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written by reader A Non-Statin Pill That Really Lowers Cholesterol, Blood Pressure and Inflammation without Side Effects Would be a Good Investment, Right?

Oh Yeah...It May Prevent Cancer, Too

By DrKSSMDPhD, August 2, 2014

[Ed. Note: Dr. KSS writes about medical topics and biotech stocks for the Irregulars. He has agreed to our trading restrictions, and his thoughts and words are his own. Enjoy!]

Any discussion of cholesterol immediately turns Brobdingnagian, such are the extremes in question.

Statins, which lower LDL cholesterol, are bombastically the best-selling drugs of all time. They’ve left a Paul Bunyan-size footprint in medicine. But they are hardly ancient and hoary. The prototype statin was discovered by Akira Endo, PhD, in 1970 while he worked for Japanese chemical giant Sankyo. Despite the Saganesque billions and billions of dollars, euros and yen his discoveries fetch every year, Endo has never seen even a nickel of the profits. Endo has been mildly honored, while those acting on principles he first introduced to the world, such as Brown and Goldstein, have gone on to Nobel notoriety.

Endo began with a hunch: cholesterol is an elemental life-cycle molecule for many organisms, and so maybe other organisms had stumbled onto ways to knock the cholesterol underpinnings out from potential invading pathogens as a safety measure. The fungi, for example, are famous sources of antibiotics that snuff bacteria. Maybe fungi had also devised a way to attack cholesterol production as a defense? Fungi have ergosterol rather than cholesterol in their cell membranes, and so could poison cholesterol-making machinery at no harm to themselves.

I’ve lived in Asia, and so have often searched for analogies to help Westerners understand how sharply Asian cultures differ from each other. One archetype is a thought exercise in which a representative of an Asian nation is given an uncut loaf of bread and asked to slice it in a way that reflects his/her culture. A Thai person, for example, would slice it ornately, lovingly, and so beautifully you’d be reluctant to eat it. A Vietnamese person would have it all sliced for you by the time you are finished explaining what you want. A Japanese person would devise a way to make bread slices that are but a few molecules thick. No culture has the fixity of purpose and ruthless attention to microscopic painstaking detail that the Japanese have. Endo went after this issue like a good Japanese scientist, and personally screened 6,000 individual compounds that had been purified from various fungi for one that could inhibit cholesterol synthesis. He didn’t have a high-throughput nanosensor-based microchip array to do it for him. He rolled up sleeves, told his wife not to wait up, and did it the old fashioned way.

akira endo-1

Dr. Akira Endo, discoverer of statins

Endo’s work led to identification of monacolin K, later dubbed lovastatin, the first such agent used as a drug, in certain oyster mushrooms and other species of fungi. To this day, many statins used as drugs are purified from fermenting yeast rather than synthesized. Although the fungus-derived statins are natural products, somehow patent protection on them was finagled (now lapsed). Meanwhile, in its most legendary abuse of power, the FDA in 1998 tried to ban red yeast rice because it naturally contains lovastatin, made by the yeast. All statins are inhibitors of a liver enzyme called hydroxymethylglutaryl CoA reductase. 85-90 per cent of the body’s total cholesterol burden is made in liver, which is why the weak anti-cholesterol agent ezetimibe, which only blocks absorption of dietary cholesterol, has little effect and really does not warrant clinical use as it is not cost-effective.

The Brobdingnagian thing, again: no topic incites more vigorous discussion, more one-off hyperbole, than statins. Character X emerges from stage left to say he knows someone who lived to be 100, ate bacon and fried eggs for breakfast every morning, and never took any pills. Mrs. Y flies out of stage right to say that one dose was all it took…..a statin nearly killed her husband and she can prove it. A chorus begins a strophe: “We’ll all get muscle aches anon!,” though perhaps only a fourth of statin users get meaningful muscle pain. Offstage a mournful basso begins a lacrimae about how his best friend took statins every day just like the doctor ordered and they didn’t save him from The Big One. I’ve posted commentaries on them, as has Michael Jorrin, and invariably the threads that follow become tempestuous. Many readers are angered by their doctors’ glib default recommendations that all should be on them and others assert their exceptional wellness in the absence of, or because of the absence of, a statin prescription. Statins are blockbuster drugs, and are so avidly believed in by both the medical and pharma establishments (which rarely are so aligned) that some only half-jokingly think statins should be in the water supply.

Even so, statins have their vigorous detractors, many of whom are quite learned. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics makes interesting if insufficient arguments. Every major medical credo always has passionate critics; Peter Duesberg, PhD, of UC-Berkeley has actively, savagely denied for 30 years that HIV causes AIDS. Duesberg is a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Statins are roundly bashed by abominations like Dr. Joseph Mercola at his appalling website, and commonly if people do quite the opposite of what Mercola asserts they should, they will be far better off and healthier. Mercola’s interests are not, of course, in health; they’re—-you guessed it!—-pecuniary! He tells you that health comes only from what he sells you, from his special nostrums that the establishment denies exist.

Where cooler heads prevail about vascular disease,  the following large tenets usually emerge, on the basis of large numbers of studies of large numbers of people for large numbers of years:

(1) there is great merit to linking cholesterol with vascular disease. It is not the only factor, as insulin resistance, blood pressure and inflammation play roles too, but it is a major factor.

(2) statins are poorly tolerated in some patients, but by no means all. Most can muddle through, especially if they dose their statins at night and sleep through the muscle-ache interval.

