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Sanofi

48°52′25″N 2°18′46″E / 48.8735°N 2.3129°E / 48.8735; 2.3129

Sanofi S.A.
Formerly
  • Sanofi-Synthélabo
    (1999–2004)
  • Sanofi-Aventis
    (2004–2011)
Company typeSociété Anonyme
ISINFR0000120578
Industry
Founded1973; 51 years ago (1973)
HeadquartersParis, France
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsMedications, generic drugs, over-the-counter drugs, vaccines, diagnostics, contact lenses, animal health (list...)
Revenue 43.07 billion (2023)
€7.875 billion (2023)
€5.436 billion (2023)
Total assets €126.4 billion (2023)
Total equity €74.35 billion (2023)
Number of employees
86,088 (2023)
Subsidiaries
Websitesanofi.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Sanofi S.A. is a French multinational pharmaceutical and healthcare company headquartered in Paris, France. The corporation was established in 1973 and merged with Synthélabo in 1999 to form Sanofi-Synthélabo. In 2004, Sanofi-Synthélabo merged with Aventis and renamed to Sanofi-Aventis, which were each the product of several previous mergers. It changed its name back to Sanofi in May 2011. The company is a component of the Euro Stoxx 50 stock market index.[2] In 2023, the company’s seat in Forbes Global 2000 was 89.[3]

Sanofi engages in the research and development, manufacturing, and marketing of pharmacological products, principally in the prescription market, but the firm also develops over-the-counter medications. The corporation covers seven major therapeutic areas: cardiovascular, central nervous system, diabetes, internal medicine, oncology, thrombosis, and vaccines (it is the world's largest producer of the last through its subsidiary Sanofi Pasteur).[4]

History edit

Sanofi-Synthélabo edit

Sanofi was founded in 1973[5] as a subsidiary of Elf Aquitaine (a French oil company subsequently acquired by Total), when Elf Aquitaine took control of the Labaz group, a pharmaceutical company formed in 1947 by Sociéte Belge de l'Azote et des Produits Chimiques du Marly;[6] Labaz developed benziodarone in 1957.[7]: 146  In 1993, Sanofi made a move into the Eastern Europe market by acquiring a controlling interest in Chinoin, a Hungarian drug company whose 1992, sales totaled about US$104 million.[8][9] In the same year, Sanofi made its first significant venture into the US, and strengthened its presence in Eastern Europe, by first partnering with Sterling Winthrop and then acquiring the prescription pharmaceuticals business in 1994.[8][10] Sanofi was incorporated under the laws of France in 1994, as a société anonyme, a form of limited liability company.[11]: 18 

Synthélabo was founded in 1970, through the merger of two French pharmaceutical laboratories, Laboratoires Dausse (founded in 1834)б and Laboratoires Robert & Carrière (founded in 1899). In 1973, the French cosmetics group L'Oréal acquired the majority of its share capital.[11]: 19  In 1991, Synthelabo acquired Laboratories Delalande[12] and Laboratoires Delagrange, and through this deal picked up the product metoclopramide.[13][14]

 
Logo for Sanofi-Synthélabo (1999—2004)

Sanofi-Synthélabo was formed in 1999 when Sanofi merged with Synthélabo; at the time of the merger, Sanofi was the second largest pharmaceutical group in France in terms of sales and Synthélabo was the third largest. The merged company was based in Paris, France.[11]: 18–19 [15]

The merged companies focused on pharmaceuticals, divesting several businesses soon after the merger, including beauty, diagnostics, animal health and nutrition, custom chemicals, and two medical equipment businesses.[11]: 19 

Aventis edit

Aventis was formed in 1999, when the French company Rhône-Poulenc S.A. merged with the German corporation Hoechst Marion Roussel, which itself was formed from the 1995 merger of Hoechst AG with Cassella, Roussel Uclaf, and Marion Merrell Dow. Hoechst AG, the majority partner at the time in Hoechst Marion Roussel, was itself a merger of two of the three forcibly separated subsidiaries of IG Farben, exploiter of Auschwitz slave labor and supplier of Zyklon B during The Holocaust.[16] The merged company was based in Schiltigheim, near Strasbourg, France.[17]: 13 [18]: 9–11 [19]: 40–41 

At the time of the merger, Rhône-Poulenc's business included the pharmaceutical businesses Rorer, Centeon (blood products), and Pasteur Merieux (vaccines), the plant and animal health businesses Rhône-Poulenc Agro, Rhône-Poulenc Animal Nutrition, and Merial, and a 67 percent share in Rhodia, a speciality chemicals company.[18]: 10  Hoechst, one of the companies that resulted from the post-WWII split of IG Farben, had seven primary businesses: Hoechst Marion Roussel (pharmaceuticals), AgrEvo (a joint venture with Schering in crop protection agents and pest control products), HR Vet (veterinary products), Dade Behring (diagnostics), Centeon, Celanese (chemicals), and Messer (chemicals).[18]: 9  Merieux has been in the business of selling blood products, and in the 1980s, during the AIDS epidemic, Merieux and other companies were involved in scandals related to HIV-contaminated haemophilia blood products that were sold to developing nations.[20]

In 2000, Aventis and Millennium Pharmaceuticals, a US biotechnology company formed to discover new drugs based on the then-new science of genomics, announced that Aventis would make a $250M investment in Millennium and would pay $200M to Millennium in research fees over five years, one of the largest such deals between a big pharmaceutical company and a biotech company at the time.[21]

In late 2000, in the midst of the recall of Starlink, its genetically modified maize product, Aventis announced that it had determined to sell off Aventis Cropscience, the seed and pesticide business unit it had created from the agriculture businesses of its predecessors.[22] In October 2001, Bayer and Aventis announced that Bayer would acquire the unit for about $6.6 billion; the unit became Bayer CropScience, making Bayer the world's second-largest agrochemical company behind Syngenta.[23]

In 2003, Aventis entered into a collaboration with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, a New York biotechnology company, to develop Regeneron's VEGF-inhibiting drug, aflibercept, which was then in Phase I clinical trials. Aventis invested $45 million in Regeneron and made an upfront payment of $80 million in cash.[24] Regeneron partnered the use of the drug with Bayer Healthcare in the field of proliferative eye diseases, and under the name Eylea it was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2011;[25] after several setbacks in clinical trials,[26] Regeneron and Sanofi got the drug approved for metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with other agents, under the brand name Zaltrap in 2012.[27]

Sanofi-Aventis merger edit

Sanofi-Aventis was formed in 2004, when Sanofi-Synthélabo acquired Aventis. In early 2004, Sanofi-Synthélabo made a hostile takeover bid for Aventis worth €47.8 billion. Initially, Aventis rejected the bid because it felt that the bid offered inferior value based on the company's share value, and the board of Aventis went so far as to enact poison pill provisions and to invite Novartis to enter merger negotiations.[28] The three-month takeover battle concluded when Sanofi-Synthélabo launched a friendly bid of €54.5 billion in place of the previously rejected hostile bid. The French government played a strong role, desiring what it called a "local solution", by putting heavy pressure on Sanofi-Synthélabo to raise its bid for Aventis and for Aventis to accept the offer[29] and by rejecting Aventis's poison pill proposal.[30] One of the largest risks in the deal for both sides was the fate of the patents protecting Clopidogrel (Plavix), which was one of the top-selling drugs in the world at the time and the major source of Sanofi's revenue.[31]

Post-merger activities edit

In 2006, Iraqis infected with HIV sued Sanofi and Baxter over HIV-contaminated haemophilia blood products sold by Merieux in the 1980s.[32] In 2006, the US patents on clopidogrel (Plavix) were challenged when a Canadian generics company, Apotex, filed an Abbreviated New Drug Application under the Hatch-Waxman Act, received FDA approval, and started marketing a generic formulation of clopidogrel. While Sanofi-Aventis and its partner in the drug, Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS), were able to get an injunction to stop Apotex from selling it,[33] the case became complicated when settlement negotiations fell apart twice – the second time because of an oral agreement made by BMS CEO Peter Dolan that BMS failed to disclose to the Federal Trade Commission during the review of the settlement agreement to ensure that it did not violate antitrust law. When Apotex disclosed the oral agreement to the FTC, the FTC launched an investigation that led to Dolan's dismissal by BMS.[34] Apotex finally lost on the patent litigation issues after its third appeal was decided in favor of BMS/Sanofi in November 2011; Apotex had to pay ~$442 million in damages and ~$108 million in interest for infringing the patent,[35] which it paid in full by February 2012.[36] Apotex also sued BMS and Sanofi for $3.4 billion for allegedly breaching the settlement agreement; Apotex lost a jury trial in March 2013.[37]

In 2007, Sanofi-Aventis expanded on Aventis's prior relationship with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals; in the new deal Sanofi-Aventis agreed to pay Regeneron $100 million per year for five years, under which Regeneron would use its monoclonal antibody discovery platform to create new biopharmaceuticals, to which Sanofi-Aventis gained the exclusive right to co-develop.[38] In 2009, the companies expanded the deal to $160 million per year and extended it to 2017.[38][39] As of 2009, the collaboration had four antibodies in clinical development and had filed an IND for a fifth. Two were against undisclosed targets, one targeted the interleukin-6 receptor as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis, another targeted nerve growth factor for the treatment of pain, and another targeted delta-like ligand 4 as a cancer treatment.[39]

Between 2008, when Chris Viehbacher was hired as CEO, and 2010, the company spent more than $17 billion in mergers and acquisitions to strengthen its consumer healthcare and generics platforms, especially in emerging markets, in the face of looming patent cliffs and the growth of the consumer healthcare segment.[40][41][42] In September, Zentiva was acquired for €1.8 billion, expanding the group's presence in eastern European markets.[43]

In 2009, Medley Farma, the third largest pharmaceutical company in Brazil and a leading generics company there, was acquired for about $635 million.[44] Sanofi outbid Teva Pharmaceuticals.[45] The deal was approved by Brazil's antitrust authorities in May 2010.[44] Later that year, Indian vaccine manufacturer Shantha Biotechnics was acquired for $784 million.[46] In October Sanofi-Aventis announced that it would lay off about 1700 US employees (about 25% of its US workforce) because of restructuring triggered by growing generic competition and other factors, and that the company would focus its US operations on diabetes, atrial fibrillation, and oncology.[47]

In 2010, US consumer healthcare company Chattem, Inc. was acquired for around $1.9 billion.[42] In the same year, Nepentes Pharma was acquired for $130 million and BMP Sunstone Corporation for $520.6 million.[48]

Name change, acquisitions and investments edit

The company dropped the -Aventis suffix of its name on 6 May 2011, after receiving approval at its annual general meeting. The reason given by the company for the change was to make its name easier to pronounce in countries such as China.[49]

In 2011, Genzyme Corporation was acquired for around $20.1 billion. This biotechnology company, headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, specializes in the treatment of orphan diseases, renal diseases, endocrinology, oncology, and biosurgery.[50]

