Current:Home > StocksWhat the health care sector is selling to Wall Street: The "first trillion-dollar drug company is out there" -FutureFinance
What the health care sector is selling to Wall Street: The "first trillion-dollar drug company is out there"
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-07 23:56:16
Every year, thousands of bankers, venture capitalists, private equity investors and other moneybags flock to San Francisco's Union Square to pursue deals.
Scores of security guards keep the homeless, the snoops and the patent-stealers at bay, while the dealmakers pack into the cramped Westin St. Francis hotel and its surrounds to meet with cash-hungry executives from biotech and other health care companies.
After a few years of pandemic slack, the 2024 J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference regained its full vigor, drawing 8,304 attendees in early January to talk science, medicine and, especially, money.
Artificial intelligence: Revolutionary or not?
Of the 624 companies that pitched at the four-day conference, the biggest overflow crowd may have belonged to Nvidia, which unlike the others isn't a health care company.
Nvidia makes the silicon chips whose computing power, when paired with ginormous catalogs of genes, proteins, chemical sequences and other data, will "revolutionize" drug-making, according to Kimberly Powell, the company's vice president of health care. Soon, she said, computers will customize drugs as "health care becomes a technology industry."
One might think that such advances could save money, but Powell's emphasis was on their potential for wealth creation. "The world's first trillion-dollar drug company is out there somewhere," she dreamily opined.
Some health care systems are also hyping AI. The Mayo Clinic, for example, highlighted AI's capacity to improve the accuracy of patient diagnoses. The nonprofit hospital system presented an electrocardiogram algorithm that can predict atrial fibrillation three months before an official diagnosis; another Mayo AI model can detect pancreatic cancer on scans earlier than a provider could, said Matthew Callstrom, chair of radiology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
No one really knows how far — or where — AI will take health care, but Nvidia's recently announced $100 million deal with Amgen, which has access to 500 million human genomes, made some conference attendees uneasy.
If Big Pharma can discover its own drugs, "biotech will disappear," said Sherif Hanala of Seqens, a contract drug manufacturing company, during a lunch-table chat with KFF Health News and others.
Others shrugged off that notion. The first AI algorithms beat clinicians at analyzing radiological scans in 2014. But since that year, "I haven't seen a single AI company partner with pharma and complete a phase I human clinical trial," said Alex Zhavoronkov, founder and CEO of Insilico Medicine — one of the companies using AI to do drug development. "Biology is hard."
Weight loss pill profits and doubts
With predictions of a $100 billion annual market for GLP-1 agonists, the new class of weight loss drugs, many investors were asking their favorite biotech entrepreneurs whether they had a new Ozempic or Mounjaro in the wings this year, Zhavoronkov noted.
In response, he opened his parlays with investors by saying, "I have a very cool product that helps you lose weight and gain muscle." Then he would hand the person a pair of Insilico Medicine-embossed bicycle racing gloves.
More conventional discussions about the GLP-1s focused on how insurance will cover the current $13,000 annual cost for the estimated 40% of Americans who are obese and might want to go on the drugs.
Sarah Emond, president of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, which calculates the cost and effectiveness of medical treatments, said that in the United Kingdom the National Health Service began paying in 2022 for obese patients to receive two years of semaglutide — something neither Medicare nor many insurers are covering in the U.S. even now.
But studies show people who go off the drugs typically regain two-thirds of what they lose, said Diana Thiara, medical director for the University of California-San Francisco weight management program.
Recent research shows that the use of these drugs for three years reduces the risk of death, heart attack and stroke in non-diabetic overweight patients. To do right by them, the U.S. health care system will have to reckon with the need for long-term use, she said.
"I've never heard an insurer say, 'After two years of treating this diabetes, I hope you're finished,'" she said. "Is there a bias against those with obesity?"
Spotlight on tax-exempt hospitals
Nonprofit hospitals showed off their investment appeal at the conference. Fifteen health systems representing major players across the country touted their value and the audience was intrigued: When headliners like the Mayo Clinic and the Cleveland Clinic took the stage, chairs were filled, and late arrivals crowded in the back of the room.
