Talk:Roivant Sciences/Archive 1
This is an archive of past discussions about Roivant Sciences. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 |
Possible Edits
I have a COI with the company , but would like to suggest some factual edits/corrections below. Thanks!
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. did part see below. |
1. There is no comma in “Roivant Sciences, Ltd.” it’s just “Roivant Sciences Ltd.” Source: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1679082/000119312516727309/d221801dex1011.htm
2. A small grammar correction: It should be “the company’s subsidiaries” not “the companies subsidiaries”
3. There is now a new logo which is on the website and image is here: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5710e74360b5e95e7434951a/t/58c01b61f7e0abb09ddbdad9/1488984934768/
Also, a lot has changed at the company recently so wanted to include some recent news that might be helpful when editing this page moving forward.
1. Topline data from MINDSET is slated to read out in September. Source: https://www.statnews.com/2017/04/10/axovant-new-ceo-david-hung/
2. Enzyvant developing a therapy for Complete DiGeorge Syndrome. Sources: http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/2017/03/pharmaceutical-company-roivant-sciences-collaborates-with-duke-community-in-drug-research and http://medcitynews.com/2017/04/enzyvant-regenerative-medicine-advanced-therapy-rmat-designation/ and https://endpts.com/ramaswamys-enzyvant-scores-a-double-barreled-fda-commitment-to-help-hustle-a-rare-disease-drug-through-its-bla/
3. Relugolix has generate positive Phase 2 trial data for both uterine fibroids and endometriosis-associated pain. Sources: https://endometriosisnews.com/2017/05/22/myovant-presenta-positive-phase-2-results-relugolix-endometriosis-pain/ and http://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/myovant-showcases-positive-relugolix-data-will-pfizer-swoop
4. Dermavant purchased the topical rights to cerdulatinib, a Syk/JAK inhibitor, from Portola Pharmaceuticals. It is also advancing a PDE4 inhibitor in-licensed from Eisai. Source: https://endpts.com/is-biopharmas-midas-man-vivek-ramaswamy-building-a-new-ipo-vehicle-with-dermavant-deal/
Thanks 50.75.206.4 (talk) 20:10, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
- Will fix the typos. If the company wants to upload its logo to the commons, the link to do that is here. Make sure who ever does it grants the proper license.
- With respect to 1 and 3 - we do not present content about health (like early clinical trial results) based on those kind of sources and we do not care about the timing of release of clinical trial data. This is an encyclopedia not the company's website or some investor board. I will look at items 2 and 4. Jytdog (talk) 20:15, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
Some corrections/additions to consider
I have a COI with the company, but would like to give some factual corrections/additions below. Thank you!
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. |
1. Roivant launched a new subsidiary, Urovant, on June 6, 2017. That company is focused on urologic diseases and its initial drug will be developed for overactive bladder (OAB). Sources: http://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/roivant-launches-urovant-phase-3-merck-med and http://fortune.com/2017/06/06/biotech-merck-ramaswamy/ and https://endpts.com/ramaswamy-notches-his-5th-biotech-startup-in-3-years-after-inking-a-deal-with-merck-for-phiii-urology-drug/
2. Two errors on Enzyvant bullet: RVT-802 is being developed for “complete DiGeorge Syndrome” (as opposed to standard “DiGeorge Syndrome”), and the treatment involves “thymus tissue,” not "thyroid tissue” as the article current states. Source: http://medcitynews.com/2017/04/enzyvant-regenerative-medicine-advanced-therapy-rmat-designation/?rf=1
3. For Axovant bullet: intepirdine is being developed for Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) in addition to Alzheimer’s disease (minor point, but it is “Alzheimer’s” disease not “Alzheimers” disease). Sources: http://www.wkyc.com/news/health/lewy-body-dementia-second-most-common-form-of-neurodegenerative-dementia-behind-alzheimers/315225308 and http://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/community/chapel-hill-news/article130991774.html The second article also notes that Axovant is also sponsoring Phase 2 trials looking at whether another drug in its pipeline, nelotanserin, can safely and effectively treat visual hallucinations for patients with with Lewy Body Dementia and REM sleep disorders for patients with DLB. Additional source: http://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/early-win-means-phase-3-test-way-for-axovant-s-dementia-drug
4. For Myovant bullet: Myovant does not have a “worldwide license” for relugolix, it has a global license *excluding Japan and certain other Asian countries” (those rights are retained by Takeda). Sources: http://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/myovant-showcases-positive-relugolix-data-will-pfizer-swoop and https://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanvardi/2016/10/27/the-woman-at-the-center-of-the-biggest-biotech-ipo-of-the-year/#3f2cbff06b08 and http://www.bioworld.com/content/roivants-myovant-sciences-files-173m-ipo-fund-its-phase-iii-ready-asset
5. For Dermavant bullet: Dermavant has three drugs in development, not two. In addition to the two mentioned, there is an oral caspase-1 inhibitor (RVT-201). The available external sources are admittedly not great, but it is inaccurate to state “As of December 2016 it had two drug candidates” since it already had three at that time. Sources: http://adisinsight.springer.com/drugs/800047675 and http://www.biospace.com/News/dermavant-sciences-announces-licensing-of-topical/442576 (under “About Dermavant Sciences”).