In January 2012, Sanofi co-invested in the $125 million Series A financing of Warp Drive Bio. Sanofi sought support for its internal cancer research program and also took on an obligation to acquire Warp Drive if certain milestones were met.[51]

In January 2014, Genzyme and Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, a US biotechnology company developing RNAi therapeutics, announced that Genyzme would invest $700 million in Alnylam. Under the deal, Genzyme obtained further rights to patisiran, an RNAi treatment for transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis – a condition that can result in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy and familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy[52] and obtained rights to other compounds in Alnylam's pipeline.[53]

In March 2014, Sanofi joined the bidding for Merck & Co.'s over-the-counter health-products unit, the maker of Coppertone sunblock and the antihistamine Claritin; bids were expected to range between $10 billion and $12 billion.[54]

In October 2014, Sanofi's directors fired US-resident chief executive Chris Viehbacher, blaming his alleged lack of communication with the board and poor execution of his strategy.[55] Board chairperson Serge Weinberg took over as interim CEO until 2 April 2015 when Bayer Healthcare board chairman Olivier Brandicourt (appointed by Sanofi on 19 February 2015[56]) took over. Before Brandicourt even started his new job, French government ministers Stéphane Le Foll and Ségolène Royal attacked the $4.5 million golden handshake he was getting from Sanofi – and his pay of about $4.7 million a year.[57] Furthermore, in 2014, the business took a 66% stake in Globalpharma, a Dubai-based generics manufacturer.[58]

In July 2015, Genzyme announced that it would acquire the cancer drug Caprelsa (vandetanib) from AstraZeneca for up to $300 million.[59] In the same month, the company announced a new global collaboration with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals to discover, develop, and commercialize new immuno-oncology drugs, which could generate more than $2 billion for Regeneron,[60] with $640 million upfront, $750 million for proof of concept data, and $650 million from the development of REGN2810.[61]

In June 2016, the company announced that it had struck an asset-swap deal with Boehringer Ingelheim. Sanofi would sell its Merial animal health division (valuing it at €11.4 billion), while acquiring Boehringer's consumer health division (valuing it at €6.7 billion) and €4.7 billion in cash. The deal meant that Sanofi was now one of the global consumer healthcare leaders by market share.[62]

In July 2017, the company announced its intention to acquire Protein Sciences, a privately held Connecticut-based vaccines biotechnology company, for $650 million and with up to $100 million in milestone achievements.[63]

In January 2018, Sanofi announced that it would acquire Bioverativ for $11.6 billion[64] and days later announced that it would acquire Ablynx for €3.9 billion ($4.8 billion).[65]

In December 2019, the company announced that it would acquire Synthorx for $2.5 billion ($68 per share), adding the lead product candidate THOR-707 (SAR444245), a form of interleukin-2 (IL-2) being developed for use against multiple solid tumors.[66][67] In October 2022, Sanofi announced that it had stopped Phase 2 studies of THOR-707 (SAR444245) because the drug's efficacy “was lower than projected”.[68] Sanofi would take a roughly $1.6 billion impairment charge because of delays to the program.[69][70]

In May 2020, Regeneron announced that it would repurchase around $5 billion of its shares held directly by Sanofi. Before the transaction, Sanofi had held 23.2 million Regeneron shares.[71] In June, the company announced that it had agreed a potential $2 billion deal with Translate Bio, expanding an already existing collaboration for COVID-19 treatments.[72] The company agreed to produce 60 million doses of a coronavirus vaccine for the United Kingdom government in July 2020. It used recombinant protein-based technology for Sanofi's flu vaccine along with GSK's pandemic technology and was seeking regulatory approval by the first half of 2021.[73] Sanofi also agreed to a $2.1 billion deal with the United States for 100 million doses.[74] In August, Sanofi announced that it would acquire Principia Biopharma for $3.7 billion, acquiring its BTK inhibitor program.[75][76][77] The acquisition was completed in September 2020.[78] In November, Sanofi announced that it would acquire Kiadis Pharma for €308 million (around $359 million, or €5.45 per share), expanding its immuno-oncology pipeline with the acquisition of Kiadis's three clinical compounds: K-NK002 in Phase II trials for hematopoietic stem cell transplants in blood cancer, K-NK003 for relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia, and K-NK-ID101 for COVID-19.[79]

In January 2021, Sanofi announced that it would buy the British biotech Kymab Ltd and its potential first-in-class drug candidate – KY1005 –- for $1.45 billion.[80][81][82] In April, the business announced that it would acquire Tidal Therapeutics for up to $470m.[83] in August the company announced that it would acquire Translate Bio and its mRNA vaccine technology for $3.2 billion.[84] On 8 September 2021, Sanofi announced that it would acquire US biotech company Kadmon Corporation for $1.9 billion[85] On 18 November 2021, it was reported that Sanofi would be investing $180 million in French startup Owkin, whose predictive algorithms aim to improve the research and development of new cures against cancer.[86] In December, the company announced that it would acquire Origimm Biotechnology GmbH and its acne vaccine candidate (ORI-001),[87][88] as well as Amunix Pharmaceuticals, for an initial $1 billion plus potentially $200 million in additional milestones.[89]

In April 2022, Sanofi broke ground on its biggest industrial investment, a $638m vaccine and enzymes production facility in Tuas, Singapore, targeted for completion in 2025.[90]

In March 2023, the company announced it would acquire Provention Bio and its type 1 diabetes therapy pipeline.[91]

In the fall of 2023, Sanofi announced plans to separate the OTC and focus on its key prescription production, increasing investment and reducing costs. The most likely way to separate a non-prescription division (about 11,000 employees, 2023 revenue — over $4 billion) is to create a public company headquartered in France. The division is planned for the fourth quarter of 2024.[92]

In December 2023, the company has signed a 140 million dollars partnership with Aqemia, a company that solves a mathematical equation that eliminates the need for heavy computing facilities with large computing power.[93]

In January 2024, Sanofi announced that it had agreed to buy a U.S. biotech firm Inhibrx for up to $2.2 billion, with a focus on obtaining Inhibrx's INBRX-101, an experimental treatment for Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency (AATD), an inherited rare disease that causes progressive deterioration of the lung tissue.[94]

Company financials edit

Historical financial data (in billions of euro)[95][96][97][98][99][100][101]
Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Revenue 6.069 7.448 8.048 14.87 27.31 28.37 28.05 27.57 29.31 30.38 33.39 34.95 30.97 31.69 34.54 33.82 35.07 34.46 36.13
Net Income 1.098 1.640 1.865 -3.665 2.202 4.006 5.263 3.851 5.265 5.467 5.646 4.888 3.716 4.390 4.287 4.800 8.42 4.31 2.81
Assets 18.23 17.36 17.42 82.85 86.24 77.76 71.91 71.99 80.25 85.26 100.7 100.4 96.06 97.39 102.3 104.7 99.81 111.41 112.74
Equity 12.75 12.60 12.74 41.63 46.40 45.60 44.54 44.87 48.32 53.10 56.19 57.35 56.9 56.12 58.05 57.72 58.07 58.88 58.93

Note. In 2001—2004 – Sanofi-Synthélabo, in 2004—2011 – Sanofi-Aventis.

Acquisition history edit

Sanofi Acquisitions
  • Sanofi
    • Sanofi–Aventis
    • Genzyme Corporation (Acq 2011)
      • Whatman Biochemicals Ltd (Acq 1981)
      • Koch-Light Laboratories (Acq 1982)
      • Integrated Genetics (Acq 1989, spun off 1991)
      • Genecore International (Diagnostic enzyme div, acq 1991)
      • Medix Biotech, Inc. (Acq 1992)
      • Enzymatix Ltd (Acq 1992)
      • Vivigen (Acq 1992)
      • Virotech (Acq 1993)
      • Omni Res srl (Acq 1993)
      • Sygena Ltd (Acq 1994)
      • BioSurface Technology Inc. (Acq 1994)
      • TSI Inc. (Acq 1994)
      • PharmaGenics, Inc. (Acq 1997)
      • Biomatrix (Acq 2000)
      • SangStat Medical Corp. (Acq 2003)
      • Ilex Oncology Inc. (Acq 2004)
      • Bone Care International Inc. (Acq 2005)
      • AnorMED Inc. (Acq 2006)
      • Bioenvision (Acq 2007)
    • Protein Sciences (Acq 2017)
    • Bioverativ (Acq 2018)
      • True North Therapeutics (Acq 2017)
    • Ablynx (Acq 2018)
    • Synthorx (Acq 2019)
    • Principia Biopharma (Acq 2020)
    • Kiadis Pharma (Acq 2020)
    • Kymab Ltd (Acq 2021)
    • Tidal Therapeutics (Acq 2021)
    • Translate Bio (Acq 2021)
    • Kadmon Corporation (Acq 2021)
    • Origimm Biotechnology GmbH (Acq 2021)
    • Amunix Pharmaceuticals (Acq 2021)
    • Provention Bio (Acq 2023)
    • Inhibrx (Acq 2024)[102]

Products edit

The following products are listed on the Sanofi Genzyme website. Generic drug names are given in parentheses following the brand name.

Autoimmune

Product recall and effects: The epinephrine (adrenaline) auto-injection devices made by Sanofi SA currently on the market in the US and Canada were voluntarily recalled on 28 October 2015.[106][107] The reason given by Sanofi was that the products had been found to potentially have inaccurate dosage delivery systems, which might include failure to deliver the drugs.[108][109]

Sanofi US also added the following warning: If a patient experiencing a serious allergic reaction (i.e., anaphylaxis) did not receive the intended dose, there could be significant health consequences, including death, because anaphylaxis is a potentially life‑threatening condition.[108]

In its news release on 28 October 2015, Sanofi Canada stated that it was "actively working with suppliers of alternative epinephrine auto-injectors to have a full stock available in Canada as soon as possible. Canadian customers were asked to immediately return the Allerject product to their local pharmacy to obtain an alternate epinephrine auto-injector."[110]

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also filed a news release,[109] confirming that the recall involved all Auvi-Q currently on the market in the United States. The FDA release went on to provide information for consumers re: exchanging the device for another brand of product, also provided on the Auvi-Q web site. Sanofi US would provide reimbursement for out of pocket costs incurred for the purchase of new, alternate epinephrine auto-injectors with proof of purchase.

