Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Merck & Co. Investor event announcing the acquisition of Prometheus Biosciences, Inc. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode until the question and answer session of today's conference. At that time, to ask a question, press star one on your phone and record your name at the prompt. This call is being recorded. If you have any objections, you may disconnect at this time. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Peter Dannenbaum, Vice President, Investor Relations. Sir, you may begin.
Thank you, Michelle. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Merck's Investor Call highlighting the announced acquisition of Prometheus Biosciences. Our agenda this morning includes Rob Davis, Merck's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, who will lead off our presentation. Rob will be followed by Dr. Dean Li, President of Merck Research Laboratories, Dr. Eliav Barr, Chief Medical Officer and Head of Global Clinical Development, Chirfi Guindo, Chief Marketing Officer of Human Health, and Caroline Litchfield, Chief Financial Officer. Q&A will follow. Before we get started, we would like to remind you that some of the statements that we make during today's call may be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provision of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of nineteen ninety-five. Such statements are made based on the current beliefs of Merck's management and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties.
If our underlying assumptions prove inaccurate or uncertainties materialize, actual results may differ materially from those set forth in the forward-looking statements. Our SEC filings, including Item 1A in the 2022 10-K, identify certain risk factors and cautionary statements that could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from those projected in any of our forward-looking statements made this morning. Merck undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements. The slide deck being used for today's call has now been posted to our website. With that, I will turn the call over to Rob.
Great. Thanks, Peter. Good morning, everyone. Merck has made tremendous progress toward our strategic priorities. We've made significant advancements across our broad pipeline, executing on our goal of bringing forth innovations that address unmet patient needs. We've achieved commercial success and very strong financial performance. We've enhanced our internal efforts with significant business development, bringing in several novel late-stage compounds that augment and complement our pipeline. We've come a long way in a short period of time and remain committed to doing more. Today, I'm very pleased to speak to you about the acquisition of Prometheus Biosciences. This transaction is another example of our company acting decisively when compelling science and value align. Prometheus brings us a potential first-in-class and best-in-class late-stage immunology treatment with the opportunity to positively impact the significant needs of patients who suffer from these debilitating diseases.
Immunology is an important area of significant unmet medical need. We're very pleased to be taking a major step forward complementing our existing programs and accelerating our presence. This transaction adds further diversity to our overall portfolio and is an important building block as we strengthen the sustainable innovation engine that will drive our long-term success. Prometheus' lead candidate is PRA023, which works via a novel mechanism of action and has demonstrated strong proof of concept results in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. PRA023 has the potential to be a foundational treatment and transform standard of care for these patients, including through a precision medicine approach. Dean and Eliav will speak more about the strength of the science and clinical progress achieved to date, as well as our plans to advance this candidate toward approval.
Given the substantial unmet need in a large patient population globally, should phase III trials be successful, we believe PRA023 has multi-billion dollar peak sales potential and can be a significant driver of revenue growth through the next decade. We are confident this transaction has the potential to create meaningful long-term value for patients and in turn for shareholders. We are well-positioned financially to complete this transaction while maintaining our ability to pursue additional business development opportunities. For Merck, we will continue to bring in the best external science that builds upon and complements our strong and growing internal research pipeline. We are excited to bring in the strong science and talented people of Prometheus to Merck. This adds to our growing list of important recent business development transactions and collaborations, including Kelun, Imago, Moderna, Orion, and Acceleron.
We remain highly focused on delivering innovative medicines and vaccines that address important unmet needs through our expansive internal research efforts as well as via business development and on sustaining our success over the long term. With that, let me turn the call over to Dean.
Thank you, Rob. Good morning, everyone. It is great to be here with you this morning to speak about the announcement. Our R&D strategy starts with our unwavering focus on translating breakthrough science into medicines and vaccines that save and improve lives. This is centered around the patient and anchored on innovation with novel mechanisms that provide the opportunity to potentially transform the standard of care. We are excited by the expertise and technology that Prometheus brings and the potential for Merck to further advance the science to improve outcomes for patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases.
We see tremendous value in bringing our two companies together to further augment and accelerate our research efforts in immunology, a therapeutic area which, despite the availability of multiple treatment options, has significant need for additional innovation. Furthermore, we are always seeking opportunities to leverage precision medicine and biomarkers where applicable to improve patient selection and outcomes. Together, we have a unique opportunity to make a difference in treating these devastating diseases. As Rob noted, inflammatory bowel disease remains an area of significant unmet medical need. Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, the two main forms of IBD, can be debilitating and severely impact the quality of life for patients. Patients are at an elevated risk of colon cancer, which continues to increase with the extent and duration of disease. A majority of patients with UC who experience active disease in a given year will have a recurrence the following year.
