in US dollars). This is more than twice the global market
average. Sales advanced well ahead of the market in both North America (16% vs 6%) and Europe (12% vs
6.5%), and in Japan the return to above-market growth (7% vs 3.5%) was maintained. Growth in all regions
was primarily driven by strong demand for the division’s oncology products, which now account for half
of pharmaceutical sales. After peak pandemic stockpiling sales of 1.5 billion Swiss francs in the second
half of 2006, uptake of Tamiflu by governments and corporations has slowed, as forecast. Excluding pandemic
sales, the division’s growth rate in the third quarter was 12%.
Oncology
- flagship products continue to perform strongly Combined sales of the division’s
oncology products increased 21% in the first nine months. This strong growth further reinforces Roche’s
position as the world’s leading provider of cancer medicines.
Sales of
MabThera/Rituxan (rituximab) for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) continue to grow strongly, advancing 17%
globally and 23% in Europe/Rest of World (RoW). Growth is being driven by increasing use of MabThera
in its new indication as maintenance therapy, adding to sales from its established indications as first
line treatment of indolent and aggressive NHL. Substantial increases were seen in emerging markets,
especially in Latin America and in the Asia–Pacific region.
Global sales
of Herceptin (trastuzumab), the only targeted therapy with survival benefits in both early and advanced
HER2-positive breast cancer, continued their strong growth (26%), with particularly large gains in Europe/RoW
(42%). New data show that, when used preoperatively in combination with chemotherapy, Herceptin can
eradicate breast tumours in nearly three times as many patients with inflammatory breast cancer (an
aggressive form of the disease) as chemotherapy alone.
Avastin (bevacizumab)
sales increased 41% worldwide compared with the same period last year. Sales grew strongly in all regions,
particularly in Europe/RoW (+58%). Following its European approval in metastatic breast cancer last
March, Avastin additionally received EU approval in August for the first line treatment of patients
with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, the most common form of the disease, in combination with platinum-based
chemotherapy. This indication was approved in the US in 2006. These approvals represent a significant
advance in the treatment of lung cancer, as this is the first therapy shown to extend survival beyond
one year. In August Genentech resubmitted its supplemental marketing application to the US Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) for use of Avastin in combination with paclitaxel as first-line treatment
of patients with locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer. Genentech has been notified by the FDA
that the application will be reviewed by the agency’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee (ODAC) at a
meeting in December. The FDA’s action date for review of the supplemental application is 23 February
2008. New data from a large international study (First BEAT) presented at the European Cancer Conference
(ECCO) in September show that, of the 11.5% of patients with initially inoperable metastatic colorectal
cancer who became eligible for surgery following treatment with Avastin plus standard chemotherapy,
almost 80% were able to undergo complete surgical removal of their metastatic lesions. This rate of
curative surgery is higher than that previously seen in trials with other biologic–chemotherapy combinations.
Xeloda
(capecitabine) posted double-digit growth (18%), driven by good sales in both the United States (+19%)
and Europe/RoW (+17%). New follow-up data from the X-ACT trial presented at ECCO show that patients
with advanced colon cancer whose disease has progressed live longer when taking oral Xeloda compared
with the current standard treatment, intravenous 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) plus folinic acid. This adds
to the growing body of evidence that supports replacing 5-FU with Xeloda in colon cancer.
Tarceva
(erlotinib), the only epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitor with a proven survival benefit
in advanced lung and pancreatic cancer, continued its strong growth (34%), with Europe/RoW (90%) the
main driver. In non-small cell lung cancer, interim data from TRUST, a major open-label study of Tarceva
in more than 12,000 patients from 59 countries, and data from MERIT, the largest prospective genomic
profiling study ever conducted in this indication, were presented this year at the World Conference
on Lung Cancer in Seoul (Korea) and at ECCO. Data from both studies reinforce the survival benefits
that patients experienced in the landmark BR.21 study that earned Tarceva marketing approval in over
80 countries.
