Dendreon Watchers: Buckle Up for Action in First Quarterly Report With Actual Sales

Dendreon followers, it’s time to get ready for another spin on the great NASDAQ merry-go-round later today.

The Seattle-based biotech firm (NASDAQ: [[ticker:DNDN]]), a poster child for wild and sometimes irrational stock market swings, is preparing to release its first quarterly report this afternoon as a company with actual sales from a product. Whatever Dendreon says, regardless of how much it matters to its future as a business, could send the market into a temporary tizzy. The company was left for dead 18 months ago at little more than $2 a share, skyrocketed to more than $57 just three months ago, and closed yesterday at $33.84.

The roller coaster ride has a long history at Dendreon, but it got really interesting when the company shocked the cancer research world in April 2009 when it showed that its drug, sipuleucel-T (Provenge), could prolong the lives of men with prostate cancer by a median time of about four months, with minimal side effects, in a study of 512 patients. Dendreon continued on its historic course four months ago when it won FDA approval for this drug, the first of its kind that actively stimulates a patient’s immune system to fight cancer cells like a virus.

It’s been a fascinating story of a scientific and medical quest over the past 15 years, but now Dendreon is entering a phase where the story is more about the unglamorous realities of business. Dendreon set the price at $93,000 per patient for this potentially life-saving therapy, an eye-opening sum to many on Wall Street, who were expecting something closer to $62,000. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services sent shivers through the market at the end of June when it said it was going to open up a process to study whether it should pay for the drug or not.

Now that Dendreon has two months of sales under its belt, investors will get to see just how many people it has been able to treat with this new mode of therapy.

Expectations with Dendreon spun way out of control earlier year, as analysts talked up Provenge’s billion-dollar potential. Less attention was paid to the complex logistics that Dendreon needed to iron out before it could fully exploit the potential of the drug, which could help the 30,000 or so patients who die of prostate cancer in the U.S. each year. The company has limited manufacturing capacity at its New Jersey factory, and has told investors that it only expects to be able to supply about 2,000 patients in its first year on the market.

“Expectations were out of whack,” says David Miller, president of Biotech Stock Research, an independent analysis firm in Seattle that follows Dendreon.

Miller forecasts $3.1 million in sales for the drug in its first two months

Author: Luke Timmerman

Luke is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences. He has served as national biotechnology editor for Xconomy and national biotechnology reporter for Bloomberg News. Luke got started covering life sciences at The Seattle Times, where he was the lead reporter on an investigation of doctors who leaked confidential information about clinical trials to investors. The story won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and several other national prizes. Luke holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and during the 2005-2006 academic year, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT.