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    Against odds, Lipitor became world's top seller

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Lipitor, the best-selling drug in the history of pharmaceuticals, is the blockbuster that almost wasn't.

    When it was in development, the cholesterol-lowering medicine was viewed as such an also-ran it almost didn't make it into patient testing.

    By the time Lipitor went on sale in early 1997, it was the fifth drug in a class called statins that lower LDL or bad cholesterol. The class already included three blockbusters, drugs with sales of $1 billion a year or more. Normally, that would make it very tough for a latecomer to sway many doctors and patients to switch.

    But a 1996 study showed Lipitor reduced bad cholesterol dramatically more than the other statins, from the very start of treatment and even more so over time. A striking graph of those results helped Lipitor sales representatives turn it into the world's best-selling drug ever, with more than $125 billion in sales over 14 1/2 years.

    Nicknamed "turbostatin," Lipitor became the top-selling statin barely three years after it was launched. It's provided 20 percent to 25 percent of the company's annual revenue for years.

    But after nearly a decade as the top-selling drug, Lipitor is set to be toppled in 2012 after getting its first generic rivals four weeks ago.

    It's a run not likely to be repeated.

    Back in the early 1980s, the public was just starting to learn what cholesterol was. There was little evidence that controlling it with medication could be so crucial in preventing disability and early death, and the coming epidemic of obesity and diabetes in an aging population wasn't foreseen.

    At the time, heart attack prevention basically amounted to telling patients to eat more oatmeal and skip the steak.

    Lipitor creator Warner-Lambert, a mid-sized drugmaker best known for consumer health products including Listerine, Benadryl allergy pills and Halls cough drops, got a late start in what turned into a surprisingly fast-growing market.

    Merck & Co. had a decade lead with Mevacor, launched in 1987. By 1994, its successor drug, Zocor, along with Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.'s Pravachol and Novartis AG's Lescol, had crowded the market.

    "Those other companies didn't even take us seriously. They didn't think we could be a viable contender," said Adele Gulfo, then head of cardiovascular marketing at Warner-Lambert Co. who now heads Pfizer's primary care drugs business.

    Doctors said they were "quite satisfied with the medicines we have," she recalled recently.

    Given that, marketing executives at Warner-Lambert were projecting Lipitor sales of $300 million a year at best, recalls the drugs's inventor, chemist Bruce D. Roth.

    "I wish someday you guys could make us a drug we could sell," the marketers told his team, recalls Roth, a research vice president for Genentech, a biotech pioneer now owned by Swiss drugmaker Roche.

    They had, but didn't see it.

    "There was a lot of controversy at Warner-Lambert as to whether we should even take our molecule into the clinic" for human testing, Roth says. "It was kind of a big risk ... It's millions of dollars."

    But senior management was persuaded in 1990 to at least fund the initial round of testing on a couple dozen employee volunteers.

    The results were far better than what had been seen in the animal tests.

    "It tremendously, incredibly outperformed the other statins," Roth says. "It was as good at its lowest dose as the other statins were at their highest dose."

    So Warner-Lambert partnered with much-larger Pfizer Inc., considered the industry's top marketer, first to help fund the expensive late-stage testing of the drug in people and then to promote Lipitor after it was launched. Pfizer bought out Warner-Lambert in 2000 to block two other companies trying to acquire it and get control of Lipitor.

    Pfizer benefited from some lucky timing: Lipitor went on sale in 1997, the year the Food and Drug Administration first allowed drug ads targeting consumers.

    So Pfizer spent tens of millions on ads, including on the popular drama "ER," first urging patients to "Know Your Numbers" and then showing patients discuss how Lipitor helped them get their cholesterol numbers below guideline goals.

    Meanwhile, health groups kept lowering the cholesterol targets in national guidelines, making millions more patients good candidates for statin treatment, as new research showed the link between cholesterol levels and consequences such as heart attacks. All those new patients boosted sales for the whole statin class, particularly Lipitor.

