<code id='52DB25E670'></code><style id='52DB25E670'></style>
    • <acronym id='52DB25E670'></acronym>
      <center id='52DB25E670'><center id='52DB25E670'><tfoot id='52DB25E670'></tfoot></center><abbr id='52DB25E670'><dir id='52DB25E670'><tfoot id='52DB25E670'></tfoot><noframes id='52DB25E670'>

    • <optgroup id='52DB25E670'><strike id='52DB25E670'><sup id='52DB25E670'></sup></strike><code id='52DB25E670'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='52DB25E670'><label id='52DB25E670'><select id='52DB25E670'><dt id='52DB25E670'><span id='52DB25E670'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='52DB25E670'></u>
          <i id='52DB25E670'><strike id='52DB25E670'><tt id='52DB25E670'><pre id='52DB25E670'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          comprehensive

          comprehensive

          author:entertainment    Page View:815
          Adam's take main illustration
          Molly Ferguson/STAT

          Behind the stellar commercial launch of Amylyx Pharmaceuticals’ treatment for ALS lies an uncomfortable question: Does early success of the drug, called Relyvrio, make it more complicated, perhaps impossible, to pull it from the market if we find out next year that it doesn’t work?

          On Monday night, Amylyx said Relyvrio sales totaled $22 million in 2022 — a period that covers slightly more than one calendar quarter given the drug’s U.S. approval last September. The company said approximately 1,300 ALS patients were on Relyvrio at the end of December, and it expects that number to at least double by the end of the first quarter.

          advertisement

          “We’re probably going to double, closer to triple, our revenue in Q1,” said James Frates, Amylyx’s chief financial officer, speaking on Monday night’s conference call.

          Unlock this article by subscribing to STAT+ and enjoy your first 30 days free!

          GET STARTED Log In

          focus

          The cancer drug shortage isn’t new — and neither are the solutions
          The cancer drug shortage isn’t new — and neither are the solutions

          PreparingachemotherapytreatmentatDukeCancerCenterinDurham,N.C.GerryBroome/APAyounggirl,maybe5or6year

          read more
          An exit interview with Bristol Myers Squibb CEO Giovanni Caforio
          An exit interview with Bristol Myers Squibb CEO Giovanni Caforio

          OutgoingBristolCEOGiovanniCaforioEmiliePickeringforSTATIt’schangingoftheguardtimeatpharmaceuticalgia

          read more
          DIEP, the 'gold standard' of breast reconstruction, is under threat
          DIEP, the 'gold standard' of breast reconstruction, is under threat

          AdobeIn1983,Iflewhomefromcollegetobewithmymotherasshewokeupfromamastectomy.Sheoptedoutofbreastrecons

          read more

          Testing for cancer recurrence creates a new limbo for patients

          EssayauthorMaraBuchbinderandherhusband,Jesse(right).CourtesyMaraBuchbinderMyhusband’scancercamebackt