The alternate products expected to most commonly replace the recalled Sanofi devices were the EpiPens made by Mylan in the US and by Pfizer—under license from Mylan—in Canada.[111] Mylan already had an 85% market share of the auto-injectors in the USA[112] in the first half of 2015. Maylan was expected to benefit from the recall by its competitor Sanofi, according to a report published in the Fierce Pharma newsletter of 2 November 2015. As Bernstein analyst Ronny Gal wrote in a note to clients,"....it is very hard to see Auvi-Q returning to the market, as it will need to be redesigned and face uphill battle to recapture patient trust after the recall."[113] Gal also believed that the company would eventually have 95% of the epinephrine auto-injector market, according to another Fierce Pharma report on 3 November 2015.[114]

Cardiovascular

Dermatology

Diabetes

Endocrinology

Gastroenterology

Hematology

– Infectious diseases

Metabolic

Neurology

Oncology

– Other

Over the counter

Pain

Respiratory and inflammatory diseases

Rheumatology

Urology

The company also produces a broad range of over-the-counter products, among them Allegra, IcyHot for muscle pain, Gold Bond for skin irritation, and Selsun Blue dandruff shampoo. These brands were acquired in 2010, when Sanofi-Aventis purchased Chattem.

Pipeline edit

As of 2013, Sanofi was in a race with Amgen and Pfizer to win approval for a drug that inhibits PCSK9, a protein that slows the clearance of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol – the form of cholesterol that leads to heart attacks.[123] Sanofi's drug, a monoclonal antibody, was discovered by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and is called alirocumab.[124] An FDA warning in March 2014, about possible cognitive adverse effects of PCSK9 inhibition threw the competition into disarray, as the FDA asked companies to include neurocognitive testing into their Phase III clinical trials.[125]

In 2013, Sanofi announced that another candidate from its collaboration with Regeneron, a monoclonal antibody against the interleukin 6 receptor, sarilumab, had better efficacy than placebo in its first Phase III trial in rheumatoid arthritis.[126]

Management edit

Stockholders edit

As of 31 December 2013:[131]: 185 

Head office edit

 
Head office 54 rue de la Boétie, Paris 8th arrondissement
 
Former head office 174 avenue de France, Paris 13th arrondissement

In January 2012, Sanofi moved its head office location to 54, Rue La Boétie in the 8th arrondissement of Paris. This former mansion designed by architect René-Patouillard had previously been the head office of Alcatel-Lucent.

Sanofi's previous head office was located in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, at 174 Avenue de France. The architecture of the head office is of the predominant style of the area surrounding the François Mitterrand Library. After Sanofi and Aventis merged, the employees at the former Aventis head office in Schiltigheim, Alsace, moved to Paris.[133]

In November 2022, Sanofi moved into its new global headquarters in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, at 46-48 Avenue de la Grande Armée.[134][135]

Collaborative research edit

In addition to internal research and development activities, Sanofi is also involved in publicly funded collaborative research projects, with other industrial and academic partners. One example in the area of non-clinical safety assessment is the InnoMed PredTox project[136][137] The company is expanding its activities in joint research projects within the framework of the Innovative Medicines Initiative of EFPIA and the European Commission.[138]

In June 2010, Sanofi and the Charité University of Berlin signed a cooperation agreement for the research and development of medicines and therapies.[139]

On 25 October 2012, Sanofi said its earnings for the third quarter slumped, as generic competitors ate into profits from its Eloxatin cancer treatment.[140]

Sanofi Pasteur edit

In 2005, Sanofi Pasteur, the vaccines division of Sanofi Group, was awarded a $97 Million United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) contract.[141]

BCG supply shortage 2012- edit

In 2011, a Sanofi Pasteur plant flooded, causing it problems with mold.[142] The facility, located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, produced BCG vaccine products, made with the Glaxo 1077 strain,[143] such as a tuberculosis vaccine ImmuCYST, a BCG Immunotherapeutic, a bladder cancer drug. By April 2012, the FDA had found dozens of documented problems with sterility at the plant, including mold, nesting birds, and rusted electrical conduits.[142] The plant was closed for over two years, resulting in shortages of bladder cancer and tuberculosis vaccines.[144] On 29 October 2014 Health Canada gave Sanofi permission to resume production of BCG.[145]

COVID-19 vaccine edit

In 2020, Sanofi, together with GSK, signed a deal with the US government's Operation Warp Speed to provide 100 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine for up to US$2.1 billion, if the vaccine was approved.[146]

As of August 2020, COVID-19 vaccine development in Sanofi underscored its fundamental competitiveness weakness, with which management has been struggling and failed to deal with for many years, beyond cutting more costs. Unfortunately, even though the approach of Sanofi-GSK is based on pre-existing, approved platforms and technology (as with Flublok flu), without reinventing the wheel of the necessary infrastructure,[147] the company lagged behind many other rivals in delivering a working vaccine. Sanofi planned to start Phase 1 clinical testing only in September and expected emergency use approval in the first half of 2021.[148] Competitors such as Novavax had already completed Phase 1 studies, with promising results,[149] and Moderna-NIH had already initiated its Phase 3 trial.[150] According to CNBC reports,[151] as part of the $2.1 billion US government deal, more than 750 million went to supporting Sanofi-GSK in vaccine development and clinical trials. Sanofi turn-outs "accelerate" the development via a smaller biotech firm, Translate Bio, with a $425M partnership.[152]

At the end of September 2021, Sanofi announced that it would stop developing its mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. Despite promising results, the drug would not continue to Phase 3 trials, and the company stated that it would be 'too late to reach the market.'[153][154]

Associations edit

Sanofi is a full member of the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA),[155] the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO),[156] and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).[157]

Sanofi's vaccine subsidiary, Sanofi Pasteur, is a member of EuropaBio.[158]

In June 2021, Sanofi partnered with Capgemini, Orange & Generali to launch Future4care, an all-European start-up accelerator centered on digital health.[159][160]

Aventis Foundation edit

The Aventis Foundation, a German charitable trust, was established in 1996, as the Hoechst Foundation, with an endowment of €50 million. In 2000, the foundation was renamed the Aventis Foundation. The foundation promotes cultural and scientific projects, specifically focused on the Frankfurt Rhine-Main area.[161]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Total reduced its stake to less than 5% in 2011.[132]

References edit

  1. ^ "Annual Report 2023 (Form 20-F)". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 23 February 2024.
  2. ^ . boerse-frankfurt.de. Archived from the original on 8 February 2019. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  3. ^ . Forbes. Archived from the original on 29 January 2024. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  4. ^ "Sanofi-Aventis to sign deal to build flu vaccine plant in China – source". Forbes. 23 November 2007. Retrieved 19 April 2009.[dead link]
  5. ^ "Le fondateur de Sanofi est mort". lexpress.fr. 28 December 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  6. ^ CPE. Chemical & Process Engineering. L. Hill. 1964. p. 83.
  7. ^ Sneader, Walter (13 September 1985). Drug discovery: the evolution of modern medicines. Wiley. ISBN 9780471904717.
  8. ^ a b Staff, The Pharma Letter. Sept 20, 1993 Sanofi Extends Holding in Chinoin
  9. ^ Chinoin listing in at securities.com Page accessed 5 February 2016
  10. ^ Collins, Joseph C.; Gwilt, John R. (2000). "The Life Cycle of Sterling Drug, Inc" (PDF). Bull. Hist. Chem. 25 (1): 22–27.
  11. ^ a b c d Sanofi-Synthélabo Form 20F for the Fiscal Year ended 31 December 2002
  12. ^ Denis Cosnard for Les Echos. 11 December 1991. Synthélabo s'offre Delalande
  13. ^ Denis Conard for Les Echos. 17 October 1991 Synthélabo rachète les laboratoires Delagrange
  14. ^ Bibliothèque nationale de France Laboratoires Delagrange Page accessed 24 August 2016
  15. ^ Tom Meek for PMLiVE 24 May 2013 A look back at Sanofi's merger with Synthélabo
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  17. ^ Aventis Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2002
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External links edit

