An interesting tidbit from the January 7 issue of The Economist:
[Teva] is the world's biggest generic drugmaker, but nearly a fifth of its sales in 2010 came from a patented blockbuster, Copaxone, a drug used to treat Multiple Sclerosis.
--"Battling borderless bugs," p. 55
If Teva, with $17 billion in revenue for the trailing 12 months, is getting 20% or $3.4 billion of its sales from just one of the several DMDs now widely used, it really makes you wonder how many folks have been diagnosed in the U.S. and other MS hot spots around the world. We need better data on this.
[Teva] is the world's biggest generic drugmaker, but nearly a fifth of its sales in 2010 came from a patented blockbuster, Copaxone, a drug used to treat Multiple Sclerosis.
--"Battling borderless bugs," p. 55
If Teva, with $17 billion in revenue for the trailing 12 months, is getting 20% or $3.4 billion of its sales from just one of the several DMDs now widely used, it really makes you wonder how many folks have been diagnosed in the U.S. and other MS hot spots around the world. We need better data on this.
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