Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Company Ltd. (BHVN) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good morning, welcome to Biohaven Pharmaceutical's Q1 2021 Earnings Call. At this time all participants' lines are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. Please be advised that today's conference call may be recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to Clifford Bechtold from Biohaven. Thank you, and please go ahead. Clifford Bechtold: Thank you, and good morning, everybody, and welcome to the Biohaven First Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. Speaking on today's call are Dr. Vlad Coric, our Chief Executive Officer; Jim Engelhart, Chief Financial Officer; BJ Jones, Chief Commercial Officer; and Dr. Elyse Stock, our Chief Medical Officer. Earlier this morning, we issued a press release announcing the first quarter 2021 highlights. A copy of this press release can be found on our website at biohavenpharma.com, and we will file our Form 10-Q later today. Before we begin, let me remind everybody that today's discussion contains forward-looking statements based on the environment as we currently see it, and includes risks and uncertainties. A list and description of the risks and uncertainties associated with an investment in Biohaven can be found in the company's filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Please be aware that you should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements we make today. For this call, we will focus on non-GAAP financial measures with detailed description of GAAP and non-GAAP analysis in our filings. An archive of today's call will be posted to Biohaven's website in the Investor Relations section. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO, Dr. Vlad Coric. Vladimir Coric: Thank you, Cliff. Good morning to our investors, and thank you for joining the first quarter earnings call, representing our first full year of earnings since the launch of NURTEC ODT. The company continues to excel in our launch of NURTEC ODT, and more broadly, advancing our strategic goals across the pipeline to grow value for patients and investors in the years to come. Our first quarter 2021 performance continues to exceed expectations across multiple fronts. NURTEC ODT was approved a little more than one-year ago. And despite facing what was perhaps the greatest challenge of any new drug launch with the emergence of the pandemic, the Biohaven team effectively and safely delivered our new migraine medication to patients. To-date, we have achieved over 600,000 prescriptions of NURTEC ODT, and access for patients is broad with greater than 89% commercial coverage. While we had expected first quarter sales to be impacted by the seasonality of patient deductibles and prescription reauthorizations typically experience in our business. NURTEC and our strong commercial team broke the mold and demonstrated exceptional delivery with first quarter net revenues of approximately 44 million for year-one, post-launch net revenue total of $107 million and climbing, I have to say. Jim Engelhart: Thank you, Vlad. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today. NURTEC ODT achieved net sales of 43.8 million in quarter one, demonstrating another strong performance versus prior quarter, increasing 25% versus quarter four, 2020, driven primarily by strong prescription volumes. Continuing down the P&L for SG&A, SG&A expenses in the quarter on a non-GAAP basis was 130.9 million compared to 85 million over the prior year quarter, an increase of 45.9 million. Most of our SG&A costs are in support of our commercial sales of NURTEC ODT. BJ Jones: Thank you, Jim. This year's Q1 earnings marks the anniversary of Biohaven's inaugural commercial launch of NURTEC ODT. It has been a year like no other as we collectively weathered the impact of the COVID-19 global pandemic. But in the midst of this once in a century struggle, Biohaven remains focused on our patients and customers' needs and in so doing we rewarded with an exciting commercial milestones throughout. We are extremely pleased with launched success to date and what we believe to be positive signals for a strong rebalance in the broader pharma market and specifically growth in the oral CGRP migraine market. The 13-months in market, we are proud to report NURTEC ODT's net sales achievement of $107 million, which is an outstanding outcome for year one of launch. And we are particularly enthusiastic about driving strong performance in Q1 despite the traditional challenges of shifting insurance coverages, resetting deductibles and a non-traditional hurdle of COVID winter surge. We exceeded market expectations again, delivering $44 million in sales on 25% growth quarter-over-quarter. We are also bullish on market growth, as we expect this momentum to continue and only accelerate over time. Dr. Elyse Stock: Thank you, BJ. Again, this quarter, I'm happy to highlight the significant advances made across our R&D organization, and I'm also happy to look to the future and Biohaven's potential to bring multiple novel therapies to patients. We continue to make great progress across our programs, including our CGRP franchise, our myeloperoxidase inhibitor platform, our glutamate modulating agents and the new opportunities we have across both common and rare diseases in our late-stage portfolio as well as our labs. Biohaven Labs has numerous early and exciting platforms being developed as well as some assets in or nearing clinical trials. We are progressing our antibody recruiting molecules, multimodal antibody therapy enhancers, also known as MACE, and molecular degraders of extra cellular proteins, and they have great potential, and you will be hearing a lot about these in the coming years. We