Anemia - Mircera gains European approval,
rollout starts In July the European authorities approved Mircera (methoxy polyethylene
glycol-epoetin beta), Roche’s innovative continuous erythropoietin receptor activator, for the treatment
of anemia associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The prescribing information (label) differentiates
Mircera from other erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) in the EU by allowing twice-monthly administration
of Mircera for correction of anemia and direct conversion of all CKD patient types to a monthly maintenance
schedule. The product has just been launched in Austria, Germany, Sweden and the UK, and initial uptake
is encouraging. The recent approval of Mircera in Switzerland has triggered filings in numerous other
countries worldwide. Roche is now in discussions with the FDA to finalise the product’s US label. The
US court case in the lawsuit brought against Roche by Amgen alleging patent infringement began in early
September, and a verdict is expected by the end of October.
Combined
sales of Roche’s NeoRecormon and Chugai’s Epogin (epoetin beta) were down 4% in a market that remains
highly competitive. While the decline in NeoRecormon sales was slight (-2%), sales of Epogin in Japan
(-10%) continued to be affected by government-mandated price cuts and reimbursement changes.
Transplantation
- steady growth maintained The immunosuppressant CellCept (mycophenolate mofetil)
continued to record steady sales growth worldwide (8%), driven by solid sales in both the US and Europe.
Growth continues to be driven by physicians’ recognition of the long-term protective benefits of CellCept
compared with other, more toxic therapies.
Virology - significant
number of Tamiflu pandemic orders filled Worldwide sales of Tamiflu (oseltamivir)
in the first nine months of 2007 declined 2% compared with the year-earlier period. As anticipated,
third-quarter 2007 sales were more than 400 million Swiss francs (or 60%) lower than in Q3 2006 , primarily
because stockpiling orders from governments and corporations as part of pandemic readiness plans have
largely been completed, and no significant new orders have been received recently. Seasonal sales of
Tamiflu in Japan have been negatively affected by the mild 2006/2007 flu season and restrictions imposed
by the authorities on the use of the medicine in adolescents. This has been more than outweighed, however,
by a substantial increase in pandemic sales to the Japanese government. Recent WHO guidelines have reinforced
the position of Tamiflu as the treatment of choice for avian influenza (bird flu).
Roche’s
hepatitis franchise continues to be led by Pegasys (peginterferon alfa-2a), which delivered steady growth
of 10% in a flat market. Copegus (ribavirin) sales continued to decline as a result of generic competition
and were down 10% in the first nine months. Initial market response in Japan to the rollout of combined
Pegasys plus Copegus for hepatitis C has been positive.
In HIV, Fuzeon
(enfuvirtide) continues to deliver steady sales growth (10%), particularly in Europe. The recall of
the HIV medication Viracept (nelfinavir), begun in June following the discovery of a chemical impurity
in some production batches, has been implemented in all markets where Roche supplies the product. In
September the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) recommended reinstating the suspended
marketing authorisation for Viracept in the European Union. The Committee stated that it is satisfied
with the actions taken by Roche. The final decision on lifting the suspension rests with the European
Commission.
Autoimmune diseases - increasing adoption of
MabThera/Rituxan in rheumatoid arthritis Adoption by physicians of MabThera/Rituxan
(rituximab) for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) continues to increase. New data presented at the annual meeting
of the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) in June demonstrate that the product’s effectiveness
in relieving the distressing symptoms of RA is sustained or further improved with subsequent courses
of treatment, as is the number of patients achieving remission. The data also show that the safety profile
of MabThera/Rituxan remained unchanged in patients who had received as many as seven courses of treatment
at 6- to 12-month intervals. A recent study in patients whose RA had responded inadequately to one or
more tumour necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors found that treatment with MabThera controlled disease activity
more effectively than switching to another TNF inhibitor.
MabThera/Rituxan
is currently approved for use in patients with active RA who have an inadequate response to or are unable
to tolerate TNF inhibitor therapy. It was recently recommended by the National Institute for Clinical
Excellence (NICE) in England and Wales, making it the first and only therapy recommended by the Institute
for patients with an inadequate response to one or more TNF inhibitor therapies.