6. Roivant’s new logo can be found here:
50.75.206.4 (talk) 13:34, 15 June 2017 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is not going to be a blow-by-blow update to the various companies' pipelines - that is what their websites are for. I will go back over this and remove some detail so you can stop wasting your time (and ours) with pipeline updates. I fixed the thymus error, thanks for pointing that out. More anon. Jytdog (talk) 13:42, 15 June 2017 (UTC)
- Note: Marked as partial. jd22292 (Jalen D. Folf) (talk) 19:16, 11 July 2017 (UTC)
Additions
I have a COI, but wanted to see if someone could add in two things. Thanks
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. |
1. Roivant launched a new subsidiary, Urovant, on June 6, 2017. That company is focused on urologic diseases and its initial drug will be developed for overactive bladder (OAB). Sources: http://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/roivant-launches-urovant-phase-3-merck-med http://fortune.com/2017/06/06/biotech-merck-ramaswamy/ https://endpts.com/ramaswamy-notches-his-5th-biotech-startup-in-3-years-after-inking-a-deal-with-merck-for-phiii-urology-drug/ http://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/news/newsroivant-forms-new-subsidiary-to-develop-urology-therapies-5836970
2. Could we add the CEOs of Roivant’s subsidiaries: Enzyvant: Alvin Shih Source: https://techcrunch.com/2017/01/06/this-millennial-wants-to-build-the-berkshire-hathaway-of-biopharmaceutical-companies-can-he-pull-it-off/ Myovant CEO: Lynn Seely Source: https://techcrunch.com/2017/01/06/this-millennial-wants-to-build-the-berkshire-hathaway-of-biopharmaceutical-companies-can-he-pull-it-off/ Axovant: David Hung Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-400-million-man-1491838810 Dermavant: Jackie Fouse Source: http://fortune.com/2017/07/10/biotech-celgene-roivant-ceo/
207.38.201.53 (talk) 12:20, 6 August 2017 (UTC)
- Did the urovant thing; the CEOs are UNDUE here. 01:38, 7 August 2017 (UTC)
Another addition for consideration:
Could we also add Datavant to the subsidiaries section? Datavant is a new technology-focused subsidiary aimed at using artifical intelligence (AI) to unlock insights in health care datasets. Datavant is the first company in the Roivant family to operate outside of traditional biopharmaceutical development.
Sources: https://techcrunch.com/2017/08/09/roivant-which-creates-companies-around-orphaned-drugs-just-raised-1-1-billion-from-softbank/?ncid=rss and https://www.wired.com/story/softbank-invests-roivant/ 50.75.206.4 (talk) 16:08, 24 August 2017 (UTC)
- Both of those refs talk about plans, not about Datavant actually being created already. Jytdog (talk) 21:04, 24 August 2017 (UTC)
- Here is another article that points to the launch of Datavant including its new CEO Travis May. Source: https://endpts.com/tech-maven-travis-may-takes-the-helm-of-roivants-data-mining-startup/ 50.75.206.4 (talk) 15:34, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
Updates
I have a COI with the company but I noticed the article is out of date and wanted to suggest a series of edits to be implemented. Thank you.
1. Roivant licenses more than “late-stage” drug candidates (see Genevant, Axovant gene therapy deals below), so more accurate to say “a company that in-licenses investigational drugs and develops them through subsidiaries.”
2. The company and its affiliates now have offices in:
a. San Francisco, C.A. Source: https://www.xconomy.com/national/2018/01/08/axovant-neuro-drug-stumbles-and-falls-in-phase-2-shares-drop-50/
b. San Diego, C.A. Source: https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/roivant-launches-lung-focused-respivant-phase-2-ipf-drug
c. Irvine, C.A. Source: https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/urovant-poaches-allergan-urology-head-as-new-cmo
d. Brisbane, C.A. Source: http://www.finsmes.com/2017/08/roivant-sciences-raises-1-1-billion-in-equity-funding.html
e. Cambridge, M.A. Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/matthewherper/2018/07/09/vivek-ramaswamys-enzyvant-asks-fda-to-approve-treatment-for-dying-babies/#6fa8c2211007
f. China (Beijing and Shanghai). Source: https://endpts.com/vivek-ramaswamy-strikes-again-this-time-launching-a-beijing-based-biotech-player-with-a-pipeline/
g. Canada (Vancouver) Source: https://www.biospace.com/article/another-notch-on-the-belt-as-ramaswamy-launches-genevant/
3. New subsidiary launched: Datavant. Aims to “de-silo different data sets across healthcare.” Source: https://endpts.com/what-do-you-get-when-you-integrate-healthcare-data-from-multiple-sources-into-one-comprehensive-global-package-travis-may-says-hes-on-track-to-find-out/
4. New subsidiary launched: Sinovant “aimed at developing innovative treatments for some of China’s most pressing medical concerns.” Launched with a pipeline of 11 investigational biopharmaceutical products for Greater China and other Asian markets, including four therapies suitable for Phase III clinical trial application or registration in China. Source: https://www.biospace.com/article/roivant-launches-new-china-based-startup-sinovant-sciences/
5. New subsidiary launched: Respivant “built around an inhaled drug for treating chronic cough in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.” Source: https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/roivant-launches-lung-focused-respivant-phase-2-ipf-drug
6. New subsidiary launched: Genevant “working on a range of RNA-based therapeutics backed by Arbutus’ proprietary lipid nanoparticle and ligand conjugate delivery technologies.” Source: https://endpts.com/vivek-ramaswamy-is-diving-into-rna-launching-a-new-biotech-with-arbutus-and-a-team-of-vets/
7. New subsidiary launched: Metavant a “cardiometabolic disease startup” which holds rights to glucagon receptor antagonist and an oral oxidative phosphorylation blocker. Source: https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/roivant-licenses-ligand-diabetes-drug-founds-metavant-as-push-into-cardiometabolic-diseases
8. New subsidiary launched: Immunovant, built around “a fully human monoclonal antibody targeting the neonatal Fc receptor.” Source: https://www.biospace.com/article/roivant-taps-genentech-veteran-as-operating-chair-ahead-of-pipeline-day/
9. New subsidiary launched: Altavant, built around “a possible treatment for pulmonary arterial hypertension and other indications.” Source: https://www.biospace.com/article/big-shakeup-and-restructuring-at-vivek-ramaswamy-s-roivant-companies/
10. After discontinuing intepirdine, Axovant has licensed several investigational gene therapies for Parkinson’s disease, oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, and other conditions. Source: https://endpts.com/focused-on-rebuilding-the-pipeline-axovants-new-crew-assembles-another-preclinical-gene-therapy-deal/; https://endpts.com/picking-up-the-pieces-left-from-an-alzheimers-implosion-axovant-is-starting-over-by-diving-into-gene-therapy/
11. Add “biopharmaceutical” to industry listing as subsidiary companies such as Genevant and Immunovant are operating in that space (i.e. biotech rather than conventional pharmaceutical)
12. Update leadership:
a. Add: Myrtle Potter, Dr. Frank Torti, Adele Gulfo, Sam Azoulay, Ben Zimmer, Allen Waxman. Source: https://endpts.com/genentech-vet-myrtle-potter-takes-a-leading-role-in-vivek-ramaswamys-fast-moving-vant-ops/; https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/roivant-appoints-nea-partner-frank-torti-as-overseer-its-vant-subsidiaries; https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/ex-pfizer-execs-join-roivant-s-c-suite; https://www.biospace.com/article/big-shakeup-and-restructuring-at-vivek-ramaswamy-s-roivant-companies/; https://endpts.com/lundbeck-ceo-bags-20m-bonus-jumping-ship-for-teva-helm/
