Skip to main content

Brainstorm Health: Amarin Stock, Oklahoma Opioid Testimony, Work Burnout

Good afternoon, readers.

All aboard the fish train! On Wednesday, shares of biotech Amarin shot up more than 11% after the company got another piece of good news in what’s been (so far) a fortuitous 2019 – a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) priority review for its prescription strength fish oil pill Vascepa.

Amarin’s stock is now up a relatively modest 6% on the year after a bit of a tug-of-war between bulls who love the company’s clinical trial results and the bears who are betting FDA reviewers will give that data a more critical eye. But it’s still up an eye-popping 440% over the past 12 months.

What’s so special about this particular fish oil pill (especially given that Omega-3 fish oils have been somewhat controversial as supplements in recent years)? For one, it’s different from the over-the-counter fish oil pill varieties; for another, the clinical results Vascepa has touted include a 25% reduction in the risk of devastating cardiovascular events like heart attack and stroke in certain high-cholesterol patients who are taking statins (but still have elevated triglycerides).

All eyes will now be on an FDA advisory panel’s review of Vascepa to be held later this year. With the priority review, the agency is expected to make a decision by the end of September.

Read on for the day’s news.

Sy Mukherjee
@the_sy_guy
sayak.mukherjee@fortune.com

DIGITAL HEALTH

BioMarin sinks on lackluster hemophilia gene therapy data. Gene therapies have had a series of notable successes in recent years (including Novartis' regulatory victory for Zolgensma). But things don't always quite work out as planned in what's still a relatively nascent space. Rare disease drug specialist BioMarin spooked investors after announcing lackluster data for its gene therapy to treat the blood disorder hemophilia A, largely over concerns that while the drug presents a benefit, that benefit may not be durable over a long term (and thus wouldn't present a cure). Given the massive prices associated with such therapies, the promise of a one-off cure is what the market is hungry to see. (Barron's)

INDICATIONS

An opioid overdose victim's dad's emotional testimony against Johnson & Johnson. Sometimes, things really do speak for themselves. "We had no idea about the prevalence of these drugs and the dangers of these drugs," said one Oklahoma college student's father during the state's ongoing trial against Johnson & Johnson for alleged deceptive marketing of the painkillers. Craig Box's son died of an opioid overdose in 2011 after being found unconscious at a friend's house. (Reuters)

THE BIG PICTURE

It's official - workplace burnout is a major health problem. Workplace burnout has now been dubbed a public health problem by none other than the World Health Organization (WHO). Technically, the WHO isn't considering the issue a "medical condition;" it is, however, enough of a workplace phenomenon that it's now included in the organization's official handbooks. Burnout, according to the WHO, results from "chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed." (CBS News)

REQUIRED READING

Robert Mueller Resigns, Says Charging Trump With Crime Was 'Not an Option,' by Renae Reints

The Splinternet Is Growing, by Jeff John Roberts

Why Alibaba's Hong Kong IPO May Signal a Chinese Retreat from Wall Street, by Clay Chandler

China's Rare Earth Metals Aren't the Trade War Weapon Beijing Makes Them Out to Be, by Eamon Barrett

[ceo_attribution author="Produced by Sy Mukherjee" email="sayak.mukherjee@fortune.com" twitter="the_sy_guy"] Find past coverage. Sign up for other Fortune newsletters.



from Fortune http://bit.ly/2K8Oa5m

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

With Trump’s WeChat ban approaching, here are several alternatives

Our mission to help you navigate the new normal is fueled by subscribers. To enjoy unlimited access to our journalism,  subscribe today . WeChat, China’s most popular app, faces an imminent ban in the U.S. , leaving many of its users in a bind. The White House said Friday it would prohibit WeChat , owned by Beijing-based Tencent, from appearing in U.S. app stores starting Sunday at midnight.  Though WeChat has a comparatively minor U.S. presence, it remains a major conduit for communications between Chinese nationals living abroad and their friends and family back home . The app has an average of 19 million million daily active users in the U.S. versus more than a billion worldwide.  WeChat, called Weixin in China, is effectively the operating system for people’s digital lives in China. They use it to pay for services, hail cabs, go shopping, read news, chat, and more. For people seeking to bridge the digital divide between the U.S. and China, WeChat is not easily re...