French pharmaceutical giant Sanofi said Friday that its first quarter sales surged in part due to stockpiling of the painkiller Doliprane, as other companies around the world struggle during the coronavirus pandemic.
Sales of Doliprane—paracetamol which can alleviate the fever and aches associated with the virus—shot up by more than 20 percent, helping boost the firm’s net sales by 6.9 percent to nearly nine billion euros ($9.6 billion).
“COVID-19 stocking in channels explains about half of company sales growth in Q1,” the company said in a statement.
The company also credited sales of Dupixent, a treatment for atopic dermatitis and asthma, which soared by nearly 130 percent.
Sanofi said its net income grew by 15.9 percent over the first three months of 2020, with “roughly half of this growth due to COVID-19 impact.”
The Paris-based pharma giant has also started collaborations to work on a coronavirus vaccine that is hoped will enter clinical trials this year, potentially making it available in the second half of 2021.
Meanwhile, it has launched two studies into whether hydroxychloroquine, a drug for rheumatoid arthritis and lupus which Sanofi sells under the brand name Plaquenil, can be an effective treatment for coronavirus patients.
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