b. Remove: Dr. Lawrence Friedhoff, William Symonds, Marianne Romeo (employed but not senior leadership and not listed in the cited article)
13. Financing history (if including SoftBank might make sense to list earlier rounds):
a. May 2014 seed round - $93 million lead by QVT Financial, included Dexcel Pharma. Source: https://techcrunch.com/2017/08/09/roivant-which-creates-companies-around-orphaned-drugs-just-raised-1-1-billion-from-softbank/;
b. December 2015 PE/Growth round - $500 million lead by Viking Global. Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanvardi/2016/07/13/billionaire-andreas-halvorsens-hedge-fund-backs-private-biotech-roivant-sciences/#5fa85b892455
c. August 2017 PE/Growth round - $1.1 billion lead by Softbank Vision Fund, with participation from Founders Fund. Source: https://techcrunch.com/2017/08/09/roivant-which-creates-companies-around-orphaned-drugs-just-raised-1-1-billion-from-softbank/
14. In June 2018 Roivant laid off 67 employees, not 70. source: https://www.fiercebiotech.com/roivant-lays-off-staff-reassigns-others-major-reshuffle
15. Add in the logo picture that I’ve uploaded to wiki commons linked here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Roivant_Logo.png
— Preceding unsigned comment added by 136.24.120.116 (talk) 22:50, 12 October 2018 (UTC)
Update Requests
I've recently been asked by Roivant Sciences to look over their page and to try to get their recent edit requests implemented. I'm hoping that these requests can be implemented by the many active editors I see on the page and I'm certainly open for any discussions about making this page more accurate and up-to-date. Thank you for any help with this project! FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 10:36, 31 October 2018 (UTC)
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Editing
I've recently started to implement some of the changes I outlined above as a stated COI editor. I'd love feedback and discourse to help the page stay current and accurate. Thanks! FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 08:11, 6 November 2018 (UTC)
Edit requests from COI editor
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. Please see the Reply section below for additional information about this request. |
I accidentally made these changes as a COI editor recently and now understand that I need to submit them for review and to have them implemented by all of you. I'd appreciate assistance with these changes and a conversation about what may work and what may not.
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I'd like this paragraph updated. Reference remains the same.
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FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:43, 14 November 2018 (UTC)
Reply 14-NOV-2018
Edit request partially implemented
- The Urovant paragraph was updated.
- The proposed additional text was not added, as it contained unattributed quoted material. Quotes must be properly attributed, per MOS:QUOTE.
- The paragraph concerning Datavent was omitted, as its text was insufficiently paraphrased from the source material. All added text must be placed in an editor's own words and phrasing, per WP:CLOSEPARAPHRASE.
- The use of they when referring to the company was changed to the company.
- The use of Dr. when referring to the company's leadership was omitted, per MOS:DOCTOR.
- Punctuation which followed ref notes was moved to precede ref notes, per MOS:PUNCTREF.
Regards, Spintendo 12:59, 14 November 2018 (UTC)
Edit requests from COI editor
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. Please see the Reply section below for additional information about this request. |
I’m resubmitting these requests with rewording, being careful not to have unattributed quotes or paraphrased materials from source material. I’ve also asked for a few small wording changes that are new. I appreciate all assistance and feedback on these ideas.
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Thanks!FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:26, 18 November 2018 (UTC)
Reply to edit request 20-NOV-2018
Below you will see where proposals from your request have been quoted with reviewer decisions and feedback inserted underneath, either accepting, declining or otherwise commenting upon your proposal(s). Please read the enclosed notes within the proposal review section below for information on each request. Spintendo 08:05, 20 November 2018 (UTC)
Proposal review 20-NOV-2018
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Edit request: COI editor
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. Please see the reply section below for additional information about this request. |
I’m requesting a few more edits as a COI editor and I look forward to your feedback.
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Thank you! FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 04:09, 5 December 2018 (UTC)
Reply to edit request 05-DEC-2018
Below you will see where proposals from your request have been quoted with reviewer decisions and feedback inserted underneath, either accepting, declining or otherwise commenting upon your proposal(s). Please read the enclosed notes within the proposal review section below for information on each request. Spintendo 10:55, 5 December 2018 (UTC)
Proposal review 05-DEC-2018
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Edit request
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest was declined. Some or all of the changes weren't supported by neutral, independent sources. |
In my last edit request, I received feedback from @Spintendo: that I needed to find references from outside of the pharmaceutical space. I'm including the sentences I'd like added with the references I've found. Thanks for your help, Spintendo and anyone else who might help me here.
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FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:12, 16 December 2018 (UTC)
Reply 16-DEC-2018
Additional references requested
- The references from Parkinson's News Today and Muscular Dystrophy News Today are not unconnected to the pharmaceutical industry.
- The reference labeled BBC World Service is actually a Cincinnati-based NPR affiliate reporting on claims affecting a business, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC) which operates in Cincinnati. There exists a connection between the radio station and its listener market on one side and Aruvent on the other, who are subsidiaries of Roivant. Just as local stories in a city have a pull on the reporting resources of a station operating within the same city, this radio station is not independent when it is reporting on a story about a company operating in the same city the radio station operates in.
Please provide secondary sources which are unconnected to either side of the actors involved here — both Roivant / the pharmaceutical industry and CCHMC. Regards, Spintendo 15:30, 16 December 2018 (UTC)
Offering other sources
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Trying again to hit the nail on the head with the type of references requested by @Spintendo:. I'm including the sentences I'd like added with the references I've found. Thanks for your help, Spintendo, and anyone else who might help me here.
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FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 10:00, 17 December 2018 (UTC)
Reply 18-DEC-2018
- Despite the direction to place the first claim "after reference 21", the claim was placed under the same bullet point as other information regarding Axovent, after ref tag number #20.
Regards, Spintendo 16:13, 18 December 2018 (UTC)
Request to add one subsidiary
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
I'd like to request that one sentence be added to the list of subsidiaries.
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FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 09:36, 7 January 2019 (UTC)
Reply 07-JAN-2019
- Please clarify what is meant by therapeutic focus, per MOS:IDIOM. As a rule, items which are explainable through brevity may often be clouded by vagueness. Please describe in what way the company focuses on PAH and what it is about that focus that makes the mentioning of its work necessary for the article. This enhanced explanation may help readers who are not familiar with disease states and how companies who treat them describe this attention as a "focusing" of their activities.[a]
Regards, Spintendo 01:04, 8 January 2019 (UTC)
Notes
- ^ The language of "focusing" is one used by select industries, such as healthcare, but is foreign to many other industries where the term is not used (i.e., a gardener does not "focus on weed extraction", etc.) The meaning should be made more clear to readers.
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
I'm resubmitting my request to add one sentence. I've tried to clarify what a "therapeutic focus" means. Thanks!
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FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:37, 10 January 2019 (UTC)
Reply 10-JAN-2019
- Thank you for the change in tone for this claim. By using plain-spoken non-industry preferred language, the claim seems more informational as a news item and less like part of a brochure for the company.
- The word new as in "new treatment" was omitted per MOS:RELTIME.
Regards, Spintendo 11:06, 10 January 2019 (UTC)
Edit request
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest was declined. Some or all of the changes weren't supported by neutral, independent, reliable sources. Consider re-submitting with content based on media, books and scholarly works. |
I'd like to request that one sentence be added to the list of subsidiaries.
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Thank you! FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:57, 23 January 2019 (UTC)
Reply 23-JAN-2019
- Extraordinary claims require extraordinary references. "Reducing the cost of commercializing medicines" is just such a claim. Please provide references from reliable secondary and third-party sources.
Regards, Spintendo 07:15, 23 January 2019 (UTC)
- @Spintendo: I certainly understand what you are saying, but I would argue that this company exists (as we know) and has a plan (which makes readers understand what their purpose is). I offer a few ideas, but the third idea leaves the reader without a clear understanding of the company's purpose. In terms of references (as we've discussed in the past) it's a biotech company and is being written up in biotech, pharmaceutical and medical publications. These are all the available references at this time.
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Thank you for all of your assistance and input, FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 09:13, 23 January 2019 (UTC)
Revised edit request
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
In response to the feedback I received to my last edit request for Roivant Sciences, I have formulated the sentence I would like added in a new way. This is intended to be added at the end of the list of subsidiaries.
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Here are three suggestions that I'm making. I'd prefer to have the first sentence used, but I've written sentences 2 and 3 as alternatives depending on what the editor finds most acceptable. I don't have any other references to offer at this time. It's a biotech company and is being written up in biotech, pharmaceutical and medical publications.
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Thank you for any assistance you can offer, FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:54, 27 January 2019 (UTC)
- As the company was only just recently created, any discussion about "what it was formed to do" is to describe a future, hoped-for state of affairs. When a claim is from a company regarding its plans for itself in the future, the claim is not about what was — rather, it discusses what will be — which cannot be done, per WP:NOTACRYSTALBALL. If the company was formed, then that can be mentioned. What the plans are for the company are claims about the future, and cannot be included using Wikipedia's voice. In order to include this claim, the language needs to specify that it is the company itself which is making these claims about its future self (i.e., "Alyvant was formed in January 2019. The company has stated that its goal is to enhance exchanges of information between patients and their physicians" versus "Alyvant was formed in January 2019 to connect patient and physician data."). This improved wording should be referenced by reliable WP:SECONDARY sources unconnected to the company itself.[a] Spintendo 11:40, 27 January 2019 (UTC)
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Edit to intro
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
I'm requesting a change in the first sentence of the article where it says: Roivant Sciences Ltd. is a pharmaceutical company that in-licenses late-stage drug candidates and develops them through subsidiaries. The wording "late-stage" is not accurate since they have some companies with early stage assets like Axovant, Genevant and Enzyvant (to name a few) and other companies with other focuses in the healthcare space. I'd like to propose that we remove the wording "late-stage" so that the sentence would read "Roivant Sciences Ltd. is a pharmaceutical company that in-licenses drug candidates and develops them through subsidiaries." I can provide other references, if needed, but I think the current ones speak to this change sufficiently. Thank you for any assistance FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:13, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
Reply 14-FEB-2019
- When the term late-stage was originally added in 2016, the statement it appeared in was worded as such:
"Roivant does this by looking for promising drugs that are not being developed by other biopharmaceutical companies due to financial reasons or commercial alignments, and takes those drugs from where they were left off in late-stage clinical development and brings them through the final stages of approval.
Please confirm whether or not this is still the case so that the sentence may either be clarified or omitted. When ready to proceed with the requested information, kindly change the{{request edit}}
template's answer parameter to read from|ans=yes
to|ans=no
. Thank you!
Regards, Spintendo 10:28, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
- Thank you for your diligence @Spintendo: The answer to your question is as follows. While the current wording was true at the time, Roivant’s pipeline and business model have expanded significantly since. Their mission is to deliver innovative medicines and technologies to patients and they have moved away from solely late stage clinical development. Notably, they've in-licensed a number of medicines that fall outside of the traditional early stage/late stage drug development paradigm, such as gene therapy assets for Aruvant, Axovant, and Urovant or RNA therapeutic platform for Genevant. Additionally, their subsidiaries Datavant and Alyvant, focused on health data and patient analytics respectively, operate outside of the biopharmaceutical company model. Because of the developments, they believe that there is space for greater clarification in how the statement is currently phrased. I look forward to your reply FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:17, 17 February 2019 (UTC)
- Thank you for your reply. Based on your answer, the question of what to do here seems simple enough, in that the sentence should be re-worded to state that Roivant originally dealt in "late stage" clinical development, but now operates in an otherwise configuration. Spintendo 14:18, 18 February 2019 (UTC)
- Thank you for your diligence @Spintendo: The answer to your question is as follows. While the current wording was true at the time, Roivant’s pipeline and business model have expanded significantly since. Their mission is to deliver innovative medicines and technologies to patients and they have moved away from solely late stage clinical development. Notably, they've in-licensed a number of medicines that fall outside of the traditional early stage/late stage drug development paradigm, such as gene therapy assets for Aruvant, Axovant, and Urovant or RNA therapeutic platform for Genevant. Additionally, their subsidiaries Datavant and Alyvant, focused on health data and patient analytics respectively, operate outside of the biopharmaceutical company model. Because of the developments, they believe that there is space for greater clarification in how the statement is currently phrased. I look forward to your reply FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:17, 17 February 2019 (UTC)
Request edit 20-FEB-2019
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
In response to my discussion with @Spintendo: I've come up with language that should meet all of the requirements for the first sentence of the article. It currently says "Roivant Sciences Ltd. is a pharmaceutical company that in-licenses late-stage drug candidates and develops them through subsidiaries." I propose that the language be changed to say: Roivant Sciences Ltd. is a biopharmaceutical company that builds subsidiary biotech and health technology companies.[1][2] The company’s initial strategy was in-licensing late-stage drug candidates but has since expanded its business model to develop earlier stage drug candidates and other healthcare technologies. [3] [4][5] Thank you for your consideration FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 09:54, 20 February 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Vardi, Nathan (13 July 2016). "Billionaire Andreas Halvorsen's Hedge Fund Backs Private Biotech Roivant Sciences". Forbes. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
- ^ Vardi, Nathan (9 September 2015). "The 30-Year-Old CEO Conjuring Drug Companies From Thin Air". Forbes. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
- ^ Spalding, Rebecca. "SoftBank-Backed Biotech Roivant Climbs to $7 Billion Valuation". Bloomberg. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
- ^ Terry, Mark. "Roivant Sciences Raises $200 Million, Bringing Its Valuation to $7 Billion". Biospace. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
- ^ Rogers, Adam. "A Japanese Telecom Giant Bets $1 Billion on Pharma". Wired. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
Reply 20-FEB-2019
Edit request implemented Spintendo 10:09, 20 February 2019 (UTC)
- Thank you for your help @Spintendo:! FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:05, 21 February 2019 (UTC)
New edit requests
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. [See below] |
I have four requests as a COI editor. Thank you.
Extended content
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1.
2.
3.
4.
References
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Thank you FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:01, 16 April 2019 (UTC)
Reply 16-APR-2019
Below you will see where proposals from your request have been quoted with reviewer decisions and feedback inserted underneath, either accepting, declining or otherwise commenting upon your proposal(s). Please read the enclosed notes within the proposal review section below for information on each request. Spintendo 10:00, 16 April 2019 (UTC)
Proposal review 16-APR-2019
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- @Spintendo:: Thank you for your fast attention to my last set of requests. I'd like to clarify why I requested "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries. Most of the cuts were in support functions including accounting, human resources, and IT.” [1]
- Rationale behind request: The restructuring was a significant change to Roivant’s business model. Previously, Roivant supported all of the Vants centrally, including scientific, operations, and back office support for (HR, IT, accounting, etc) as needed. As part of this restructuring (or decentralization as some call it), all business and operating functions were moved to the Vant level and Roivant no longer had to support most of the infrastructure for these groups, leading to a leaner organization overall. Much of this explanation is also offered in this article from fiercebiotech: "Most of the affected employees will find new homes at Roivant’s portfolio of startups. Roivant is set up to provide scientific support and other services to its eight "vant" startups from its own facilities and offices, lessening the need for each business to have its own infrastructure. Pursuing that model, Roivant has expanded in Durham, North Carolina, in recent years, picking up scientists let go by other business that used to have big presences in the region. The changes suggests Roivant is now tweaking that model, reassigning some of its staff to the subsidiaries. Such an administrative change would give leadership teams at each subsidiary more direct control over the people handling their projects."[2]
FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:26, 17 April 2019 (UTC) Thanks for your attention to this!
Request to add a sentence
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
A bit over a week ago I requested to have a sentence added after the sentence that says "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries.”
- I am requesting to add this sentence “Most of the cuts were in support functions including accounting, human resources, and IT.” [1]
- I was asked to provide more explanation for this additional sentence and the explanation is below. I appreciate having someone evaluate this sentence and add it if they agree it explains the situation better.
Rationale: The restructuring was a significant change to Roivant’s business model. Previously, Roivant supported all of the Vants centrally, including scientific, operations, and back office support for (HR, IT, accounting, etc) as needed. As part of this restructuring (or decentralization as some call it), all business and operating functions were moved to the Vant level and Roivant no longer had to support most of the infrastructure for these groups, leading to a leaner organization overall. Much of this explanation is also offered in this article from fiercebiotech: "Most of the affected employees will find new homes at Roivant’s portfolio of startups. Roivant is set up to provide scientific support and other services to its eight "vant" startups from its own facilities and offices, lessening the need for each business to have its own infrastructure. Pursuing that model, Roivant has expanded in Durham, North Carolina, in recent years, picking up scientists let go by other business that used to have big presences in the region. The changes suggests Roivant is now tweaking that model, reassigning some of its staff to the subsidiaries. Such an administrative change would give leadership teams at each subsidiary more direct control over the people handling their projects."[2]
- Thank you FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:58, 25 April 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ a b Noto, Anthony. "Biotech startup Roivant cuts staff, forms two new subsidiaries". Biz Journals. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
- ^ a b Taylor, Nick Paul. "Roivant cuts staff, reassigns others in major reshuffle, as insider decries 'bloodbath'". FierceBiotech. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
Reply 25-APR-2019
- Thank you for providing this clarification. The clarification was not meant for me alone, but was also meant for readers of the article. Businesses around the world on any given day may restructure their operations to certain degrees. This type of routine business event is usually not noteworthy.
- To prevent the article from being weighted down by irrelevant information — and to guard against the company using this information to sculpt a favorable public view about its business operations[a] — the COI editor was asked to clarify for readers of the article what it was about that restructuring which made it noteworthy enough to mention.
- This clarification should be incorporated into the text of the proposal, taking care to be as brief as possible, and to place the references for those explanations at the exact positions in the text where the clarifications are mentioned. Please note that this clarification should not come directly from the company itself (or its press releases) but rather, should be voiced by unconnected sources.[b]
Regards, Spintendo 11:20, 25 April 2019 (UTC)
Notes
- ^ A business which reshuffles its employees might have that reshuffling viewed negatively by others in the business community. Extra explanations for why this reshuffling took place, including descriptions of it as making for a "leaner" organization — in effect, a healthier one — can have a mitigating effect on many of those views. This type of PR is not the purpose of the article.
- ^ A story reported on by an independent publication which is based primarily on a press release issued by the company (or based on "insider sources") would not count as unconnected.
Reply and clarification
Thanks for the clarification, @Spintendo:. I clearly did not understand that this was the request. I'm not sure now if I should make my request below to you or put in an official request. Please let me know if you'd like me to make an official request.
I have two options that I would like to submit.
- 1. I agree, as you stated, that “this type of routine business event is usually not noteworthy.” To that end, I’d like to suggest that we delete this sentence entirely “"In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries.”
- 2. Should this not be the direction editors are willing to take, then I’d like to add these sentences as a clarification to the restructuring:
- "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries. Most of the cuts were in support functions[1] including accounting, human resources, and IT[2] as Roivant decentralized its business model, moving business and operating functions to the subsidiary level. [3]
Resubmitting the request
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
I'm resubmitting a request that I made after the clarifications offered by @Spintendo:.
I'd like to request one of two things:
- 1. Deletion of the sentence "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries” as this is a routine business event and is not noteworthy.
- 2. Should this not be the direction editors are willing to take, then I’d like to add these sentences as a clarification to the restructuring:
- "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries. Most of the cuts were in support functions[1] including accounting, human resources, and IT[2] as Roivant decentralized its business model, moving business and operating functions to the subsidiary level." [3]
I look forward to getting feedback. Thanks! FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 09:11, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ a b Paavola, Alia. "Roivant cuts 10% of workforce, shuffles leadership: 7 things to know". Beckers Hospital Review. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- ^ a b Noto, Anthony. "Biotech startup Roivant cuts staff, forms two new subsidiaries". Biz Journals. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- ^ a b Terry, Mark. "Big Shakeup and Restructuring at Vivek Ramaswamy's Roivant Companies". BioSpace. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
Reply 30-APR-2019
I'm more comfortable mentioning only the layoffs and reassignments and leaving out the phrase "restructuring" which implies a reason for these actions. Also, the phrase concerning "most of the cuts"
, because the word most runs the risk of garnering a {{By how much}}
inline template.[a] The actions themselves should be all that is mentioned: "In June 2018, Roivant laid off 67 employees while reassigning a further 130 employees to subsidiaries."
The lead section is not ideal for this information, but as the only other section concerns subsidiaries (and the claim concerns both Roivant and its subsidiaries) there seems to be no other location for it. I'd like to know what other editors suggest. Regards, Spintendo 15:52, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
Notes
- ^ "Support functions" is also vague. Theoretically, everyone who isn't an executive would be in a "support position", thus, describing the cuts and/or reassignments as coming from "most(ly) support functions" does not clarify these positions to a great extent.
Question about recent reply
Hi @Spintendo:. I really appreciate all of the feedback that you offer and the time that you take to discuss these issues. I notice that there are very few other editors who chime in, however, or ever come to this page so I wanted to ask you what to do about that. You wrote, above, that you'd like to know what other edtiors think, but how can we generate interest in a discussion? Thanks so much FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:21, 1 May 2019 (UTC)
- @FinalFrontier.003: There's the WikiProject Companies talk page which is well-equipped to handle requests. You might try asking there. We'll leave this request open in the meantime. Regards, Spintendo 15:57, 1 May 2019 (UTC)
- The difficulty I see here is that an expanded explanation on why this restucturing took place may prove illusory. The reasons given before do not delve into levels nearing sufficiency:
"As part of this restructuring (or decentralization as some call it), all business and operating functions were moved to the Vant level and Roivant no longer had to support most of the infrastructure for these groups, leading to a leaner organization overall."
The part left out in that explanation is evident when one considers what it was, about the company, that made its support for most of the infrastructure for these groups unsustainable.
- The difficulty I see here is that an expanded explanation on why this restucturing took place may prove illusory. The reasons given before do not delve into levels nearing sufficiency:
- I don't believe that an answer to this could ever really be sufficiently provided, because it would require a level of frankness for which companies may not be comfortable with or used to expressing. In the end, we would always be left with what the company says are its reasons for doing so — reasons which state what happened (the restructuring) what result was expected to happen (a leaner organization) but not why it happened (in other words, why an action which was previously thought to be sustainable — supporting the Vants in this manner — was later found to be unsustainable).
- Just giving the company supplied reason, even when placed in the company's voice and not Wikipedia's, would offer a disservice to the reader because what sounds like an explanation — that they wanted to become a leaner organization — is not really much of an explanation at all, but is really just a goal. Broad based goals are interesting, but not really encyclopedic. What would be more interesting are the specific motivations behind this particular goal being expressed at this particular time, something I don't think is possible or even verifiable. Mentioning what the company says are its reasons for this appears to be a Pandora's box of WP:SPECULATION which might best be left unopened. Regards, Spintendo 14:43, 2 May 2019 (UTC)
- Agree 100 percent with Spintendo that it would leave things open for speculation. It is also not up to Wikipedia to explain why things happened. I would think something like this would suffice - " "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, moving business and operating functions to the subsidiary level, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries.[3]" - This states what happens without the need to explain why. This is also assuming that the references support the statement as I only looked at the proposed wording, not the source. Also, stating "most of the cuts" reads more like something Roviant needs to address outside of Wikipedia. It leaves even more speculation such as "what were the other cuts," "how many were there that weren't support function," "what happened to these people," etc. --CNMall41 (talk) 15:32, 2 May 2019 (UTC)
- Just giving the company supplied reason, even when placed in the company's voice and not Wikipedia's, would offer a disservice to the reader because what sounds like an explanation — that they wanted to become a leaner organization — is not really much of an explanation at all, but is really just a goal. Broad based goals are interesting, but not really encyclopedic. What would be more interesting are the specific motivations behind this particular goal being expressed at this particular time, something I don't think is possible or even verifiable. Mentioning what the company says are its reasons for this appears to be a Pandora's box of WP:SPECULATION which might best be left unopened. Regards, Spintendo 14:43, 2 May 2019 (UTC)
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
After a discussion with @Spintendo: and @CNMall41: I'm hoping we can agree on the language submitted here: "In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, moving business and operating functions to the subsidiary level, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries." [1][2]
Thank you FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:26, 12 May 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Paavola, Alia. "Roivant cuts 10% of workforce, shuffles leadership: 7 things to know". Beckershospitalreview. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
- ^ Terry, Mark. "Big Shakeup and Restructuring at Vivek Ramaswamy's Roivant Companies". Biospace. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
The standing version is the one agreed upon. Spintendo 16:20, 16 May 2019 (UTC)
- Hi @Spintendo: Can you clarify your recent response to my requested edit when you wrote "The standing version is the one agreed upon" please? The conversation here was only between you and CNMall41 and I wanted to understand if I read something incorrectly in that exchange. CNMall41 wrote "I would think something like this would suffice - 'In June 2018, Roivant restructured its business model, moving business and operating functions to the subsidiary level, laying off 67 employees and reassigning 130 to subsidiaries.'" Given this suggestion, which adds to the overall understanding of what happened with the layoffs and restructuring, I submitted this exact wording in my requested edit. I thought this was a direction that made sense and was being discusssed. Thanks so much FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 06:44, 21 May 2019 (UTC)
One sentence edit request
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
I'm requesting to have this sentence placed at the very end of the intro after the sentence "In June 2018, Roivant laid off 67 employees and reassigned 130 to subsidiaries."
"In September 2019, Roivant entered into a memorandum of understanding for a $3 billion alliance with Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma."[1][2]
Thank you, FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 05:20, 8 September 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Taylor, Nick Paul. "Roivant lines up $3B upfront in Sumitomo Dainippon deal". Fierce Biotech. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
- ^ Swift, Rocky. "Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma investing $3 billion in Swiss Roivant in overseas push". Reutuers. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
Reply 08-SEP-2019
The problem that we have here, is that the Roivant article currently has no main section per se, only Subsidiary and Financial sections which ideally should be subsections of the main section (if there was a main section to be had). In place of this main section, the lead section has become a proxy of sorts for this missing main section. All of the information which should be placed in a main section is being placed in the article's lead section.
Now then, because the lead section is what most readers see first, it appears that a struggle may be taking place where "bad" information (such as layoffs) is requested to be mollified by mitigating "good" information (such as "alliances"). Unfortunately, this newer claim in the proposal contains phrases such as "memorandum of understanding" and "alliance" which is much too vague to be informative. So as it stands, the answer to the request would be Unable to implement because it Needs clarification . That being said, there are a couple of options available to choose from where everyone might come away happy:[a]
- Option 1: The lead section could be stripped of most of the claims which are present there now, and the stripped information would then form the basis of the missing main section I mentioned earlier. That would solve the problem of the layoffs being mentioned in the lead section (which I suspect is the main reason for today's edit request). This is probably the easiest of the options to fulfill, because it involves only rearrainging information.
- Option 2: The proposed claim could be elaborated upon, where it would be re-scripted to explain in full detail what "understandings" have been reached as well as what form this "alliance" would constitute (I say "would" because at this point the alliance is only being forecasted, and has not occurred yet). This option is probably the most difficult of the options to fulfill, because it would involve deconstructing the company's WP:FLOWERY press-release into something more plain-spoken — a task which would likely prove impossible to reference with WP:SECONDARY sources who are independent of the subject.
I invite the COI editor to choose from the above which course to take, or as an alternative, suggest a third or indeed fourth options which I may have overlooked. Please advise. When ready to proceed with the requested information, kindly change the {{request edit}}
template's answer parameter to read from |ans=yes
to |ans=no
. Thank you!
Regards, Spintendo 07:38, 8 September 2019 (UTC)
Notes
- ^
"where everyone might come away happy"
There would be no disagreement from me if I were to be accused of having too-rosy an outlook regarding this — considering the well-known aphorism which states that compromise is when neither side comes away happy.
Reply
Thank you for taking so much time and thought with your answer, @Spintendo:. I definitely think that Option 1 makes sense and that the page is lacking having more subsections. Certainly all of this doesn't need to be in the lead. Many similar pages have a History section, which I believe makes sense to add here. I propose the following material be moved and added to that section:
The company was founded in 2014 by Vivek Ramaswamy.[1] Roivant's initial strategy of in-licensing late-stage drug candidates through subsidiaries was later expanded to develop earlier stage drug candidates and other healthcare technologies through those same subsidiaries.[2] In June 2018, Roivant laid off 67 employees and reassigned 130 to subsidiaries.[3] In September 2019, Roivant entered into a memorandum of understanding for a $3 billion alliance with Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma."[4][5]
I look forward to your reply FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 05:19, 10 September 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Vardi, Nathan (9 September 2015). "The 30-Year-Old CEO Conjuring Drug Companies From Thin Air". Forbes. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
- ^ Spalding, Rebecca. "SoftBank-Backed Biotech Roivant Climbs to $7 Billion Valuation". Bloomberg. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
- ^ Taylor, Nick Paul. "Roivant cuts staff, reassigns others in major reshuffle, as insider decries 'bloodbath'".