(3) statins may not provide be-all-end-all vascular disease prevention because they address only the cholesterol aspect, but they do play a vital role, as the overpowering evidence is that cholesterol contributes to vascular disease and is easily modified.

(4) statins are definitively, overwhelmingly helpful in secondary prevention: preventing a second MI or CVA after a patient has had a first one. For primary prevention, helping a patient never have an initial event, their merit is debated still. The bulk of data shows them helpful in primary prevention, but that data is not as stark as for secondary prevention.

(5) statins do have other effects: they may worsen insulin resistance in some patients,  intensify dementia in others (cholesterol is the most abundant substance in brain), though they clearly have mild anti-cancer effects. Occasionally statins can trigger a syndrome called rhabdomyolysis. I have managed several people through it: rhabdo is ugly, painful (it is a breakdown and profound inflammation of muscle tissue), leads to renal failure. Not only are statins not ideal, but the potential for significant problems from them is always just on the other side of the door.

Many people rightfully wonder: if cholesterol is so deleterious for humans, why has nature endowed us with so much of it? I would respond to this by stealing a line from Baruch Spinoza, that nature does not work with the end in view. Natural selection caters mostly to reproductive fitness, and so rigs us to be at our best until such time as we can reproduce. In slightly balder terms, nature may not care about what becomes of us beyond the age of 18 or so. We are configured and calibrated in fact so that two systems tend to get us into trouble: the clotting system and the lipid system. Both may be teed up to favor survival advantages for hunter-gatherers. If being attacked by a lion or cheetah is a daily threat, then you need to be able to clot your wounds quickly, and also channel to them ingredients needed to rebuild flesh. These abilities to clot and generate flesh become maladaptive for us as we age. An unfortunate additional feature of cholesterol metabolism has to do with how it interdigitates with other metabolic pathways, and somehow, the factors that drive weight gain, high blood pressure and inflammation all tend to make blood more coagulable and cholesterol more abundant in it.

Blood from a patient with profound familial hypercholesterolemia

Blood from a patient with profound familial hyper-cholesterolemia

In November 2013, the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology issued new guidelines for prevention of MI and stroke. Their guidelines were that there is no longer a role for niacin, fibric acid derivatives (ie, clofibrate), bile acid sequestrants (ie, colesevelam), ezetimibe or fish oils. The reasoning was that even if any of these latter agents modify cholesterol parameters favorably, they do not lead to better outcomes for patients. This observation calls into question the whole cholesterol model of vascular disease, of course, and caused some to speculate that perhaps statins have effects beyond their role in lowering cholesterol. At any rate, the councils recommended statins for all, and this immediately led to cries of outrage in some circles, as there were claims of conflicts of interest: many members of the committee advancing statins had consulting and investigative ties to Big Pharma. There’s just one problem with that theory, however: with the exception of Astra-Zeneca’s (AZN) Crestor, statins are largely no longer patent-protected.

Scenario: Pfizer (PFE) loses patent protection on bestseller statin Lipitor. It has seemingly only one flagship product, Viagra, which is amazingly patent-protected til 2020, though Teva (TEVA) is allowed to launch a rival in 2017. PFE makes overture to buy AZN for the benefits of tax inversion. And because AZN’s Crestor is still on patent til mid-2016, it gets rebuffed. PFE’s R&D pipeline is fallow, and PFE is smarting from a fall off a patent cliff. What can it do to right its ship? In fact, what can Big Pharma do to put shareholders back on the gravy strain of dividends and profits to rival the statin golden years?

And what can medicine devise to really prevent heart attacks and strokes in people in such an effective and safe way that people no longer quibble over the cholesterol hypothesis and the imperfectness of statins?

A company I’ve found may hold the answer to these issues. And that may provide a surprise, an upset, to what many will think is a refutation of my thesis. But I will get to that shortly.

Statins mainly work by lowering LDL cholesterol. They inhibit the hepatocyte cholesterol synthesis enzyme HMG CoA reductase. Other present agents reduce LDL to a much lesser degree, raise HDL somewhat, lower triglycerides…..but do nothing to prevent cardiac and cerebrovascular events. And yet HMG CoA reductase is by no means the only enzyme pivotal for cholesterol synthesis. Why has no biotech entity tried some other means of blocking the production of cholesterol in liver?

Enter Esperion Therapeutics (ESPR) of Ann Arbor, Michigan. Esperanza is “hope” in Spanish, in which esperar means “to wait.” ESPR has many investors waiting hopefully for what may be some very nice news during the next six months regarding its main pipeline agent ETC-1002. Esperion had its IPO debut in mid-2013, when 17 insiders bought 3.4 million shares.

Aisling Capital (an investor in Durata (DRTX)), Domain Associates (investors in DRTX, Achaogen (AKAO) and Regado (RGDO)) and Alta Partners each own 2.1 million shares of ESPR. Roger Newton, PhD, Esperion’s founder and Chief Scientific Officer, owns 629,700 shares, the largest position of any company insider; Newton is also on ESPR’s board. Newton has chops and street cred: he co-discovered atorvastatin (PFE’s Lipitor, which PFE acquired Warner-Lambert for), and led its clinical development. Newton was once Brobdingnagianly called “The Luckiest Guy in the Drug Business” by Forbes Magazine. 

roger newton, PhD-1

Dr. Roger Newton, founder of Esperion

Esperion’s float is 13.5 million shares, 81 per cent of which are owned by institutions,  and 93 per cent of which are owned by large-block holders. Its recent market capitalization is just under $250 million. Pfizer owns nearly 6 per cent of Esperion, and no other pharmaceutical company has a position in it. Pfizer has some history with Esperion, which I will discuss.

