May 16 (Reuters) - Ozempic-maker Novo Nordisk
on Friday ousted its CEO Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen over concerns
the company is losing its first-mover advantage in the
competitive obesity drug market to American rival Eli Lilly ( LLY )
.
The company has had five CEOs in its more than 100 years of
history. Jorgensen, who joined in 2017, has had the shortest
tenure of all.
Here is a timeline of the company with respect to its CEOs:
-
1920s-2000
Danish couple August and Marie Krogh founded Nordsik
Insulinlaboratorium in 1923 and commercialized the production of
insulin.
The company competed with Novo Terapeutisk Laboratorium,
which was founded by brothers Harald and Thorvald Pedersen,
until the two merged in 1989.
Knud Hallas Molle was Novo's second CEO from 1961 to 1981.
During that time, both companies pursued and developed
techniques to produce pharmaceutical products using
fermentation.
Mads Ovlisen served as CEO of Novo and Novo Nordisk after
its merger from 1981 to 2000.
In 1982, Novo marketed Human Monocomponent Insulin, and in
1987, the first human insulin products were made using
genetically engineered yeast cells. Novo launched the NovoPen -
the first insulin pen device in 1985.
2000-2017
Lars Rebien Sorensen becomes CEO after serving as the head
of Novo's healthcare business. The company's enzymes business
was spun off as a separate company, Novozymes A/S in 2000. In
2004, Levemir - a long-acting modern insulin - was launched.
Under Sorensen, the company develops its first GLP-1 drug, a
precursor to Ozempic and Wegovy. Liraglutide, a GLP-1 product
for treatment of type 2 diabetes, enters phase 3 trials.
Novo Nordisk launches its first GLP-1 product, liraglutide,
branded as Victoza in 2009 in Europe and in 2010 in the U.S.
In 2013, Novo Nordisk's semaglutide starts global phase 3
trials. In December 2016, it files semaglutide for regulatory
approval in the U.S. and the EU, based on the results from the
six trials.
2017-present
In January 2017, Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen became CEO
decades after joining the company as a graduate. In December
2017, Ozempic, also known as semaglutide, gets approved in the
U.S. for diabetes, the first once-weekly GLP-1 drug.
Wegovy, which uses the same active ingredient as Ozempic,
gets approved in the U.S. as a treatment for obesity in June
2021.
In November 2023, U.S. and UK regulators approved Eli
Lilly's ( LLY ) rival weight-loss treatment Zepbound, after the
company's diabetes drug was launched in 2022.
In December 2024, Novo Nordisk's next-generation obesity
drug shows lower-than-expected weight loss in a late-stage
study, dealing a blow to its ambitions for a successor to Wegovy
that is more powerful than rival Lilly's Zepbound.
On May 16, Novo Nordisk says Jorgensen will step down,
citing recent market challenges and a slide in the stock since
mid-2024.
Jorgensen says in an interview with Danish broadcaster TV2
that he did not see the decision coming and was only informed
very recently.