AstraZeneca

AstraZeneca plc
Type Public limited company
(LSEAZN, OMXAZN)
Industry Pharmaceutical
Founded 6 April 1999 by merger
Headquarters London, United Kingdom
Key people Louis Schweitzer (Chairman), David Brennan (CEO)
Products Pharmaceutical products
Revenue US$33.27 billion (2010)[1]
Operating income US$11.49 billion (2010)[1]
Net income US$8.053 billion (2010)[1]
Total assets US$56.13 billion (end 2010)[1]
Total equity US$23.41 billion (end 2010)[1]
Employees 61,000 (2011)[2]
Website astrazeneca.com

AstraZeneca plc[3] is a global pharmaceutical and biologics company headquartered in London, United Kingdom. It is the world's seventh-largest pharmaceutical company measured by revenues and has operations in over 100 countries.[4][5] It has a portfolio of products for major disease areas including cancer, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, infection, neuroscience, respiratory and inflammation.[2]

AstraZeneca has its primary listing on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. It had a market capitalisation of approximately £39.5 billion as of 23 December 2011, making it the 10th-largest company on the London Stock Exchange.[6] It has secondary listings on the New York Stock Exchange and the OMX exchange.

Contents

History

Astra AB was founded in 1913 by 400 doctors and apothecaries in Södertälje, Sweden.[7] In 1994 the company formed a joint venture with Merck to market Losec, an ulcer-treatment drug.[8]

In 1993 ICI demerged its pharmaceuticals businesses and its agrochemicals and specialties businesses, to form Zeneca Group plc.[8]

In 1999 Astra AB and Zeneca Group plc merged to form AstraZeneca plc.[8]

In 2005 the company announced an arrangement with Astex for the discovery, development and commercialisation of novel small molecule inhibitors of protein kinase B for use as anti-cancer agents.[9] In the same year it announced a collaboration with Avanir for research and licensing in the area of reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) enhancing compounds for the treatment of cardiovascular disease.[10] It also announced an alliance with Schering AG for research and licensing in the area of selective glucocorticoid receptor agonists (SEGRAs).[11] It also announced that it had become a Diamond Member of the Pennsylvania Bio commerce organization.[12]

In 2006, following a collaborative relationship begun in 2004,[13] AstraZeneca acquired Cambridge Antibody Technology.[14][15]

Also in 2006 it formed an alliance with Abbott Laboratories in relation to Crestor and TriCor, commencing that year and extending to at least 2009.[16]

In 2007 it reported that it had entered into an alliance with Bristol-Myers Squibb to form a global collaboration to develop and commercialise two investigational drugs (saxagliptin and dapagliflozin) beginning from 2007.[17]

Also in 2007 AstraZeneca acquired American company MedImmune for about $15.2 billion.[18] AstraZeneca consolidated its biologics portfolio in MedImmune and Cambridge Antibody Technology which was rebranded to create a dedicated biologics division known as 'MedImmune'.[19]

Operations

AstraZeneca develops, manufactures, and sells pharmaceuticals to treat disorders in the gastrointestinal, cardiac and vascular, neurological and psychiatric, infection, respiratory, pathological inflammation and oncology areas.

The corporate headquarters are in London, United Kingdom and research and development (R&D) headquarters are in Södertälje, Sweden. The company employs over 11,000 people at research facilities in the United Kingdom, United States, Sweden, France, Canada, India, China and Japan.

The company's largest single research and development site is at Alderley Park (a large country estate on the east side of the A34 road north of the Monk's Heath crossroads) in Cheshire in England. There around 4,500 staff are based.[20]

The company has a major research and development presence in Sweden, with approximately 4,000 staff employed at research facilities primarily in Mölndal and production and development in Södertälje.[21]

Products

AstraZeneca specialises in prescription medicines to fight disease in several therapeutic areas. Year-on sales information can be found through AstraZeneca annual reports.[22] The following is a list of key products found on the AstraZeneca website.[23] Generic- drug names are given in parentheses following the brand name.