ETC-1002 is being developed because it inhibits ATP citrate lyase, a fundamental step in cholesterol biosynthesis. Curiously, however, ETC-1002, which is an oral small molecule, also strongly activates 5′-adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK). AMPK has important roles, or seems to, in insulin sensitivity, inflammation, weight, and even blood pressure. ESPR has preliminary clinical evidence of improvement in all four of those parameters in ETC-1002-treated patients.

The primary basis of statin-intolerance is that a minority of patients unpredictably have defects or mutations in an anionic transporter molecule that is responsible for uptake of statins into liver cells. In patients so afflicted, muscle tissue sees undue burdens of statin, which is toxic to muscle tissue. ETC-1002 is taken up into liver by a different mechanism, and in fact in a sizable cluster of phase 1 and phase 2 trials has yet to cause any serious adverse events and only rarely leads to minor instances of side effects.

ATP citrate lyase is an enzyme that merits some technical attention. It is found in cell cytosol, as opposed to nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum or lysosome. As described in this helpful recent review article, which has an excellent diagram of reactions on page 2, ATP citrate lyase generates acetyl CoA from citrate, which then has one of three fates: it feeds into cholesterol synthesis (HMG CoA reductase, inhibited by statins, is the very next step), or fatty acid synthesis (which means inhibiting the enzyme could result in triglyceride reduction), or else into acetylation reactions, such as those of histones, which bind DNA. Histone deacetylase modulators are a “hot” area in cancer therapeutics, and in fact an abundance of evidence shows that inhibiting ATP citrate lyase blocks tumorigenesis.

You’re bound to be wondering: does ETC-1002 work? Does it lower LDL cholesterol?

Esperion presented a fine poster at the 2014 National Lipid Association that meta-analyzed 4 phase 2a studies of ETC-1002: placebo-controlled dose escalation studies of the drug in patients with dyslipidemia, with dyslipidemia and type II DM, and dyslipidemia with statin intolerance, and in addition to atorvastatin. You can review the data here. But the key summary points are that LDL lowering was dose-dependent, was much more prominent in patients with diabetes, was well-tolerated, and above all else, achieved LDL reductions comparable to what statins can achieve. Bear in mind: this effect is additive to statins and possibly synergistic. In fact, one can envision a future in which a patient might not be placed on either a statin or ETC-1002, but on both, and with a reduced dose of statin so that side effects are milder. A common goal of statin therapy is reduction of LDL to 100 mg/dL or less, and from these studies it appears this is easily accomplished in a brief time with 240 mg ETC-1002 once daily. Some patients on ETC-1002 have achieved 80 per cent diminutions in LDL cholesterol.

Among the most interesting findings in these studies is that ETC-1002 therapy afforded reductions in hsCRP, a marker of inflammation, of 40 per cent or more as compared with placebo. This is a striking and statistically significant finding. While statins do lower hsCRP to a degree, this effect in them has been less comprehensively studied. In these trials, ETC-1002 was no likelier than placebo to lead to any adverse event, something statins can never claim.

In another pooled analysis, Esperion has demonstrated that ETC-1002 establishes a nearly 7 mm Hg reduction in blood pressure with statistical significance. The mechanism of this is not yet known, but the effect is additive to other anti-hypertensives, and is certainly a physiological benefit none of the statins can boast. The links to the posters provide ample graphics supporting the data.

Esperion is now enrolling in two phase 2b studies. One examines ETC-1002 as an add-on to ongoing statin therapy. It is placebo-controlled, and compares two doses of ETC-1002, and seeks 132 patients among 27 U.S. study locations. The other examines ETC-1002 in 144 patients with both hypercholesterolemia and hypertension at 35 U.S. centers. This latter study will of course examine achievement of blood pressure reduction goals. Both studies have a mix of urban and rural, private and academic study sites. Both will also look at effects on LDL particle size, number and distribution, apolipoprotein B, and HDL cholesterol, as some evidence has suggested Esperion’s drug may slightly lower HDL.

For would-be investors in Esperion, as for the company, the main question is not whether to proceed to a large phase 3 trial, but rather what sort of phase 3 should be run. Here Esperion is feeling its way. The goals of such a trial must be clearly decided in advance: is ETC-1002 to be studied as a stand-alone lipid-lowering agent, in which case it might be compared with placebo? Or would the FDA deem statins to be standard of care and so insist on a head-to-head trial against statins? Or does the company wish to pursue an add-on, adjunctive indication in which the drug can be used in addition to statins, recognizing that some physicians will prescribe it as stand-alone therapy? This will take careful decision analysis, and deft negotiation with the FDA. No single class of drug has been as comprehensively studied in human trials as the statins have. The tenor and expectations of such negotiations, however, may be strongly affected by the fact we are now nearly in a post-brand-name statin era. Since ETC-1002 works by a route completely untouched by statins, the FDA may well endorse development along two paths (both as single-agent therapy and as adjunctive therapy).