  • Official website

sanofi, 8735, 3129, 8735, 3129, formerly, synthélabo, 1999, 2004, aventis, 2004, 2011, company, typesociété, anonymetraded, aseuronext, paris, sancac, componentisinfr0000120578industrypharmaceuticalsbiotechnologyhealthcarefounded1973, years, 1973, headquarters. 48 52 25 N 2 18 46 E 48 8735 N 2 3129 E 48 8735 2 3129 Sanofi S A FormerlySanofi Synthelabo 1999 2004 Sanofi Aventis 2004 2011 Company typeSociete AnonymeTraded asEuronext Paris SANCAC 40 componentISINFR0000120578IndustryPharmaceuticalsBiotechnologyHealthcareFounded1973 51 years ago 1973 HeadquartersParis FranceArea servedWorldwideKey peopleSerge Weinberg Chairman Paul Hudson CEO ProductsMedications generic drugs over the counter drugs vaccines diagnostics contact lenses animal health list Revenue 43 07 billion 2023 Operating income 7 875 billion 2023 Net income 5 436 billion 2023 Total assets 126 4 billion 2023 Total equity 74 35 billion 2023 Number of employees86 088 2023 SubsidiariesSanofi Pasteur Genzyme Shantha Biotechnics Chattem Ablynx BioverativWebsitesanofi wbr comFootnotes references 1 Sanofi S A is a French multinational pharmaceutical and healthcare company headquartered in Paris France The corporation was established in 1973 and merged with Synthelabo in 1999 to form Sanofi Synthelabo In 2004 Sanofi Synthelabo merged with Aventis and renamed to Sanofi Aventis which were each the product of several previous mergers It changed its name back to Sanofi in May 2011 The company is a component of the Euro Stoxx 50 stock market index 2 In 2023 the company s seat in Forbes Global 2000 was 89 3 Sanofi engages in the research and development manufacturing and marketing of pharmacological products principally in the prescription market but the firm also develops over the counter medications The corporation covers seven major therapeutic areas cardiovascular central nervous system diabetes internal medicine oncology thrombosis and vaccines it is the world s largest producer of the last through its subsidiary Sanofi Pasteur 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Sanofi Synthelabo 1 2 Aventis 1 2 1 Sanofi Aventis merger 1 3 Post merger activities 1 4 Name change acquisitions and investments 1 5 Company financials 1 6 Acquisition history 2 Products 2 1 Pipeline 2 2 Management 2 3 Stockholders 3 Head office 4 Collaborative research 5 Sanofi Pasteur 5 1 BCG supply shortage 2012 5 2 COVID 19 vaccine 6 Associations 7 Aventis Foundation 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksHistory editSanofi Synthelabo edit Sanofi was founded in 1973 5 as a subsidiary of Elf Aquitaine a French oil company subsequently acquired by Total when Elf Aquitaine took control of the Labaz group a pharmaceutical company formed in 1947 by Societe Belge de l Azote et des Produits Chimiques du Marly 6 Labaz developed benziodarone in 1957 7 146 In 1993 Sanofi made a move into the Eastern Europe market by acquiring a controlling interest in Chinoin a Hungarian drug company whose 1992 sales totaled about US 104 million 8 9 In the same year Sanofi made its first significant venture into the US and strengthened its presence in Eastern Europe by first partnering with Sterling Winthrop and then acquiring the prescription pharmaceuticals business in 1994 8 10 Sanofi was incorporated under the laws of France in 1994 as a societe anonyme a form of limited liability company 11 18 Synthelabo was founded in 1970 through the merger of two French pharmaceutical laboratories Laboratoires Dausse founded in 1834 b and Laboratoires Robert amp Carriere founded in 1899 In 1973 the French cosmetics group L Oreal acquired the majority of its share capital 11 19 In 1991 Synthelabo acquired Laboratories Delalande 12 and Laboratoires Delagrange and through this deal picked up the product metoclopramide 13 14 nbsp Logo for Sanofi Synthelabo 1999 2004 Sanofi Synthelabo was formed in 1999 when Sanofi merged with Synthelabo at the time of the merger Sanofi was the second largest pharmaceutical group in France in terms of sales and Synthelabo was the third largest The merged company was based in Paris France 11 18 19 15 The merged companies focused on pharmaceuticals divesting several businesses soon after the merger including beauty diagnostics animal health and nutrition custom chemicals and two medical equipment businesses 11 19 Aventis edit Aventis was formed in 1999 when the French company Rhone Poulenc S A merged with the German corporation Hoechst Marion Roussel which itself was formed from the 1995 merger of Hoechst AG with Cassella Roussel Uclaf and Marion Merrell Dow Hoechst AG the majority partner at the time in Hoechst Marion Roussel was itself a merger of two of the three forcibly separated subsidiaries of IG Farben exploiter of Auschwitz slave labor and supplier of Zyklon B during The Holocaust 16 The merged company was based in Schiltigheim near Strasbourg France 17 13 18 9 11 19 40 41 At the time of the merger Rhone Poulenc s business included the pharmaceutical businesses Rorer Centeon blood products and Pasteur Merieux vaccines the plant and animal health businesses Rhone Poulenc Agro Rhone Poulenc Animal Nutrition and Merial and a 67 percent share in Rhodia a speciality chemicals company 18 10 Hoechst one of the companies that resulted from the post WWII split of IG Farben had seven primary businesses Hoechst Marion Roussel pharmaceuticals AgrEvo a joint venture with Schering in crop protection agents and pest control products HR Vet veterinary products Dade Behring diagnostics Centeon Celanese chemicals and Messer chemicals 18 9 Merieux has been in the business of selling blood products and in the 1980s during the AIDS epidemic Merieux and other companies were involved in scandals related to HIV contaminated haemophilia blood products that were sold to developing nations 20 In 2000 Aventis and Millennium Pharmaceuticals a US biotechnology company formed to discover new drugs based on the then new science of genomics announced that Aventis would make a 250M investment in Millennium and would pay 200M to Millennium in research fees over five years one of the largest such deals between a big pharmaceutical company and a biotech company at the time 21 In late 2000 in the midst of the recall of Starlink its genetically modified maize product Aventis announced that it had determined to sell off Aventis Cropscience the seed and pesticide business unit it had created from the agriculture businesses of its predecessors 22 In October 2001 Bayer and Aventis announced that Bayer would acquire the unit for about 6 6 billion the unit became Bayer CropScience making Bayer the world s second largest agrochemical company behind Syngenta 23 In 2003 Aventis entered into a collaboration with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals a New York biotechnology company to develop Regeneron s VEGF inhibiting drug aflibercept which was then in Phase I clinical trials Aventis invested 45 million in Regeneron and made an upfront payment of 80 million in cash 24 Regeneron partnered the use of the drug with Bayer Healthcare in the field of proliferative eye diseases and under the name Eylea it was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration FDA in 2011 25 after several setbacks in clinical trials 26 Regeneron and Sanofi got the drug approved for metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with other agents under the brand name Zaltrap in 2012 27 Sanofi Aventis merger edit Sanofi Aventis was formed in 2004 when Sanofi Synthelabo acquired Aventis In early 2004 Sanofi Synthelabo made a hostile takeover bid for Aventis worth 47 8 billion Initially Aventis rejected the bid because it felt that the bid offered inferior value based on the company s share value and the board of Aventis went so far as to enact poison pill provisions and to invite Novartis to enter merger negotiations 28 The three month takeover battle concluded when Sanofi Synthelabo launched a friendly bid of 54 5 billion in place of the previously rejected hostile bid The French government played a strong role desiring what it called a local solution by putting heavy pressure on Sanofi Synthelabo to raise its bid for Aventis and for Aventis to accept the offer 29 and by rejecting Aventis s poison pill proposal 30 One of the largest risks in the deal for both sides was the fate of the patents protecting Clopidogrel Plavix which was one of the top selling drugs in the world at the time and the major source of Sanofi s revenue 31 Post merger activities edit In 2006 Iraqis infected with HIV sued Sanofi and Baxter over HIV contaminated haemophilia blood products sold by Merieux in the 1980s 32 In 2006 the US patents on clopidogrel Plavix were challenged when a Canadian generics company Apotex filed an Abbreviated New Drug Application under the Hatch Waxman Act received FDA approval and started marketing a generic formulation of clopidogrel While Sanofi Aventis and its partner in the drug Bristol Myers Squibb BMS were able to get an injunction to stop Apotex from selling it 33 the case became complicated when settlement negotiations fell apart twice the second time because of an oral agreement made by BMS CEO Peter Dolan that BMS failed to disclose to the Federal Trade Commission during the review of the settlement agreement to ensure that it did not violate antitrust law When Apotex disclosed the oral agreement to the FTC the FTC launched an investigation that led to Dolan s dismissal by BMS 34 Apotex finally lost on the patent litigation issues after its third appeal was decided in favor of BMS Sanofi in November 2011 Apotex had to pay 442 million in damages and 108 million in interest for infringing the patent 35 which it paid in full by February 2012 36 Apotex also sued BMS and Sanofi for 3 4 billion for allegedly breaching the settlement agreement Apotex lost a jury trial in March 2013 37 In 2007 Sanofi Aventis expanded on Aventis s prior relationship with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals in the new deal Sanofi Aventis agreed to pay Regeneron 100 million per year for five years under which Regeneron would use its monoclonal antibody discovery platform to create new biopharmaceuticals to which Sanofi Aventis gained the exclusive right to co develop 38 In 2009 the companies expanded the deal to 160 million per year and extended it to 2017 38 39 As of 2009 update the collaboration had four antibodies in clinical development and had filed an IND for a fifth Two were against undisclosed targets one targeted the interleukin 6 receptor as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis another targeted nerve growth factor for the treatment of pain and another targeted delta like ligand 4 as a cancer treatment 39 Between 2008 when Chris Viehbacher was hired as CEO and 2010 the company spent more than 17 billion in mergers and acquisitions to strengthen its consumer healthcare and generics platforms especially in emerging markets in the face of looming patent cliffs and the growth of the consumer healthcare segment 40 41 42 In September Zentiva was acquired for 1 8 billion expanding the group s presence in eastern European markets 43 In 2009 Medley Farma the third largest pharmaceutical company in Brazil and a leading generics company there was acquired for about 635 million 44 Sanofi outbid Teva Pharmaceuticals 45 The deal was approved by Brazil s antitrust authorities in May 2010 44 Later that year Indian vaccine manufacturer Shantha Biotechnics was acquired for 784 million 46 In October Sanofi Aventis announced that it would lay off about 1700 US employees about 25 of its US workforce because of restructuring triggered by growing generic competition and other factors and that the company would focus its US operations on diabetes atrial fibrillation and oncology 47 In 2010 US consumer healthcare company Chattem Inc was acquired for around 1 9 billion 42 In the same year Nepentes Pharma was acquired for 