Anaesthetics

-Cardiovascular

-Gastrointestinal

Infection

-Neuroscience

  • Heminevrin (clomethiazole)
  • Mysoline (primidone; handed over to Acorus Therapeutics Ltd. in July 2004)
  • Seroquel (quetiapine)
  • Seroquel XR ([quetiapine extended release])

-Oncology

-Respiratory and Inflammation

Controversies

Seroquel: adverse effects and trial procedures

AstraZeneca has stated that the atypical-antipsychotic drug, Seroquel, is the subject of four class-action lawsuits in Canada. Also, in the U.S., there were multiple product-liability cases alleging personal injury, namely, that Seroquel caused people to develop diabetes.

The company has indicated its intention to seek approval for Seroquel to treat psychiatric conditions such as depression and general anxiety disorder.[24]

Note as well that scientific findings regarding a new sustained-release form of the drug were announced at a conference in Madrid, Spain, in March 2007. At the time the data regarding the new drug were discussed, the drug had not been approved for sale by any health regulatory body in any country.[25]

During 2005 and 2006 clinical trials were carried out to examine the possibilities of further development of Seroquel. Test persons were recruited from research centres in Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Bulgaria and India. As part of the trials half of the test persons were given a placebo and stopped their medication. As a result thirty-six test persons relapsed into illness. One test person committed suicide, possibly as a result of quitting his medication. AstraZeneca denied that the suicide was related to the testing procedures. Ethical concerns were raised over the issue of carrying out trials in less-developed countries because of lower requirements for getting trials approved and overall lower trial costs.

In 2008, 45% of the test persons in AstraZeneca medical trials came from Asia; Eastern- and Central Europe; and South America. The same year 13.5% of the total sales were made in these regions. In contrast 86% of total sales were made in Japan, North America and Western Europe.[26][27]

In March 2011, AstraZeneca settled a lawsuit in the United States totaling $68.5 million dollars to be divided up to 38 states.[28] Claims were made against AstraZeneca that it promoted Seroquel's use in children and adolescents long before establishing that it was safe or effective for any use in this population. Furthermore, it was found that patients experienced very serious side effects, including weight gain, diabetes and heart problems. AstraZeneca has been caught in a number of lawsuits stemming from deceptive and unfair promotion of Seroquel, and this is not the first series of settlements.[29]

Late-stage trial failures

Recently, AstraZeneca has experienced a run of failures of drugs in late-stage clinical trials.[30] These include Galida for diabetes, and Exanta to prevent thrombosis. Other drugs with late-failing trials include NXY-059[31] for acute ischemic stroke, Iressa for lung cancer, and AGI-1067 for prevention of atherosclerosis. With patents expiring on older drugs, this threatens future revenue growth.

MedImmune takeover

After this long run of failed late-stage clinical trials, on 19 June 2007 AstraZeneca completed the acquisition of vaccine maker MedImmune, paying $15.2 billion primarily for its drug-development pipeline. Analysts have criticised this take-over, claiming that AstraZeneca paid too much.[32] AstraZeneca consolidated its biologics portfolio in MedImmune and Cambridge Antibody Technology (acquired in 2007).[33] This biologics portfolio was then rebranded to create a dedicated, global biologics organisation known as 'MedImmune'. Amid allegations of broken promises over this consolidation,[33] AstraZeneca presented the new MedImmune to investors on 7 December 2007.[19]

Nexium

The company's most successful medication is esomeprazole. When it is manufactured the result is a mixture of two mirror-imaged molecules, R and S. Both are converted to the same active molecule in the body. Two years before the omeprazole patent expired AstraZeneca patented S-omeprazole in pure form, pointing that since some people metabolise R-omeprazole slowly, pure S-omeprazole treatment would give higher dose efficiency and less interindividual variation.[34] The company marketed Nexium, as it would a brand new drug. This practice is criticised because it maintains the profits of drug companies at the expense of patients and public healthcare systems.[35]

On 16 August 2007, Marcia Angell, former editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine and a lecturer in social medicine at the Harvard Medical School, alleged in Stern, a German language, weekly newsmagazine, that AstraZeneca's scientists had doctored their research on the drug's efficiency:

Instead of using presumably comparable doses [of each drug], the company's scientists used Nexium in higher dosages. They compared 20 and 40mg Nexium with 20mg Prilosec. With the cards having been marked in that way, Nexium looked like an improvement- which however was only small and shown in only two of the three studies.