At the same time, Esperion does face a serious obstacle in that statins have been so thoroughly studied. In fact statins appear to have vascular protective effects that may be unrelated to either their lipid-lowering or inflammation-lowering abilities. The most cited and best study in this regard is the 20,000-patient 5-year study that appeared in The Lancet in 2011. Patients lacking elevations in LDL and hsCRP were just as likely as patients with elevations to be protected from MI and CVA. The ability of statins to lower hsCRP is not related to their effects on cholesterol, and meanwhile many antihypertensive agents have anti-inflammatory effects. My feeling is that it would be most unfortunate if the FDA required Esperion to compare ETC-1002 in a head-to-head way with statins, as it could shine nicely as monotherapy in the statin-intolerant, and as add-on treatment in those with an insufficient statin response. My sense is that ETC-1002 more potently lowers hsCRP than statins do, but I cannot prove that, and the two have never been directly compared.

One tricky aspect of ETC-1002’s development may be that the FDA will want data not only of LDL reduction, but also of event risk reduction too. We now know that non-statins that improve lipoprotein profiles make no difference in MI and stroke risk. ETC-1002’s case is strongly enhanced by the fact that it sharply lower hsCRP, a great bonus. But evidence-based medicine insists on evidence, and the fact is that these markers are imperfect surrogates for risk reduction. Accordingly, it is very possible that Esperion will be placed into performing risk-reduction phase 3 trials to support an NDA for ETC-1002. Such trials would be quite expensive, and unless the company is acquired, will warrant dilutive capital-raising. Pfizer may be looking for acquisitions to bulk up its pipeline, and would be a good fit with Esperion, but at the same time may wish to devote energy to bigger transformative steps than acquiring a microcap company.

Some company history is worth mentioning. Before the present Esperion was formed in 2008, there was a prior incarnation of Esperion, which developed ETC-1002 in 2004. That Esperion was acquired totally by Pfizer. ESPR in current form broke away from Pfizer, and purchased from Pfizer worldwide rights to ETC-1002, and does not have to pay licensing fees or royalties to Pfizer in any form. Esperion’s relationship with Pfizer is amicable, and Pfizer owns ESPR shares. Is Pfizer actively thinking of buying out Esperion? That’s hard to know. Pfizer seems more concerned right now with a grandiose deal, such as a tax inversion, to reinvent itself. Even so, Esperion would be a diminutive company for it to acquire, and this would not confound larger plans. An Esperion acquisition however would fly in the face of the development resources Pfizer has placed behind its PCSK9 agent. Accordingly, a suitor might take the form of a another traditional pharma house, not a biotech.

The potential refutation to any investor interest in Esperion may be the coming of the PCSK9-acting agents.

Let’s discuss them.

It would be difficult for me to convey fully the extent to which I regard the advent of the PCSK9 inhibitors with boredom. Although Regeneron (REGN) and Sanofi (SNY) unveiled awaited data on 30 July that their new PCSK9-inhibiting monoclonal antibody alirocumab not only lowers cholesterol potently but also reduces cardiovascular event risk, investors seem to be forgetting key things about this class of drug, which includes Amgen (AMGN)‘s evolocumab and PFE‘s bococizumab (which lags the other two in development):

(1) these are injected drugs

(2) these drugs are not yet approved

(3) these drugs lower LDL cholesterol to such a stark degree that dementia may prove to a be a serious consequence of them. Make no mistake about it: “fuzzy thinking” is already pegged as a serious issue in PCSK9-antibody treated patients.

(4) therapy with these drugs will likely be priced at $10,000 or more per annum, which will create a third-party payer cost apocalypse that will make the everybody-can-recite $84,000 for 12 weeks of Gilead‘s (GILD) Sovaldi seem penny-ante. Although only 9 per cent of HCV-infected Americans have been cured, the fact is that they are cured by treatment, and do not require chronic intervention. And their numbers (“only” 3.2 million Americans have HCV) are utterly dwarfed by the number of Americans with dyslipidemia.

(5) the PCSK9 inhibitors will not replace statins, but will be used as add-ons. They will replace statin therapy only in those who have experienced clinical catastrophes on statins, which are rare.

Because of these considerations, drug companies expecting a register-ringing Hemingwayesque Moveable Feast of revenues from the PCSK9 inhibitors may be misguided. Your insurance company is not going to let you receive them just because you don’t like statins. And if the cognitive side effects are as bad as some suggest, you may not want to take them.

While the biochemistry of PCSK9 is complex, the Cliff’s Notes version is that it suppresses expression of the LDL receptor on the surface of hepatocytes. When PCSK9 is blocked by antibodies, LDL receptors are more abundant in liver, and so better able to soak up LDL from circulation. LDL is generally regarded as the entity that carries cholesterol to the arteries, while HDL is regarded as the conduit of cholesterol from arteries back to liver.

The whole PCSK9 monoclonal field had its legitimacy undermined when CNBC reporter Meg Tirrell broke a story on 30 July that Biomarin (BMRN) sold, for $67.5 million, a rare disease drug development voucher to Regeneron that will cut 4 months from its approval review cycle for alirocumab. This distasteful event reminds one of the ridiculousness of the sale of indulgences by the Catholic Church in the run-up to the Protestant Reformation. Drugs should be advanced on scientific merits, not certificated bribes. At fault here is neither REGN nor BMRN, but Margaret Hamburg’s FDA, which is quite OK with this abusive non-meritocratic practice, one it will likely make haste to place fig leaves over. It is because of kleptocratic practices like these that Sovaldi costs $1000 per pill. When I contemplate the drug development business in the US, “arch” and “turgid” and “epic” come to mind.