expect our early pipeline to bring us exciting compounds in numerous areas over future years. But for today, I'm going to focus on our later-stage program that are in the clinic with many nearing top line readouts. Our aim, of course, is to always look to novel targets so as to be able to bring treatments to so many who suffer from debilitating neurologic disorders. NURTEC ODT remains our cornerstone marketed product indicated for the acute treatment of migraine. NURTEC's prevention sNDA, as you have heard, is currently under evaluation by the FDA and the PDUFA date is nearing. Devega Pans is following closely behind with both intranasal and in oral formulation in clinical trials. Our third CGRP antagonist small molecule three 100 is also headed to the clinic. morning, I will be highlighting some of our most important progress to date. Our portfolio of small molecule CGRPs affords us great flexibility and has the potential for multiple blockbusters. The impressive commercial success of NURTEC in the United States has been touched upon by both Vlad and BJ. NURTEC's sNDA for prevention of by grade is under evaluation and has its PDUFA date this, the second quarter of 2021. The European evaluation of NURTEC's dual acting filing is underway. And with these approvals, we look forward to being able to treat the continuum of migraine disease with simplicity of using one medicinal product. This significant paradigm shift will be able to improve the lives of many living with migraine across the globe. Filings and approvals for the acute treatment of migraine have taken place or are underway in multiple countries. In the Middle East, and we have already secured approvals in Israel and the UAE. We expect further approvals throughout this year. Life cycle expansion beyond geographic regions and the dual APS indications is also of critical importance. We have ongoing trials in both pediatric migraine as well as trigeminal Neuralgia, and expect to study NURTEC in several additional migraine adjacent areas, including posttraumatic headache, temporal mandibular joint disease and at least one other undisclosed area. Investigator-initiated trial and studies in health economics will add to the wealth information that will ultimately be available for Nortek and will help define the scope of important information for patients, providers and payers. Our vazegepant program includes both intranasal and oral formulations, an acute treatment Phase III study with intranasal vazegepant began in October of last year, and followed a positive Phase II study. The second pivotal vazegepant trial has the potential to confirm an even more rapid onset of effect. An oral formulation has also been advanced and began one of two Phase III studies in migraine prevention in March. Newest in our portfolio of CGRP antagonist, small molecules are a number of next-generation CGRP antagonists. We expect the first of these three 100 to advance to the clinic in the second quarter of this year. CGRP represents an important pathway in the nexus between the immune and central nervous system. Across our range of CGR antagonist assets will follow the science and conduct multiple proof-of-concept and registrational studies. Some of these have begun, for example, class psoriasis with rimegepant and COVID-19 with divegent. Additional non-migraine studies are planned, including asthma and others remain undisclosed. These multiple CGRP antagonists all open new possibilities for us to expand our CGRP platform and afford us the ability really to customize the unique attributes of each of these structurally unique compounds. We have deep experience in this mechanism of action and now we have multiple assets to optimize for different indications. We are quite busy with the CGRP antagonist as well as our other important platforms. Biohaven's pipeline has both low-risk opportunities in life cycle management of our CGRP platform and higher risk, high-reward investments in our Glutamate and myeloperoxidase inhibitor platforms. Our glutamate modulating platform is one of those high risk, high-reward areas. Troriluzole recently completed enrollment in a Phase III study in spinocerebellar ataxia, and is expected to read out top line results between 4Q 2021 and the first quarter of next year. A Phase III program in OCD started at the end of last year with the enrollment in the first study and the second study was initiated in the first quarter of this year. Both studies are based on critical signaling that emerge from the earlier proof-of-concept OCD study we conducted. Glutamate is the most abundant excitatory transmitter in the brain, and we believe troriluzole has and will provide important advances in the neuroscience deals across many areas, which may then be expanded. With regard to our MTO platform, our myeloperoxidase inhibitor trial in multiple system atrophy are rare and rapidly progressing disease with FDA's Fast draft designation will read out top line data in the third quarter of this year. The mass general here study that is testing this agent in ALS is also ongoing and is expected to complete enrollment in the fourth quarter of this year. Biohaven's efforts across our glutamate and myeloperoxidase platforms allows us to target three rare and devastating diseases, multiple system atrophy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and spinal cerebellar ataxia. We anticipate all of these to read out over the next year and the potential for three global work in drug approvals in 2022 and 2023. We are really excited by the immense opportunities across all of our assets and platforms, and we will continue to make strategic decisions across the portfolio with both external partnerships and internal programs. Our pipeline is, as always exciting, and we continue to drive