Search This Blog

Monday, April 15, 2019

Janssen INVOKANA Cuts Renal Fail Risk in Diabetes, Kidney Disease Phase 3

  • INVOKANA® is the only medicine in nearly 20 years and the first diabetes medicine to demonstrate significant reduction in risk of renal failure, dialysis or kidney transplantation, and renal or cardiovascular death in this high-risk patient population
  • In the study, INVOKANA® significantly reduced the combined risk of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke, and demonstrated no imbalance in amputation or bone fracture
  • The CREDENCE study was halted early for positive efficacy findings and served as the basis for Janssen’s March 2019 filing of a supplemental New Drug Application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for INVOKANA®
The Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson announced today new results from the Phase 3 CREDENCE study, showing that INVOKANA® (canagliflozin) demonstrated a 30 percent reduction in the risk of the primary composite endpoint, comprised of progression to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), defined as the need for renal replacement therapy (RRT) such as chronic dialysis or renal transplant; doubling of serum creatinine, a key predictor of ESKD; and renal or cardiovascular (CV) death. The landmark study evaluated the efficacy and safety of INVOKANA® versus placebo in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and type 2 diabetes (T2D) when used in addition to standard of care. Study results also showed INVOKANA® reduced the risk of the secondary CV endpoints, including the risk of CV death and hospitalization for heart failure by 31 percent, major adverse CV events (MACE; composite of nonfatal myocardial infarction [MI], nonfatal stroke and CV death) by 20 percent, and the risk of hospitalization for heart failure alone by 39 percent. Importantly, the study showed no imbalance in amputation or bone fracture. Additionally, no new safety concerns were identified in this study of high-risk patients.
The data were presented today during a late-breaking clinical trials session at the International Society of Nephrology (ISN) 2019 World Congress of Nephrology (WCN) in Melbourne, Australia, and simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Gelesis Gets FDA OK for PLENITY™ Aid in Weight Management

LENITY is FDA cleared for the largest number of adults struggling with overweight and obesity (BMI 25-40 kg/m2) of any prescription weight-management aid and the first that can be used, along with diet and exercise, in millions of overweight adults who have never before had prescription options
~6 out of 10 adults treated with PLENITY were responders, losing on average 10% of their weight (22 pounds) and 3.5 inches from their waists within 6 months in pivotal study
PLENITY is a new orally administered, non-stimulant, non-systemic aid in weight management based on proprietary hydrogel technology with a highly favorable safety and efficacy profile demonstrated in clinical studies
Gelesis, a biotechnology company developing first-in-class hydrogel therapeutics to treat obesity and other chronic diseases related to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, today announced that the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cleared the Company’s lead product candidate, PLENITY™ (Gelesis100), as an aid in weight management in adults with a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 25–40 kg/m2, when used in conjunction with diet and exercise. A BMI of 25 kg/m2 and over is the accepted definition of overweight, and a BMI of 30 kg/m2 and above commonly defines obesity.