Most Irregulars who follow these biotech threads are now streetwise enough to realize that any time a drug works by blunting the effect of a protein, the same pharmaceutical effect can be achieved by using RNA silencing to suppress expression of the protein in question. To this end, Alnylam (ALNY) has already done phase I trials in the UK of a siRNA that silences expression of PCSK9. It’s unclear, however, that complete obliteration of PCSK9 is a good thing or a worthy goal, and Alnylam may be wishing to position itself to see how monoclonals to bind up PCSK9 fare before it advances itself into the lipid management arena. Alnylam has not presented phase I results, and most of its work in PCSK9 silencing is still preclinical.

Does Esperion have other attributes, other assets? It reports having acquired worldwide rights to an agent known as 4WF from Cleveland Clinic in 2011. 4WF is said to be an HDL mimetic, something that would channel lipid from areas of vascular disease back to liver, and the CSO has had an interest in these. Both 4WF and a second agent that seems to ameliorate hyperglycemia and weight in overfed mice, however, are strictly preclinical. Try as I might, I have been unable to glean any information about the molecular nature of these entities.

Then comes a question: is ETC-1002 something akin to a Second Coming of statins? I don’t know. What I can say for sure is that the PCSK9 inhibitors are not an event of eschatological significance, though Big Pharma wants us to believe that they are. ETC-1002 clearly has two strong effects in vivo, and sharply lowers both LDL cholesterol and inflammation as measured by hsCRP. It has few or minimal side effects, is compatible with other drugs and is far safer even at this stage of development than statins were ever known to be. Without resorting to hyperbole, ETC-1002 is a lot like a global metabolic tonic, one that tames the bundle of manifestations of syndrome X’s high cholesterol, high inflammation, high triglycerides, insulin resistance and high blood pressure. ETC-1002 could likely stand in the marketplace as either first- or second-line treatment for hypercholesterolemia. A vigorous search through the drug development literature suggests that no other viable oral-drug candidates for safe lowering of cholesterol are being trialled anywhere, and confirms that Esperion is in fact working along a unique mechanism and unique pathway (ATP citrate lyase), one that few know of, and one in which it has no competition at all. This is a drug indication littered with failures, and Esperion has made it past the worst of its hurdles, in my view. The architect of the strategy is the same person who brought the world Lipitor, the single best-selling cholesterol agent in history. He may be crafting another lipid home run.

ETC-1002 has completed 7 clinical trials now and done famously in all. Two new trials are underway, and the trial in patients with both high cholesterol and high blood pressure has just dosed its first patient. Data from both trials should be at hand no later than 2Q15, during which time, I suspect ESPR shares are likely to become less and less undervalued. Esperion isn’t the sort of recondite company trawling in sophisticated science that I usually delve into here, but it has a simple pill—one that works—-for mankind’s worst and most prevalent ailment, one that is likely to be sought after in an age where the best other pills no longer offer big profits. It is likely to be able to do so at prices that, unlike the costs of PCSK9 inhibitors, will not outrage pharmacy benefits managers. It’s an opportunity all the more compelling because of stealth. Seemingly no one knows of Esperion: no one has heard of it, and no one is familiar with the enzymic pathway it is acting on and the striking potency of its lead drug. We’ll be hearing more about ETC-1002 from Esperion and it’s likely to be good.

Is Esperion vulnerable to competition? Are others pursuing ATP citrate lyase inhibitors? I explored this in detail. A number of naturally-occurring molecules from fruits and vegetables, presumably not patentable, do inhibit ATP citrate lyase. Many other inhibitors exist as well, including halogen- and sulfur-substituted citric acid derivatives, the bile salt deoxycholic acid, vanadium, and even polychlorinated biphenyls. These moieties seem invariably to have one or more of the following issues: (1) severe toxicity, (2) severe side effects (e.g., radicicol is a good inhibitor, but a potent sedative), (3) unfavorable thermodynamics such that doses required would be enormous. These have been comprehensively reviewed in a 2012 paper by Zu and colleagues, and full pdf versions of this manuscript can be freely downloaded at researchgate.net. Above all else, none are even to clinical trials yet, and so Esperion has several years of lead time now.

Could Esperion be sideswiped by an RNAi company suppressing ATP citrate lyase expression? Others may try this, but bear in mind that this enzyme is life-critical, and that complete abrogation of it would likely be harmful. Also, Esperion’s drug acts by turning on the activity of the enzyme AMPK, something RNAi cannot do. Esperion’s drug candidate is a once daily pill that is well-tolerated, and since it appears to work well, it’s not likely to be supplanted by any form of injectable drug.

For more than a decade, cardiovascular disease researchers have conjectured widely about  a “polypill”….a single tablet that might contain, for example, aspirin, a statin, a beta-blocker and an ACE inhibitor. The theory has been that compliance would be so good—all agents dosed once daily in one tablet; side effects minimal as the dose of each agent would be reduced; synergistic benefits among the drugs—that such a preparation could cut cardiovascular event risk by 75 per cent. ETC-1002 has so many health-positive actions (simultaneously lowering blood pressure, lipids, inflammation and cancer risk) that one cannot help but speculatively regard it as like a single-agent polypill: one drug, poly in its effects. Esperion knows this, and continues with phase 2b studies to limn and define the drug’s actions. As explored in this 2014 peer-reviewed study, ETC-1002’s metabolically favorable effects appear to shine in patients with type II DM. Phase 3 trials of ETC-1002 are unlikely to be underway until 3Q2015 at the earliest, but meanwhile my starter position in Esperion compels me to follow the company, track drug development, and be poised to add in anticipation of good news. The drug will probably never see an indication as a cancer preventive, of course, but Esperion can leverage the ample data on ATP citrate lyase inhibition’s anti-neoplastic effects as a means of currying favorable bias among patients.

