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Eprex, Roche's NeoRecormon and Amgen's Epogen are all versions of the same hormone, erythropoietin, or EPO.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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"The best case is that they lose a third of their Eprex sales for chronic renal failure, " says Sweig.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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French regulators are apparently concerned only with using Eprex to treat the anemia that occurs during chronic kidney failure.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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On Nov. 30 The New York Times reported that French regulators were discussing pulling Eprex from the market entirely.
FORBES: European Woes May Hit J&J's Earnings
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This morning, the drug giant confirmed in a press release that it is renegotiating the safety information on Eprex's label in France.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Sales of that drug actually fell in the fourth quarter as regulators cracked down on apparent problems with the way Eprex is injected in Europe.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Things are worse in Europe, where the drug is called Eprex.
FORBES: J&J Earnings Soar, But Competition Looms
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Most of Eprex's problems may also come from manufacturing--that would explain why the same side effects are not cropping up as often with Amgen's and Roche's drugs.
FORBES: European Woes May Hit J&J's Earnings
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Another example occurred between 2001 and 2003, when a biological to treat anemia called Eprex (chemical name, erythropoietin), a supposedly identical version of a sibling called Epogen (which was manufactured in a different facility), caused a 30-fold increase in a severe kind of anemia.
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