Metabolic
Diseases - new data support Bonviva/Boniva In a highly competitive market, nine-month
sales of Bonviva/Boniva (ibandronic acid) for the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis almost doubled
to 604 million Swiss francs compared with the previous-year period. New data strengthening the product’s
efficacy profile were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Bone Mineral Research
in September.
Sales of the prescription weight-loss medication Xenical
(orlistat 120 mg) declined 8% worldwide and 21% in the United States, where Roche’s partner GlaxoSmithKline
is successfully launching non-prescription orlistat 60 mg under the brand name alli. As licensor, Roche
will receive royalties on sales of alli.
In August Genentech announced
that it had completed the acquisition of Tanox, Inc. The acquisition gives Genentech improved profitability
on Xolair (omalizumab), the asthma medication jointly developed and commercialised by Genentech, Tanox
and Novartis. Through the acquisition, Genentech eliminates the royalty on Xolair sales which it previously
paid to Tanox and obtains Novartis’ profit share and royalty payments to Tanox.
Development
- major additions to pipeline and growth prospects As of 30 September 2007 the
Pharmaceuticals Division’s R&D pipeline (phase I to III/registration) included 58 new molecular
entities (NMEs) and 56 additional indications (AIs). During the third quarter of 2007 the following
major pipeline changes occurred: two projects entered phase II; one phase II project was discontinued;
five projects entered phase III, and two projects received regulatory approval; no phase III projects
were discontinued.
The development programme for Avastin continues to
make steady progress. Additional important phase III trials have started, studying use of the product
in early-stage non-small cell lung cancer and metastatic gastric (stomach) cancer, as well as combined
MabThera and Avastin in aggressive non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Phase III studies with pertuzumab in metastatic
breast cancer are expected to start before the end of 2007.
Actemra (tocilizumab),
an innovative IL-6 receptor inhibitor in development as a novel treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA),
has passed another milestone with the announcement in July of phase III study results that for the first
time showed superiority of monotherapy with a biologic medicine over the standard effective dose regimen
of methotrexate, a drug commonly use to treat RA. This is the fourth international phase III trial to
meet its primary objective. Preparations for marketing applications in the United States and the European
Union based on the data from all four trials are on schedule. Roche expects to submit these by the end
of 2007. A fifth international study is progressing on track, with results expected towards the end
of 2008.
Ocrelizumab, a humanised anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody, is now
in phase III development for RA, with three trials by Roche and Genentech currently ongoing. Ocrelizumab
is also being investigated as a potential treatment for other autoimmune diseases, including systemic
lupus erythematosus and multiple sclerosis. Phase III studies in lupus are expected to start in November.
Phase II studies with ocrelizumab in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis are currently
being prepared.
Based on preliminary results released in June from an
ongoing phase III trial of CellCept in lupus nephritis conducted by Aspreva, Roche and Aspreva have
decided not to proceed at this time with a regulatory filing for the product as induction therapy for
this autoimmune condition.
Progress in mid-stage development
pipeline In addition to its ongoing programme to investigate combined Pegasys and
Copegus in additional hepatitis indications, Roche is developing a number of potential new treatments
for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. R1626, currently in phase II clinical testing, is a polymerase
inhibitor that has shown robust antiviral effects; it is being studied in combination with Pegasys and
Copegus. Roche also has promising anti-HCV compounds in phase I development, including the polymerase
inhibitor R7128 (collaboration with Pharmasset) and the protease inhibitor R7227 (collaboration with
InterMune).
In the autoimmune area Roche has decided to terminate development
of R1503 (p38 kinase inhibitor, for RA) as it did not reach the predefined efficacy threshold. Clinical
testing of other promising oral drug candidates for autoimmune diseases, including R3421 (PNP inhibitor,
in phase II with BioCryst) and R3477 (S1P1 receptor agonist, in phase I with Actelion), is progressing
on track.
