Bayer plans US expansion despite blood thinner drug setback

Reuters

Published Jan 08, 2024 08:15PM ET

By Patrick Wingrove

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Germany's Bayer (OTC:BAYRY) will continue its expansion into the U.S. despite its November announcement that its promising blood thinner candidate failed to demonstrate superiority over a competing medicine, the drugmaker's pharmaceuticals head Stefan Oelrich said on Monday.

Bayer's experimental anticoagulant asundexian could still be a blockbuster if its second trial for stroke prevention reads out positively, Oelrich told Reuters at the JPMorgan health conference in San Francisco.

He said there is also strong opportunity in the U.S. for the company's cardiovascular and menopause symptom relief treatments, including its experimental elinzanetant, which Bayer said on Sunday eased hot flashes and improved sleep in late-stage trials.

"When you look at any of the opportunities that we're talking about (in those areas), typically the reward for innovation in the U.S. is superior to the one in Europe," he said.

Bayer announced in late November that asundexian was shown to be inferior to Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE:BMY) and Pfizer (NYSE:PFE)'s established Eliquis in preventing strokes in high-risk patients part-way into a late-stage trial called OCEANIC-AF.

The company earlier that month said it started a trial called OCEANIC-AFINA to test the experimental blood thinner in patients with a trial fibrillation who are ineligible for oral anticoagulant treatment because of increased risk of bleeding.

Oelrich said Bayer still plans to sell the drugs it is developing itself in the country, rather than partner with U.S. companies like it has in the past.