• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Takeda seeks approval for sleep drug in Europe

Tue Mar 20, 2007 6:00am EDT

Stocks

   

TOKYO, March 20 (Reuters) - Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. (4502.T), Japan's largest drug maker, said on Tuesday it has applied for the right to sell a sleep drug in Europe, hoping to enter a market led by Sanofi-Aventis (SASY.PA).

Regulatory News

Takeda said it has submitted a marketing application to the European Medicines Agency for the insomnia drug, Ramelteon, which is already being sold in the United States under the name Rozerem.

Takeda spokesman Shoji Wakayama said the market for insomnia drugs in Europe was worth about $1 billion in fiscal 2005, with the major markets of the U.K., Germany, France and Italy accounted for about 60 percent of the total.

The current leader in the market is Sanofi-Aventis's drug Ambien, Wakayama said.

Wakayama said Rozerem logged sales of $62 million in the United States in the nine months to December, against overall sales in the country of more than $4 billion during the same period.

The process from marketing application to the start of sales typically would take about one year, Wakayama said.



More from Reuters

Photo

House prices stall, consumer confidence up

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. consumer confidence rose to a three-month high in December, while prices in the hard-hit housing sector stalled in October, breaking a five-month string of gains.

An employee swipes a customer's credit card through the card reader at a restaurant in Tokyo February 19, 2005.REUTERS/Issei Kato

Taking a swipe at credit cards

New legislation meant to protect consumers could be a "game changer" for the industry -- and not in a good way.  Full Article 

A traveller lifts her arms as she stands in the new security scan at Schiphol airport, Netherlands, May 15, 2007.REUTERS/Jerry Lampen

Are you ok getting "naked"?

Full-body scanners can detect weapons under clothing but also expose passengers to operators. Should security trump privacy?  Full Article | Video