these robust platforms and programs forward. We are very busy, and we remain committed to following the science and to keeping the patient at the center of all we do. It is really, again, a pleasure to be able to share all of this with you, and I will now turn the call back to Vlad. Vladimir Coric: Thank you, Elyse. In closing, Biohaven has generated robust growth in terms of the commercialization of NURTEC ODT and inferred maturation of our late-stage neuro innovation pipeline. We expect continued market expansion in nurse ECTP and migraine and anticipate at least 4 pivotal trial readouts over next year. We have the potential for multiple NDAs over the next couple of years and importance to us as a growth of the company is to continue advancing this robust pipeline. Before opening up to Q&A, I would like to end by thanking the entire bio vacant team for their relentless commitment and value creation for patients and investors. I also want to thank all the patients, their family members and investigators who participated in our clinical trials and have helped advance clinical care in the area of neuroscience. We must continue to work hard to bring novel treatments to patients suffering from these diseases. Finally, thank you to our visionary investors who have helped fund our studies and bring NURTEC ODT to patients. We'd like to now open it up to questions operator. Operator: Our first question today is from Ken Catacora of Cowen. Kenneth Cacciatore: Congratulations on all the progress. I was just wondering if you could talk about any kind of interactions to date with the agency in terms of the prevention, are we down to labeling discussions or any nuance or perspective you could provide. And the second question is, to what degree are we going to need to sample of support if we do get the prevention approval during the year. So I'm just trying to think about if we could set some expectations for gross to nets as we try to convert over the managed care for prevention, maybe just make sure we are all properly prepared for how we are going to support that launch when it occurs? Vladimir Coric: Ken, thanks for the questions. We don't give a lot of details about the interactions with FDA. I think suffice say we are at the appropriate time and interactions with the agency, and we look forward to their decision, which should be coming shortly and with regards to prevention, looking forward to next year, something that is really a benefit and allows us to streamline the launch Nurtec ODT. Prevention is the fact that we use the same dose, the same APAC and there is a significant advantage to that when it comes to both payers and also our sampling strategy. I will ask BJ to add any comments to that, but I don't anticipate there being major changes to DTMs around that. BJ? BJ Jones: Yes just to reinforce that, Vlad, and thank you for the question, Ken. We believe, one, we will retain and maintain our excellent acute commercial access. And continue to aggressively pursue what will be preventive accesses as well. And we can also tell you, we have significant interest in preventive indication among payers in early discussions have been fruitful. As it relates to any changes from a sample strategy standpoint, we really don't believe that to be necessary as we provide appropriate sample support for all our clinicians. Vladimir Coric: Great. Thanks, BJ. and there is also this efficiency. Think about the fact that in our media spend and our physician outreach, you don't have to do too set advertising. It is not like you have to have a different DTC budget for a different branded agent. So if we had two drugs going into the space, you might expect there would be a significant increase in those costs. You are going to see a pivot in our advertising that I be very focused and streamlined that this is going to include both. And like that slide, BJ showed earlier, we are going to dissolve the line between acute and prevention. That also means going to be very efficient with our marketing dollars and our interaction because we will be able to send this dual therapy message in one interaction or one app. Operator: Next question is from Paul Choi of Goldman Sachs. Kyuwon Choi: And let me also add my congratulations on the quarter and the progress I also have a couple of questions on prevention as well. Just first, Vlad or BJ. The antibody growth has been pretty flat for the past couple of quarters here. And I was just wondering if you could maybe just comment on whether this is as sort of a penetration issue or is it primarily a payer issue in terms of that is been driving sort of this flat growth with regard to the antibodies in prevention? And then second, I know the vegan oral trial was just starting to kick off, but could you maybe speak to how you are thinking about positioning down the road as that trial completes and that product can come to market? And how you think about it in the prevention indication versus NURTEC? Vladimir Coric: Thanks, Paul. Look, come back to a year or so ago, we had made the prediction that if you had oral CGRPs that were readily available, that we believe patients would prefer oral solution over injectable. We have updated that slide that we showed in the deck here quarter-over-quarter. And as you said, it is flat. Now the speculation for why it is flat can vary, but it is our belief that when you give patients an oral solution and access to this mechanism in acute, that it makes sense, right, that if you are effectively treating acute episodes, less people will need to go on to preventative agents. And actually, you look at the treatment guidelines, right. They specify that you should go through a set of acute therapies before going on to preventative agents. And so it is speculation, but it is our belief that it is the effect of acute therapy with orals that are going on to less patients meeting those mAbs. Getting on to your question about the vegetate positioning. Look, I think as you have heard from multiple individuals on the call, this is a franchise that we have developed with multiple assets we do not want any area of migraine or any area where CCP is going to be leveraged in a disease to not be a top competitor in that area. So oral vazegepant really puts us into two positions, right, for those very few patients who may need absolutely every day use we want to have a solution for them oral vazegepant prevention. But then it also gives us massive flexibility in non migrating indications to bring different formulations forward for those diseases. And at least had outlined, we have a vision for this mechanism of action that extends into very large and common disease areas well beyond migraine, migraine is just the beginning, and we are going to be excited about seeing those studies in future years. Operator: The next question is from Chris Raymond of Piper Sandler. Christopher Joseph: Just on the primary care versus specialist sort of sales effort, how are you guys thinking about the volume split here between specialists and primary care docs, maybe over the next year or two? I mean especially with the prevention label being added potentially. I know you guys have talked about efficient DTC advertising here with the label expansion, but maybe talk about how you approach the sort of the sales effort to keep the momentum going among PCPs? Vladimir Coric: Yes. I'm going to have BJ talk about it. It won't be a surprise. We have already transitioned to that focus. I think when you first started commercial launch. It is no surprise in this space. It starts in the specialty clinics. And BJ, you want to comment about that transition to primary care, how important it is us and the plan. BJ Jones: Absolutely. And Chris, thanks for the question. This is a very unique scenario in which is Vlad mentioned a moment ago, it is almost 100%, like synergistic. And so the beauty is we don't need to kind of shift our attention or call if you will, from the current focus we call. Again, we believe that just as in Queue and kind of what has been is rapid adoption of oral CGRPS, it happened primarily in specialty. First, and then we will slowly but importantly, transition out to primary care. We believe the same thing will happen as it relates to the preventive indication as well. And so we feel very confident as it relates to our promotion, whether it be DTC or whether it be from direct promotion to clinicians is that we are well focused. Again, every dollar we spend supports both what would be acute and preventive. And so it all works extremely well for us as we pursue what is this dual therapy and is different in the marketplace. Operator: The next question is from Laura Chico of Wedbush Securities. Laura Chico: I guess two. So just kind of following back, the market research, it seems like there is a little bit of a disconnect on a couple of levels. So in one regard, you have got greater familiarity comfort with the ability versus NURTEC, but more favorable views on NURTEC in terms of durability of tractate of onset so I'm just wondering if you could kind of help us understand how you are reconciling the data, but also maybe with 2021 having a lot of reopening changes, how are you planning to kind of modify your outreach efforts to position and then secondarily, just following the EU submission. I guess I'm trying to think about the balance on capital allocation between the SG&A spend and build out there and further pipeline investment. So I guess any color there that would be helpful. Vladimir Coric: Thanks, Laura. I appreciate it. I know you watch the weekly scripts very closely with your note that comes out every week. And there is a tuber on the NBRx every week. And so you see that there is probably a splitting of market share at this point, which I think is a win for both companies and also win for patients to have choice in the space. We do have to believe and I think the research reflects it that we have a more differentiated label from our competitor with the early onset that the return to normal by it minutes and then the durability of 48 hours. That is really resonating. And then the drug is really, I think, because of that profile is built for primary care. Right. So we think that is going to just continue to resonate throughout this year in our messaging. And we think you will see perhaps a little bit more of a differentiation in those market numbers. As we continue to penetrate primary care and then the prevention label comes in. And so BJ, do you want to talk a little bit more about capital allocation and the other aspect of -. BJ Jones: Absolutely. And Laura, thanks for the question. As it relates to how the market's opening and how do we kind of shift our allocation we will still focus on what are kind of these two anchor points of making sure we can activate patients, but also making sure we communicate effectively and broadly with physicians and that is the area of opportunity for us. And frankly, not just for us but for the entire market. I just haven't been able to get the clinicians in the way that you normally do. And so we will hit kind of current access opportunities that will broaden, and we will be able to be more productive in some sense. And so that is the relative shift that we see. It is still consistent with our overall strategy. And we just expect kind of more productivity kind in that space. So as well as things have gone thus far, we expect them to accelerate as the market opens. Operator: The next question is from Marc Goodman of SVB Leerink. Marc Goodman: So before you preannounced the first quarter sales slide, you had talked about gross to net staying high. And at the same high levels that we were used to seeing kind of in the second half of last year, and you said that would be well into this year. And then in the first quarter, it kind of felt like gross tenets dropped quite a bit. But obviously, there is a lot of things that go on in between the gross and the average price. And so maybe you guys can talk a little bit about what happened in the first quarter. Was there any like onetime adjustment that helped you in revenues or why were gross to net so low? And maybe you could just give us a flavor for how you are thinking about gross tons for the rest of the year? And then secondly, Jim, maybe you could just give us a sense of how we should be thinking about spending for the rest of the year. The numbers went up pretty dramatically in the first quarter. There was some share-based compensation expense that looked very high. Just wondering if there is kind of a one-timer in there or if those things are going to be there for each quarter? And just give us a sense of that. Vladimir Coric: Thanks, Marc. I'm glad to hear you saying growth cements are low. So thank you for that. No. As you know, what we had always said is that there will be turbulence around gross nets, and they certainly are. There are so many different variables that go into GTNs and something that we did, say, last year, we would start to do, and we weren't sure what the success of that would be, would be to start to change some of the rules around our affordability programs. And so I think first quarter, you also saw the cycling out of non Aim customers to more paying customers. And that reflects that after the year of launch, we are able to identify, as you know, most plans were equal curing with our competitor and there is a few plans where we have some wins. They have some wins. And so you saw some of our rule changing that people who aren't on our - we have an insurance bridge and UBRELVY is, there is no reason for us to continue to cover those patients. And so part of what you saw was coming off of NURTEC and so you might see a decrease in some of those scripts and then going on to UBRELVY, but for us, a very efficient because it meant that we were fine-tuning the more gain customers this is going to be a challenging year as first quarter always is. We had a little bit more success than we thought on getting through the deductibles and co-pays, first quarter. But it is something I would caution people that we will continue to tweak these affordability programs and when we do that, there is some learning that occurs and back and forth. So it is not so straightforward that you just get the better when you stay there. So I would say, let's all be cautious about this year. And especially, as we saw, and we are surprised by the resurgence in COVID and then also some weather in Texas that affected scripts. So there is a lot of external variables. Let's be cautious. But I think after this year, you should see more steady and predictable GPM numbers. Then, just wanted to talk about the onetime costs that I think definitely increase the perception of R&D spend. But I would remind folks, a lot of things get dapped into R&D spend that always are R&D. Jim Engelhart: So thanks, Vlad, and thanks, Mark, for the question. So Mark, as you pointed out, the increase in spending. There are a number of drivers there. Stock-based comp is one of them, which is why we also provide lens on non-GAAP to see some of those things out. Stock comp, obviously, when you have stock performance to what we have, there is exercises, but there is also timing of awards that play into that as well. And then outside of the one-times upon SG&A, as we have said in the past, there is always going to be timing of how we invest in our brand and kind of a pulse strategy and so any given quarter can see variability, but it doesn't necessarily set the tone for what our future is on future quarters. So hopefully, that addresses your question. Operator: Next question is from Charles Duncan of Cantor Fitzgerald. Charles Duncan: Congrats on a great quarter. Let's see, we are juggling call. So sorry if this has already been asked. I wanted to ask a couple of questions about the pipeline. In particular, the I guess, I'm wondering, can you provide a little bit more color on how you think vazegepant will fit within the current CGRP franchise? And then I had a follow-up on the other pipeline assets. Vladimir Coric: Thanks, Jeff. So vazegepant also represents -- we did comment very briefly earlier about the flexibility in different modalities, formulations, indications as well as non migraine indication. But to start with maybe differentiation in the intranasal. So we have seen every single migraine metis action eventually migrate to an intranasal and now it does cause a to get a greater speed of onset. And also remind you that when patients are vomiting gives an ultimate way patients can get drug in their body without that. So again, we want to be at the lead with this robust franchise that we have. So with our strategy, we will be the first intranasal, assuming we get positive data towards the end of the year, years ahead of any competitor. And also highlight that some of these CGRPs are actually very difficult to make into internals because they struggle with solubility, but vazegepant has a really unique characteristics and at a time we soluble. So you are going to see the first entry will be in the intranasal for ultra rapid onset of action. We think it is going to be complementary the NURTEC, that it is not going to take away share from neuropathies, generally speaking, prefer oral over intranasal over injectables in that order. And so this will be a nice additional formulation in the toolkit