- ^ Taylor, Nick Paul. "Roivant lines up $3B upfront in Sumitomo Dainippon deal". Fierce Biotech. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
- ^ Swift, Rocky. "Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma investing $3 billion in Swiss Roivant in overseas push". Reutuers. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
Reply 10-SEP-2019
Edit request implemented Spintendo 06:16, 10 September 2019 (UTC)
Edit Request
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. Please see the reply section below for additional information about this request. |
As a result of recent news and a final agreement for Roivant, I'm requesting the following text changes. At the end of the susidiaries section, I'm requesting to delete the sentence and references that are currently there and to rewrite it to say:
- Current: In September 2019, Roivant entered into an agreement to sell four of its subsidiaries to Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma: Myovant, Urovant, Enzyvant, and Altavant, for $3 billion dollars. A fifth subsidiary which is part of the deal has yet to be identified.[24][25]
- Proposed replacement sentence: In October 2019, Roivant entered into an agreement to transfer its ownership stakes in five of its subsidiaries to Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma: Myovant, Urovant, Engyvant, Altavant and Spirovant. Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma will also receive a greater than 10% stake in Roivant itself. Roivant will receive $3 billion as an upfront cost for this alliance.[1][2]
Thank you FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 07:32, 7 November 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Terry, Mark. "The Roivant-Sumitomo Deal: $3 Billion, 5 Companies, $550 Million in Loans and an Option on 6 More Companies". BioSpace. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
- ^ Carroll, John. "Vivek Ramaswamy trades top execs and adds stealthy vant to $3B sale, while his new partner tosses Myovant $350M". Endpoints News. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
Reply 07-NOV-2019
Edit request partially implemented
- The claim regarding the "transfer of properties" was implemented.
- The claim regarding $3 billion in "upfront costs" was not added because it was worded as taking place in the near WP:FUTURE.
Regards, Spintendo 09:14, 7 November 2019 (UTC)
Reply and additions
Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. Please see the reply section below for additional information about this request. |
Thank you for the assistance with recent edits. I’d like to clean up the page a bit more to reflect these edits and have the following requests.
- 1. Since the $3 billion upfront costs wasn’t added (as it reflected an event from the future), I’d like to propose the following in bold (including a change to the misspelled word Enzyvant): “In October 2019, Roivant announced an agreement to sell five of its subsidiaries, Myovant, Urovant, Enzyvant, Altavant and Spirovant — in addition to a greater than 10% share in itself — to Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma in exchange for a $3 billion upfront payment. “
- 2. I’m requesting to move the Enzyvant sentences currently listed under subsidiaries to be part of the new section of sold subsidiaries (along with Myovant, Urovant and Altavant Sciences) and to reword that bullet which has a note on it that it needs to be clarified.
- It currently reads as: "Enzyvant was founded to develop therapies for rare diseases.[10][11] One of its treatments is human acid ceramidase, being developed as treatment for Farber disease.[12] Another was licensed from Duke University in 2017 and is a potential treatment for a kind of DiGeorge syndrome; the treatment is thymus tissue that is harvested, treated, and implanted in a person with the condition.[clarify][12]"
- I'm proposing to reword it to read as: "Enzyvant was founded to develop therapies for rare diseases.[1] The company’s lead therapeutic candidate, RVT-802, is a thymus tissue implantation therapy for the potential treatment of pediatric congenital athymia.[2] Enyzvant completed a biologic licensing application to the FDA for approval of RVT-802 in June 2019. Another potential treatment is human acid ceramidase, being developed for Farber disease."[3]”
- 3. I’d like to add a bullet for Spirovant to the section of sold subsidiaries. I’d like to suggest the following wording: Spirovant, which is focused on developing gene therapies for cystic fibrosis [4]
Thank you FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 08:42, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Adams, Ben. "Roivant and Plexcera launch rare disease focused spinout". FierceBiotech. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ Park, Brian. "FDA Accepts BLA for Tissue Based Regenerative Tx for Pediatric Congenital Athymia". MPR. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ "New company Enzyvant takes aim at Farber disease". Drug Target Review. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ Pagliarulo, Ned. "Roivant, Sumitomo alliance to target cystic fibrosis gene therapy". BioPharma Dive. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
Reply 12-NOV-2019
Edit request partially implemented
- The incorrect spelling of Enzyvant was corrected.
- The additional claims regarding Enzyvant were omitted, as that company is no longer a part of the article's subject company. Those claims ought to be moved to the Sumitomo article.
- The language used to describe the Sumitomo transaction was changed from sold to agreed to be sold.
- Spirovant was added to the list of agreed to be sold properties.
- The claim regarding the price of the sale to Sumitomo was not added, as the claim describes this as an "upfront payment" without adequately explaining the definition of such a term.[a]
- References which carried the same verifying information (and which in both cases were dated as being published less than 24 hours apart) were consolidated by omitting whichever reference carried the later-published date.
- The list of subsidiaries and the list of agreed to be sold subsidiaries were both placed in alphabetical order.
Regards, Spintendo 11:28, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
Notes
- ^ Primarily the difference between upfront payments and payments made after the fact, including why such a distinction ought to be made here — a reason which was not included with the request.
Tweak request
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Thank you for all of the assistance and explanations. I'd like to request the following, with regard to the $3 billion. Can we add the three words in bold here to the sentence: “In October 2019, Roivant agreed to sell five of its subsidiaries, Myovant, Urovant, Enzyvant, Altavant and Spirovant — in addition to a greater than 10% share in itself — to Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma for $3 billion.” FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 08:36, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
- Implemented Spintendo 11:59, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
Removing the word "reportedly"
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Since the deal between Sumitomo Dainippon and Roivant closed on December 30, 2019, I am requesting that the word "reportedly" be removed from the last sentence in the Subsidiaries section where it says "In October 2019, Roivant agreed to sell five of its subsidiaries, Myovant, Urovant, Enzyvant, Altavant and Spirovant — in addition to a greater than 10% share in itself — to Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma, reportedly for US$3 billion dollars." Coverage of the deal can be found here and here and here. Thank you for your consideration, FinalFrontier.003 (talk) 09:58, 5 January 2020 (UTC)