130 million and BMP Sunstone Corporation for 520 6 million 48 Name change acquisitions and investments edit The company dropped the Aventis suffix of its name on 6 May 2011 after receiving approval at its annual general meeting The reason given by the company for the change was to make its name easier to pronounce in countries such as China 49 In 2011 Genzyme Corporation was acquired for around 20 1 billion This biotechnology company headquartered in Cambridge Massachusetts specializes in the treatment of orphan diseases renal diseases endocrinology oncology and biosurgery 50 In January 2012 Sanofi co invested in the 125 million Series A financing of Warp Drive Bio Sanofi sought support for its internal cancer research program and also took on an obligation to acquire Warp Drive if certain milestones were met 51 In January 2014 Genzyme and Alnylam Pharmaceuticals a US biotechnology company developing RNAi therapeutics announced that Genyzme would invest 700 million in Alnylam Under the deal Genzyme obtained further rights to patisiran an RNAi treatment for transthyretin mediated amyloidosis a condition that can result in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy and familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy 52 and obtained rights to other compounds in Alnylam s pipeline 53 In March 2014 Sanofi joined the bidding for Merck amp Co s over the counter health products unit the maker of Coppertone sunblock and the antihistamine Claritin bids were expected to range between 10 billion and 12 billion 54 In October 2014 Sanofi s directors fired US resident chief executive Chris Viehbacher blaming his alleged lack of communication with the board and poor execution of his strategy 55 Board chairperson Serge Weinberg took over as interim CEO until 2 April 2015 when Bayer Healthcare board chairman Olivier Brandicourt appointed by Sanofi on 19 February 2015 56 took over Before Brandicourt even started his new job French government ministers Stephane Le Foll and Segolene Royal attacked the 4 5 million golden handshake he was getting from Sanofi and his pay of about 4 7 million a year 57 Furthermore in 2014 the business took a 66 stake in Globalpharma a Dubai based generics manufacturer 58 In July 2015 Genzyme announced that it would acquire the cancer drug Caprelsa vandetanib from AstraZeneca for up to 300 million 59 In the same month the company announced a new global collaboration with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals to discover develop and commercialize new immuno oncology drugs which could generate more than 2 billion for Regeneron 60 with 640 million upfront 750 million for proof of concept data and 650 million from the development of REGN2810 61 In June 2016 the company announced that it had struck an asset swap deal with Boehringer Ingelheim Sanofi would sell its Merial animal health division valuing it at 11 4 billion while acquiring Boehringer s consumer health division valuing it at 6 7 billion and 4 7 billion in cash The deal meant that Sanofi was now one of the global consumer healthcare leaders by market share 62 In July 2017 the company announced its intention to acquire Protein Sciences a privately held Connecticut based vaccines biotechnology company for 650 million and with up to 100 million in milestone achievements 63 In January 2018 Sanofi announced that it would acquire Bioverativ for 11 6 billion 64 and days later announced that it would acquire Ablynx for 3 9 billion 4 8 billion 65 In December 2019 the company announced that it would acquire Synthorx for 2 5 billion 68 per share adding the lead product candidate THOR 707 SAR444245 a form of interleukin 2 IL 2 being developed for use against multiple solid tumors 66 67 In October 2022 Sanofi announced that it had stopped Phase 2 studies of THOR 707 SAR444245 because the drug s efficacy was lower than projected 68 Sanofi would take a roughly 1 6 billion impairment charge because of delays to the program 69 70 In May 2020 Regeneron announced that it would repurchase around 5 billion of its shares held directly by Sanofi Before the transaction Sanofi had held 23 2 million Regeneron shares 71 In June the company announced that it had agreed a potential 2 billion deal with Translate Bio expanding an already existing collaboration for COVID 19 treatments 72 The company agreed to produce 60 million doses of a coronavirus vaccine for the United Kingdom government in July 2020 It used recombinant protein based technology for Sanofi s flu vaccine along with GSK s pandemic technology and was seeking regulatory approval by the first half of 2021 73 Sanofi also agreed to a 2 1 billion deal with the United States for 100 million doses 74 In August Sanofi announced that it would acquire Principia Biopharma for 3 7 billion acquiring its BTK inhibitor program 75 76 77 The acquisition was completed in September 2020 78 In November Sanofi announced that it would acquire Kiadis Pharma for 308 million around 359 million or 5 45 per share expanding its immuno oncology pipeline with the acquisition of Kiadis s three clinical compounds K NK002 in Phase II trials for hematopoietic stem cell transplants in blood cancer K NK003 for relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia and K NK ID101 for COVID 19 79 In January 2021 Sanofi announced that it would buy the British biotech Kymab Ltd and its potential first in class drug candidate KY1005 for 1 45 billion 80 81 82 In April the business announced that it would acquire Tidal Therapeutics for up to 470m 83 in August the company announced that it would acquire Translate Bio and its mRNA vaccine technology for 3 2 billion 84 On 8 September 2021 Sanofi announced that it would acquire US biotech company Kadmon Corporation for 1 9 billion 85 On 18 November 2021 it was reported that Sanofi would be investing 180 million in French startup Owkin whose predictive algorithms aim to improve the research and development of new cures against cancer 86 In December the company announced that it would acquire Origimm Biotechnology GmbH and its acne vaccine candidate ORI 001 87 88 as well as Amunix Pharmaceuticals for an initial 1 billion plus potentially 200 million in additional milestones 89 In April 2022 Sanofi broke ground on its biggest industrial investment a 638m vaccine and enzymes production facility in Tuas Singapore targeted for completion in 2025 90 In March 2023 the company announced it would acquire Provention Bio and its type 1 diabetes therapy pipeline 91 In the fall of 2023 Sanofi announced plans to separate the OTC and focus on its key prescription production increasing investment and reducing costs The most likely way to separate a non prescription division about 11 000 employees 2023 revenue over 4 billion is to create a public company headquartered in France The division is planned for the fourth quarter of 2024 92 In December 2023 the company has signed a 140 million dollars partnership with Aqemia a company that solves a mathematical equation that eliminates the need for heavy computing facilities with large computing power 93 In January 2024 Sanofi announced that it had agreed to buy a U S biotech firm Inhibrx for up to 2 2 billion with a focus on obtaining Inhibrx s INBRX 101 an experimental treatment for Alpha 1 Antitrypsin Deficiency AATD an inherited rare disease that causes progressive deterioration of the lung tissue 94 Company financials edit Historical financial data in billions of euro 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Revenue 6 069 7 448 8 048 14 87 27 31 28 37 28 05 27 57 29 31 30 38 33 39 34 95 30 97 31 69 34 54 33 82 35 07 34 46 36 13 Net Income 1 098 1 640 1 865 3 665 2 202 4 006 5 263 3 851 5 265 5 467 5 646 4 888 3 716 4 390 4 287 4 800 8 42 4 31 2 81 Assets 18 23 17 36 17 42 82 85 86 24 77 76 71 91 71 99 80 25 85 26 100 7 100 4 96 06 97 39 102 3 104 7 99 81 111 41 112 74 Equity 12 75 12 60 12 74 41 63 46 40 45 60 44 54 44 87 48 32 53 10 56 19 57 35 56 9 56 12 58 05 57 72 58 07 58 88 58 93 Note In 2001 2004 Sanofi Synthelabo in 2004 2011 Sanofi Aventis Acquisition history edit Sanofi AcquisitionsSanofi Sanofi Aventis Aventis Merged 2004 Rhone Poulenc Merged 1999 Rorer Centeon Pasteur Merieux Rhone Poulenc Agro Rhone Poulenc Animal Nutrition Merial Sold to Boehringer Ingelheim 2016 Rhodia Hoechst Marion Roussel Merged 1999 AgrEvo HR Vet Dade Behring Centeon Celanese Messer Sanofi Synthelabo Merged 2004 Sanofi Est 1973 as subsidiary of Elf Aquitaine Midy Sterling Winthrop Acq 1994 Synthelabo Laboratoires Dausse Founded 1834 merged 1970 Robert amp Carriere Founded 1899 merged 1970 Zentiva Acq 2008 Leciva Slovakofarma Acq 2003 Sicomed SA Bucharest Acq 2005 Medley Farma Acq 2009 Shantha Biotechnics Acq 2009 Chattem Acq 2010 Nepentes Pharma Acq 2010 BMP Sunstone Corporation Acq 2010 Genzyme Corporation Acq 2011 Whatman Biochemicals Ltd Acq 1981 Koch Light Laboratories Acq 1982 Integrated Genetics Acq 1989 spun off 1991 Genecore International Diagnostic enzyme div acq 1991 Medix Biotech Inc Acq 1992 Enzymatix Ltd Acq 1992 Vivigen Acq 1992 Virotech Acq 1993 Omni Res srl Acq 1993 Sygena Ltd Acq 1994 BioSurface Technology Inc Acq 1994 TSI Inc Acq 1994 PharmaGenics Inc Acq 1997 Biomatrix Acq 2000 SangStat Medical Corp Acq 2003 Ilex Oncology Inc Acq 2004 Bone Care International Inc Acq 2005 AnorMED Inc Acq 2006 Bioenvision Acq 2007 Protein Sciences Acq 2017 Bioverativ Acq 2018 True North Therapeutics Acq 2017 Ablynx Acq 2018 Synthorx Acq 2019 Principia Biopharma Acq 2020 Kiadis Pharma Acq 2020 Kymab Ltd Acq 2021 Tidal Therapeutics Acq 2021 Translate Bio Acq 2021 Kadmon Corporation Acq 2021 Origimm Biotechnology GmbH Acq 2021 Amunix Pharmaceuticals Acq 2021 Provention Bio Acq 2023 Inhibrx Acq 2024 102 Products editThe following products are listed on the Sanofi Genzyme website Generic drug names are given in parentheses following the brand name Autoimmune Aubagio Teriflunomide small molecule for multiple sclerosis Approved by the FDA in September 2012 103 Auvi Q Epinephrine autoinjector licensed from Intelliject 104 and approved by the FDA in 2012 for emergency treatment of life threatening allergic reactions 105 Product recall and effects The epinephrine adrenaline auto injection devices made by Sanofi SA currently on the market in the US and Canada were voluntarily recalled on 28 October 2015 106 107 The reason given by Sanofi was that the products had been found to potentially have inaccurate dosage delivery systems which might include failure to deliver the drugs 108 109 Sanofi US also added the following warning If a patient experiencing a serious allergic reaction i e anaphylaxis did not receive the intended dose there could be significant health consequences including death because anaphylaxis is a potentially life threatening condition 108 In its news release on 28 October 2015 Sanofi Canada stated that it was actively working with suppliers of alternative epinephrine auto injectors to have a full stock available in Canada as soon as possible Canadian customers were asked to immediately return the Allerject product to their local pharmacy to obtain an alternate epinephrine auto injector 110 The US Food and Drug Administration FDA also filed a news release 109 confirming that the recall involved all Auvi Q currently on the market in the United States The FDA release went on to provide information for consumers re exchanging the device for another brand of product also provided on the Auvi Q web site Sanofi US would provide reimbursement for out of pocket costs incurred for the purchase of new alternate epinephrine auto injectors with proof of purchase The alternate products expected to most commonly replace the recalled Sanofi devices were the EpiPens made by Mylan in the US and by Pfizer under license from Mylan in Canada 111 Mylan already had an 85 market share of the auto injectors in the USA 112 in the first half of 2015 Maylan was expected to benefit from the recall by its competitor Sanofi according to a report published in the Fierce Pharma newsletter of 2 November 2015 As Bernstein analyst Ronny Gal wrote in a note to clients it is very hard to see Auvi Q returning to the market as it will need to be redesigned and face uphill battle to recapture patient trust after the recall 113 Gal also believed that the company would eventually have 95 of the epinephrine auto injector market according to another Fierce Pharma report on 3 November 2015 114 Cardiovascular Adenoscan Adenosine for arrhythmias marketed by Astellas Altace Ramipril for hypertension marketed by Pfizer Arixtra Fondaparinux for thrombosis marketed by GlaxoSmithKline and now owned by Mylan Avalide Irbesartan for hypertension marketed by Bristol Myers Squibb Avapro Irbesartan for hypertension marketed by Bristol Myers Squibb Cardizem Diltiazem for hypertension Now owned by Bausch Health Cholestagel Colesevelam for low calorie diet and exercise Cordarone Amiodarone for heart rhythm problems Iprivask Desirudin for atherothrombosis Now owned by Bausch Health Kynamro Mipomersen an antisense drug invented by Isis Pharmaceuticals and acquired by Genzyme in 2008 pre Sanofi 115 and approved by the FDA in 2013 for the orphan disease homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia 116 Lasix Furosemide for edema Lovenox Enoxaparin for thrombosis its biggest seller in 2008 117 Multaq Dronedarone for cardiac arrhythmias Nitrolingual Nitroglycerin for chest pain and angina marketed by G Pohl Boskamp GmbH amp Co Plavix Clopidogrel for atherothrombosis marketed by Bristol Myers Squibb Praluent Alirocumab for heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia and clinical atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease marketed by Regeneron Ranexa Ranolazine for stable angina marketed by Gilead Sciences Dermatology Dupixent Dupilumab for eczema marketed by Regeneron Dynabac Dirithromycin for acute bacteria exacerbations Sklice Ivermectin for head lice now owned by Arbor Pharmaceuticals Diabetes Adlyxin Lixisenatide for type 2 diabetes mellitus Admelog insulin lispro for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Afrezza Inhalable insulin for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Amaryl Glimepiride for type 2 diabetes mellitus Apidra insulin glulisine for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Diabeta Glyburide for type 2 diabetes mellitus Glucophage Metformin for type 2 diabetes mellitus marketed by EMD Serono Insuman Human insulin for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Lantus insulin glargine for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Soliqua insulin glargine lixisenatide for type 2 diabetes mellitus Toujeo insulin glargine for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Endocrinology Adlyxin Lixisenatide for type 2 diabetes mellitus Admelog insulin lispro for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Afrezza Inhalable insulin for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Amaryl Glimepiride for type 2 diabetes mellitus Apidra insulin glulisine for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Cholestagel Colesevelam for low calorie diet and exercise Diabeta Glyburide for type 2 diabetes mellitus Glucophage Metformin for type 2 diabetes mellitus marketed by EMD Serono Hectorol Doxercalciferol for parathyroid hormone Insuman Human insulin for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Lantus insulin glargine for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Skelid Tiludronic acid for Paget s disease of bone Soliqua insulin glargine lixisenatide for type 2 diabetes mellitus Toujeo insulin glargine for type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus Gastroenterology Dupixent Dupilumab for eosinophilic esophagitis marketed by Regeneron Lanzor Lansoprazole for acid reflux disease Seprafilm Adhesion barrier for internal adhesions Zaltrap Aflibercept recombinant fusion protein approved in metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with other agents in 2012 marketed by Regeneron 27 Hematology Alprolix Factor IX for hemophilia B Arixtra Fondaparinux for thrombosis marketed by GlaxoSmithKline and now owned by Mylan Cablivi Caplacizumab for thrombosis Campath Alemtuzumab for multiple sclerosis Clolar Clofarabine for leukemia Eloctate Factor VIII for hemophilia A Ferrlecit Sodium ferric gluconate complex for iron deficiency anemia Fludara Fludarabine for leukemia Mozobil Plerixafor for macrocycle approved by the FDA for peripheral blood stem cell mobilizer for non Hodgkin s lymphoma and multiple myeloma in December 2008 118 Oforta Fludarabine for leukemia Thymoglobulin for hemophilia A Zemaira Alpha 1 antitrypsin for chronic augmentation Now owned by CSL Behring Infectious diseases Antibiotics Amoklavin Amoxicillin clavulanic acid Claforan Cefotaxime Priftin Rifapentine Suprax Cefixime Tavanic Levofloxacin Vaccines Bacterial diseases ActHIB Hib vaccine Adacel DPT vaccine Daptacel DPT vaccine Dengvaxia Dengue vaccine Menactra Meningococcal infections Mycobax Tuberculosis vaccine Pentacel DTaP IPV Hib vaccine Pneumo 23 Pneumococcal infections Quadracel DTaP IPV Hib vaccine Shanchol Cholera vaccine Synercid Quinupristin dalfopristin marketed by Pfizer Tenivac Tetanus vaccine Tripedia DPT vaccine discontinued in 2012 Tubersol Tuberculosis vaccine Typhim Vi Typhoid fever Vaccin Tetanique Pasteur Tetanus vaccine Viral diseases ACAM 2000 Smallpox vaccine eradicated in 1980 vaccine produced as a measure in response to the threat of bioterrorism Avaxim Hepatitis A vaccine Flublok Influenza vaccine Fluzone Influenza vaccine Hbvaxpro Hepatitis B vaccine Imovax Polio Polio vaccine Imovax Rabies Rabies vaccine Ipol Polio vaccine Ixiaro Japanese encephalitis M M RVaxPro MMR vaccine Rouvax Measles vaccine Rudivax Rubella vaccine Stamaril Yellow fever vaccine Vaxigrip Influenza vaccine YF VAX Yellow fever vaccine Metabolic Actonel Risedronic acid for osteoporosis and Paget s disease now owned by Allergan Renagel Sevelamer hydrochloride for end stage renal disease Renvela Sevelamer hydrochloride for end stage renal disease Neurology Ambien Zolpidem for insomnia Ambien CR Zolpidem for insomnia Aubagio Teriflunomide for multiple sclerosis Depakine Valproic acid for epilepsy now owned by AbbVie Depakote Valproate semisodium for epilepsy now owned by AbbVie Hyalgan Sodium hyaluronate for blood tests Lemtrada Alemtuzumab for multiple sclerosis Pediapred Prednisolone for multiple sclerosis Rilutek Riluzole for ALS Sabril Vigabatrin for epilepsy marketed by Lundbeck Oncology Anzemet Dolasetron for nausea and vomiting Campath Alemtuzumab for multiple sclerosis Caprelsa Vandetanib for breast colorectal cancer and female infertility Clolar Clofarabine for leukemia Clomid Clomifene for female infertility Dupixent Dupilumab for eczema marketed by Regeneron Eligard Leuprorelin for prostate cancer marketed by Astellas Elitek Rasburicase for the treatment to help stop uric acid Eloxatin Oxaliplatin for colorectal cancer Fludara Fludarabine for leukemia Gliadel Wafer Carmustine for cancer now owned by Arbor Pharmaceuticals Jevtana Cabazitaxel for prostate cancer Kevzara Sarilumab for blood tests lung and prostate cancer marketed by Regeneron Libtayo Cemiplimab for squamous cell skin cancer marketed by Regeneron Mozobil Plerixafor macrocycle approved by the FDA for peripheral blood stem cell mobilizer for non Hodgkin s lymphoma and multiple myeloma in December 2008 119 Oforta Fludarabine for leukemia Taxotere Docetaxel for breast lung and prostate cancer Uroxatral Alfuzosin for benign prostatic hyperplasia Zaltrap Aflibercept recombinant fusion protein approved in metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with other agents in 2012 marketed by Regeneron 27 Other Aldurazyme Laronidase for hurler syndrome Aplenzin Bupropion for depression and quit smoking Captique Dermal filler for facial wrinkles Carticel Knee cartilage replacement therapy for knee pain Cerdelga Eliglustat for type 1 gaucher disease Ceredase Alglucerase for Gaucher s disease Cerezyme Imiglucerase for Gaucher s disease Elaprase Idursulfase marketed by Shire Epicel cultured epidermal autografts for thickness burns Fabrazyme Agalsidase for Fabry disease Flagyl Metronidazole for vaginal infections marketed by Pfizer Hylaform Plus Injectable filler for facial wrinkles Lumizyme Alglucosidase alfa for Pompe disease Myozyme Alglucosidase alfa for Pompe disease Sculptra Polylactic acid for facial fat loss Thyrogen Thyroid stimulating hormone for thyroid cancer Over the counter Allegra Fexofenadine for allergic rhinitis Buscopan Hyoscine butylbromide for abdominal pain Maalox Calcium carbonate an antacid Nasacort Triamcinolone for allergic rhinitis Novaldol Paracetamol for pain and fever Unisom Doxylamine for night time allergy and cold relief Xyzal Levocetirizine for allergic rhinitis marketed by UCB Telfast for Seasonal Allergy Relief 120 Enterogermina Medicine for Diarrhea 121 Pain Bi profined Ketoprofen for pain Solpadol Codeine for chronic pain Respiratory and inflammatory diseases Atrovent Ipratropium bromide for asthma marketed by Boehringer Ingelheim Azmacort Triamcinolone for asthma Dupixent Dupilumab for eosinophilic asthma and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis marketed by Regeneron Dynabac Dirithromycin for acute bacterial exacerbations Ketek Telithromycin for community acquired pneumonia Priftin Rifapentine for tuberculosis Rifadin Rifampin for tuberculosis Rifamate Isoniazid rifampicin for tuberculosis Rifater Rifampicin isoniazid pyrazinamide for tuberculosis Tilade Nedocromil for asthma Zagam Sparfloxacin for chronic bronchitis Zemaira Alpha 1 antitrypsin for chronic augmentation now owned by CSL Behring Mucosolvan Medicine for Cough 122 Rheumatology Arava Leflunomide for rheumatoid and psoriatic arthritis Kevzara Sarilumab for blood tests lung and prostate cancer marketed by Regeneron Primaquine Primaquine for malaria Synvisc Hyaluronic acid for knee pain Urology Ditropan XL Oxybutynin chloride for bladder relief marketed by Janssen Eligard Leuprorelin for prostate cancer marketed by Astellas Flomax Tamsulosin for bladder relief marketed by Astellas The company also produces a broad range of over the counter products among them Allegra IcyHot for muscle pain Gold Bond for skin irritation and Selsun Blue dandruff shampoo These brands were acquired in 2010 when Sanofi Aventis purchased Chattem Pipeline edit As of 2013 update Sanofi was in a race with Amgen and Pfizer to win approval for a drug that inhibits PCSK9 a protein that slows the clearance of low density lipoprotein LDL cholesterol the form of cholesterol that leads to heart attacks 123 Sanofi s drug a monoclonal antibody was discovered by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and is called alirocumab 124 An FDA warning in March 2014 about possible cognitive adverse effects of PCSK9 inhibition threw the competition into disarray as the FDA asked companies to include neurocognitive testing into their Phase III clinical trials 125 In 2013 Sanofi announced that another candidate from its collaboration with Regeneron a monoclonal antibody against the interleukin 6 receptor sarilumab had better efficacy than placebo in its first Phase III trial in rheumatoid arthritis 126 Management edit Serge Weinberg chairman 127 Paul Hudson chief executive officer 128 129 Jean Francois Dehecq was the general manager of Sanofi from its creation in 1973 until 2007 Francois Xavier Roger CFO 130 Stockholders edit As of 31 December 2013 131 185 Breakdown of share ownership 8 93 by L Oreal 0 27 treasury shares and 1 31 employees The remaining 89 49 were publicly traded A Head office edit nbsp Head office 54 rue de la Boetie Paris 8th arrondissement nbsp Former head office 174 avenue de France Paris 13th arrondissement In January 2012 Sanofi moved its head office location to 54 Rue La Boetie in the 8th