Cholesterol Reduction

AstraZeneca Adds Lp(a) Candidate with CSPC Licensing Move

AstraZeneca expanded its cardiovascular pipeline this week, signing an exclusive license agreement for CSPC Pharmaceutical Group’s Lp(a) disruptor candidate, YS2302018. The deal comes with a $100M upfront investment that could reach $1.92B depending on further milestones.

  • YS2302018 is a small molecule Lipoprotein (a) disruptor intended to treat dyslipidemia patients by preventing the formation of excess blood lipids.
  • The Lp(a) disruptor will become part of AstraZeneca’s cholesterol-reduction pipeline, as both a single agent and in combination with the company’s PCSK9 inhibitor (AZD0780).
  • The licensing agreement puts AZ in direct competition with Eli Lilly’s Lp(a) disruptor, muvalaplin.

CSPC’s YS2302018 addresses a sizable target market, noting that nearly 70% of patients with CVD aren’t meeting guideline-directed LDL-C targets despite taking high-intensity statins. 

  • Although there’s no public data on YS2302018, it would be combined with AstraZeneca’s PCSK9i, which achieved a 52% reduction in LDL-C on top of standard-of-care statins in a Phase 1 trial.
  • By pairing the PCSK9i with its new Lp(a) disruptor, AZ believes the combined therapy could yield even greater benefits.

This combo approach appears to be a core part of AstraZeneca’s strategy for AZD0780, which is being evaluated in a number of cardiovascular combinations (e.g. with a GLP-1 candidate), and could be worth $5B in the long run.

The Takeaway

While it’s still too early to tell, this PCSK9i + Lp(a) combination is in good hands with AstraZeneca, which has the R&D and commercialization capabilities to fully explore its potential. Given AZ’s efforts with PCSK9i-based combos and ongoing drug developments from the other big pharma companies, the dyslipidemia landscape might look very different in the coming years.

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