The current treatment paradigm often involves patients having to cycle through therapies due to suboptimal responses and poor tolerability. Patients with serious disease can be frequently hospitalized and ultimately, for those with severe disease who have exhausted therapeutic options, surgery is the only option. We need to do better for these patients, and that is why we are excited by the potential to provide a novel treatment option with Prometheus' anti-TL1A antibody. Work conducted by Prometheus founder Dr. Stephan Targan's lab at Cedars-Sinai was instrumental to elucidating the role of TL1A in inflammation and fibrosis and identifying its therapeutic potential through his pioneering work conducting analysis of a comprehensive biobank of IBD tissue samples. Further genomic and preclinical studies reinforce the role of TL1A in development and pathogenesis of additional immune-related conditions.
This work also points to the opportunity to use a genetic biomarker to identify those patients most likely to respond to PRA023. This contrasts with current therapies and enables development of a risk stratification approach. This is potentially transformational in treating patients with certain immune-mediated diseases. We look forward to further expanding on the compelling work accomplished by the talented Prometheus team, and I want to emphasize the important strengths that will help Merck enhance and accelerate our immunology presence. We have deep expertise in clinical development and the ability to scale globally. We also have extensive experience with a proven track record of developing and implementing precision medicine strategies. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, we have an extremely talented and motivated team dedicated to utilizing Merck's expansive capabilities to advance important new therapies.
I am confident that as one company, we will be able to leverage our strengths and better serve patients. With that, I'll turn the call over to Eliav, who will provide a deeper look into the clinical profile of Prometheus' pipeline.
Thank you, Dean. Today is a very exciting day for Merck. As you have heard from Rob and Dean, Prometheus offers compelling science with novel therapeutic and diagnostic products as we look forward to build on the important work that they have accomplished. Starting with the TL1A target. Tumor necrosis factor-like ligand 1A, TL1A, a circulating protein, and its receptor DR3, have been implicated as central mediators of the abnormal inflammation and fibrosis that characterizes many autoimmune diseases. There is high expression of TL1A in patients with these diseases, particularly in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Stimulation of DR3 by TL1A results in proliferation of anti-self T cells, many of which express inflammatory cytokines. This stimulation also induces fibroblast proliferation, which can cause scarring and strictures in affected portions of the intestinal tract.
PRA023, the lead compound of Prometheus, is an IgG1 humanized monoclonal antibody that has been shown to block TL1A, preventing stimulation of the DR3 receptor. PRA023 is therefore a potential first-in-class, late-stage clinical candidate with a unique dual mechanism of action. It is anti-inflammatory, and it is anti-fibrotic. With these properties, PRA023 has the potential to substantially improve outcomes for patients with ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, and other immune-mediated inflammatory diseases. The phase II data for PRA023 demonstrated remarkable efficacy across patient segments in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. PRA023 also had a favorable safety and tolerability profile. As Dean noted, Prometheus has used precision medicine to identify a proprietary biomarker that may identify patients who may benefit even further from treatment with the drug.
I will now review the results of the phase II program that has gotten us, and the field, so excited about PRA023. The first of the study design for the phase II ARTEMIS trial in ulcerative colitis. Now, this was a 12-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of PRA023 In patients with moderate to severely active ulcerative colitis. The goal of the study was to determine whether PRA023 could induce remission of ulcerative colitis signs and symptoms in patients with moderately or severely active disease, including those who failed prior therapy with biologics. A total of 135 patients were randomized one to one to either PRA023 or placebo administered IV. The primary endpoint was clinical remission at treatment week 12 using a standard measurement, which is the three-component modified Mayo Score.
Secondary endpoints included measures of inflammation, symptoms, and patient-reported outcomes. Cohort 2, which is ongoing, is evaluating efficacy in the biomarker positive patient population. The study met its primary endpoint and secondary endpoints, including endoscopic improvement and clinical response in patients with active ulcerative colitis. After adjusting for placebo response, patients who received PRA023 experienced an absolute 25% improvement in the protocol-defined primary endpoint and improvement in secondary endpoints, including an absolute 30.8% increase in the proportion of patients needing endoscopic improvement and an absolute 43.8% improvement in patients experience a clinical response. Importantly, with an eye to the profiles of currently available treatments, no safety concerns were identified.
Next to the APOLLO-CD study, which was a phase II-A single-arm open label study designed to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics of PRA023 in patients with moderate to severely active Crohn's disease. The primary outcome measures included safety and tolerability as well as endoscopic improvement at week 12. There were several secondary outcome measures, including clinical remission, clinical response, endoscopic and clinical improvement, as well as biomarker-mediated clinical improvement. Now, this trial enrolled a highly refractory patient population, with 71% of patients previously treated with at least one biologic therapy and 53% previously treated with two or more biologic therapies. Given that the study evaluated highly refractory patients with severe signs and symptoms, all patients received active drug and efficacy was assessed against historical controls. Now we can look at the results.