Ill. sterilization plant closure challenges Minn. medical device makers

Medical device companies across the state are scrambling to prevent product shortages after the abrupt closure of a major plant in Illinois that sterilizes finished medical products.
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency on Feb. 15 ordered the Sterigenics plant in Willowbrook, Ill., to seal its containers of ethylene oxide (EtO) and stop using the chemical to sterilize devices. Although the gas can be used safely to sterilize medical devices, Illinois regulators said the chemical was being emitted from the factory and creating cancer risks for thousands of people near the plant.
With the plant now idle for two months, litigation is ongoing between Sterigenics and Illinois officials in federal and state court over what happens next.
Meanwhile, device makers with big Twin Cities operations like Medtronic, Boston Scientific, Smiths Medical and Teleflex are faced with the prospect of managing customer demand with existing stock or getting regulatory permission to move sterilization functions to another plant.
Medtronic PLC, run from offices in Fridley, said the decision to close the Willowbrookplant is creating “supply challenges” in its surgical-innovations business, which includes minimally invasive surgical stapling devices, vessel-sealing and wound-closure devices, electrosurgery products, hernia mechanical devices, mesh implants and gynecology products.
“Sterilization is a vital requirement for medical technology, and Sterigenics plays an important role as a source of sterilization to Medtronic and others in this industry,” spokesman Fernando Vivanco said in an e-mail.
All eight members of Minnesota’s U.S. House delegation have signed a letter to the FDA urging the agency to act quickly to prevent shortages of medical devices. The letter noted that it normally takes up to six months to get regulatory approval to change a sterilization source for a medical device production system, but many manufacturers affected have only one or two months’ worth of inventory on hand to meet customer demand.
The lawmakers said the environmental concerns in Willowbrook are “very alarming and should continue to be addressed,” but also note in the letter that the sudden closing of the plant ”is posing significant challenges to the supply of lifesaving medical devices.”
All surgical instruments must be sterilized before touching a patient, to prevent microbes left on the device after manufacturing from infecting patients. But many devices are made of soft plastics and other materials that can’t be treated with heat or radiation, which is why the FDA allows companies to use EtO sterilization instead.
EtO is a colorless gas that has long been produced in industrial quantities for a variety of industries, including for materials manufacturing, agricultural fumigation and sterilization of medical products too delicate to be cleaned through other means, like heat or radiation.
“Unfortunately,” the U.S. Labor Department said, “EtO possesses several physical and health hazards that merit special attention.” Chronic exposure, the department said, “has been associated with the occurrence of cancer, reproductive effects, mutagenic changes, neurotoxicity, and sensitization.”
Sterigenics said that on a typical day, the Willowbrook plant sterilized 200 pallets of medical products, including 1,000 cardiac devices, 1,500 surgical-procedure kits, 16,000 catheters, and thousands of diabetes monitoring and care kits, renal care products, neurological devices and respiratory-care products. A letter from the FDA’s medical device branch said that 90% of the work at the plant is related to medical devices, and the closure affects more than 100 manufacturers of devices.
Minnesota health technology trade group the Medical Alley Association said the effect is especially acute for small and midsize companies, for which the Willowbrook plant was the only qualified and validated sterilization source that could handle their smaller product volumes. Medical Alley CEO Shaye Mandle urged the FDA to consider special measures like expediting new requests for sterilization source approvals.
In the wake of the Willowbrook closure, the FDA said it is working with device companies to help them move to another plant or find another acceptable sterilization method.
“Supply issues can lead to shortages of medical devices — and can pose a threat to public health by delaying or disrupting critical care for patients. Mitigating product supply issues and working to prevent patient harm from device shortages are important to the FDA,” the FDA’s web page on the EtO sterilization states.
Teleflex Medical, which in 2017 acquired Minnesota’s Vascular Solutions, said some of its customers may have to go without certain devices, if suitable substitutes can’t be found and the company can’t get a new sterilization process approved by the FDA in time.
Teleflex sells a wide range of products for vascular and interventional procedures, as well as for cardiac and surgical care, anesthesia, respiratory care, urology and emergency medicine. The company sterilizes about 7 million units of products at Willowbrook annually.
“The unplanned shutdown of the Willowbrook facility will affect Teleflex’s ability to supply hospitals and health care providers with the products described above,” Teleflex global procurement director Gregg Twomey said in a declaration filed as an exhibit to a lawsuit filed by Sterigenics against Illinois environmental officials.
Smiths Medical, which has its operations headquarters in Plymouth, has alerted customers to a disruption affecting many of its Bivona tracheostomy tubes, which are used to create airways in the neck. Smiths Medical declined to comment for this story.
Major Minnesota employer Boston Scientific Corp.’s urology and pelvic-health products division sterilizes devices at the Willowbrook plant. The company advised in a Feb. 19securities filing that it planned to rely on existing stock while accelerating plans to move to existing sterilization facilities that are already in the company’s supply chain.
In an updated statement, the company said the FDA as of March 28 has granted approval for the company to sterilize its men’s health products at a different location.

Microdrop Blood Testing Device is Validated by Scientific Community

These days, when someone mentions blood-testing diagnostics systems that rely on a few drops of blood, first thoughts may head directly to the alleged fraud committed by the founder and chief executive officer of Theranos, Elizabeth Holmes.
Homes faces up to 20 years in prison for allegedly defrauding investors at Theranos. For years Holmes promised a diagnostic technology that could function on a single drop of blood but never delivered on her promises. All the while, the company raised hundreds of millions of dollars from investors and the diagnostics that were performed, led to numerous lawsuits over the tens of thousands of results that had to be voided.
But despite that background, the co-founders of Microdrop believe they have a blood-testing diagnostics system that will bring levels of confidence back to the space due to validation from the scientific community.
“We’re working hard to be different,” Jani Tuomi, co-founder of healthcare company Microdrop, told BioSpace in an exclusive interview.
Microdrop has created a direct-to-consumer product that uses several drops of blood to test for several medical conditions, including celiac disease, rheumatoid arthritis and other infectious diseases. The company’s device, called imaware, is the first at-home blood-testing platform to validate and share its data with consumers and medical professionals. For Theranos followers, some of that information may sound familiar, but unlike the company that closely guarded its proprietary information (what little there may actually have been), Microdrop is being quite open about its data. The openness, as well as the efficacy of the imaware diagnostics, has brought the product some significant support, including from Beyond Celiac, an advocacy group. The company recently shared data in an article in the clinical chemistry journals “Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine” that showed the imaware product achieved a 98.3 percent or higher report in levels of accuracy.