if you have to have a really quick onset of action or vomiting. And then when you look past to the oral version, we are going to compete with an oral version for every single day use in prevention for those patients who really need that level. And as we know, the minority of patients that will need that level of daily use, but we will have that. And then the other oral formulations will allow us to specifically target other disease states, and we are excited about that. So it really represents a nice expansion of the franchise do. Charles Duncan: Okay. That is helpful. And then just quickly on Troriluzole and verdiperstat. I know that they are in, call it, tough put indications initially. But I'm wondering if verdiperstat and - excuse me, Troriluzole and spinocerebellar ataxia. And videos at in multisystem atrophy. I'm wondering if you could provide a little bit of color on why you have confidence or what you have done to, I guess, reduce risk with those current clinical trials. Vladimir Coric: Great. Great question. So I think when you look at where we are with for Louisville and videos you are right, these are tough indications historically. The difference is we are finally coming to these registrational trials that have been performed and designed on the platform of Phase II data that showed a signal, right. So our strategy is always have multiple kind of basket trial like approaches of indications because they are tough disorders. And the remaining SCA had really nice proof-of-concept data. We allowed to sit and use that data to increase our dose, increase our sample size and make adjustments scale. So we did everything we can to improve our probability of winning based on a Phase II output. So that is why we are particularly excited about FCA. Same goes for verdiperstat. I think Astrazeneca prior to exiting neuroscience had performed a really nice Phase II, demonstrating a dose dependent signal in MSA. Once again, it is an area where we are now going forward with an optimized dose, higher sample size and a scale that is been optimized. So we think both of those, all be it tough areas. Increased chance of winning because of the Phase II work that was done. And unlike some of the other indications that we that were a little bit higher risk but high unmet needs, where we didn't have that Phase II proof-of-concept to give us the advantage. So we are excited about both those readouts. And as we said today, we are tracking early. MSA will now be a readout in third quarter. And FDA by the end of the year or early next year. So thanks, Charles. Operator: The next question is from Tim Lugo of William Blair. Unidentified Analyst: This is (Ph) on for Tim. So you mentioned earlier that you expect increased productivity as the market starts to reopen. Can you sort of help kind of quantify that or just help us think about how much upside there is to the productivity as the team or productivity of the team in the market hopefully continues to reopen? And then secondly, you mentioned the usual payer dynamics in the first quarter. Were there any -- is there any pushback that you experienced or any surprises there? Vladimir Coric: Thank you. Appreciate it. And I will turn it over to BJ to address that. BJ Jones: Tim, thank you. So as it relates to productivity and quantifying that, once again, as well as things have gone for Neurotech and frankly, for all CGRPs, we know there is been a bit of a blanket, right. On this since the launch. And it is because patients haven't readily been going to a lock. There is clinicians appropriately have not been widely open to our promotion and to our representatives as well, and this is happening across the industry as a whole. And so as it relates now to what we think is this upside, as well as we could have done, it would have increased what was the growth, right, of our launch, that is what we expect now is to kind of insert back into what should be substantive growth that we could have seen, right, since the launch. And so that is what we expect to see. Again, I want to be very careful and we want to set up what our right expectations. We have not seen thus far, we don't expect to see just all of a sudden, June 1st, the market opens up broadly and just takes off. It will be incremental because that is the way the nation has been opening up. And we are starting to see evidence of that already. And so we are very focused on that. As it relates to discussions thus far with payers, again, there is a lot of work to be done, for sure, as it relates to the preventive indication. But as I mentioned, thus far, dialogue with different payers, and we are well into those discussions. There is a lot of interest. And we are having very good and robust discussions. We will not land anything in the near term, but we are still waiting, obviously, to hear back from the agency. So a lot more work to be done, but thus far, things seems too good. Thanks. Operator: The next question is from Vamil Divan of Mizuho Securities. Vamil Divan: So maybe I also apologize if I missed this earlier, but just in terms of the European opportunity, can you talk a little bit more about your partnership discussions? It sound a few months ago that you are making good progress there. Just wondering if we should expect something ahead of a potential approval there or are your plans sort of to go alone if needed? And then just a second question maybe around the as you move from just having the label to potentially having prevention as well. Can you talk out of your market research or anything you have seen kind of talks about the sort of severity of the patients that are coming on to NURTEC? How many migraines do they have in a month? On average or anything along those lines and do you think as you to the prevention side, maybe you