Of the patients who received PRA023 on a placebo-adjusted basis using historical controls, at 12 weeks, 14% of patients achieved the primary endpoint of endoscopic response, and 33% of patients achieved the secondary endpoint of clinical remission. Again, no safety concerns were identified. To put the results in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease in perspective, we have provided a side-by-side display of the placebo-adjusted clinical remission rates for existing therapies compared to PRA023's phase II results in both diseases. Of course, cross-trial comparisons should be done with caution, it's important to note that the trials in the slide were generally comparable to the study design of the Artemis PRA023 study. In this side-by-side comparison, PRA023's phase II efficacy compares very favorably to the efficacy of leading approved agents across both diseases.
PRA023 appears comparable to upadacitinib or RINVOQ, which is one of the most potent anti-IBD agents developed to date. Of note, PRA023 to date has a differentiated favorable safety profile when compared to the JAK inhibitor such as upadacitinib, which has a black box warning due to potentially fatal cardiovascular events, thrombosis, and malignancies. Next, I wanted to highlight data that will provide insight into how a precision-based approach has the potential to transform the treatment of ulcerative colitis. Now, an interim analysis was performed on the ARTEMIS-UC study to evaluate the effectiveness of PRA023 in a biomarker positive subpopulation.
Of the limited patient numbers, data from the subset of 32 patients from the ARTEMIS study in ulcerative colitis demonstrated a placebo-adjusted clinical remission rate of 37.5%, which is a striking 1.5-fold or 12.5% absolute improvement compared with the placebo-adjusted remission rate of 25% for all comers. These are unprecedented results, and the prevalence of biomarker positivity was approximately 24%. The optional use of this biomarker can provide physicians with added confidence in ensuring that acutely ill patients are getting the right drug at the right time.
An expansion cohort of the ARTEMIS-UC trial in ulcerative colitis, which is statistically powered to further assess the treatment effect of PRA023 in this biomarker-positive patient population, will continue to enroll. We look forward to gathering further insights from these data in the second quarter of this year. I've given Merck's strong track record and steadfast commitment to using precision medicine to inform and develop treatment strategies in the immuno-oncology space. I'm excited and confident in our ability to build and execute on the great foundation set by Prometheus. More importantly, this work will potentially lead to better outcomes for patients. Now, I also wanted to provide insights into the continued progress across the development program for PRA023. We have the ongoing maintenance portion of the phase II ARTEMIS-UC study in UC, as well as the APOLLO-CD study in Crohn's disease.
While it's still early, we are encouraged by the responses we are seeing to date in those phases of the study. Next, I wanna highlight the recent end of phase II meeting with the FDA. We're encouraged by the productive discussions which have taken place with the FDA, and we look forward to initiating our phase III development program. Now, with the addition of Prometheus' pipeline, Merck has built a robust immunology clinical development program with a potential to make a substantial impact in this area of high unmet medical need. As mentioned, following the completion of the phase II studies for PRA023, we look forward to initiating of the phase III development program late this year or early 2024.
We also plan to share data from PRA052, an anti-CD30L monoclonal antibody in phase I studies, once available. Finally, we continue to advance MK-6194, an engineered IL-2 mutein fused to a protein backbone, which is expected to enter phase II later this year in vitiligo, alopecia areata, systemic lupus erythematosus, and atopic dermatitis. Beyond the clinical stage pipeline, we have multiple candidates in preclinical development across our combined pipeline, which we expect to enter the clinic in the coming years. We are excited by the potential of the Prometheus360 Data Sciences Platform, which enables a key link between genetics and biology to enable precision drug discovery and patient stratification. This will help us better inform how we target the right subset of patients who can benefit the most from certain treatments.
In closing, it's worth noting that our deep knowledge of immuno-oncology has led to important insights into the immune system. Therefore, two years ago, we separated immunology as a therapeutic area of focus in discovery research. With this commitment, we have diligently brought in key scientific talent who have vast experience in immunology. Aileen Pangan, Vice President, Late-Stage Immunology, who is with us for our Q&A session, is an example of the key talent that we have attracted. Aileen has joined our company over a year ago. She led the team that brought forth upadacitinib or RINVOQ. She, along with others, brings a wealth of knowledge and invaluable expertise to Merck. We are proud of the capabilities and expertise we have built across our organization, and we look forward to the addition of Prometheus, which will complement and accelerate our efforts in immunology.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Chirfi to provide a commercial overview.
Thank you, Eliav. Turning now to the commercial prospects of this transaction. As Dean described, there's a significant remaining unmet need in inflammatory bowel disease, a chronic and disabling condition impacting approximately 2 million patients in the United States, of which nearly 1 million have moderate to severe disease. With no available cure, many of these patients face relapses and disease progression, making this a hugely devastating diagnosis that substantially impacts an individual's quality of life. Today, treatment for inflammatory bowel disease is focused on delaying disease progression, managing symptoms, and reducing hospitalization. Unfortunately, existing therapies work only in a fraction of patients, with a high % becoming unresponsive to therapy. As a result, patients typically cycle through multiple treatment classes, and physicians do not have an effective way to identify who will best respond to each therapy.
