Roche’s Top-Selling Drug’s New High-Dose Version Fails in Study

May Be Interested In:Wildfires: UK burnt area for 2025 already beats annual record


(Bloomberg) — Roche Holding AG said a high-dose version of Ocrevus, its best-selling multiple sclerosis drug, failed to outperform the original in a large study, potentially reducing the drugmaker’s ability to fend off cheaper copies. 

Doubling or tripling the dose over 120 weeks of treatment didn’t slow progression of the disease any more than the current version of the drug, Roche said on Wednesday. The findings affirm that the existing dose is optimal, said Levi Garraway, Roche’s chief medical officer. 

The results are a blow to the company’s strategy for extending the profitable life of the MS drug, which analysts anticipate will rake in 7.32 billion Swiss francs ($8.27 billion) in sales this year. Roche had told investors in January that the high-dose version of Ocrevus had the potential to be the new standard treatment for MS, a chronic and potentially debilitating neurological disease that can bring on muscular weakness and numbness and render walking difficult. 

Roche has also been trying to reach new patients for Ocrevus, with a version of the drug that can be given via a shot instead of needing to be infused in a doctor’s office. The shot should be able to add about 2 billion francs in annual sales, Roche’s pharmaceutical unit chief, Teresa Graham, said in January.

Roche declined to comment on when the original version of Ocrevus is likely to face patent expiry and cheaper copies. But biosimilar makers are already gearing up to compete. Amgen Inc. said this year it’s testing a copy of Ocrevus in patients, while Celltrion Inc. has also registered a competitor study in Europe.

Begun in 2020, Roche’s failed high-dose study followed more than 800 patients with relapsing MS, the most common form of the disease. Still to come this year are results from another large study of high-dose Ocrevus in patients with primary progressive MS, a less common and generally more disabling version of the disease that has fewer options for treatment. 

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Why Sterling K. Brown's kids might not be following in their famous parents' footsteps
Why Sterling K. Brown’s kids might not be following in their famous parents’ footsteps
Southport stabbings: Axel Rudakubana, 18, denies murdering girls
Southport stabbings: Axel Rudakubana, 18, denies murdering girls
Hanks had Castaway, De Niro Raging Bull, now Alec Baldwin reveals he lost 10kg for Blue Jasmine
Hanks had Castaway, De Niro Raging Bull, now Alec Baldwin reveals he lost 10kg for Blue Jasmine
An image with a dark background and two globes in the foreground, and a brightly lit line connecting them.
Qubit that makes most errors obvious now available to customers
MAN Industries’ subsidiary enters into agreement to develop land parcel opposite DY Patil Stadium in Nerul | Company Business News
MAN Industries’ subsidiary enters into agreement to develop land parcel opposite DY Patil Stadium in Nerul | Company Business News
Airbus Chief Says Goal of Clean Aviation by 2050 Is at Risk
France’s Macron Urges EU Companies to Pause US Investments
Cutting Through the Noise: The News You Can Trust | © 2025 | Daily News