Given the volatility and the spotlight that biotechnology has
received, this may be a good company to place a small amount of
your hard-earned money for a speculative investment.
Ariad Pharmaceuticals (ARIA) is known for
its lead compound called Ridaforolimus. It's a small-molecule
compound for treating cancer, which makes it very compatible and
attractive as a pharmaceutical business model. As it stands
today, ARIAD is collaborating with Merck & Co., Inc. to
globally develop and commercialize Ridaforolimus. It's not an
outright licensing, but a co-development, co-commercialization
agreement: so a lot of the revenue upside is retained within the
company. More details can be found here.
Although this is a very primitive way of analyzing the
feasibility of the science behind the drug, it is an easy way for
non-industry investors: Merck has partnered on the drug.
Merck has previous experience with cancer drugs through its
blockbuster Gardasil for cervical cancer, Emend for chemotherapy
side effect treatment, and Quadramet for bone cancer.
Quadramet received approval in 1997 so it is either about to, or
already a fall off patent. Rida is in phase 3 for soft tissue
and bone sarcoma, so we can certainly expect Merck's commitment to
getting the drug to market to recycle its existing sales and
marketing force, patient advocacy group, etc. Additionally,
Rida is also being explored in metastatic breast cancer; it is
currently in phase 2 with positive preliminary data.
The interim results from the Phase 3 trial in soft tissue and
bone sarcoma should arrive some time next month, so there is a
rally potential for short-term investors.
The company also does have more substance than just Rida - Merck
slogan:…