arrondissement of Paris This former mansion designed by architect Rene Patouillard had previously been the head office of Alcatel Lucent Sanofi s previous head office was located in the 13th arrondissement of Paris at 174 Avenue de France The architecture of the head office is of the predominant style of the area surrounding the Francois Mitterrand Library After Sanofi and Aventis merged the employees at the former Aventis head office in Schiltigheim Alsace moved to Paris 133 In November 2022 Sanofi moved into its new global headquarters in the 17th arrondissement of Paris at 46 48 Avenue de la Grande Armee 134 135 Collaborative research editIn addition to internal research and development activities Sanofi is also involved in publicly funded collaborative research projects with other industrial and academic partners One example in the area of non clinical safety assessment is the InnoMed PredTox project 136 137 The company is expanding its activities in joint research projects within the framework of the Innovative Medicines Initiative of EFPIA and the European Commission 138 In June 2010 Sanofi and the Charite University of Berlin signed a cooperation agreement for the research and development of medicines and therapies 139 On 25 October 2012 Sanofi said its earnings for the third quarter slumped as generic competitors ate into profits from its Eloxatin cancer treatment 140 Sanofi Pasteur editMain article Sanofi Pasteur In 2005 Sanofi Pasteur the vaccines division of Sanofi Group was awarded a 97 Million United States Department of Health and Human Services HHS contract 141 BCG supply shortage 2012 edit In 2011 a Sanofi Pasteur plant flooded causing it problems with mold 142 The facility located in Toronto Ontario Canada produced BCG vaccine products made with the Glaxo 1077 strain 143 such as a tuberculosis vaccine ImmuCYST a BCG Immunotherapeutic a bladder cancer drug By April 2012 the FDA had found dozens of documented problems with sterility at the plant including mold nesting birds and rusted electrical conduits 142 The plant was closed for over two years resulting in shortages of bladder cancer and tuberculosis vaccines 144 On 29 October 2014 Health Canada gave Sanofi permission to resume production of BCG 145 COVID 19 vaccine edit Main articles Sanofi GSK COVID 19 vaccine and Sanofi Translate Bio COVID 19 vaccine In 2020 Sanofi together with GSK signed a deal with the US government s Operation Warp Speed to provide 100 million doses of COVID 19 vaccine for up to US 2 1 billion if the vaccine was approved 146 As of August 2020 COVID 19 vaccine development in Sanofi underscored its fundamental competitiveness weakness with which management has been struggling and failed to deal with for many years beyond cutting more costs Unfortunately even though the approach of Sanofi GSK is based on pre existing approved platforms and technology as with Flublok flu without reinventing the wheel of the necessary infrastructure 147 the company lagged behind many other rivals in delivering a working vaccine Sanofi planned to start Phase 1 clinical testing only in September and expected emergency use approval in the first half of 2021 148 Competitors such as Novavax had already completed Phase 1 studies with promising results 149 and Moderna NIH had already initiated its Phase 3 trial 150 According to CNBC reports 151 as part of the 2 1 billion US government deal more than 750 million went to supporting Sanofi GSK in vaccine development and clinical trials Sanofi turn outs accelerate the development via a smaller biotech firm Translate Bio with a 425M partnership 152 At the end of September 2021 Sanofi announced that it would stop developing its mRNA COVID 19 vaccine Despite promising results the drug would not continue to Phase 3 trials and the company stated that it would be too late to reach the market 153 154 Associations editSanofi is a full member of the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations EFPIA 155 the Biotechnology Industry Organization BIO 156 and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America PhRMA 157 Sanofi s vaccine subsidiary Sanofi Pasteur is a member of EuropaBio 158 In June 2021 Sanofi partnered with Capgemini Orange amp Generali to launch Future4care an all European start up accelerator centered on digital health 159 160 Aventis Foundation editThe Aventis Foundation a German charitable trust was established in 1996 as the Hoechst Foundation with an endowment of 50 million In 2000 the foundation was renamed the Aventis Foundation The foundation promotes cultural and scientific projects specifically focused on the Frankfurt Rhine Main area 161 See also editSanofi Biogenius Canada Amgen Inc v Sanofi a United States Supreme Court case on patent enablement Portals nbsp France nbsp CompaniesNotes edit Total reduced its stake to less than 5 in 2011 132 References edit Annual Report 2023 Form 20 F U S Securities and Exchange Commission 23 February 2024 Borse Frankfurt Frankfurt Stock Exchange Stock market quotes charts and news boerse frankfurt de Archived from the original on 8 February 2019 Retrieved 23 May 2017 The Global 2000 2023 Forbes Archived from the original on 29 January 2024 Retrieved 7 February 2024 Sanofi Aventis to sign deal to build flu vaccine plant in China source Forbes 23 November 2007 Retrieved 19 April 2009 dead link Le fondateur de Sanofi est mort lexpress fr 28 December 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2015 CPE Chemical amp Process Engineering L Hill 1964 p 83 Sneader Walter 13 September 1985 Drug discovery the evolution of modern medicines Wiley ISBN 9780471904717 a b Staff The Pharma Letter Sept 20 1993 Sanofi Extends Holding in Chinoin Chinoin listing in at securities com Page accessed 5 February 2016 Collins Joseph C Gwilt John R 2000 The Life Cycle of Sterling Drug Inc PDF Bull Hist Chem 25 1 22 27 a b c d Sanofi Synthelabo Form 20F for the Fiscal Year ended 31 December 2002 Denis Cosnard for Les Echos 11 December 1991 Synthelabo s offre Delalande Denis Conard for Les Echos 17 October 1991 Synthelabo rachete les laboratoires Delagrange Bibliotheque nationale de France Laboratoires Delagrange Page accessed 24 August 2016 Tom Meek for PMLiVE 24 May 2013 A look back at Sanofi s merger with Synthelabo Joseph Borkin The Crime and Punishment of I G Farben New York The Free Press 1990 p 163 Aventis Form 20 F for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2002 a b c Arturo Bris and Christos Cabolis Corporate Governance Convergence Through Cross Border Mergers The Case of Aventis Chapter 4 in Corporate Governance and Regulatory Impact on Mergers and Acquisitions Research and Analysis on Activity Worldwide Since 1990 Eds Greg N Gregoriou Luc Renneboog Academic Press 26 July 2007 Lawton Robert Burns The Business of Healthcare Innovation Cambridge University Press 26 July 2012 Meier Barry 11 June 1996 Blood Money and AIDS Haemophiliacs Are Split Liability Cases Bogged Down in Disputes The New York Times Pollack Andrew 24 June 2000 Aventis Unit Sets Big Investment in Biotechnology Start Up The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 Aventis to Sell Agriculture Unit The New York Times Bloomberg News 16 November 2000 Retrieved 27 November 2019 CNN Money 2 October 2001 Bayer buys CropScience Candace Hoffmann for First Word Pharma 8 September 2003 Aventis inks deal with Regeneron for collaboration on cancer therapy Gever John 19 November 2011 FDA Approves Eylea for Macular Degeneration MedpageToday com Retrieved 16 October 2013 Ciombor KK et al 2013 Aflibercept Clin Cancer Res 19 8 1920 1925 doi 10 1158 1078 0432 CCR 12 2911 PMC 3710732 PMID 23444216 a b c 2012 Notifications U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 13 February 2018 Archived from the original on 26 December 2019 Retrieved 25 December 2019 Timmons Heather 3 April 2004 Aventis Invites Novartis To Counter Sanofi s Bid The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 Timmons Heather 27 April 2004 France Helped Broker the Aventis Sanofi Deal The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 Aventis Plan Is Rejected The New York Times Bloomberg News 24 April 2004 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Kimberly S Cleaves and Ann M Thayer Warning merge with care Sanofi Aventis Modern Drug Discovery August 2004 21 26 Zielbauer Paul von 4 September 2006 Iraqis Infected by H I V Tainted Blood Try New Tool A Lawsuit The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 BMS Press Release 8 December 2006 Preliminary Injunction Against Apotex Upheld on Appeal Aaron Smith for CNNMoney com 26 October 2006 Bristol CEO Dolan gets fired Company says it heeded request of a federal monitor Donald Zuhn for Patent Docs 9 November 2011 Sanofi Aventis v Apotex Inc Fed Cir 2011 Linda a Johnson for Associated Press 8 February 2012 Apotex pays Bristol Sanofi damages over Plavix Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Carolina Bolado for Law360 14 March 2013 Bristol Myers Escapes 3 4B Apotex Suit Over Plavix Deal a b Winslow Ron 10 November 2009 Sanofi Expands Regeneron Deal The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 27 November 2019 a b Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News 11 November 2009 Sanofi Aventis Commits Over 2 8B to Regeneron in mAb Discovery Alliance FierceBiotech Sanofi Aventis A timeline of biopharma deals Andy Tisman for IMS Health 2010 The Rising Tide of OTC in Europe a b Drug Maker Sanofi Aventis Buys Chattem for 1 9 Billion The New York Times Reuters 21 December 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Sanofi Aventis to buy Czech generic drug maker The New York Times 22 September 2008 Retrieved 27 November 2019 a b Leigh Kamping Carder for Law360 20 May 2010 Brazil Clears Sanofi s 635M Medley Pharma Buy Gareth Macdonald for PharmaTechnologist 15 April 2009 Sanofi beats Teva in Medley melee Sanofi snaps up India s Shantha for 784M FierceBiotech 27 July 2009 Gryta Thomas Spencer Mimosa 9 October 2010 Sanofi Cuts Jobs Counters Genzyme The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 27 November 2019 Phil Serafino for Bloomberg News 28 October 2010 Sanofi Aventis to Buy BMP Sunstone to Expand in China Mennella Noelle 6 May 2011 Sanofi changes name pace of acquisitions to slow Reuters Retrieved 7 May 2011 Nicholson Chris V 16 February 2011 Sanofi Agrees to Buy Genzyme for 20 1 Billion The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 Arlene Weintraub for Xconomy 10 January 2012 Warp Drive Bio Launches With 125M from Third Rock Greylock Sanofi Alnylam TTR Amyloidosis FAP Bray Chad 13 January 2014 Sanofi Unit to Buy 700 Million Stake in Rare Disease Company The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 Bloomberg News 1 24 March 2014 French drugmaker Sanofi sacks CEO shares drop Natalie Huet and Noelle Mennella Reuters news agency New York 29 October 2014 Retrieved 6 July 2015 Sanofi Sanofi Appoints Olivier Brandicourt as Chief Executive Officer Sanofi corporate website 19 February 2015 Retrieved 6 July 2015 Silverman Ed 24 February 2015 French Government Slams Sanofi Over Brandicourt Pay Package The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 6 July 2015 Eric Palmer 26 June 2014 Sanofi buys Dubai s Globalpharma to produce generics in the Middle East Questex LLC Retrieved 24 February 2017 Genzyme to Buy Caprelsa from AstraZeneca for Up to 300M GEN News Highlights GEN Genengnews com 27 July 2015 Regeneron Sanofi Launch 2B Immuno Oncology Collaboration GEN News Highlights GEN Genengnews com 28 July 2015 UPDATED Struggling Sanofi paying 1 8B to partner with Regeneron on immuno oncology FierceBiotech com 28 July 2015 Aiming for top dog status Sanofi and Boehringer swap animal and consumer health units FiercePharma com 27 June 2016 Sanofi Sanofi to acquire Protein Sciences Sanofi mediaroom sanofi com Archived from the original on 15 July 2017 Retrieved 12 July 2017 Hirschler Ben 22 January 2018 