In the diabetes and metabolic diseases area Roche has moved
R1579 (DPP-IV inhibitor) into phase II clinical trials. First data from phase IIb testing of R1583 (GLP-1,
sustained-release formulation) are expected before year-end. Both molecules are being developed to treat
type 2 diabetes. Following encouraging data from phase II studies with the CETP inhibitor R1658 (dyslipidemia,
collaboration with Japan Tobacco) and positive discussions with the health authorities, Roche is now
close to a phase III decision on this promising molecule.
Diagnostics
Division Professional Diagnostics and Applied
Science
drive sales growth
Roche Diagnostics posted sales of 6.8 billion
Swiss francs in the first nine months of 2007, an increase of 5% in local currencies (6% in Swiss francs,
10% in US dollars) over the year-earlier period. Professional Diagnostics reported solid single-digit
growth, and Applied Diagnostics double-digit growth. The Diabetes Care business increased its sales
4%. Molecular Diagnostics’ nine-month sales declined 3% overall but grew 3% excluding industrial reagents.
All regions contributed to growth, with divisional sales showing single-digit gains in the EMEA region
(Europe, Middle East, Africa), North America and Japan and double-digit growth in Asia–Pacific and Latin
America. The acquisition of US-based NimbleGen Systems, Inc., a leading supplier of high-density microarrays,
was completed in August.
Professional Diagnostics - above-market
immunoassay sales continue Roche Professional Diagnostics (formerly Centralized
Diagnostics and Near Patient Testing) reported an overall sales increase of 7%. The increase was led
by immunoassay sales, which continued to grow at a rate of 12%, or twice as fast as the market. Top-selling
assays included tests for the cardiac markers troponin T and NT-proBNP and for the thyroid marker TSH
(thyroid-stimulating hormone). In July a vitamin D test was added to the bone marker menu for diagnosing
osteoporosis. Clinical chemistry sales continued to grow in line with the market.
Strong
demand continues for the cobas 6000 analyser series, launched last year for medium-volume laboratories.
The cobas e 411 immunochemistry analyser, the first in the new cobas 4000 series for small-volume laboratories,
is already on the market, and a clinical chemistry instrument for the series will follow in the fourth
quarter of this year.
Products for decentralised testing were again significant
growth drivers. The underlying growth of the coagulation self-monitoring business remains strong thanks
to the CoaguChek platform. Sales of point-of-care cardiac assays have continued to accelerate, particularly
in Europe, following the launch of the portable cobas h 232 cardiac testing system in February.
Sales
of hospital glucose testing products continued their strong upward trend, led by the US market. In ambulatory
care, the cobas h 152 was launched in September as a successor to the highly successful Accutrend line.
This easy-to-use device is the first handheld meter capable of measuring glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides
and lactate in blood.
Diabetes Care - strong uptake of
Accu-Chek Spirit insulin pump Roche Diabetes Care’s nine-month sales grew 4% in
the face of increasing reimbursement pressures in the United Kingdom and Germany, and slower market
growth in the United States and other key markets. These factors affected both volume and price growth.
The Accu-Chek Aviva, Accu-Chek Performa and Accu-Chek Compact blood glucose monitors were the main growth
drivers. The Accu-Chek Spirit insulin pump delivered strong double-digit growth. The most recent upgrade
of the Accu-Chek Compact Plus, an integrated monitoring system combining test strips and lancing capabilities
in a single device, premiered in September at this year’s annual meeting of the European Association
for the Study of Diabetes and will be rolled out to markets starting in the fourth quarter of this year.
Roche remains the clear leader in the growing integrated glucose monitor segment.
North
American sales advanced at a single-digit rate for the first nine months. The Accu-Chek Spirit insulin
pump has been well received and continues to attract customers in the United States, where it was launched
in late 2006. The global rollout of the Accu-Chek Performa monitor continued with launches in Argentina
and France. The new Accu-Chek Compact Plus and the Accu-Chek Performa are expected to contribute to
increased fourth-quarter sales growth.