In your due diligence, you’ll come across the company’s 2014 annual report, which confirms the fiscal health of Esperion. Analysts from Citi, Stifel Nicolaus, JMP Securities and Credit Suisse cover Esperion and all have “buy” or “strong buy” ratings on it.

Stock Gumshoe, of course, is not a tipsheet. For the many PhD and MD readers who now participate in this forum, I would encourage spending 1-2 hours to read over studies I have provided in hyperlinks, as you will find the content quite gratifying. It is intellectually sexy. Biopharma investing entails consummate risks, as although the body works along fixed principles, biology is bewilderingly complicated. Even so, if ever there were a biotech insider capable of pulling off a great second act in lipid drugs, Roger Newton is probably that person. Esperion is his company.

Addendum: The author owns shares in ESPR, PFE, GILD, AKAO, RGDO and DRTX, has no positions in any other mentioned company, and no plans to trade in any mentioned company for 7 days after publication.

This is a discussion topic or guest posting submitted by a Stock Gumshoe reader. The content has not been edited or reviewed by Stock Gumshoe, and any opinions expressed are those of the author alone.

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👍 47658
timmuggs
timmuggs
August 12, 2014 10:47 am
Reply to  DrKSSMDPhD

Down again this morning, this time on over 260k shares traded.

👍 123
KennyG
KennyG
August 12, 2014 12:56 pm
Reply to  timmuggs

The 3 month daily average volume for BIOZF is 3100 shares. Today it has already had a volume of 746,000! Very unusual action to say the least and still no news that I can find.

👍 3533
frankw17
August 12, 2014 4:54 pm
Reply to  KennyG

KennyG, BIOZF trading today is very strange. I show a volume of 746K shares with
no trades shown after 11:00AM EDT. I have checked 3 sources for news;Schwab,Yahoo
and Fidelity, but have found none. Fidelity shows 8 “block trades”, where a block trade
is usually defined as 10K shares or more trades. The strange thing to me is that there
were no trades shown after 11:00AM with that sort of total volume. Will continue to dig.
Frank

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davehello7
davehello7
August 11, 2014 8:44 pm
Reply to  DrKSSMDPhD

Gosh Dr Kss. Don’t know…it hasn’t dropped much it seems expectations might still be there.

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newby3867
newby3867
August 11, 2014 9:13 pm
Reply to  DrKSSMDPhD

Doc Kss, I do not know much about them but I did find this recent research report on ACHN. http://smallcapir.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ACHN-CFA-Report-MM-BB2.pdf
Cheers,Glenn

👍 6779
mary
mary
August 13, 2014 8:26 am
Reply to  DrKSSMDPhD

Looks like their price really popped apx. June 9 from $2.88 to the $7.00 + range where it has since stayed. In the article Glenn linked, it states they have enough cash to last them through March, 2015. For what it’s worth, Yahoo has a target estimate of $10.56 .
A buyout would change the target estimate, but who knows how much. I am very new to biotech trading and hesitate to offer an opinion but it looks like a good company with several offerings in their pipeline. I would probably have bought at 2.88, but will sit on the side lines for now. If no one has bought them by March and they need more cash at that time, perhaps the price will come down. There are certainly a lot of variables to
consider when investing…even more in biotech!

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bwd1up
bwd1up
August 11, 2014 1:21 pm

Nice volume with BIOZ today (223,000), I don’t know how many trades though..

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DBMD
Irregular
DBMD
August 11, 2014 2:11 pm

A post back in the Regado thread about Malaria. http://www.stockgumshoe.com/2014/04/microblog-in-a-brutal-biotech-market-a-reason-to-be-excited-introducing-regado-biosciences/#
Some thoughts about the Defensins, they are a novel approch and now CTIX has proprietary rights and the risk for resistance much lower.

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biotechlong (btl)
August 11, 2014 3:38 pm

Trevena has had a string of recent and upcoming news catalysts that may propel resumption of its impressive growth (up 45% since mid-June) .
– Trevena CEO to Present at the Canaccord Genuity 34th Annual Growth Conference
8/7/2014 4:19:00 PM – Business Wire
– Trevena Initiates Phase 1 Multiple Ascending Dose Study of TRV734 for Acute and Chronic Pain
8/6/2014 7:00:00 AM – Business Wire
– Trevena to Host Conference Call to Discuss Second Quarter 2014 Results on August 12
8/5/2014 7:00:00 AM – Business Wire
– Trevena Granted Key U.S. Method of Use Patent for TRV027
8/5/2014 6:38:00 AM – Business Wire
Mark H.N. Corrigan, M.D., Julie H. McHugh, and William Hunter, M.D. to Serve on EPIRUS Board of Directors.

Long TRVN.

Read more: http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/trvn/real-time#ixzz3A76RnF2t

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pm1773
pm1773
August 11, 2014 7:09 pm
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pm1773
pm1773
August 11, 2014 9:02 pm

RGDO Conference Call Aug 12th at 830 EDT

ERENCE CALL INFORMATION

Interested participants and investors may access the conference call by dialing (877) 870-4263 for domestic callers or (412) 317-0790 for international callers. The conference call will be webcast live under the investor relations section of the Regado website at http://www.regadobio.com and will be archived there for 60 days following the call.