Biotech M amp A takes off as Sanofi and Celgene spend 20 billion Reuters Blamont Matthias 30 January 2018 Sanofi beats Novo to buy Ablynx for 4 8 billion in biotech M amp A boom Reuters Sanofi Press Releases Monday December 9 2019 sanofi com en Archived from the original on 3 February 2021 Retrieved 11 December 2020 Sanofi Pushes Further into Immuno Oncology with 2 5 Billion Synthorx Takeover BioSpace Retrieved 11 December 2020 Taylor Nick Paul 28 October 2022 In wake of bempeg blowup Sanofi rethinks 2 5B bet on IL 2 after midphase efficacy falls short Fierce Biotech Retrieved 31 October 2022 Sanofi reveals setback for cancer drug acquired in Synthorx buyout BioPharma Dive Retrieved 31 October 2022 Sanofi 5 October 2022 A Phase 1 2 Non randomized Open label Multi cohort Multi center Study Assessing the Clinical Benefit of SAR444245 THOR 707 Combined With Cemiplimab for the Treatment of Participants With Advanced Unresectable or Metastatic Skin Cancers a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help U S Regeneron to buy back 5 billion stake held by Sanofi Reuters 25 May 2020 Retrieved 11 December 2020 Mishra Sudip Kar Gupta Manas 23 June 2020 Sanofi clinches 2 billion vaccines deal with Translate Bio Reuters Retrieved 11 December 2020 via uk reuters com a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Coronavirus vaccine UK signs deal with GSK and Sanofi BBC News 29 July 2020 Retrieved 11 December 2020 U S agrees to pay Sanofi and GSK 2 1 billion for 100 million doses of coronavirus vaccine CNBC 31 July 2020 Sanofi Acquires Principia Biopharma in 3 6 Billion Deal BioSpace Retrieved 11 December 2020 Sanofi to acquire Principia Biopharma BioSpace Retrieved 11 December 2020 Kar Gupta Sudip 17 August 2020 Sanofi in hunt for specialty drugs with 3 7 billion deal for U S based Principia Reuters Retrieved 11 December 2020 via uk reuters com Sanofi concludes acquisition of Principia Biopharma Express Pharma 29 September 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2020 Sanofi Picks Up Kiadis and Its Immuno Oncology Assets for 359 Million BioSpace Retrieved 11 December 2020 White Sarah 11 January 2021 Sanofi buys Kymab for up to 1 5 billion to expand in immunotherapy Reuters Retrieved 11 January 2021 Sanofi to acquire Kymab adding KY1005 to its pipeline a human monoclonal antibody targeting key immune system regulator OX40L Press release 11 January 2021 Sanofi Ups Immunology Game with 1 4 Billion Acquisition of Kymab Sanofi Snatches up Tidal Therapeutics in 470 Million Deal Blamont Matthias 3 August 2021 EXCLUSIVE Sanofi offers to buy U S Biotech mRNA partner Translate Bio sources Reuters France s Sanofi to buy U S biopharma firm Kadmon in 1 9 bln deal Reuters 8 September 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Rosemain Mathieu 18 November 2021 Drugmaker Sanofi invests 180 million in French AI startup Owkin Metro US metro us Retrieved 18 November 2021 Sanofi to acquire Origimm Biotechnology in first move to treat acne with vaccine based immunotherapy BioSpace Sanofi to buy Origimm Biotechnology for acne vaccine candidate Reuters 1 December 2021 Sanofi in 1 bln deal to buy U S based Amunix Pharma Reuters Reuters 21 December 2021 Joyce Teo 20 April 2022 Sanofi in 1 bln deal to buy U S based Amunix Pharma Reuters The Straits Times Retrieved 30 April 2022 Burger Ludwig Kartit Dina 13 March 2023 Sanofi hones in on type 1 diabetes in 2 9 BLN Provention Bio deal Reuters Sanofi s planned consumer health spinoff picks up interest from multiple firms Bloomberg Fierce Pharma Archived from the original on 21 February 2024 Retrieved 27 February 2024 Mollaret Guillaume Aqemia cette pepite de l intelligence artificielle qui a seduit Sanofi Le Figaro Le Figaro Retrieved 6 December 2023 Sanofi Buys Inhibrx for Up to 2 2B to Bolster Inflammation Drug Pipeline BioSpace Retrieved 24 January 2024 Annual Report 2005 on SEC Filing Form 20 F Sanofi 31 March 2006 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Annual Report 2010 on SEC Filing Form 20 F Sanofi 1 March 2011 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Annual Report 2015 on SEC Filing Form 20 F Sanofi 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Form 20 F 2016 EDGAR 8 March 2019 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Form 20 F 2017 EDGAR 2 March 2018 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Form 20 F 2018 EDGAR 8 March 2019 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Inline XBRL Viewer sec gov Retrieved 3 June 2020 Sanofi Buys Inhibrx for Up to 2 2B to Bolster Inflammation Drug Pipeline BioSpace Retrieved 24 January 2024 FDA approves new multiple sclerosis treatment Aubagio Press release U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 12 September 2012 Archived from the original on 13 September 2012 Retrieved 14 September 2012 kaleo kaleo Thomas Katie 1 February 2013 Brothers Develop New Device to Halt Allergy Attacks The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 All Allerject epinephrine auto injectors recalled Cbc ca Sanofi Canada Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Allerject Due to Potential Inaccurate Dosage Delivery PDF Allerject ca Retrieved 22 September 2018 a b Auvi Q epinephrine injection USP Auvi q com a b UPDATED Sanofi US Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of All Auvi Q Due to Potential Inaccurate Dosage Delivery U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 30 October 2015 Archived from the original on 3 February 2017 Retrieved 23 May 2017 Sanofi Canada Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Allerject Due to Potential Inaccurate Dosage Newswire ca Welcome to EpiPen 101 Epipen101 ca 19 March 2015 Reprints Cynthia Koons CynthiaLKoons Robert Langreth RobertLangreth 23 September 2015 How Marketing Turned the EpiPen into a Billion Dollar Business Bloomberg com Sanofi s Auvi Q recall puts Mylan s rival EpiPen in full control of blockbuster market FiercePharma Fiercepharmamarketing com It s open season for Mylan s EpiPen as Sanofi Teva stumble FiercePharma Fiercepharma com 2 November 2015 Lisa M Jarvis for Chemical and Engineering News 14 January 2008 Isis Genzyme In Heart Drug Deal F D A Approves Genetic Drug to Treat Rare Disease The New York Times 29 January 2013 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Annual Review 2008 PDF Sanofi Aventis Retrieved 19 April 2009 Mozobil approved for non hodgkin s lymphoma and multiple myeloma Press release Monthly Prescribing Reference 18 December 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2009 Mozobil approved for non Hodgkin s lymphoma and multiple myeloma Press release Monthly Prescribing Reference 18 December 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2009 Recommended Allergy Medicine in the UAE Telfast Recommended Allergy Medicine in the UAE Telfast Enterogermina Probiotic Medicine for Diarrhea in UAE Enterogermina Oral Suspension Medicine For Diarrhea in the UAE Cough Medicine UAE Eliminate Excess Mucus amp Phlegm Mucosolvan Cough And Cold Medicine To Eliminate Mucus Mucosolvan Kolata Gina 9 July 2013 Rare Mutation Ignites Race for Cholesterol Drug The New York Times Retrieved 27 November 2019 Alirocumab on Regeneron s website Archived from the original on 16 April 2012 Retrieved 11 December 2020 John Carroll for FierceBiotech 7 March 2014 UPDATED Regeneron Sanofi and Amgen shares suffer on FDA s frets about PCSK9 class John Carroll for FierceBiotech 22 November 2013 Regeneron Sanofi hit a trio of goals in first PhIII test of rheumatoid arthritis drug board of directors sanofi com Retrieved 23 January 2021 PharmaLive 4 September 2019 Sanofi picks CEO successor Executive Committee Sanofi Sanofi sanofi com Retrieved 23 January 2021 Sanofi recruits Francois Xavier Roger Annual Report 2013 PDF Sanofi Aventis Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2014 Retrieved 13 April 2014 MarketWatch 29 April 2011 Total CFO says firm cut Sanofi stake to under 5 Sanofi Aventis regroupement a Paris Le Journal du Net Retrieved on 28 September 2010 Kansteiner Fraiser 28 November 2022 Sanofi moves into swanky new Paris HQ designed around hybrid work and sustainability Fierce Pharma Retrieved 29 November 2022 Press Release Sanofi moves into its new Paris global headquarters Sanofi www sanofi com Retrieved 29 November 2022 Mattes William B 2008 Public Consortium Efforts in Toxicogenomics In Mendrick Donna L Mattes William B eds Essential Concepts in Toxicogenomics Methods in Molecular Biology Vol 460 pp 221 238 doi 10 1007 978 1 60327 048 9 11 ISBN 978 1 58829 638 2 PMID 18449490 InnoMed PredTox Member Organizations Archived from the original on 26 September 2008 Retrieved 25 August 2008 Innovative Medicines Initiative IMI Call Topics 2008 IMI GB 018v2 24042008 CallTopics pdf European Commission Archived from the original on 15 October 2009 Retrieved 25 August 2008 Sanofi aventis Charite University Sign Cooperation Agreement News article from InfoGrok Sanofi Earns Slump in Q3 as Competition Heats Up The New York Times 25 October 2012 dead link Sanofi pasteur Awarded 97 Million HHS Contract to Accelerate Cell Culture Pandemic Influenza Vaccine Development 4 January 2005 Archived from the original on 25 April 2005 Retrieved 12 June 2013 a b April 2012 Inspectional Observations form 483 U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Vaccines Blood amp Biologics 12 April 2012 retrieved 29 January 2016 Fine P E M 2004 Issues relating to the use of BCG in immunization programmes A discussion document WHO V amp B 99 23 PDF Geneva WHO Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2012 Palmer Eric 10 September 2014 Merck again shipping BCG cancer treatment but Sanofi still is not Shortages of bladder cancer and tuberculosis treatment have persisted for two years FiercePharma Palmer Eric 31 March 2015 Sanofi Canada vax plant again producing ImmuCyst bladder cancer drug FiercePharma retrieved 29 January 2016 Sanofi and GSK selected for Operation Warp Speed to supply United States Government with 100 million doses of COVID 19 vaccine 31 July 2020 retrieved 7 August 2020 Sanofi and GSK land 2 1 billion deal with U S for Covid 19 vaccine development and 100 million doses 31 July 2020 retrieved 7 August 2020 Sanofi accelerates coronavirus vaccine plans 24 June 2020 retrieved 7 August 2020 Novavax Announces Positive Phase 1 Data for its COVID 19 Vaccine Candidate 4 August 2020 archived from the original on 13 June 2021 retrieved 7 August 2020 Phase 3 clinical trial of investigational vaccine for COVID 19 begins 27 July 2020 retrieved 7 August 2020 U S agrees to pay Sanofi and GSK 2 1 billion for 100 million doses of coronavirus vaccine 31 July 2020 retrieved 7 August 2020 Sanofi a straggler in the Covid 19 vaccine race accelerates its plans 23 June 2020 retrieved 7 August 2020 France s Sanofi halts work on mRNA Covid vaccine amid success of Pfizer Moderna France 24 28 September 2021 Retrieved 29 September 2021 French drugmaker Sanofi halts development of its mRNA COVID vaccine euronews 28 September 2021 Retrieved 29 September 2021 The Pharmaceutical Industry in Figures 2008 Edition European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations EFPIA p 49 Archived from the original on 16 September 2008 Retrieved 25 August 2008 BIO Member Directory BIO BIO Retrieved 22 September 2018 Members PhRMA Phrma org Retrieved 22 September 2018 Members Europabio Archived from the original on 27 April 2014 Retrieved 19 April 2014 Tazrout Zacharie 11 June 2021 Orange Generali Sanofi and Capgemini launch Future4care a start up accelerator Actu IA in French Retrieved 7 July 2021 Schenker Jennifer L 11 June 2021 Future4Care Four Corporates Team To Make Europe A Global Leader in E Health The Innovator Retrieved 7 July 2021 Englisch Aventis Foundation in German Retrieved 14 September 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sanofi Official website 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