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Biogen announces job cuts, turns focus to Alzheimer’s drug launch
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A sign marks a Biogen facility in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. January 26, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo/File Photo
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By Manas Mishra and Mariam Sunny
(Reuters) -Biogen Inc said on Tuesday it expects to slash about 1,000 jobs, or 11% of its workforce, in a fresh round of cost-cutting as it looks to the launch of a new Alzheimer’s drug to help it return to growth.
The company said its costs are elevated compared to rivals and that it would focus on higher-growth products such as the recently approved Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi, which it sells with partner Eisai.
“We had very prosperous times in the more recent history of the company. And we have seen a reversal of fortunes in some of those products,” said CEO Christopher Viehbacher.
That reversal is highlighted by slumping sales of the U.S. drugmaker’s multiple sclerosis treatment Tecfidera in the face of cheaper generic rivals, while the future of its spinal muscular atrophy drug Spinraza looks less certain due to intense competition from rivals sold by Novartis and Roche.
“I don’t think we as a company have really made the changes in our … cost base to really reflect that transition,” Viehbacher said after the job cuts were announced.
Biogen (NASDAQ:) shares were off 3% at $268.62 in early trading, reversing premarket gains.
A former Sanofi (NASDAQ:) CEO, Viehbacher was hired in November to put the biotech back on a growth path and help it recover from a series of missteps around the controversial Alzheimer’s drug Aduhelm that never gained traction.
“CEO Viehbacher is in a tough position, as it’s near impossible to cut to growth, but we appreciate the need to critically look at all current operations as Biogen evolves,” said BMO Capital Markets analyst Evan Seigerman.
Biogen, which had 8,725 employees worldwide at the end of 2022, expects to re-invest about $300 million from the new cost-cutting program into launches and research and development.
Excluding the re-investment, the program aims to reduce about $700 million in net operating expenses by 2025.
Biogen said it would now focus on the Leqembi launch.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration earlier this month granted standard approval to Leqembi, clearing the way for wider insurance coverage of the drug, but also flagging the risk of potentially dangerous brain swelling, a known risk for Alzheimer’s drugs in the same class.
“There’s an awful lot of education around safety to make sure that the right patients are in place,” Viehbacher said, adding that talks with commercial insurers on coverage for Leqembi were going well.
Eisai and Biogen are also working on an injectable version of Leqembi, which would be easier to administer than the current hour-long infusion at a specialized center.
Regulatory filings for that version of the drug are expected to be completed by the end of the first quarter of 2024, Biogen said.
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