can kind of tap into a more severe patient population? Just trying to get a little better sense of kind of where you might be expand your -- the opportunity. Vladimir Coric: Appreciate it. So as you know, with any partnerships or potential partnerships, we are very careful not to get into too much specific detail around timing and other things around that. What I would say is, look, just like we have said in the U.S., right. We always have to be prepared to either launch and do things on their own, and we have proven do that. Ex U.S., there is definitely an efficiency of other companies and groups that have pre-existing established infrastructures as well as relationships with payer and regulatory front. So there would be a heightened efficiency U.S. as we previously said, and the interest is varied from local regional groups that are very good in certain markets to larger groups that are global. It is not surprising that one could think of there would be an efficiency in the ease of one global partner. But that doesn't mean that, that would kind of take us in over a really strong local group. So we have to balance those two and see what the best relationships and economics would be for our investors, but then also who can most efficiently deliver this globally to patients. So that is all we can say about it at this point, stay tuned, and there will be additional details that you get there. So getting to your second part of the question about what are the types of patients coming in. About one year ago, again, this is another area we were different than a lot the messaging that traditionally investors have had around migraine, there is, I think, a hyper focus in prevention. And I think a lot of people missed the fact that it is actually people with less frequent migraines that make up very large numbers in the space, if you more than 65% of our patients I have kind of less than that four to eight kind of migraines per month. And so those have traditionally been people for acute therapy. And I think you are seeing that in the great numbers of ourselves and our competitors are putting up is a very large, unsatisfied acute population here. We have not seen a lot of prevention used off-label because I think people are here waiting for that data. They are waiting. So they saw the data in the Lancet that we had that was robust. I think that step one, step two is getting the approval from the FDA and being able to promote on it. So I think there will be a lot of growth ahead in this redefining of the space if we are successful with the NDA of one drug, same dose treat both acute and prevention and finally, getting rid of the distinction between these two different categories. So thanks for the question. Operator: Next question is from Douglas Tsao of H.C. Wainright. Douglas Tsao: I'm just curious, if we look at the Script data and the data that you presented, you had sort of really tracked ahead of you rates on the new to brand, and it sort of now seems to be back in sort of back and forth and maybe even having a slight advantage. Just curious if you are seeing anything in market and obviously, we have the prevention launch, which sort of should be quite meaningful inflection point for you. But just on the acute side, what you might be seeing in the near term, some of the dynamics in the marketplace. Vladimir Coric: Yes. Look, we have been very happy. I think if you rewind to a year ago, most people were saying, look, your competitors are going to get 70% of this market because they are the established competitor. It is going to be hard for Biohaven to get in there. And I think we are very pleased where we are, but we are not resting on our lower line. Of course, we want to become the market leader. And I think we will be on that trajectory, given the profile and especially with the upcoming prevention as well. And I just if he wants to add anything to that commentary, but don't over-interpret the script numbers, especially when we are changing rules on affordability programs, and you don't have a line of sight into some of the rationale as to how those affordability programs change and then the impact. So it might seem as though you have a reduction in the subset of patients. But again, if it is converting people over to being more paying the nonpaying customers, then it might look like there is a change in the Rx when there really isn't, right. There is just a program wide affordability changes. BJ, anything on MBRx or your thoughts? BJ Jones: Yes, no only thing I would add, Mike, thank you for outlining that. It is really since July of last year. And if you look holistically, we spend within a few percentage points of one another, NBRx. And again, it is a very, very positive thing. We continue to be in that space even with the affordability changes that Vlad talked about. And so we believe, absolutely, especially with the market research so positive. In the fullness of time, we will be the market leader, and we expect to make that happen. That being said, this market is huge. And there is plenty of room actually for multiple, very successful drugs. And so we continue to be excited about with the head. Vladimir Coric: And we think there is going to be halo effect if we are successful in prevention, right. Wouldn't you -- your patient physician? Wouldn't you want your patients to be on the acute therapy that could also prevent you see for migraine, right. So we think it is going to be a nice halo effect there. Operator: Next question is from Esther Rajavelu of UBS. Esther Rajavelu: I have two quick ones. First on the MPO inhibitor. Can you share your thinking on the commercial environment for MSA and what you would need to do to educate prescribers to diagnose correctly? And any color you can share on the regulatory time line