In severe cases, patients face significant complications, such as hospitalization due to flare-ups, and may require surgery. Prolonged disease increases risk of colon cancer. Given this paradigm, patients not only face mental stress and physical strain, but also social and economic burden with high cumulative costs over time. Patients, key opinion leaders, and payers recognize the need for additional and improved treatment options in this space. We believe that PRA023 has the opportunity to potentially transform the standard of care based on the compelling evidence from the phase II clinical trials, including potential best-in-class efficacy and safety. By utilizing a precision medicine approach, it is possible to identify those patients who can most benefit from this treatment.
Given the unmet need and large patient population, immunology is a substantial and growing commercial market, expected to reach $140 billion by 2028. Together, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease represent approximately $23 billion in 2022, and is expected to grow to approximately $28 billion by 2028 with the introduction of new therapeutic options. We believe PRA023 has the potential to become a foundational therapy in both UC and CD and see multibillion-dollar peak sales opportunity in each of these indications. In addition, we aim to broaden the reach of PRA023 to help more patients by pursuing additional indications over time. In the United States, patent exclusivity for PRA023 extends into the 2040s. This treatment has the potential to become a significant growth driver for Merck well into the next decade.
We are excited to build on the substantial progress that Prometheus has made to date, and we plan to leverage Merck's global scale and strong commercial capabilities to accelerate and expand access to this potentially transformative treatment for the benefit of patients. With that, I'll turn the call over to Caroline to highlight the financial aspects of the transaction.
Thank you, Chirfi. As Rob said, Merck has executed exceptionally well and is in a strong financial position, allowing us to announce the acquisition of Prometheus while retaining significant capacity to pursue our capital allocation priorities, including future business development should additional attractive opportunities arise. Given the substantial unmet need in a large patient population and the potential for PRA023 to transform patient care, we believe this compound has multibillion-dollar peak revenue potential and that it can be a significant driver of growth for Merck through the next decade. Prometheus will also increase our portfolio and pipeline diversification, accelerating our efforts in an important disease area. We are confident that this transaction has the potential to create meaningful value for patients and shareholders. Turning to the financial details of this transaction, Merck has agreed to acquire all outstanding shares of Prometheus Biosciences for $200 per share.
This results in a total transaction value of approximately $10.8 billion, or $10.3 billion net of approximately $650 million of cash and investments on Prometheus balance sheet as well as other transaction-related items. We have the flexibility to finance the transaction through cash on hand, commercial paper, or opportunistic new debt issuance, and we expect no impact to our credit rating. We anticipate the transaction will close in the third quarter of this year, subject to Prometheus shareholder approval and regulatory approvals. We believe this transaction will negatively impact EPS by approximately $0.25 in the first 12 months, roughly one-third of which represents investment to advance pipeline assets, and the remainder is the assumed cost of financing.
In addition, we expect the transaction to be accounted for as an asset acquisition, which will therefore result in a charge recorded to this year's research and development expense of approximately $10.3 billion or approximately $4 per share. The impact of this charge will be reflected in both our GAAP and non-GAAP results. Our balanced approach to capital allocation remains intact. We will use our strong balance sheet and growing cash flow to continue prioritizing investment in our rich portfolio and pipeline. We remain committed to funding and growing our dividend over time, and we preserve the ability within our strong investment-grade credit rating to pursue additional value-enhancing and innovation-driven business development transactions, which remains an important priority. In addition, we intend to execute modest share repurchases this year. Thank you for your attention. I will now turn the call back to Peter.
Thank you, Caroline. Michelle, we are now ready to start the Q&A portion of the call. As a reminder, as Eliav said, Dr. Aileen Pangan, head of our Late-Stage Immunology, is with us for this call. I'd like to request that analysts limit themselves to one or two questions, please. Thank you.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, if you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. You may withdraw your question at any time by pressing star two. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset before pressing the numbers. Once again, if you have a question, you may press star one. One moment please for the first question. Trung Huynh from Credit Suisse, you may go ahead.
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Trung Huynh from Credit Suisse. On PRA023, you mentioned it has anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic mechanism. Can you perhaps talk about the other immune-related disease opportunities that you mentioned? I can see on the slides SSc- ILD. Is there anything else? Potentially what could the terms of these indications be? Then my second question is just on the UC data we saw in December. If you have a look at the placebo arm, the rate was very low. Perhaps can you talk about what got you comfortable with the data here? When you look at it versus peers, it seems to be extremely low. Thanks for that.
Thank you very much. This is Dean. I'll just take a first swipe at the indication sort of question, and then I'll ask Eliav and Aileen to speak about some of the more detailed questions. Whenever you have an immune mediator, whether it's TNF or IL-23 or in this case TL1A, the number of places that you can place that indication is quite large. You know, really what focused the attention of Prometheus and of us was the use of their biomarker and biomarker database to sort of focus where they would go. Would there be other indications outside of those that you've discussed? Potentially, but the focus has been where the data and where the association were first made. With that, I'd like to turn it over to Eliav and then potentially to Aileen. Eliav?