Molecular Diagnostics
- blood screening contract signed with Japanese Red Cross Roche Molecular Diagnostics
maintained its leading market share, with nine-month sales down 3% from the same period in 2006. Excluding
industrial reagents, sales were up 3%. Virology, one of the business area’s largest segments, grew 3%,
driven by placements of the automated Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas TaqMan platform in Europe, Asia–Pacific
and the United States.
In the blood screening segment, the US Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) approved the cobas TaqScreen West Nile Virus Test, which is also under regulatory
review in Canada. Commercialisation of the test in the United States began in September. The Japanese
Red Cross has awarded Roche a contract to supply its fully integrated, next-generation cobas s 401 instrument
and multiplexing reagents to screen the entire Japanese Red Cross blood supply (five million blood donations
annually) for HIV and hepatitis B and C viruses (HBV, HCV). The contract will be effective from 2008.
In addition, FDA reviews are under way of a multiplex blood screening test for HIV, HCV and HBV and
of HBV and HCV tests for the virology segment.
Applied
Science - life science products drive growth Roche Applied Science posted a 10%
increase in nine-month sales. The LightCycler 480 and Genome Sequencer 20 systems and research reagents
were again the main growth drivers.
The acquisition in August of NimbleGen
Systems, Inc., a pioneer in DNA microarrays, has brought Roche a step closer to its strategic goal of
providing complete workflow solutions for the genomics and post-genomics life science markets. This
followed the acquisition of 454 Life Sciences in May, a deal that reinforces Roche’s position as a major
player in the genome sequencing market.
About
Roche Headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, Roche is one of the world’s leading
research-focused healthcare groups in the fields of pharmaceuticals and diagnostics. As the world’s
biggest biotech company and an innovator of products and services for the early detection, prevention,
diagnosis and treatment of diseases, the Group contributes on a broad range of fronts to improving people’s
health and quality of life. Roche is the world leader in in-vitro diagnostics and drugs for cancer and
transplantation, a market leader in virology and active in other major therapeutic areas such as autoimmune
diseases, inflammation, metabolic disorders and diseases of the central nervous system. In 2006 sales
by the Pharmaceuticals Division totalled 33.3 billion Swiss francs, and the Diagnostics Division posted
sales of 8.7 billion Swiss francs. Roche has R&D agreements and strategic alliances with numerous
partners, including majority ownership interests in Genentech and Chugai, and invests approximately
7 billion Swiss francs a year in R&D. Worldwide, the Group employs about 75,000 people. Additional
information is available on the Internet at www.roche.com.
All
trademarks used or mentioned in this release are protected by law.
Annex
Additional
information - Roche Pharma pipeline
Next
event - Full-year results 2007: 30 January 2008 (tentative date)
Disclaimer:
Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements This document contains certain
forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements may be identified by words such as ‘believes’,
‘expects’, ‘anticipates’, ‘projects’, ‘intends’, ‘should’, ‘seeks’, ‘estimates’, ‘future’ or similar
expressions or by discussion of, among other things, strategy, goals, plans or intentions. Various factors
may cause actual results to differ materially in the future from those reflected in forward-looking
statements contained in this document, among others: (1) pricing and product initiatives of competitors;
(2) legislative and regulatory developments and economic conditions; (3) delay or inability in obtaining
regulatory approvals or bringing products to market; (4) fluctuations in currency exchange rates and
general financial market conditions; (5) uncertainties in the discovery, development or marketing of
new products or new uses of existing products, including without limitation negative results of clinical
trials or research projects, unexpected side-effects of pipeline or marketed products; (6) increased
government pricing pressures; (7) interruptions in production; (8) loss of or inability to obtain adequate
protection for intellectual property rights; (9) litigation; (10) loss of key executives or other employees;
and (11) adverse publicity and news coverage. The statement regarding earnings per share growth is not
a profit forecast and should not be interpreted to mean that Roche’s earnings or earnings per share
for any current or future period will necessarily match or exceed the historical published earnings
or earnings per share of Roche. |
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