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11th Jun, 2026 12:00 AM
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Takeda's AI-crafted Psoriasis Pill Tops Bristol Myers' Sotyktu in Head-to-head Trial

June 11 (Reuters) - Japan's Takeda Pharmaceutical said on Thursday its experimental once-daily psoriasis pill, developed with the help of AI, outperformed Bristol ⁠Myers Squibb's approved drug Sotyktu in a late-stage head-to-head study.

Here are some details:

• The Japanese drugmaker said the drug, zasocitinib, met ⁠the main goal of a late-stage trial in adults with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, achieving greater skin clearance ⁠than Sotyktu after 16 weeks of ‌treatment.

• Plaque psoriasis is a chronic immune-mediated skin disease that causes red, scaly, inflamed patches on the skin.

• Zasocitinib was developed using artificial intelligence, reflecting a growing trend in the pharmaceutical industry to use AI to speed drug development, shorten clinical trial timelines and reduce animal ‌testing.

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• Takeda said zasocitinib achieved complete skin clearance in 35% of patients after ​16 weeks, ‌more than 2.5 times the rate seen ‌with Sotyktu.

• The company also said zasocitinib's safety profile was consistent with earlier studies and no new safety issues ⁠were identified.

• Takeda's daily pill offers a convenient option ‌to treat plaque psoriasis, ⁠alongside Bristol Myers' Sotyktu and Amgen's ​Otezla, in a market largely dominated by ‌injectables.

• The drugmaker is counting on zasocitinib as a potential blockbuster to help offset a revenue gap from the looming patent cliff for its inflammatory bowel disease drug Entyvio, which ​is expected to lose key patents by the end ‌of ‌the decade.

• Takeda said last year that it expects zasocitinib, if approved, to generate peak annual ‌sales in the range ​of $3 billion to $6 billion.

• The drugmaker had acquired zasocitinib from Nimbus Therapeutics in 2022 in a deal valued at up to $6 billion.

• Takeda said it will present ⁠detailed data at upcoming medical meetings and remains on track to begin ‌seeking FDA approval for zasocitinib to treat plaque psoriasis this fiscal year.

(Reporting by Padmanabhan ​Ananthan in Bengaluru; Editing by Diti Pujara)


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