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Sanofi says rare lung disease drug outperforms standard care in trial

Mon, 18th May 2026 20:30

* Therapy raised key lung protein more than ​standard ⁠care in trial

* Less frequent dose may appeal ​to patients, Sanofi says

* Sanofi sees opportunity in reaching undiagnosed patients

LONDON, May 18 (Reuters) - French ​drugmaker ‌Sanofi said on Monday a trial showed its rare disease therapy was better than standard ⁠care in raising levels of a key ⁠protein in patients with a genetic ​form of lung disease.

The data in the head-to-head study offers a potential boost to Sanofi's $2.2 billion bet on efdoralprin alfa, the experimental therapy it acquired through its ​2024 Inhibrx ‌deal in the wake of a run of pipeline setbacks last year.

Sanofi estimates about 235,000 people have the condition and sees an opportunity in switching patients from standard therapy and also in finding those who have not ​been diagnosed. Sanofi first reported in October that the study had met its main ‌goals.

Investors are looking for evidence that Sanofi's pipeline can support growth beyond Dupixent, its top-selling drug. The drugmaker has ‌hired CEO Belén Garijo to improve R&D productivity and sharpen execution.

Sanofi said the new data, presented at the American Thoracic Society meeting in Orlando, showed that ​in the 97-patient trial, efdoralprin alfa administered every three weeks raised trough levels for AAT protein by ‌24.1 micromolar at week 32, versus 7.6 micromolar for weekly plasma-derived standard therapy.

Patients on Sanofi's therapy maintained normal levels of AAT, or alpha-1 antitrypsin, throughout the ⁠study, compared ⁠with less than half the time for those on ‌standard therapy. Without enough AAT, lungs and liver can both become damaged.

Unlike plasma-derived treatments, efdoralprin alfa ​is produced using ​recombinant technology, potentially easing dependence on donated plasma, said Alaa ‌Ahmed, Sanofi's head of medical affairs for rare diseases.

Ahmed said the drug's less frequent dosing could also appeal to patients for whom weekly treatment is a burden. (Reporting by Bhanvi Satija; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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