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Wednesday, December 2, 2020

FDA approval tracker: November

 Last month was big on FDA knockbacks, with the coronavirus pandemic playing a major part. Five complete response letters were disclosed due to chemistry, manufacturing and control issues, and there were two Pdufa delays as travel restrictions hampered manufacturing inspections. The new Pdufa date for one of the delayed projects, Bristol’s lisocabtagene maraleucel, has not yet been announced and the company is edging ever closer to the CVR deadline of December 31. On the approval side, Alnylam’s Oxlumo was given the green light a week early; it is used to treat primary hyperoxaluria type 1, a rare genetic disease. Another rare disease player, Rhythm, received its first ever approval: Imcivree gained the thumbs up in pro-opiomelanocortin deficiency obesity and leptin receptor deficiency obesity. However, only around 30 patients have been identified and Rhythm does not plan to deploy a salesforce yet. Phase III data are due soon in the bigger indication of Bardet-Biedl syndrome and there are plans for a basket trial to expand into additional genetically defined obesities. Three emergency use authorisations were granted for Covid-19 treatments last month, but all eyes are on December when two vaccines could get FDA backing.

Notable first-time US approval decisions in November
ProjectCompany2026e sales by indication ($m)OutcomeReason for CRL/delay?
Liso-cel/JCAR017/Breyanzi Bristol Myers Squibb1,155Delayed (no new date disclosed)Manufacturing inspection delay
Imcivree (setmelanotide)Rhythm955Approved-
DostarlimabGlaxosmithkline571No decision yet (Q4 date)-
SutimlimabSanofi553CRLCMC
LIQ861Liquidia Technologies476CRLCMC
ALKS 3831 Alkermes362CRLCMC
RT002/
DaxibotulinumtoxinA/
DAXI 
Revance350Delayed (no new date disclosed)Manufacturing inspection delay
SPN-812Supernus279CRLCMC
Oxlumo (lumasiran)Alnylam253Approved ~1 week early-
Danyelza (naxitamab)Y-mabs247Approved-
ZimhiAdamis174CRLCMC
Zokinvy (Ionafarnib)Eiger99Approved-
AR19Arbor-Not disclosed (private company)-
Sources: EvaluatePharma & company releases.

 

Advisory committee meetings in November
ProjectCompany2026e sales by indication ($m)OutcomeNote
AducanumabBiogen/Eisai4,757NegativePositive briefing docs but negative panel meeting, Pdufa set for March 5 2021 (Aducanumab: this time it’s personal)
Hydexor
(CL-108)
Charleston Laboratoris/
Olas Pharma
-NegativeReceived first CRL in 2017 and negative adcom in 2018, second CRL afterwards
Sources: FDA ad com calendar, EvaluatePharma.

 

FDA issued EUAs to treat Covid-19
ProjectCompany2026e sales by indication ($m)Setting
Olumiant plus VekluryEli Lilly1,729*Confirmed Covid-19 in hospitalised patients
Bamlanivimab
(LY-CoV555) 
Eli Lilly-Mild-to-moderate Covid-19
Casirivimab plus imdevimab
(REGN-COV2)
Regeneron31Mild-to-moderate Covid-19 (The pandemic response roars on)
*Veklury received full FDA approval as a single agent in October. Sources: FDA.gov, EvaluatePharma.

 

Supplementary and other notable approval decisions in November
ProductCompanyIndication (clinical trial)Outcome
XofluzaRocheThree decisions:
1) new formulation as one-dose granules for oral suspension, 
2) for the treatment of acute uncomplicated influenza in children aged 1-12, 
3) post-exposure prophylaxis of influenza in people aged 12 and over (miniStone-2 and Blockstone)
Approved for 1) and 3), not yet approved in paediatric setting
Keytruda + chemoMerck & CoTriple-negative breast cancer (≥10% PD-L1 expressers) (Keynote-355Approved
BrilintaAstrazeneca/ Merck & CoAcute ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack (Thales)Approved
ImfinziAstrazenecaFour-week fixed-dose regimen for NSCLC and bladder cancer (several trials, incl Caspian)Approved
Sources: EvaluatePharma & company releases.

https://www.evaluate.com/vantage/articles/news/snippets/us-fda-approval-tracker-november-0

How the U.K. Beat the U.S. and Europe to a Covid-19 Vaccine

Britain's first-in-the-West authorization of a Covid-19 vaccine thrusts its little-known medicines watchdog into the global spotlight -- weeks before the U.K.'s split from the European Union adds to the regulator's responsibilities.

The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency signed off Wednesday on a vaccine developed by Pfizer Inc. and Germany's BioNTech SE, setting in motion its rollout in the U.K. It reached a decision ahead of higher-profile watchdogs, such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency.

It is the British agency's highest-profile move ahead of the Dec. 31 end to the U.K.'s transition out of the EU. After that date, the MHRA will be the regulator with the primary responsibility for drugs authorized for use in the U.K., stepping out of the shadow of the EMA, which had that role for the last 16 years.

"The MHRA has enormous incentive to appear very smooth to ensure that starting in 2021, companies will come to them with new drugs, new vaccines," said Stephen Evans, professor of pharmacoepidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. It is a dress rehearsal with the whole world watching, he said, and the message is: "We'll do it quickly."

June Raine, head of the MHRA, said in a televised briefing on Wednesday that the agency followed international vaccine-review standards, from deciding hurdles for safety and effectiveness in the summer to monitoring the quality of Pfizer-BioNTech doses coming out of factories in recent days. Asked about any concerns that the regulator had rushed the process, Dr. Raine said, "Everyone can be absolutely confident that no corners whatsoever have been cut."

The FDA and the EMA have defended their slower approach. Both agencies have rapidly compressed their own typical vaccine-approval timelines, and both are expected to make a decision on the Pfizer vaccine this month.

The FDA on Dec. 10 will hold an online public meeting, with expert advisers, to discuss emergency-use authorization of the vaccine. Scientists and other members of the public can submit comments beforehand. The next day, the EMA will host a virtual public meeting to talk about vaccine development and regulatory reviews.

Such meetings -- designed to bolster confidence in the regulatory process -- require extensive time and planning. Researchers say they might help address people's hesitancy to take vaccines. The FDA is expected to make a decision on the Pfizer shot a few days after the Dec. 10 meeting. FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn told ABC News on Tuesday that the agency would take the time necessary to perform its own analysis.

The FDA scheduled the public meeting on Nov. 20, in part to assure the public it wasn't being rushed by political considerations. It is expected to rule on a vaccine from Moderna Inc. a short time after it makes a call on the Pfizer shot.

The EMA said Wednesday that it was pursuing a broader category of authorization, which would be more sweeping and permanent than the British decision. EU law doesn't allow the EMA to reach the kind of temporary, emergency-use authorization that the U.K. pursued, agency officials said. As such they needed more evidence and assurances that manufacturing controls will remain in place after authorization, they said.

"These are essential elements to ensure a high level of protection to citizens during the course of a mass vaccination campaign," an EMA spokeswoman said.

The EMA is set to announce a decision about Pfizer's vaccine by Dec. 29 and Moderna's vaccine by Jan. 12. In each case, the agency will have to convene its high-level scientific committee for human medicines before reaching a judgment. Communication between drugmakers and the EMA has been slowed by data-formatting issues and software compatibility, according to people familiar with the matter. Last week, the agency said it was willing to consider ways to speed up its system, and asked pharmaceutical companies to make suggestions.

The U.K. agency has the advantage of having been a workhorse of the EMA during the country's time in the EU, handling evaluations for a large chunk of the overall bloc's new medicines. Individual EU countries oversee clinical trials; the EMA enforces guidelines for safety, effectiveness and quality, and coordinates bloc-wide decisions, via committee, on authorized use.

The U.K.'s decision to leave the EU pushed the EMA last year to move out of its London headquarters and set up shop in Amsterdam.

The EMA by then had already been doling out the U.K. regulator's massive portfolio of Europe-wide medicine evaluations to other EU countries. The 370 medicines at the time that were part of the U.K.'s responsibility were redistributed among 27 EU nations plus Iceland and Norway, the EMA has said.

With its workload lessened, the MHRA "has been relatively underworked," said Prof. Evans. That has given it additional bandwidth to act quickly, researchers said. The London-based MHRA also gained experienced staff who left the EMA and stayed behind in the city.

British regulators and ministers also no longer need to go through the EU committee system. "There is an advantage in being small," said George Freeman, a former U.K. life-sciences minister who oversaw MHRA changes to speed up drug reviews.

The agency -- not a household name even in its home country -- was founded in 2003 with the merger of separate U.K. regulators for medicines and medical devices, and has a staff of 1,320. The EMA has about 900 employees, though it doesn't evaluate medical devices or oversee clinical trials. The FDA has a staff of around 17,000.

For the vaccine green light, the U.K. government used a long-held power to authorize drugs on its own in an emergency, allowing the MHRA to review the drug outside the EMA framework even before the end of the Brexit transition period. All other EU members have the same power, but none have publicly declared plans to exercise it.

Pfizer executive Ralf Rene Reinert said during a media briefing on Wednesday he was receiving emails about other countries considering pursuing more-rapid authorization, following the U.K.'s lead. "The world is at the moment looking at the U.K.," he said. He didn't name the countries.

Like the FDA and the EMA, the British agency used data from large-scale human trials handed over in rolling batches as the trials progressed. People who have been working with the MHRA in recent months say it has been more proactive in working with drug companies as they provide data, asking additional questions and requesting more information that could speed a review.

Recently, the MHRA's "rolling review is a much more interactive experience," said Sarah Blagden, associate professor of experimental cancer therapeutics at the University of Oxford, who oversees cancer trials. "The regulators become part of the discussion very, very early on."

In the run-up to the Pfizer vaccine authorization in the U.K., teams from the company and its partner BioNTech worked around the clock with counterparts at the MHRA, answering individual queries and providing extra, bespoke data when necessary, according to people familiar with the process. They said the MHRA was sending questions to the companies through last weekend.

Prof. Reinert, the Pfizer executive, said the MHRA would respond quickly, sometimes after just 10 minutes, to data it sent in.

BioNTech praised the U.K. regulator. "The MHRA has asked the same level of detail of questions as any agency," said Sean Marett, BioNTech's chief business and commercial officer.

The U.K. government has also asked the agency to review a vaccine being co-developed by AstraZeneca PLC and the University of Oxford ahead of a possible emergency-use authorization. The U.K. has said it is doing rolling reviews of trial data from the shot by Moderna, too, and that the vaccine, if authorized, could be available in the U.K. as early as the spring, similar to the rest of Europe.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/PFIZER-INC-23365019/news/How-the-U-K-Beat-the-U-S-and-Europe-to-a-Covid-19-Vaccine-31921580/

NY to Get Enough Doses of Covid-19 Vaccine for 170,000

 New York expects to receive enough doses of a Covid-19 vaccine on Dec. 15 to begin immunizing 170,000 people, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday.

Mr. Cuomo said at a news conference that the initial batch of vaccines -- manufactured by Pfizer Inc. in partnership with BioNTech SE -- will be distributed to residents of nursing homes and staff in those facilities. The companies will send the necessary second doses of the medicine roughly three weeks later to fully inoculate those recipients.

A second tranche of vaccines developed by Moderna Inc. is expected later in December, state officials said. Both Pfizer and Moderna have asked the Food and Drug Administration to authorize use of their vaccines, and the distribution is contingent upon that approval.

The initial number of doses won't be sufficient to fully inoculate the 85,000 nursing-home residents and 130,000 facility staff in the state, officials said. However, the governor said he expects some individuals will decline to take the vaccine.

Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, said he was following the advice of a federal advisory panel that on Tuesday recommended that health-care workers and residents of long-term care facilities be the first to receive vaccine doses. The governor said hospital-based health-care workers in the state would be vaccinated after people who live and work in nursing homes.

Under the plan Mr. Cuomo outlined, the majority of the state's more than 19 million residents won't receive a vaccine for months. Between 75% and 85% of residents must be vaccinated for normal economic activity to resume in the state, Mr. Cuomo said.

The state faces serious challenges in distributing vaccines and building public buy-in for vaccination programs, the governor said. Given those challenges, and the limited supply of vaccines, he said he expects a critical mass of New Yorkers to be inoculated by as early as June or as late as September.

The governor said the arrival of vaccines in New York offers both hope and challenges as the state has seen a sharp rise in the number of Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations in recent weeks.

"That's the bad news; we have another mountain to climb," Mr. Cuomo said. "The good news is, the goal line is in sight and the goal line is a vaccine."

The recent surge in cases is being fueled by residential gatherings -- many related to the holiday season -- and may begin to slow and reverse by mid-January, Mr. Cuomo said.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/MODERNA-INC-47437573/news/New-York-Will-Get-Enough-Doses-of-Covid-19-Vaccine-for-170-000-People-Update-31922880/

Medical journal editorial refutes WHO finding on Gilead's remdesivir for COVID-19

 An editorial in the influential New England Journal of Medicine cites problems with a World Health Organization (WHO) study that found Gilead Sciences Inc's antiviral remdesivir failed to improve COVID-19 survival, and said it does not refute trials that demonstrated benefits of the drug in treating the illness.

