STAT+: Pharmalittle: Pfizer touts study data for hemophilia drug; former Novartis execs cleared of bribery in Greece

Good morning, everyone, and how are you today? We are doing find, thank you, especially since we had an extended holiday weekend on this side of the pond. Whether you were off or not – depending upon where you may be – we hope you are feeling refreshed and energized this morning as we all prepare for the usual routines. To cope, yes, we are brewing cups of stimulation. Our choice today is blueberry cobbler. Please feel free to join us. Meanwhile, we hope you have a meaningful and productive day…

Drugmakers have already hinted at suing Medicare over its new efforts to negotiate prescription drug prices, but a new report by nonpartisan congressional researchers suggests there are at least some parts of the law that cannot be challenged. At the same time, they caution it would ultimately be up to the courts to decide, STAT News tells us. To speed things up, the law directs government officials to forgo the usual public rulemaking that allows for industry feedback, and it restricts the courts from reviewing aspects of that process, including the drugs chosen for negotiation and the maximum price that Medicare will pay for them.

Pfizer disclosed that late-stage study data for its experimental hemophilia therapy showed superiority to the current standard of care treatment in reducing bleeding rates in patients, Reuters writes. The therapy, marstacimab, met its main trial goal, demonstrating superiority to factor replacement therapies, with a 92% reduction in bleeding in patients with severe hemophilia A and moderately severe to severe hemophilia B. The current standard of care requires regular infusion of the missing proteins. The once-weekly Pfizer drug is an anti-tissue factor pathway inhibitor that could help initiate blood clotting.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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