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Dan
Dan
August 11, 2014 9:43 pm

Dr KSS,
Sickening news with Robin William’s suicide. I would be curious to read your thoughts on connection between depression and heart surgeries. Sure seems that a rather high % of those having undergone heart surgeries incur depression.

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biotechlong (btl)
August 11, 2014 10:22 pm

Here is a summary of a very enlightening study of biotech mergers/acquisitions and licensing deals authored by Trinity College Dublin (Ireland) academics and published last month in the journal Nature Biotechnology:
“By analyzing over 800 licensing deals, totaling over 16 trillion USD, the authors sought to discover whether small-to-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) receive more lucrative deals licensing their drugs to large pharmaceutical companies than to their smaller SME counterparts.
The research group led by Professor in Neuroscience in the School of Medicine, Trinity, Kumlesh Dev, found that contrary to assumptions, big pharma did not appear to use its market muscle to negotiate aggressive deals with SMEs. Rather, smaller companies were able to attract higher upfront payments selling to big pharma than to other SME market players.
The study showed that, compared with SMEs, big pharma paid on average at least 35% more in upfront payments at all phases of research and development, including for filed therapies, drugs in phase I-III clinical trials, as well as preclinical and early research compounds. It also showed that the total number of upfront payments, more than $100 million, made by big pharma is two and a half times greater than those made by SMEs.
The researchers found that pharmaceutical companies are much more active than SMEs in licensing assets in early research or preclinical development, an important point for those researchers and spinout companies located in Ireland who are considering out-licensing deals.
Speaking about the importance of these findings for those involved in drug development research and for funding agencies of scientific research, Professor Dev said: “These findings suggest that engagement of Irish-based SMEs, research institutions and universities with internationally renowned large pharma can be profitable at all stages of drug development and commercialization. Our research shows that attracting lucrative out-licensing deals with large pharma is worthwhile, and indeed possible, at early stages of research as well as in the preclinical and clinical development phases. We were also interested to see that early research activities can be equally commercially rewarding as late development products. We think that while there is a drive to push research toward later phases of drug discovery, it appears that large pharma are in need of new and early research projects and are thus willing to pay well for such early research products. These findings are important for researchers engaged in drug development, as well as Irish funding agencies that are vital to the continued support of such activities.”
‘Over half of revenues in big pharma come from in-licensed drugs. As such, knowing the buying behaviors of these corporations is of fundamental importance to understanding the market dynamics of this sector,’ concluded Professor Dev.”
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/280458.php

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timmuggs
timmuggs
August 11, 2014 11:35 pm

No kidding…

Big pharma companies are essentially distribution channels, and basic research is performed by the little guys. Big pharma will pay more for promising drugs because they have a better chance of actually getting them in front of doctors when the drugs are approved. Or even more important, getting them on the formulary of approved drugs that an insurance company will pay for.

It’s kinda like Coca Cola or Pepsi would pay more for a new type of sugar drink than a tiny beverage company would. Coke can ramp up the factory, load the truck and stack it on the shelves, keeping the quaint packaging and band name of the cute little drink, like Arizona Iced Tea or whatever. They do the focus groups, find the new trend, test the brand names, and pay for the one with the magic name. Then it goes into the sales machine.

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pm1773
pm1773
August 11, 2014 10:39 pm
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newby3867
newby3867
August 12, 2014 12:04 am

For those of you invested in Biocept(BIOC) or interested, a nice interview with the CEO.
http://www.redchip.com/company/home/BIOC
Cheers,Glenn

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newby3867
newby3867
August 12, 2014 12:50 am

Recent fact sheet on Sanuwave by Redchip who I think does a great job for the company even though they are compensated with stock and cash.
http://www.redchip.com/assets/reports/SNWV_20140807_Fact_Sheet.pdf
Cheers,Glenn

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omcdac1
omcdac1
August 12, 2014 3:42 am
Reply to  newby3867

Thanks glenn. This is very good update.

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JoeS
JoeS
August 12, 2014 6:53 am
Reply to  newby3867

Dear REDCHIP,

Kindly reach out to Peter French and let him know that you can reach more people than his tired, overhead projector.

Best Regards- The Investment World Outside of Aussie

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KennyG
KennyG
August 12, 2014 9:05 am
Reply to  JoeS

Glenn/Om: Regarding SNWV and RedChip – – Redchip is one of those “newsletters” that get paid for their writeups and endorsements. From their tiny print disclosure: “SNWV agreed to pay RedChip Companies, Inc. a monthly cash fee, plus 200,000 shares of Rule 144 stock for six (6) months of RedChip investor awareness services. Investor awareness services and programs are designed to help small-cap companies communicate their investment characteristics. RedChip investor awareness services include the preparation of a research profile(s), multimedia marketing, and other awareness services.”

While many things they may say are factual, they may also be exaggerated and negative items would by necessity be omitted. With that said, I am also long SNWV.

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JoeS
JoeS
August 12, 2014 9:08 am
Reply to  KennyG

Kenny,

Not sure if you caught it, but Glenn noted that “Disclosure” with his link.

Joe

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KennyG
KennyG
August 12, 2014 9:37 am
Reply to  JoeS

Yes I did Joe. Glenn is usually pretty thorough with things like that. I just wanted to point out that the content of RedChip articles in general had to be taken in its entirety, in that negative items about a company that they write about will not appear in their write up, while the positive items may in fact be true.
As an aside, now may be a good point to pick up (more) SNWV. While my initial position is down ~20%, I feel that the upside from this price point is much greater than the downside.