Thanks. Just adding on to the indication. As you may recall, Prometheus had noted that they would be revealing a fourth indication towards the end of this year, and we look forward to working with them and being able to look at that fourth indication. That's coming. With respect to the clinical trial, Aileen Pangan, who actually ran many of these studies, can tell us a little bit about that.
Thank you so much, Eliav. When we saw the low placebo rate from their ulcerative colitis study, it's actually indicative of the fact that Prometheus, based on their expertise and knowledge of this field, have gone to the expert clinical sites that have found the right patients and designed the study such that you are not getting a whole lot of extraneous noise. If you will recall, many years ago, we released a phase II-B study of upadacitinib, where the placebo rate in II- B is actually 0%. In many immunology studies, a high placebo rate is something that worries you. When we see placebo rates that are low like this, particularly in IBD, it tells us that they got the right patient population to test the efficacy of the drug.
Great. Next question, please, Michelle.
Thank you. Mohit Bansal from Wells Fargo, you may go ahead.
Thank you for taking my question, and congrats on the deal. A couple of questions from my side. You talk about biomarker-based approach. In phase III, do you expect to test that hypothesis as an option, or do you think that could be the go-to strategy in phase III and maybe have a really strong benefit among those patients? The second part of the question is more of clarification question. What is the maintenance schedule for PRA023? Is it every four weeks, or is it longer than that? Thank you.
Thank you very much for that questions about the biomarker. I would just emphasize that it's very important that we talk about biomarkers, that there's oftentimes a lot of discussions about biomarkers and what biomarkers to use. Really the critical thing is can you place them in your clinical trials? Can you do the regulatory rigor that you need? Can you create a network so that upon commercial launch, those biomarkers are real, they're easily addressable and accessible. I just want to recall back our understanding of how to do that for immuno-oncology led the way for PD-L1, TMB, MSI and others. We're very confident in our capability to be able to accelerate biomarkers.
In specific, related to your question, if you look at the data, what's actually quite interesting is that there is quite strong efficacy in all comers. When you take the biomarker that has been shown in the phase II, what you see is in the biomarker positive, you see a level of response that hasn't been seen for other treatments, which is very encouraging. I would also highlight that I mean, sorry, in the biomarker negative patient population, if you look at those responses, those responses are quite strong. In terms of the clinical trial and how to think through those sort of issues, I'd like to just ask Eliav if he wanted to add any other comments.
Yeah. First, just to your second question, in the phase II program, it was every four weeks in maintenance, we're looking at the design of the phase III study now. Just to add, we believe the biomarker population to be there to add confidence for physicians who are especially those who are facing a very severely ill patient. We think that that would help them, you know, increase their confidence in using the drug when they have the biomarker positive population. The phase III program of course, will be doing an all comers analysis, but certainly the study will be sufficiently powered to enable us to determine the implications of biomarker positivity on the overall efficacy of the drug.
I would again note that on those who are biomarker negative, the efficacy of PRA023 was really quite good, in fact, comparable to some of the best agents out there.
Thank you, Mohit. Next question, please. Michelle.
Thank you. Andrew. Andrew Baum from Citi. You may go ahead, sir.
Hello, thank you. Couple of questions. Firstly, just pushing on your comments on the IL-2 mutein that you acquired through Pandion. Obviously, Nektar and Synthorx have had disappointing data with their really quite similar approach. I'm assuming expectations have been lowered, but you did highlight expectations to go into the next stage of development. I'm just curious how those two data points would influence your expectations for the compound. Secondly, on the biomarker, could you talk to whether the possibility and the appetite exists for opening a basket trial in order to explore subgroups simultaneously across different autoimmune indications for TL1A blockade? Thank you.
Yeah. This is Dean, let me just answer the question about the IL-2 mutein. The field evolves very quickly. There are a number of companies who are advancing IL-2 muteins in the field. I would remark that that interest in doing it is based on real-world clinical practice as of now using IL-2, not the mutein, but IL-2 in relationship to a series of autoimmune diseases. You know, the field is seeking to do is try to make a mutein that can be more easily deployed, but to follow that clear physiologic signal that has already been established in clinical medicine. When you think about the Nektar molecule, we study the Nektar molecule quite closely. We have studied both their IL-2 alpha and their IL-2 beta gamma.
I don't wanna get into the details of how their molecule is formed, but I would say that we do look at the data of other people. We also understand how our molecule is differentiated, and we try to take the lessons from other people's clinical trials in a way that's balanced, understanding where they succeed and fail, but also understanding the precision of the way that these molecules are designed are reasonably different that would allow us to continue to have excitement to move our IL-2 mutein in the indications that Eliav had spoken briefly about. I just wanted to turn it to Eliav. Is there anything that you would like to add from a clinical standpoint?
No, I think you've covered it. you know, IL-2 muteins and IL-2 targeting agents are different, and we chose the Pandion compound for a specific reason, and that's why we're excited about it. by the way, our phase I-B program continues to validate our excitement.
Eliav, did you wanna briefly talk about the potential of a basket in the future?