    The Lipitor promotion team set new standards for a marketing campaign. They repeatedly visited family doctors as well as cardiologists, and blanketed patients with data showing that Lipitor was best at lowering cholesterol. They stressed to doctors nervous about safety that Lipitor's lowest dose worked as well as rivals' highest doses. They gave free samples of the white pills and sometimes bought lunch for the office staff.

    In another savvy move, Lipitor was priced below rival drugs.

    The company continued research on Lipitor, through this year conducting more than 400 studies, costing roughly $1 billion and including more than 80,000 patients. The studies have shown how Lipitor helped patients with heart problems, diabetes, stroke risk and other conditions, by preventing heart attacks and strokes and reducing plaque buildup in arteries.

    Even with Zocor, Pravachol and Mevacor all going generic several years ago, and AstraZeneca PLC's Crestor joining the market in 2003, Lipitor sales have remained strong. It's the only brand-name drug among the 20 most-dispensed drugs in the U.S., according to data firm IMS Health.

    But Pfizer, the world's largest drugmaker by revenue, has struggled to develop another runaway blockbuster. Its bid to create a next-generation statin flamed out in 2007 when it had to abandon heavily touted compound torcetrapib, after roughly $800 million in testing, because it raised heart attack and stroke risk.

    In recent years, Pfizer has focused on creating other types of drugs and on another unprecedented strategy — this one for hanging onto Lipitor revenue until June, when multiple new generic Lipitor versions will join one sold by Ranbaxy Laboratories and the authorized generic from Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc. Pfizer is offering patients and insurance plans big discounts and rebates, including cards giving patients a $4 monthly copayment, if they stay on Lipitor until then.

    But branded Lipitor is by no means history.

    Its patent is still in force in many major foreign countries and Pfizer is promoting it heavily in emerging markets such as China.

    Pfizer's strategy to keep U.S. patients on Lipitor appears to be working a little better than some analysts expected: The number of Lipitor prescriptions filled in the first full week after generics arrived only fell by half.

    Sanford Bernstein analyst Dr. Tim Anderson forecasts Lipitor sales will decline from about $11 billion in 2009 and 2010 to $3.9 billion next year and just above $3 billion in 2015.

    That would make it Pfizer's No. 3 drug that year — and possibly still among the world's 20 top-selling drugs by revenue, as half those on the current list also will have generic competition by then.

    Lipitor, the best-selling drug in the history of pharmaceuticals, is the blockbuster that almost wasn't.

    When it was in development, the cholesterol-lowering medicine was viewed as such an also-ran it almost didn't make it into patient testing.

    By the time Lipitor went on sale in early 1997, it was the fifth drug in a class called statins that lower LDL or bad cholesterol. The class already included three blockbusters, drugs with sales of $1 billion a year or more. Normally, that would make it very tough for a latecomer to sway many doctors and patients to switch.

    But a 1996 study showed Lipitor reduced bad cholesterol dramatically more than the other statins, from the very start of treatment and even more so over time. A striking graph of those results helped Lipitor sales representatives turn it into the world's best-selling drug ever, with more than $125 billion in sales over 14 1/2 years.

    Nicknamed "turbostatin," Lipitor became the top-selling statin barely three years after it was launched. It's provided 20 percent to 25 percent of the company's annual revenue for years.

    But after nearly a decade as the top-selling drug, Lipitor is set to be toppled in 2012 after getting its first generic rivals four weeks ago.

    It's a run not likely to be repeated.

    Back in the early 1980s, the public was just starting to learn what cholesterol was. There was little evidence that controlling it with medication could be so crucial in preventing disability and early death, and the coming epidemic of obesity and diabetes in an aging population wasn't foreseen.

    At the time, heart attack prevention basically amounted to telling patients to eat more oatmeal and skip the steak.

    Lipitor creator Warner-Lambert, a mid-sized drugmaker best known for consumer health products including Listerine, Benadryl allergy pills and Halls cough drops, got a late start in what turned into a surprisingly fast-growing market.

