Japanese drug giant Eisai Co. said global Alzheimer drug program officer Ivan Cheung will retire at the end of the month and be replaced by the son of the firm’s CEO, after a tenure that saw him lead the push for US approval of breakthrough medicine Leqembi.
(Bloomberg) — Japanese drug giant Eisai Co. said global Alzheimer drug program officer Ivan Cheung will retire at the end of the month and be replaced by the son of the firm’s CEO, after a tenure that saw him lead the push for US approval of breakthrough medicine Leqembi.
Keisuke Naito, 34, a senior vice president and chief strategy and planning officer, will become the acting global Alzheimer’s officer, the company said in a statement Tuesday. Naito is a member of Eisai’s founding family and a son of Chief Executive Officer Haruo Naito.
Chief Financial Officer Tatsuyuki Yasuno will become acting president of its US unit, Eisai said, another role that had been held by the outgoing Cheung.
Cheung’s resignation comes less than a week after Eisai and partner Biogen Inc. were granted full approval for Alzheimer drug Leqembi in the US. Leqmebi is the first medicine shown to slow progression of the disease, which afflicts some 6 million Americans. Eisai is also seeking approvals in other markets.
Earlier: Eisai Wins US Approval of Alzheimer’s Drug With Restrictions
“Many investors may be uneasy at the changes given that they come just as Leqembi is about to get its full launch,” Citigroup Global Markets Japan Inc. analyst Hidemaru Yamaguchi wrote in a note.
Leqembi was granted expedited authorization in the US in January, with the approval expected to spur greater insurance coverage for the drug, which costs $26,500 a year.
Eisai shares on Tuesday were down 4% from Friday — when the stock last dropped as much as 8.1% as some analysts expressed concerns that its Alzheimer’s drug would take time to be widely adopted. The broader Topix index was down just 0.38%.
Keisuke Naito has been in charge of strategy planning and creating a dementia platform with other industries to collect data and create solutions to detect the disease early. He joined Eisai in 2013 and became an executive officer in 2019 before being appointed a senior vice president in June.
His family owns less than 2% of Eisai, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
A majority of the company’s 11-member board of directors are independent.
The 46-year-old Cheung is departing in order to seek new career challenges after 17 years with the company, an Eisai spokesperson said by phone Tuesday. He is Haruo Naito’s son-in-law.
Cheung previously served as the head of Eisai’s neurology business, deputy head of its oncology business and an executive offier responsible for strategy, finance and accounting.
(Updates backgrounds of Naito, Cheung from 4th paragraph.)
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