Yeah. I think, you know, as you know, Merck pioneered this concept of the TL1A basket, of a biomarker-defined basket in immuno-oncology. You know, these are early days, but this is one of the reasons why we're so excited about Prometheus. The fact that they have this extraordinary biomarker database and having already identified a very important biomarker for ulcerative colitis really will serve to change the way in which immunologists think about their patients and think about this, these diseases. We have done that revolution in immuno-oncology and anticipate similar things in the immunology space.
Great. Thanks, Andrew. Next question, please, Michelle.
Thank you. Geoff Meacham from Bank of America. You may go ahead, sir.
Hey, guys. thanks for the question. just have two quick ones. Rob, there's been a clear investor focus, obviously, on BD that, you know, diversifies oncology and Prometheus, Acceleron, you know, addresses this. The question is, should we look to I and I and cardio kind of as a foundation for future deals, or is there still a desire to expand the therapeutic area? Real quick for Dean or Eliav, how much of the PRA023 opportunity, how much of the value do you place on maintenance versus induction? Thank you.
Great. Thanks for the question. You know, as we think about from a business development perspective, what we need to do, you know, I think we've been consistent and that the science will drive us to the best opportunity. Clearly, in this case, we saw great science matching an unmet need and it aligned with value. We moved. No different than we did with the Acceleron deal. You know, as we sit here today, given both these foundational deals that today what we're announcing with Prometheus and then obviously, in immunology and then in cardiovascular with Acceleron, we do believe that we are in a position to have a robust pipeline in both immunology and cardiovascular. As we think about business development, the science will lead us.
We continue to be very excited about oncology as well and wanna lead in oncology well into the next decade. You know, I would say we're not driven by the therapeutic area, we're driven by the science, but it is definitely taking us to these focus areas, and we're excited about what we have both through the BD and through our internal pipeline. These will be three areas of investment, but I'm not limiting it to just those.
I would just answer your question about induction and maintenance. Maybe I'll ask Aileen or Eliav to make a comment as well, but if you're a patient, you don't value induction over maintenance. You value induction because you have a hot colon and you need it to be cooled down, and so induction is very important. If you can't maintain it, you know, I'd rather not be cycling off these medicines as well. When you ask me about the value, the value to the patient, I think is substantial in both. Eliav or Aileen?
I think that, you've answered it, very well. Thanks, Dean.
Great. Thank you. Next question, please, Michelle.
Thank you. Mara Goldstein from Mizuho, you may go ahead.
Great. Thanks so much. I wanted to just ask a question and on the PRA023 trials and just some of the differences you've observed in clinical remission and endoscopic improvement in those endpoints, and whether those differentials match or within line of sort of expectations as it relates to previous trials. If you could just speak to those differences. I'm just curious overall around the potential for diagnostic and how you think a diagnostic could be introduced into this market.
Yeah. Why don't I just turn that directly to Eliav and Aileen in relationship to the trials and the differences, and also the implementation of these diagnostics. As Eliav has pointed out, what we're hoping to do is do what we did for immuno-oncology and cancer in relationship to biomarkers and introduce that concept into immunology and into that field. Eliav and Aileen?
I'll ask Aileen to comment on the consistency of the results across endpoints.
Thank you, Eliav. When we were looking closely at this asset, that was definitely one of the things we wanted to further understand, is there consistency in how they are looking at efficacy of this drug using the various endpoints? Based on the data that we've seen and what was presented at the recently concluded ECCO meeting, is that there is consistency between clinical endpoint, endoscopic endpoint, histologic endpoint from a directionality point of view. That was definitely encouraging for us.
Right. I mean, I think that was actually quite an important part of the story because we were able to see whether in UC or in Crohn's, that all measures were improved. It wasn't really driven by one element. That profound benefit that we've seen was really quite similar across endpoints. You asked about how one would deploy a biomarker. As Dean noted, of course, we've done that before. This biomarker is not a complex one. It can be very easily acquired from the patient without having to do anything invasive.
We're able to, we'll be able to very quickly put it into a format that will enable laboratories to use this in a pretty simple way. I think that this will be a very important part of the armamentarium for the use of this drug. You know, I think immunologists are looking for better answers for treating their patients. The current circumstance of cycling on and off based on experience or trial and error probably isn't particularly satisfying, not to the physician and certainly not to the patients. The ability to enrich for a population that might benefit from PRA023 will really help in increasing the confidence of physicians to use this product. Again, you know, this would be a complementary approach.
Physicians do not need to use the biomarker because there's efficacy regardless of whether the biomarker is positive or negative. It's just that in the positive patients, the results to date have been just exceptional and unheard of.
Great. Thank you, Mara. Next question, please.
Thank you. Chris Shibutani from Goldman Sachs. You may go ahead.