    Merck & Co. had a decade lead with Mevacor, launched in 1987. By 1994, its successor drug, Zocor, along with Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.'s Pravachol and Novartis AG's Lescol, had crowded the market.

    "Those other companies didn't even take us seriously. They didn't think we could be a viable contender," said Adele Gulfo, then head of cardiovascular marketing at Warner-Lambert Co. who now heads Pfizer's primary care drugs business.

    Doctors said they were "quite satisfied with the medicines we have," she recalled recently.

    Given that, marketing executives at Warner-Lambert were projecting Lipitor sales of $300 million a year at best, recalls the drugs's inventor, chemist Bruce D. Roth.

    "I wish someday you guys could make us a drug we could sell," the marketers told his team, recalls Roth, a research vice president for Genentech, a biotech pioneer now owned by Swiss drugmaker Roche.

    They had, but didn't see it.

    "There was a lot of controversy at Warner-Lambert as to whether we should even take our molecule into the clinic" for human testing, Roth says. "It was kind of a big risk ... It's millions of dollars."

    But senior management was persuaded in 1990 to at least fund the initial round of testing on a couple dozen employee volunteers.

    The results were far better than what had been seen in the animal tests.

    "It tremendously, incredibly outperformed the other statins," Roth says. "It was as good at its lowest dose as the other statins were at their highest dose."

    So Warner-Lambert partnered with much-larger Pfizer Inc., considered the industry's top marketer, first to help fund the expensive late-stage testing of the drug in people and then to promote Lipitor after it was launched. Pfizer bought out Warner-Lambert in 2000 to block two other companies trying to acquire it and get control of Lipitor.

    Pfizer benefited from some lucky timing: Lipitor went on sale in 1997, the year the Food and Drug Administration first allowed drug ads targeting consumers.

    So Pfizer spent tens of millions on ads, including on the popular drama "ER," first urging patients to "Know Your Numbers" and then showing patients discuss how Lipitor helped them get their cholesterol numbers below guideline goals.

    Meanwhile, health groups kept lowering the cholesterol targets in national guidelines, making millions more patients good candidates for statin treatment, as new research showed the link between cholesterol levels and consequences such as heart attacks. All those new patients boosted sales for the whole statin class, particularly Lipitor.

    The Lipitor promotion team set new standards for a marketing campaign. They repeatedly visited family doctors as well as cardiologists, and blanketed patients with data showing that Lipitor was best at lowering cholesterol. They stressed to doctors nervous about safety that Lipitor's lowest dose worked as well as rivals' highest doses. They gave free samples of the white pills and sometimes bought lunch for the office staff.

    In another savvy move, Lipitor was priced below rival drugs.

    The company continued research on Lipitor, through this year conducting more than 400 studies, costing roughly $1 billion and including more than 80,000 patients. The studies have shown how Lipitor helped patients with heart problems, diabetes, stroke risk and other conditions, by preventing heart attacks and strokes and reducing plaque buildup in arteries.

    Even with Zocor, Pravachol and Mevacor all going generic several years ago, and AstraZeneca PLC's Crestor joining the market in 2003, Lipitor sales have remained strong. It's the only brand-name drug among the 20 most-dispensed drugs in the U.S., according to data firm IMS Health.

    But Pfizer, the world's largest drugmaker by revenue, has struggled to develop another runaway blockbuster. Its bid to create a next-generation statin flamed out in 2007 when it had to abandon heavily touted compound torcetrapib, after roughly $800 million in testing, because it raised heart attack and stroke risk.

    In recent years, Pfizer has focused on creating other types of drugs and on another unprecedented strategy — this one for hanging onto Lipitor revenue until June, when multiple new generic Lipitor versions will join one sold by Ranbaxy Laboratories and the authorized generic from Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc. Pfizer is offering patients and insurance plans big discounts and rebates, including cards giving patients a $4 monthly copayment, if they stay on Lipitor until then.