Nexium is also alleged by the authors to be "the top of the list" of medications which are marketed by pharmaceutical companies directly to doctors, who receive gifts of money and/or goods when they prescribe the medication in question. As a reason for the company's behaviour, it is alleged that the German public healthcare system spends an additional $139.50 million at time of reporting--> per annum on Nexium as compared to using omeprazole, which however would be less profitable for the company as its patent protection has expired.[36]

Corporate sexual harassment

Confronted by allegations in a 13 May 1996, Business Week cover story, of widespread sexual harassment and other abuses, Astra USA Inc. suspended three top executives and launched an internal probe.[37]

Astra USA agreed to pay $10 million to settle a lawsuit brought by at least seventy-nine women and one man against the company. The suit accused Astra's former president and other executives of pressuring female employees for sex and replacing older workers with younger, more attractive women.[38]

Bildman fraud

On 4 February 1998, Astra USA sued Lars Bildman, its former president and chief executive officer, seeking $15 million for defrauding the company.[39] The sum included $2.3 million in company funds he allegedly used to fix up three of his homes, plus money the company paid as the result of the EEOC investigation. Astra's lawsuit alleged Bildman sexually harassed and intimidated employees, used company funds for yachts and prostitutes, destroyed documents and records, and concocted "tales of conspiracy involving ex-KGB agents and competitors … in a last-ditch effort to distract attention from the real wrongdoer, Bildman himself." Bildman had already plead guilty in U.S. District Court for failing to report more than $1 million in income on his tax returns; in addition, several female co-workers filed personal sexual-harassment lawsuits.

Nobel Prize investigation 2008

In 2008, the award of the Nobel Prize in Medicine for cancer-related research on Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) by Harald zur Hausen was being looked into by the Swedish police anticorruption unit. The reason was that AstraZeneca, which has a stake in two lucrative HPV vaccines and thus stands to gain financially from the prize, had agreed to sponsor Nobel Media and Nobel Web. Investigations were focused on whether AstraZeneca could have exerted undue influence on the award. According to Times Online, two senior figures in the process that chose zur Hausen also had strong links with AstraZeneca.[40]

Transfer mispricing

In 2010, AstraZeneca agreed to pay £505m to settle UK tax dispute, relating to transfer mispricing.[41]