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JoeS
JoeS
August 12, 2014 9:44 am
Reply to  KennyG

Agree; Though I am down a bit more than 20% right now. (on more than 1 ticker)

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mary
mary
August 13, 2014 8:38 am
Reply to  newby3867

I have some stock in this company and hope this device works. Not just for my portfolio but as a nurse I have irrigated and packed some of the most horrible diabetic foot ulcers; it is hard to believe how bad they can be . I would love to see something help these wounds heal before they tunnel so deeply. The only good thing about them is the patients rarely feel any pain due to having lost the feeling in their feet (due to diabetes).

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newby3867
newby3867
August 12, 2014 1:03 am

Interesting read on Putin/Hitler comparisons.Scary stuff.
http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-what-can-be-learned-from-the-putin-hitler-comparisons-2014-8
Cheers,Glenn

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omcdac1
omcdac1
August 12, 2014 3:52 am

Dr KSS.
Thank you so much for introducing Biocept to us, I was reading again your old post, today i realize how important this technology is.
As always you are the best of best.
Every time i think about you i feel more honored having you and more and more respect for you.
Om

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Elliot
August 12, 2014 8:01 am

Found this in BioTime (BTX)’s 10-Q, which I am digging through this morning
“On August 7, 2014 we were notified by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration of a premarket approval of our 510 (k) application for Premvia™, a HyStem®-based product indicated for the management of wounds including: partial-thickness, full-thickness, tunneling wounds, pressure ulcers, venous ulcers, diabetic ulcers, chronic vascular ulcers, donor skin graft sites, post-Moh’s surgery, post-laser surgery, podiatric wounds, wound dehiscence, abrasions, lacerations, second degree burns, skin tears, and draining wounds.”

There doesn’t appear to have been a press release for this, and I’m not sure how big of a deal it is. I’ll have to try to figure out more. Anyone know what an FDA “premarket approval” is?

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Elliot
August 12, 2014 8:48 am
Reply to  Elliot

Also, BioTime subsidiary Asterias Bio is now traded over the counter as ASTYV. I cannot find the number of shares outstanding… but BioTime (BTX) owns 70.6% of Asterias (ASTYV) according to BioTime’s 10-Q filed yesterday.

And here is more from BioTime’s 10-K:
“We are pleased with our success to date in building toward our goal of developing both near-term commercial applications of our technologies and maintaining our focus on the power of pluripotent stem cells to create innovative human therapeutics,” said Dr. Michael D. West, BioTime’s Chief Executive Officer. “Near-term product development underway includes our subsidiary OncoCyte Corporation’s three cancer diagnostic products undergoing clinical studies, mobile health product development in our subsidiary LifeMap Solutions, Inc., our Renevia™ pivotal clinical trial in Europe, steps to prepare for the marketing of our recently FDA-cleared wound healing product Premvia™,and growing research product sales by our ESI BIO division.”

“BioTime’s longer-term major therapeutic product opportunities are based on the broad range of cell-based regenerative therapies planned for development from its pluripotent stem cell technology platform. This platform is protected by over 600 patents and patent applications worldwide within the BioTime family of companies. Our subsidiary Asterias Biotherapeutics, Inc. has submitted an amended IND to the FDA for a Phase 1/2a clinical trial of AST-OPC1 for the treatment of cervical spinal cord injury and is currently awaiting clearance from the FDA for that trial. Asterias is also currently undertaking process development of AST-VAC2, a cancer immunotherapy targeting the important antigen called telomerase, for a potential clinical trial in lung cancer. This progress, along with the appointment of Pedro Lichtinger as Asterias’ CEO and the award of a $14 million grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, should fuel the development of these first-in-class therapeutic products. Recently, Asterias’ shares began to trade publicly under the symbol ASTYV, the first of our subsidiaries to have its shares trade publicly. Lastly, we expect that BioTime’s subsidiary Cell Cure Neurosciences Ltd. will soon file its IND to begin a clinical trial of OpRegen®for the treatment of age-related macular degeneration. Additional important cell-based product development is underway in our disease-focused subsidiaries OrthoCyte Corporation and ReCyte Therapeutics.”

“As we saw in the first quarter of this year, our expenses have risen compared to recent quarters, but our progress during the second quarter in streamlining our workforce through shared core resources among our subsidiaries should reduce our cash burn rate in the third quarter. We would like to thank those who share our goal of better health in the coming era of regenerative medicine. Their continued support and the diligent efforts of our collaborators at leading academic medical institutions is critical in advancing our products from the lab bench to the clinic, where they are desperately needed.”

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Kris Prasad
Guest
Kris Prasad
August 12, 2014 10:07 am
Reply to  Elliot

Logging in after a hiatus. Thanks Elliot for the info on Biotime. Mention is made in the article in SA that you brought to our attention about OncoCyte , a subsidiary of BTX. They too , like Biocept (BIOC), have a blood diagnostic product for cancer markers. Moreover, they also have one for Urine analysis.
So it appears they are going head to head with Biocept (and Janssens). In post 33 Dr.KSS pointed out that other companies are in this space as well.
Winner? Any thoughts?
Also, strong move by Admedus (AMEUF) on high volume. Still down20%, though.
Cheers

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