    But branded Lipitor is by no means history.

    Its patent is still in force in many major foreign countries and Pfizer is promoting it heavily in emerging markets such as China.

    Pfizer's strategy to keep U.S. patients on Lipitor appears to be working a little better than some analysts expected: The number of Lipitor prescriptions filled in the first full week after generics arrived only fell by half.

    Sanford Bernstein analyst Dr. Tim Anderson forecasts Lipitor sales will decline from about $11 billion in 2009 and 2010 to $3.9 billion next year and just above $3 billion in 2015.

    That would make it Pfizer's No. 3 drug that year — and possibly still among the world's 20 top-selling drugs by revenue, as half those on the current list also will have generic competition by then.

     

    51 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  Jacksonville, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      Yup ! And exploited the woe beggoten public 'big time' .
      • 38 Special 4 mths ago
        Thanks to a Crooked Congress bought off by W-L.
    • sldfkgjdflkgjfdskjgfdklsj ...  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  4 mths ago
      i take lipitor and its expensive. wondering if there is a generic. if so, how much is the cost?
      • rbtdude 4 mths ago
        health insurance, sounds like you dont have any
      • Bad Bob 4 mths ago
        Lovistatin is a generic, works for me.
      • Joseph M 4 mths ago
        I suggest homemade chicken soup and stop eating so many doritos.
    • Jo  •  4 mths ago
      To all you fools taking Lipitor for nothing, ask your doc for a VAP blood test, if your LDL particle size is Type A (large and bouyant) it is too big to stick in your arteries and you don't need Lipitor, no matter what your numbers are, of course the docs don't want you to know about VAP.
    • Deb  •  4 mths ago
      The chemist who actually created Lipitor gave a talk at my college a few years back. His company fired him after he made the drug and he never saw any benefit from it. And apparently, this practice in the pharmaceutical industry is not uncommon.
      • DavidC 4 mths ago
        Things you invent at a company, using company resources and on company time belong to the company. Of course he wouldn't see profit from it. He should have had enough foresight to negotiate a percentage of the patent on the compounds he created.
    • .  •  4 mths ago
      The generic Lipitor aka Atorvastatin, is not cheap but less expensive than Lipitor. The generic co-pay on this drug is $40.00 at my pharmancy. Cost without insurance is over $100.00 for 30 tabs.
    • christina p  •  El Cajon, California  •  4 mths ago
      If ppl would eat right, work out and take care of themselves we would not need to make the drug companies rich and fill our bodies with chemicals.
      • a Yahoo! User 4 mths ago
        The problem is that medicine is not an exact science and there are too many variables to know what's good for one patient and not the next.

        God only knows how people lived to be 80 twenty years ago! Funny how life expectancy hasn't changed much but, the drug industry is booming!

