Surprisingly, Lipitor share is tracking below historical generic substitution patterns from the past few years, i.e., the brand-name version is losing share faster than a typical generic drug.
The chart below tells the story, which is about as unexpected as an overweight, butter-loving celebrity chef becoming the spokesperson for a manufacturer of diabetes medicine. Oh, wait...
Based on IMS data, Larry Marsh at Barclays Capital reported yesterday that atorvastatin, the generic form of Lipitor, controlled 67.4% of the Lipitor market for the week ending January 6, 2012. This is the fifth full reported week by IMS with atorvastatin on the market.
The chart below compares Lipitor to a broad sample of generic drugs from the past 5 years. To create it, I combined the following two sources:
- Page 21 from the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics' The Use of Medicines in the United States report
- The IMS prescription data for Lipitor, as reported by Barclays Capital yesterday
I'll check back in a few months and see where things stand. In the meantime, I'll be managing my weight and cholesterol levels by eating a burger, egg, bacon, and donut sandwich.
What was Novo thinking? Didn't anyone watch Paula Deen's show?
ReplyDeleteAdam - This is great and interesting as I think everyone is focused on this case study. I certainly plan for this to be part of my PCMA discussion on the topic in a few weeks.
ReplyDeleteAt the same time, this looks very different than the curves I'm familiar with. I thought MSB share was typically about 10% by month 3.
I guess the question is whether IMS data is missing anything. I think there are some retailers and mail order pharmacies that don't share their data, but I can't remember. Is that an issue?
Thanks.
No mystery here in my mind. Most PBM/Formulary managers dislike/distrust Pfizer due to their past marketing practices. Time to get even for their many dirty tricks over the years.
ReplyDeleteIt should be noted that in the IMS data the brand shares include line extensions such as long-acting branded formulations, even if those extensions are not generically available.
ReplyDeleteGiven that there are no line extensions for Lipitor, this really isn't a fair comparison.
However, what it does demonstrate is that there is no substitute for an LCM strategy that includes a compelling line extension.
True, a more fine-grained analysis would benchmark Lipitor against "comparable" products. However, the IMS data are a reasonable (and publicly available) proxy for overall market share erosion.
ReplyDeleteI agree with jru. The line extension issue makes this set of IMS data an unusable comparison. Just because it is public, it is not reasonable.
ReplyDelete