Drugmakers Roche and Sanofi talk up their pipelines, as earnings fail to excite

Drugmakers Roche and Sanofi’s latest earnings were largely as expected, with the companies talking up the potential of experimental medicines ahead of a looming “patent cliff” for Big Pharma.

Both companies’ stocks were down less than 1% on Thursday after reporting earnings before the bell.

They are both among the pharmaceutical companies that could see revenue fall dramatically in the coming years unless they top up their pipelines by developing drugs internally or acquiring drug candidates developed by others.

“On the pipeline side, we’ve had an amazing run of a number of Phase 3 readouts that are going to be instrumental for future growth,” the CEO Thomas Schinecker told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.

“We have a number of medicines that we’ve now moved into the late stage of development, and we will have up to 19 new medicines that we can launch by the end of the decade.”

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Last year, Roche also entered into a partnership with Danish Zealand Pharma to co-develop Zealand’s drug petrelintide, an amylin analog, as a stand-alone as well as in combination with CT-388.

“We’re not investing in [the] first generation of these medicines – we’re investing in the next generation,” CEO Schinecker told CNBC on Thursday.

“We can differentiate in combination with other therapies we have in house, because there are more than 200 comorbidities in neurology, in immunology, in cancer, and none of the other players have the kind of portfolio that we have for combinations,” he said, adding that there was also windows for differentiation with the longer lasting molecule itself, as well as in diagnostics.

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