        Fear sells!
      • Ilona 4 mths ago
        Christina P, you are very right
    • Cessna 140  •  4 mths ago
      They neglected to mention the bad side effects such as muscle wasteing and blocked vitamin absorption. Statins have hurt a lot of people, and are not the panacea they are made out to be.
      • Big Daddy 4 mths ago
        not everyone reacts the same to a medication.
      • Dianne 4 mths ago
        You must take Co-enzyme Q-10 with a statin as statins drain the body of this enzyme that muscles need. Isn't the heart a Muscle?
      • ALVIN H 4 mths ago
        It hurt mine, bad.
    • DavidC  •  New York, New York  •  4 mths ago
      I worked for a Pfizer competitor when Lipitor and Viagra were launched. Contrary to what the article states about "not taking" Lipitor seriously, the company I worked for as a drug rep, took Pfizer and Lipitor very seriously. The article forgot to mention that to mention that the Pfizer reps successfully leveraged Viagra to lock out competative drug reps. "Here's some samples of Viagra for you, Doc. I'll keep them coming to you if you write more scripts for Lipitor and less for Zocor and Pravachol." Simple tactic that was extremely successful.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  4 mths ago
      Dr Sangi Gupta, a few years ago, remarked that he couldn't see what the extreme high cost of American medicine was getting ...
      Guess he didn't look in any doctor's driveway ... or at any doctor's estate.
      Or in the coffers of the drug companies.
      Didn't take the Obama crew long to jump in bed with the pharmaceutical giants.
      Thank you, Billy Tauzin, for pointing out what the Obama administration REALLY is about!
    • Jo  •  4 mths ago
      I wanted to add to my prior post that the high Lipitor sales are partly based on fraud on the doctors' part for not offering the inexpensive VAP blood test to their patients to determine particle size, even Dr. Oz addressed the issue of LDL particle size on his show a few weeks ago!
    • Joseph D  •  Coram, New York  •  4 mths ago
      There is so much misinformation and non-information being posted here and it always happens when a medication is the subject. I am a retired pharmacist with 50 years in practice, I started when mercurials were used to treat edema; medications containing mercury to treat water retention. Treat cholesterol, what's cholesterol and ulcers were treated by consuming dairy products including drinking heavy cream to"coat the stomach". Remarkeable things have happened since then and, yes remarkeable side effects.. Rarely do the depressed jump out of windows though they may gain weight. Yes, medications do kill people, injure livers, pancreases and on and on. Here is my suggestion - if you're that concerned the you feel the extreme need to serve mankind by diseminating negative info then do this - the next time your baby has a 106 dg. temp. and needs an antibiotic do not give it to them, after all, their intestines may be unduly affected, forever. Does that sound sarcastic - if not, too bad, because it was meant to be. Look, I'm not advocating blindly taking whatever medication is written on a piece of paper by someone you think you trust. Ask questions and write them down BEFORE you visit your doctor, do your homework and pay attention to how you feel after starting a med. Many years, a lot of money, some super research have gone into creating products to HELP you stay well and ameliorate many illnesses. When was the last smallpox outbreak in your town? Happy and, above all, a Healthy New Year.
    • allan  •  Kingston, Canada  •  4 mths ago
      Nice editing yahoo/ap.....nice editing yahoo/ap
    • brian  •  4 mths ago
      it's scary and very telling of the establishment and medical industry, when a dangerous drug like this can be a best seller...apathy and ignorance are destroying us, as a nation.
    • Doc  •  Utrecht, The Netherlands  •  4 mths ago
      My own father was on Lipitor and blood pressure medicines, had severe hip pain, and was weeks before getting a fake hip. I told him to stop taking this crap, and within ONE DAY his hip pain was totally gone!!!
      Think the surgeon was happy about that? Ha ha ha. They don't give a crap, that's what people have got to realize!
    • Larry  •  Vincennes, Indiana  •  4 mths ago
      The killer leg cramps it caused was horrible. Thank God I am not on that trash med. anymore.
    • mr wallace  •  4 mths ago
      I bet it dont out sell cocain ???
    • Louis Cipher  •  Denton, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Two reasons that it is a top seller.

      1) Once you go on Lipitor, doctors seem to never want to take you off the drug. Use it till you are dead.

      2) The lawyers haven't gotten to it on their list of 'drugs to sue over for some side effect'.
    • sheila  •  Clinton, North Carolina  •  4 mths ago
      Now watch as every person who takes or has taken this medicine health start to fail. Cholesterol drugs block the absorption of fat soluble drugs such as vitamins A, D, E, and K.
    • Joseph M  •  Knob Lick, Kentucky  •  4 mths ago
      Humans, even otherwise educated ones, are so gullible when it comes to snake oil. Sorry folks, but old and and death is what awaits all of us... if we don't get hit by a bus first that is.
    • slappy  •  4 mths ago
      Nice advertisement for Pfizer. Not that hard to be successful when you come up with a drug that treats the effects of poor diet and inactivity in one of the fattest countries on Earth.
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