Pfizer's (PFE-$31.93) management stated during the fourth-quarter 2013 earnings call last
month that a move toward opioid analgesics and a promising anti-nerve growth
factor (NGF) drug in its pipeline, a monoclonal antibody called tanezumab,
could help to mitigate the impact Celebrex's loss of market exclusivity will
have on sales going forward.
Looking to
capitalize on the growing need for abuse-deterrent formulations, Pfizer is
looking to entrench itself in the $5.1 billion market for extended-release (ER)
opioid formulations prescribed by physicians to chronic pain sufferers (30% of
the $18.1 billion in annual sales for all opioid-based therapies).
Chief
executive Ian Read confirmed on the conference call that Embeda, an ER
morphine/naltrexone formulation that was voluntarily benched in 2011, would be
back on pharmacy shelves in second-quarter 2014 after the FDA approved both an
updated manufacturing process and a risk evaluation and mitigation
strategy (REMS) – which is now required for all ER and long-acting
opioid medications.
Read more at
The Motley Fool: Pfizer
Stubs Toe Without Celebrex
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