Thank you very much. Congratulations on the deal. Two questions, if I could. On the TL1A mechanism, antifibrotic is often one of the things brought to the forefront. So far with this mechanism across the asset you've acquired in competitors, we've primarily seen shorter term induction data. Do you have a hypothesis about how you feel the maintenance data will evolve? Also along the antifibrotic line, do you have a hypothesis on whether you think this could be more successful in Crohn's disease, which seems to be arguably an area of greater unmet need because fewer treatment options? A second follow-up would be program plans and timelines. You note the potential to be first in class. If I could just clarify, phase III program starts, I think you have in your slides, ulcerative colitis starting in early 2024.
That reflects back to what Prometheus had said. I think they had pegged in general a 2023 start for that. I think they also had plans to start a Crohn's disease registrational phase III program this year. If you could comment there, since I did not notice, and apologize if I missed it, your plans with a phase III in Crohn's? Thank you.
Thank you very much for the questions. I'll just, you know, first go to high level in relationship to this pathway. I mean, this pathway, you know, initially there were a whole bunch of GWAS or genome-wide associations published in 2008, 2011. There were many different pathways that were identified. It was really Steve Targan, who's actually focused on a certain TL1A haplotype and its increased expression. Through their studies, they did gain of function, loss of function antibody. They re-recognized not only did it have a potential role in inflammation, but in terms of fibrosis as well. That sort of view of whether that preclinical evidence of affecting not just inflammation but also fibrosis is something that makes us very interested in this
Mechanism could potentially, could potentially bear out, especially in longer term studies with patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease in this pathway. I would highlight that one of the interests of Prometheus is to begin to test the role of TL1A in a situation where there's a little bit even more fibrosis than the difference of ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, and that was in their scleroderma related interstitial lung disease. We'll see that as it plays out using a spectrum of diseases, not just ulcerative colitis and Crohn's, but other diseases. In relationship to some of the other questions, Eliav and Aileen, did you wanna touch on them?
Sure. Just to be clear, first of all, the Prometheus had a very productive meeting with the FDA at an end of phase II setting. This is a really important element of our confidence and timelines. We anticipate that we can start the studies either in late this year or early next year. The study designs, I think are going to be well in hand with a little further back and forth with the agencies as we refine things. I think that that's really great. We also are very excited to get started with the Crohn's disease program. We will start that in due course.
We anticipate, again, having to discuss that with FDA at an end of phase II meeting. Again, the results of the Crohn's disease study are pretty clear and pretty striking. We are very confident in that as well.
Great. Thank you, Chris. Next question, please.
Louise Chen from Cantor, you may go ahead. Louise, your line is open.
Hi, sorry about that, was on mute. Thanks for taking my questions. First question I wanted to ask you was about the inflammatory bowel disease space. It's getting increasingly crowded. Second question is, do you plan to build out your IBD franchise with internal development or more complementary acquisitions? Thank you.
Thank you for the question, Louise. This is Chirfi. You know, this is obviously a very unsatisfied market as we just have been highlighting. It's a large market that is in dire need for new innovation. We believe that we can compete effectively in this space based on a number of factors. First, this is a first in a new class, as we mentioned, anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic effect. PRA023 offers basically a RINVOQ-like efficacy and ENTYVIO-like safety, right? Which is really best there is out there. The precision medicine approach really gives us an opportunity to differentiate and identify the applications early on, potentially as first biologic to be initiated post-diagnosis.
We believe based on all of these factors and our ability to execute, we've demonstrated in the case of KEYTRUDA, that we will be able to compete to win in this space. Let me also add that we have experience in this space in Europe, through our collaboration with J&J, with REMICADE and SIMPONI, where we're able to really execute effectively and generate multi-billion-dollar revenue in the European environment over a number of years in IBD.
The second question was, like, build Salesforce.
Build the pipeline. Maybe I can. It wasn't Salesforce, it was pipeline.
Okay.
You know, on that point, it's really gonna be both. We do have a very robust internal pipeline. Dean can comment if he'd like. We also, as we've said, will look for bringing in the best external science, including further moves in immunology if we see them. We're looking to do both. As I said in my prepared comments, we're gonna fully invest behind immunology as an area of importance for this company.
Thank you, Louise. Next question, please.
Thank you. Colin Bristow with UBS, you may go ahead.
Good morning, and congrats on the deal. Maybe can you talk about how you see PRA023 as differentiated versus the other TL1As? Just kind of within this, could you talk about the datasets you had access to during the diligence process, which are obviously not in the public domain, but gave you additional confidence in the deal or the valuation? On the valuation side, can you talk about what was factored in here in your base case in terms of indications, peak sales, et cetera? Thank you.
Let me take a shot from the scientific standpoint, and I'll also ask Eliav to speak about the datasets. I just wanna be a little bit cautious of us making any direct comparisons between the Prometheus asset and other people's assets in the TL1A space. I would just say is the datasets that we saw in the all comers were striking to us. The fact that they had a biomarker that was pre-specified and was part of that movement such that one is no longer retrospectively sort of looking at the biomarker, but prospectively defining it and getting the data they had is very important to us. The other point of view is, in some sense, you have a little bit of an internal control.
It's not exactly an internal control, but the fact that we have ulcerative colitis in a blinded study...
