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Johnson & Johnson is starting to
have more share in the treatment of psoriasis, a painful skin condition,
as the Big Pharma company released results of a study on
Thursday. (File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Sept. 19 (Xinhuanet) -- Johnson & Johnson is starting to have more
share in the treatment of psoriasis, a painful skin condition, as the Big Pharma
company released results of a study on Thursday.
The study in a late stage showed Johnson &
Johnson¡¯s psoriasis drug ustekinumab (also called Stelara) was more effective
than Enbrel, now a leading drug for psoriasis in the market, and equally safe.
The study was the first to help Johnson &
Johnson's psoriasis treatment challenge that of Enbrel, which is jointly
marketed by Wyeth and Amgen and currently commands 75 percent of the global
market.
The global market will be worth about 1.1 billion
dollars in 2008 and is expected to reach 3 billion in 2010, estimated Mike
Weinstein, analyst of JPMorgan Chase.
Johnson & Johnson's study, unveiled in Paris,
showed that ustekinumab cut the severity of the psoriasis by 68 percent in
patients taking a 45 milligram dose and 74 percent, a 90 milligram dose.
Patients taking 50 milligrams of Enbrel only saw a 57 decrease in their disease.
Both drugs are given through injections, but Johnson
& Johnson said ustekinumab would be administered not as frequently.
"These findings reinforce the promise of Stelara as
an infrequently administered and highly effective biologic therapy for the
treatment of adults with moderate to severe psoriasis," trial investigator Bruce
Strober was quoted as saying.
Johnson & Johnson also produces the psoriasis
drug Remicade with little market share because the drug is more invasive than
the other medications as it is given using an IV.
A U.S. Food and Drug Administration panel unanimously
recommended approval of Stelara. However, seven of the panel¡¯s 11 members
expressed concerns about the self-administration of the injections and
recommended that the drug be given by a physician.
"This recommendation takes away from the convenience
advantage of the product," said Raymond James analyst Jayson Bedford.
(Agencies)