
Dr. Heine's primary research interests is the epidemiology and pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes. This does not make him the most obvious choice for his new role, as Lilly's type 2 business actually remains fairly healthy (the Byetta franchise which is exclusively for the type 2 audience remains very healthy, although profits are shared with partner Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) while Lilly's insulin business aimed largely at the type 1 audience is the business that's in terrible shape. In fact, since Lilly introduced Humalog in 1996, the company's market share in insulin has plunged from 82% of the market back in 1995 (and as recently as 2000) to just 43% in 2006 according to IMS Health (Lilly still controls 50% of the insulin analog market, however). What's more, there are no insulins in late stage development except for an inhalable insulin similar to Exubera (and that's looking like a bust, although supporters claim the size of the bong its inhaled through is to blame, I think its the lack of using a standardized dosage that doomed Exubera). Dr. Heine cannot fix a lack of investment made over a decade ago, but he can support studies that demonstrate superiority of Lilly insulin products over rivals, possibly even ones like the Barbara Davis Diabetes Center study that showed it was feasible for patients to mix Humalog and Lantus in the same syringe without any adverse impact on glycemic control.
As I elucidated in my January 18, 2005 Open Letter to Lilly CEO Sidney Taurel, it will take more than some fancy pens to turn around Lilly's insulin franchise. Although Dr. Heine was not necessarily the best choice, he certainly is a strong leader with a proven track record in the field of treatment. The fact remains that Lilly badly needs someone to turn the business around from a strategic standpoint, and having an articulate, powerful leader heading the endocrinology business at Lilly can go a long way towards getting research dollars that, in recent decades, were invested into treatments for unrelated conditions. These include such ailments as depression (Prozac, Cymbalta) and schizophrenia (Zyprexa) just to name a few blockbusters, as well as erectile dysfunction (Cialis), while the diabetes business has been forced to rely almost exclusively on outside partnerships for the past decade. Dr. Heine may bring a fresh perspective and new leadership to the Indianapolis-based company that has strayed from its roots as the first mass-producer of insulin made commercially available in North America.
Unfortunately, when it comes to insulin, today, Lilly is a one-trick pony, offering no long-acting insulin whatsoever since removing Ultralente from the market in 2005. Basal insulin is often promoted as a treatment for type 2 diabetes, but as Rury Holman of Oxford University presented at the EASD, patients with type 2 diabetes are less likely to reach target blood sugar levels on the basal insulin alone than when on rapid-acting insulin products to cover meals, although truthfully, the differences were not really huge with either. This really is like proving the obvious, yet for some reason, most type 2 patients who begin insulin therapy start with basal insulin only. Still, in this study, involving 708 type 2 patients who had poor control of their disease despite taking two oral diabetes drugs, found that while all the insulins helped, only 8% of patients achieved target HbA1c below 6.5% with a basal insulin alone. We shouldn't be too surprised that the study was sponsored by Novo Nordisk (although this study is scheduled to continue until 2009), a company that relies on revenues from insulin for such a large percentage of its profits.
As Mads Krogsgaard Thomsen, Novo Nordisk's chief scientific officer so appropriately noted, "It [the 3-year study comparing three types of insulin in type 2 diabetes patients] shows you need a portfolio of insulins you can combine and intensify". One is usually not sufficient. Perhaps Dr. Heine should take note, as Lilly risks losing more managed care providers who seek to minimize the number of suppliers to their drug formularies. Unfortunately, as I noted before, drug development takes a decade (sometimes more), so Lilly may need to expand its partnerships if it wants to stop the slide in its insulin market share. However, it is hopeful that Dr. Heine will take take this into consideration.
Beyond this little tidbit, Lilly's new tagline, "We Take Diabetes Personally" was also revealed. While having a good tagline is not a bad thing, I don't think that will be sufficient to stop Lilly's slide in prescriptions for insulin, only doing the hard work and offering a complete product portfolio will accomplish that.


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