These hospitals, which are supposed to provide community benefits in exchange for not paying taxes, were eager to demonstrate financial stability and showcase money-making mechanisms besides patient care — they call it "revenue diversification." PowerPoints skimmed through recent operating losses and lingered on the hospital systems' vast cash reserves, expansion plans and for-profit partnerships to commercialize research discoveries.
At Mass General Brigham, such research has led to the development of 36 drugs currently in clinical trials, according to the hospital's presentation. The Boston-based health system, which has $4 billion in committed research funding, said its findings have led to the formation of more than 300 companies in the past decade.
Hospital executives thanked existing bondholders and welcomed new investors.
"For those of you who hold our debt, taxable and tax-exempt, thank you," John Mordach, chief financial officer of Jefferson Health, a health system in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. "For those who don't, I think we're a great, undervalued investment, and we get a great return."
Other nonprofit hospitals talked up institutes to draw new patients and expand into lucrative territories. Sutter Health, based in California, said it plans to add 30 facilities in attractive markets across Northern California in the next three years. It expanded to the Central Coast in October after acquiring the Sansum Clinic.
Money from new — and old — treatments for autoimmune disease
Autoimmunity drugs, which earn the industry $200 billion globally each year, were another hot theme, with various companies talking up development programs aimed at using current cancer drug platforms to create remedies for conditions like lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.
AbbVie, which has led the sector with its $200 billion Humira, the world's best-selling drug, had pride of place at the conference with a presentation in the hotel's 10,000-square-foot Grand Ballroom.
President and Chief Operating Officer Robert Michael crowed about the company's newer autoimmune drugs, Skyrizi and Rinvoq, and bragged that sales of two-decades-old Humira were going "better than anticipated." Although nine biosimilar — essentially, generic — versions of the drug, adalimumab, entered the market last year, AbbVie expects to earn more than $7 billion on Humira this year since the "vast majority" of patients will remain on the market leader.
In its own presentation, biosimilar-maker Coherus BioSciences conceded that sales of Yusimry, its Humira knockoff listed at one-seventh the price of the original, would be flat until 2025, when Medicare changes take effect that could push health plans toward using cheaper drugs.
Biosimilars could save the U.S. health care system $100 billion a year, said Stefan Glombitza, CEO of Munich-based Formycon, another biosimilar-maker, but there are challenges since each biosimilar costs $150 million to $250 million to develop. Seeing nine companies enter the market to challenge Humira "was shocking," he said. "I don't think this will happen again."
KFF Health News, formerly known as Kaiser Health News (KHN), is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
- In:
- Nvidia
- Health Care
veryGood! (49)
Related
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Removed during protests, Louisville's statue of King Louis XVI is still in limbo
- Rihanna Performs First Full Concert in 8 Years at Billionaire Ambani Family’s Pre-Wedding Event in India
- NCAA freezing investigations into third-party NIL activities after judge granted injunction
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Social media is giving men ‘bigorexia,' or muscle dysmorphia. We need to talk about it.
- Have the Courage To Wear a Full Denim Look This Spring With Coach’s New Jean-Inspired Drop
- 10,000 cattle expected to be slaughtered by the Smokehouse Creek Fire, reports say
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Film director who was shot by Alec Baldwin says it felt like being hit by a baseball bat
Ranking
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Wendy Williams' guardianship is the subject of a new documentary. Here's how it works
- What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing, listening and reading
- 'Wait Wait' for March 2, 2024: Live in Austin with Danny Brown!
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Fashion Icon Iris Apfel Dead at 102
- Harvard Business School grad targeted fellow alumni in Ponzi scheme, New York attorney general says
- The IRS is sending 125,000 compliance letters in campaign against wealthy tax cheats
Recommendation
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
For an Indigenous woman, discovering an ancestor's remains mixed both trauma and healing
Celebrated stylemaker and self-named 'geriatric starlet' Iris Apfel dies at age 102
Why Victoria Beckham Is Stepping Out at Paris Fashion Week With Crutches
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Woman behind viral 'Who TF Did I Marry' series opens up in upcoming TV interview
Woman behind viral 'Who TF Did I Marry' series opens up in upcoming TV interview
CDC shortens 5-day COVID isolation, updates guidance on masks and testing in new 2024 recommendations