The results that we have, and then the expectation is you would expect something that had that important an impact in ulcerative colitis would have some impact in Crohn's disease. The fact that we had data in hand in relationship to Crohn's disease from Prometheus creates more advantage of looking at how fast we can move this compound in the inflammatory bowel disease. The readout from the Crohn's disease gives you even more confidence of the ulcerative colitis data as well. Is there any other data that you would wanna highlight, Eliav?
Sure. You know, I would just point out that we looked at individual patient data. I mean, you know, when we do diligence, we look at everything with a fine-tooth comb. We also, of course, look at the publicly available data externally. One thing to consider is that we know that we had an end of phase II meeting, and we've not heard from any other company, at least publicly disclose, an end of phase II meeting with FDA. You know, I think that we were struck by the quality of the data. We looked very deep, intensely at all of the parameters. We had two studies, not one, that were strongly positive.
We considered that this product was really excellent and had a superb opportunity to really impact patients with IBD.
Colin, this is Caroline. Addressing the valuation, we have been balanced and disciplined in our valuation of Prometheus. The major driver of that value is PRA023, and I hope you've heard the team's excitement on our opportunity if the study continues successfully to have significant impact for patients, and it to represent a multi-billion dollar opportunity in ulcerative colitis. To represent a multi-billion dollar opportunity in Crohn's disease. There could be the potential for other indications, and we see the platform as providing the opportunity to accelerating our discovery efforts in immunology. The totality of the valuation is weighted towards PRA023, but we think we've got significant opportunity to create value for patients and shareholders.
Thank you. Next question, please.
Thank you. Tim Anderson with Wolfe Research. You may go ahead, sir.
Hi. This is Adam on the line for Tim. Thanks for taking our question. Could you comment on whether doing this deal rules out the possibility that Merck does any other share buybacks in 2023? Some investors have been thinking that in the absence of large M&A, cash might be spent on buybacks. Does a midsize target like Prometheus rule that out? Thanks.
Adam, this is Caroline. As I described in our prepared remarks, and as we stated previously, our company's capital allocation priorities are first and foremost to invest in our business the rich opportunities that we have with our own portfolio, and to augment that portfolio with smart, value-creating, science-driven business development. That will remain our priority, but we will return excess cash to our shareholders via share buybacks to the extent there is. We will continue the modest level of share buybacks this year, as we indicated after the last sales and earnings call.
Great. Thank you. I think we have time for one more question, please, Michelle.
Thank you. Umer Raffat from Evercore. You may go ahead, sir.
Hi. Thanks so much for taking my question. Rob, I think one of your bigger achievements during your tenure has been the price discipline in BD. I realize you've set the bar very high, but I have to ask, the price being paid for Prometheus is basically the same ballpark as Acceleron, but very different than what Roivant paid for the Pfizer TL1A. I'm just curious to hear your thoughts overall. Dean, is this a real biomarker? And will you continue forward with the same selection of SNPs? Because the way Prometheus reported that UC biomarker data was very odd. I've never seen pooled across drug and placebo, so I'm curious how you were thinking about all that. Thank you.
Yeah. No, Umer, thanks for the question. you know, I think and as I appreciate you've commented, I believe we have shown good discipline through our business development and how we think about value. What today should tell you is the confidence we have in this asset. you know, this was us really looking at what we saw the potential to be here, which Caroline outlined, Dean has outlined. I will tell you, we see meaningful positive NPV potential at the price we paid. We think it was a full and fair value for this asset. Assuming success of the drug, we see this as a meaningful opportunity, providing growth in a period where we know that, you know, it's gonna be important for the company and addressing what is continuing to be an important unmet need.
As we look at this is the confidence that our scientific team has in this asset after studying it deeply and over a period of time and the position we have in immunology. I see this as the same discipline. You're just seeing us putting value where we see and have confidence that that value should go.
I would just emphasize that one of the values proposition is clearly in TL1A, but it's also related to your other question, which is: How do you advance a biomarker in a field that has not had biomarkers? Rheumatologists, gastroenterologists have not had the ability to do biomarker-driven strategies in general, and it has been a little bit of clinical experience and cycling. In relationship to the ulcerative colitis, there is a series of SNPs related to the biomarker. There is an algorithm around that. We also believe that some permutation of that could be also effective in Crohn's disease.
I also wonder, and this is not proven, I also wonder whether their database may actually teach us how to do biomarkers not just for future targets and future molecules, but it may be able to begin to risk stratify some of the current drugs that are in the cycling that may be very important for us as we wanna position TL1A and other things in the Prometheus pipeline and other things in our pipeline in relationship to how physicians should cycle not just these new pathways and new targets and new molecules, but also the ones that are already out there.
Great. Thank you, Umer, and thank you all for the great questions. I understand some of our upfront remarks were a little difficult to understand, so we're gonna look to post those remarks to our website as soon as we can. Please reach out to the IR team if you have any follow-up questions today. Thank you all very much.
Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. You may go ahead and disconnect at this time.