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A `Better Botox' May Target Millennials, Men and Women

A `Better Botox' May Target Millenials, Men and Hesitant Women

(Bloomberg) -- Revance Therapeutics Inc’s lead asset is a new form of botulinum toxin, akin to the best-selling wrinkle eraser, Botox, but with a key difference, durability, according to Chief Executive Officer Daniel Browne.

Recent results in a late-stage study may back up his claim. The Newark, California-based drug developer plans to leverage that durability claim to expand into previously untapped markets rather than just challenging Botox and its maker, Allergan Plc, Browne said in an interview at Bloomberg LP’s New York office.

When pressed on how his company could drive expansion in a field where Botox has been dominant for nearly three decades, Browne talks about moving into new therapeutic areas that Allergan hasn’t dipped into yet, like plantar fasciitis, a common cause of heel pain in runners and overweight patients. Revance is expected to report results from a mid-stage study in plantar fasciitis before the year ends. 

Revance plans to use cash from a recent stock offering for more research and development, as well as to speed along development of a program in cervical dystonia, a painful and under-diagnosed condition that causes a person’s head to twist to one side. The Food and Drug Administration awarded Revance an orphan drug designation for the program.

Browne also envisions tapping into the aesthetic market by winning over women who may have been on the fence about starting multiple repeat injections with Botox. Millennials and men are another target in that Revance’s CEO could see pressing into. For fresh-faced millennials, the pitch could be using the wrinkle reducer as a preventative treatment to stop them before they start.

But millennials don’t need to open their wallets or dip into their bitcoin just yet. RT002, Revance’s experimental therapy, isn’t likely to get Food and Drug Administration approval and be available at plastic surgeons’ offices before 2020. 

That time-line didn’t stop shares in Allergan from sliding on Dec. 5. That’s when the small-cap reported results from two late-stage trials that showed RT002 kept wrinkles between the eyebrows from returning for about six months on average, longer than Botox where the label states it lasts about three to four months. That’s potentially good news for trypanophobists, who want to look younger but hate needles.

A `Better Botox' May Target Millennials, Men and Women

Revance does have its detractors. Analysts from Wells Fargo to Morgan Stanley rushed to Allergan’s defense, saying the drop in the Dublin-domiciled, Madison, New Jersey-based company’s shares was “overdone.” Morgan Stanley saw patients’ own assessments of RT002’s effectiveness as similar when compared to Botox patient-reported results. The scales used to compare patient responses were different, with Botox using an eight-point scale and RT002 a four-point scale. It “may be marginally easier for Botox,” to show a difference, Morgan Stanley wrote.

Allergan also scoffed, with a spokesman writing in an email shortly after the results were made public that “the Revance Phase 3 results reported for RT002 don’t support a longer duration claim.” Browne countered: “Allergan has never by any scale been able to get beyond 16-weeks, we were able to get beyond 24-weeks on multiple scales.”

Analysts have also pointed to Revance’s dose is double Botox’s twenty units, but “a unit of Revance is not a unit of Botox,” says Browne, pointing to medical literature penned in part by Allergan’s chief scientific officer for Botox, Mitchell Brin. The article says dose response data for Botox in wrinkles between the eyebrows “showed that 20 units was not statistically different from 30 or 40 units, but that 10 units was statistically significantly less effective.”

Still it’s not a zero-sum game, Browne said. Shorter-acting products like Botox could be “complementary” to what he sees as the next-generation neuro-modulators. A longer acting product could provide patients “better outcomes and pharmacoeconomics.” Ultimately, “the label matters” and for Revance investors, they’ll just have to wait until a few years to see that.

To contact the reporter on this story: Cristin Flanagan in New York at cflanagan1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Arie Shapira at ashapira3@bloomberg.net, Steven Fromm, Christiana Sciaudone

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.