Bayer’s Kidney Drug Shows Promise In Fighting Common Heart Failure
Bayer's drug Kerendia reduces heart failure risks by 16%, showing promise despite declining revenues.
Breaking News
Sep 02, 2024
Mrudula Kulkarni
In a recent study, Bayer AG's kidney drug Kerendia
demonstrated its ability to prevent complications associated with a common type
of heart failure, marking a significant win for the company's pharmaceutical
division amidst various challenges. The study showed that Kerendia reduced the
relative risk of death and severe events related to this form of heart
failure—where heart pumping ability is only mildly impaired—by 16%. The
late-stage trial, involving 6,000 participants, compared Kerendia to a placebo
and focused on a condition affecting roughly 30 million people globally, for
which new treatment options are scarce.
As Bayer's pharmaceutical division navigates declining
revenues from its leading blood thinner Xarelto and eye medication Eylea—both
facing competition from generic alternatives—the company is looking for growth
opportunities. Despite disappointing sales of Kerendia for kidney disease,
Bayer is optimistic about its potential in treating heart failure, according to
Stefan Oelrich, head of the pharmaceutical division, who shared this outlook
with investors earlier this year.
In January 2023, Bayer projected that annual sales of
Kerendia could surpass €3 billion ($3.32 billion). However, the company has
since revised this target. Analysts now estimate the drug’s peak sales could
reach €2.22 billion by 2033, according to Bloomberg data. Bayer had reported in
early August that Kerendia achieved the study’s objectives, with detailed
results unveiled at the European Society of Cardiology Congress in London and
published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The data slightly outperformed expectations from Markus
Manns, a portfolio manager at Union Investment, a Bayer shareholder. Manns had
anticipated an efficacy of around 15% for Kerendia, suggesting that the drug
could still achieve peak annual sales between €2 billion and €3 billion. Bayer
has announced plans to seek regulatory approval for Kerendia in the context of
heart failure, though it has not specified a timeline for this process.