Senior management

The senior executive team is composed of David Brennan, Simon Lowth, John Patterson, Tony Zook, David Mott, Bruno Angelici, Lynn Tetrault and David Smith. As of 2008, Brennan is paid $1,574,144 for his role as chief executive officer.[42]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Annual Results 2010". AstraZeneca. http://www.astrazeneca.com/cs/Satellite?blobcol=urldata&blobheader=application%2Fpdf&blobheadername1=Content-Disposition&blobheadername2=MDT-Type&blobheadervalue1=inline%3B+filename%3DFigurespdf&blobheadervalue2=abinary%3B+charset%3DUTF-8&blobkey=id&blobtable=MungoBlobs&blobwhere=1285616560140&ssbinary=true. Retrieved 5 February 2011. 
  2. ^ a b About us
  3. ^ Standard practice is that the name be pronounced as "Astra Zeneca" rather than "Astrazeneca"
  4. ^ "Global 500 – Pharmaceuticals". Fortune. 20 July 2009. http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/global500/2009/industries/21/index.html. Retrieved 19 August 2010. 
  5. ^ "Key facts". AstraZeneca plc. http://www.astrazeneca.com/about-us/key-facts/. Retrieved 1 September 2010. 
  6. ^ "FTSE All-Share Index Ranking". stockchallenge.co.uk. http://www.stockchallenge.co.uk/ftse.php. Retrieved 26 December 2011. 
  7. ^ "Organizational Portraits – AstraZeneca". The Pharmaceutical Century: Ten Decades of Drug Discovery. Washington, DC: ACS Publications. 17 November 2000. http://pubs.acs.org/journals/pharmcent/company3.html. Retrieved 14 July 2008. 
  8. ^ a b c AstraZeneca US History
  9. ^ Press release, 27 July 2005
  10. ^ Press release, 11 July 2005
  11. ^ Press release, 27 July 2005
  12. ^ "Pennsylvania Bio – Member Listings". Pennsylvania Bio web site. Archived from the original on 14 December 2005. http://web.archive.org/web/20051214215037/http://www.pennsylvaniabio.org/membership/listings.asp. Retrieved 8 October 2005. 
  13. ^ AstraZenica and Cambridge Antibody Technology announce major strategic alliance to discover and develop human antibody therapeutics in inflammatory disorder
  14. ^ Recommended Cash Offer by AstraZeneca UK Limited for Cambridge Antibody Technology Group plc Offer Declared Unconditional and Initial Offer Period Extended
  15. ^ AstraZeneca UK Limited Completes Acquisition of Cambridge Antibody Technology Group plc Compulsory Acquisition Procedure Completed Subsequent Offer Period Closed
  16. ^ Press release, 5 July 2006
  17. ^ Press Release 11 January 2007
  18. ^ AstraZeneca Successfully Completes Acquisition of MedImmune
  19. ^ a b AstraZeneca Presents its Global Biologics Organisation, MedImmune, at 2007 Analyst and Investor R&D Day
  20. ^ "Alderley Park". AstraZeneca United Kingdom. http://www.astrazeneca.co.uk/about-us/alderley-park?itemId=4142261&nav=yes. Retrieved 20 August 2010. 
  21. ^ "Research". AstraZeneca Sweden. http://www.astrazeneca.se/om_oss/verksamheten-i-Sverige/Forskning/. Retrieved 20 August 2010. 
  22. ^ AstraZeneca annual reports
  23. ^ AstraZeneca UK website, retrieved 2005-03-27
  24. ^ "AstraZeneca Pipeline Summary February 2008". AstraZeneca Corporate Website. http://www.astrazeneca.com/article/511390.aspx#lineextensions. Retrieved 28 February 2008. 
  25. ^ Seroquel Sustained Release Schizophrenia Data Presented at ECP Congress in Madrid
  26. ^ Retrieved from Swedish Public Radio (SR) homepage on 2009-03-27
  27. ^ Svenska Dagbladet Homepage. Published and retrieved on 2009-03-29.
  28. ^ "Drugmaker settles lawsuits over Seroquel". The Des Moines Register. http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20110311/BUSINESS/103110347/1017/SPORTS06/?odyssey. Retrieved 2011-03-01. 
  29. ^ Seroquel Diabetes settlements now total $350m
  30. ^ AstraZeneca, struggling to develop new medicines, agrees to buy MedImmune
  31. ^ Once-Promising Stroke Drug Fails in Trial
  32. ^ AstraZeneca's big, risky $15 billion bet
  33. ^ a b AstraZeneca faces patent battle on No 3 drug as profits tumble
  34. ^ United States Patent 5,877,192
  35. ^ Gladwell, Malcolm (25 October 2004). "High Prices: How to think about prescription drugs". The New Yorker.
  36. ^ Grill, Markus and Hansen, Hans (2007): "Vorsicht, Pharma! Wie die Industrie Ärzte manipuliert und Patienten täuscht." ('Caution, Pharma! How the industry manipulates physicians and deceives patients.') Published in the 16.08.2007 issue of Stern (Germany; pp. 100–107). Available as an e-paper here
  37. ^ Business Week
  38. ^ David Brennan, chief executive of Astra Zeneca The Times, 18 October 2009
  39. ^ Business Week
  40. ^ The Times, 19 December 2008. "AstraZeneca row as corruption claims engulf Nobel prize"
  41. ^ AstraZeneca agrees to pay £505m to settle UK tax dispute, The Guardian 23 February 2010
  42. ^ "Executive directors' salaries 2009". Remuneration Report – AstraZeneca Annual Report 2008. AstraZeneca. http://www.astrazeneca-annualreports.com/2008/remuneration_report/exec_directors_exec_team.html#basic-salary. Retrieved 22 August 2009. 

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