considerations would be helpful. And then I have a quick follow-up on Nurtec. Vladimir Coric: So thanks for the question. We are really excited about MSA because, as you know, there is no current treatment for MSA whatsoever. And as you alluded to, often, it gets misdiagnosed as Parkinson's, but very quickly the right diagnosis is achieved because patients progress much more rapidly become well sure bound and unfortunately, die much earlier versus the very different onset with Parkinson. So most of the highly skilled neurology centers that we are working with on call on at CMSA, the diagnosis is pretty straightforward. I think where some of the education will be -- having to occur is in more of the larger community center neurology offices where these individuals may get diagnosed with Parkinson's earlier. And so we have a plan around that and making sure that we get more widespread education about the differences between Parkinson's and MSA. But like migrate, you are going to see the launch in more in the specialty centers first and then branch out. For there. So hopefully, that answered the first part of your question. And for the second one, what was that? Esther Rajavelu: Yes. In terms of Nurtec, I just wanted to see what proportion of patients on mAbs are also getting a script for OCTP right now? Vladimir Coric: That is a good question. And what we know and what we have heard from folks that people have used it for breakthrough. We actually don't have a quantifiable number, but that is a good question. We will see if we can drill down on that a little bit, but we are hearing that look at - if you are on any preventative agent, whether it is Topamax, mAbs, patients continue to have breakthrough. And our understanding from clinicians has been really welcome to have a new mechanism that can treat that breakthrough, but I don't have a specific number for you, but we will look into it. Clifford Bechtold: And I think we are unfortunately out of time. Thank you, Esther. So we are going to have to stop the questions there. Thank you all very much for joining our first quarter call and look forward to the next quarter discussion with you. Thank you all. Operator: This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.
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Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Company Ltd. (NYSE:BHVN) Sees Positive Analyst Sentiment Amidst Product Pipeline Progress

  • The consensus price target for Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Company Ltd. (NYSE:BHVN) has increased from $60 to $65, indicating growing optimism among analysts.
  • Biohaven reports a strong financial position with $440 million in cash and equivalents, alongside positive interim data from its MoDE™ platform.
  • Despite a recent stock decline due to an experimental drug's performance, ongoing clinical trials and a diverse portfolio present potential growth opportunities.

Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Company Ltd. (NYSE:BHVN) is a biopharmaceutical company that focuses on developing treatments for neurological and neuropsychiatric diseases, as well as rare disorders. The company is well-known for its product NURTEC ODT (rimegepant), which is used for the acute treatment of migraines. Biohaven is also working on other promising treatments, including Zavegepant and Troriluzole.

The consensus price target for Biohaven's stock has shown an upward trend over the past year. A year ago, the average price target was $60, which increased to $60.56 last quarter, and more recently, it has risen to $65. This suggests growing optimism among analysts about Biohaven's prospects, possibly due to advancements in their product pipeline or positive clinical trial developments.

Biohaven's financial position is strong, with approximately $440 million in cash, cash equivalents, marketable securities, and restricted cash as of June 30, 2024. The company is advancing its Molecular Degrader of Extracellular Proteins (MoDE™) platform, with positive interim data from a Phase 1 study of BHV-1300 showing dose-dependent and rapid IgG reductions without serious adverse events. This progress may contribute to the positive sentiment reflected in the rising price targets.

The company is also making significant strides in its novel ion channel program, with five Phase 2/3 trials underway for BHV-7000 in epilepsy and mood disorders. Positive Phase 1 data for the TRPM3 antagonist BHV-2100 has been released, showing promising results and paving the way for a Phase 2 study in acute migraine. These developments may further bolster analyst confidence in Biohaven's future performance.

Despite these advancements, Biohaven's stock experienced a decline following the disappointing performance of its experimental protein-degrading drug, as highlighted by Investors.com. This setback has impacted the company's market position, with BTIG setting a price target of $24, indicating a cautious outlook. However, Biohaven's diverse portfolio and ongoing clinical trials may still offer potential for future growth and success.

Biohaven Pharmaceutical Pre-Announced Q4 Beat, Shares Up 5%

Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Company Ltd. (NYSE:BHVN) shares closed more than 5% higher on Thursday following the company’s pre-announcement, according to which its Q4 Nurtec ODT end-user revenue came in at $190 million (up 48% quarter-over-quarter), beating the consensus estimate of $140 million. The company mentioned no material inventory level changes, suggesting strong organic growth.

Analysts at Wedbush continue to see the dual prevention/treatment label as a key differentiation point for Nurtec ODT, and raised their price target on the company’s shares to $149 from $144 following the pre-announcement.