Consumers collect the blood at home in a small vial and send it to imaware for testing. Testing is conducted on imaware platforms at CLIA-certified partner laboratories located in Missouri and Texas. The results are then shared in a secure and private online portal with additional resources and access to local medical professionals.
The imaware test measures multiple biomarkers in order to provide the consumer with comprehensive results he or she can then take to their physician for further study, Tuomi said. As researchers continue to learn more and more about biomarkers for various diseases, Tuomi said it is likely the imaware test will be able to expand the range of diseases and conditions it can test for. Microdrop anticipates expanding its imaware testing for cardiovascular health, liver disease and prostate health later this year. He said the “menus of tests” the company will offer this year are “pretty impressive.”
Tuomi said that at-home testing is a valuable tool for people who want to take control of their health care and stay in front of any potential concerns they may have. But, he said the issues of Theranos and its invalidated tests and disgraced research has made people wary.
"The missing piece in at-home testing has been transparency in how the tests work and their accuracy,” Tuomi said.
Additionally, Tuomi noted that for every indication that the imaware tests, they have well-known medical specialists from those areas of study involved who validate the tests as well as author papers. As a point of reference, Tuomi said one of the specialists involved with the celiac tests is the researcher who identified the biomarker for the autoimmune disorder.
“We partner with leading specialists for each condition we test for. We will never launch a test we can’t have leading specialists be on board with for validating,” Tuomi said. “We are putting all of our data where our mouth is.”
https://www.biospace.com/article/microdrop-blood-testing-device-is-validates-by-scientific-community/

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Intercept EASL Slide Show

The following slide deck was published by Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc. in conjunction with this event.

page 1 / 3 | Next »

Daiichi Sankyo Launches Tarlige® Tablets for Pain Treatment in Japan

Daiichi Sankyo Company, Limited (hereafter, Daiichi Sankyo) today announced the launch of Tarlige® Tablets 2.5 mg, 5 mg, 10 mg, 15 mg (generic name: mirogabalin besilate; hereafter, the drug) for the treatment of pain in Japan.
This drug, an α2δ ligand*1 , created by Daiichi Sankyo, was approved for marketing in Japan in January 2019 on the basis of the results of phase 3 clinical trials conducted in Asia including Japan in patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain (DPNP) *2 and postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) *3, for the indication of peripheral neuropathic pain (PNP) *4.
Daiichi Sankyo expects the drug to benefit patients in Japan by providing a new therapeutic option for the treatment of peripheral neuropathic pain.

Lyft pulls electric bikes in three U.S. cities after complaints about braking

Lyft Inc is removing several thousand electric bikes from service in its bike-share program in New York, Washington and San Francisco because of a braking problem, the ride-hailing company said on Sunday.

“We recently received a small number of reports from riders who experienced stronger than expected braking force on the front wheel,” the company said in a blog post emailed to customers on Sunday.
The company’s bike share division is working to replace about 3,000 pedal-assist bikes in New York, Washington and San Francisco with traditional bikes to prevent service interruptions. The company already operates about 17,000 traditional bikes in those cities.
The bike share brands that were impacted by the service removal include Citi Bike in New York, Capital Bikeshare in Washington D.C., and Ford GoBike in the Bay Area.
Some of the electric bikes are still on docks but customers will no longer be able to rent them.
“After a small number of reports and out of an abundance of caution, we are proactively pausing our electric bikes from service, said Citi Bike spokeswoman Julie Wood. “Safety always comes first.”
The company said it had been working on a new electric bike model that would be ready to deploy soon.
Lyft, which went public in March, bought Citi Bike operator Motivate last year in a move to fend off competition from rival Uber Technologies Inc’s purchase of electric cycle-sharing startup JUMP Bikes months before.