The editorial, by David Harrington at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, infectious disease specialist Dr. Lindsey Baden and Brown University biostatistician Joseph Hogan, was published on Wednesday along with the WHO study.

They noted that the trial called Solidarity, which looked at four drugs, was conducted in 30 countries ranging from Switzerland and Germany to Iran and Kenya, leading to inconsistencies in the data collected.

The findings are complicated by the fact that there is "variation within and between countries in the standard of care and in the burden of disease in patients who arrive at hospitals," they write.

Solidarity also found no COVID-19 survival benefit from treatment with the HIV drug lopinavir, the immune booster interferon or hydroxychloroquine, a malaria drug championed by U.S. President Donald Trump despite a lack of evidence of benefit in COVID-19.

The release in October of the trial's summary findings sparked a reevaluation by some of the utility of remdesivir, which was shown to shorten COVID-19 hospitals stays by five days compared with a placebo in an earlier U.S. government-run trial.

Solidarity "did not collect or report the standard of care or the healthcare system capacity in any of the 400 hospitals from 30 countries," said Dr. Andre Kalil, infectious disease specialist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center and lead investigator of the U.S. trial.

"If the basic supportive care is scarce or inadequate, no treatment drug will show much benefit even if known to be effective, because the adequate supportive care is essential for the survival of patients hospitalized with COVID-19," he said.

The WHO last month declared that remdesivir, which is given as an intravenous infusion, should not be used for patients hospitalized with COVID-19, regardless of how ill they are, since there is no evidence that it can improve survival or reduce the need for mechanical ventilation.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in October approved remdesivir, which is sold under the brand name Veklury, for COVID-19 patients over the age of 12 who require hospitalization. The drug is authorized or approved for use as a COVID-19 treatment in more than 50 countries.

Both the U.S. Infectious Diseases Society of America and the National Institutes of Health, which conducted the U.S. study, in recent weeks reaffirmed their guidelines for use of remdesivir following the FDA's full approval of the drug.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/GILEAD-SCIENCES-INC-4876/news/Gilead-Sciences-Medical-journal-editorial-refutes-WHO-finding-on-Gilead-s-remdesivir-for-COVID-19-31924327/

Putin orders Russia begin large-scale COVID-19 vaccinations next week

 President Vladimir Putin ordered a large-scale voluntary vaccination programme against COVID-19 to begin next week across Russia, saying teachers and doctors should be first in line to get the country’s flagship Sputnik V vaccine.

Putin gave the order during an online meeting with ministers on Wednesday, a day when Russia, which has the fourth highest number of recorded infections in the world, registered 589 new daily deaths from the coronavirus.

Putin said Russia will have produced 2 million vaccine doses within the next few days.

Sputnik V, one of two Russian-made vaccines to have received domestic regulatory approval so far despite clinical trials being incomplete, requires two injections. A third vaccine is in also in the works.

Russia said last month that the Sputnik jab was 92% effective at protecting people from COVID-19 according to interim results.

“Let’s agree on this - you will not report to me next week, but you will start large-scale vaccination... Let’s get to work already,” Putin told Deputy Prime Minister Tatiana Golikova.

“I understand that you’re using very careful language and it’s absolutely right that we are cautious. But I know that industry and the (health) network are in general ready. Let’s take this first step.”

Russia has already vaccinated more than 100,000 high-risk people, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said during a separate presentation to the United Nations about Sputnik V.

According to the presentation, more than 45,000 people are currently participating in Sputnik V trials worldwide.

The rise in infections in Russia has slowed since reaching a high on Nov. 27, with 25,345 new daily cases reported on Wednesday.

Russia has resisted imposing lockdowns during the second wave of the virus, preferring targeted regional curbs.

‘ABSOLUTE PRIORITY’

The Kremlin earlier gave assurances that Russians were first in line to be vaccinated, with Moscow also discussing supply deals with other countries.

“The absolute priority is Russians,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. “Production within Russia, which is already being developed, will meet the needs of Russians.”

Authorities in St Petersburg, which reported 3,684 new infections on Wednesday, ordered bars and restaurants to close from Dec. 30 until Jan. 3, to combat the rise in cases there, the RIA news agency reported.

Museums, theatres and concert halls would be closed to the public in the city of more than 5 million people for the duration of Russia’s New Year holidays, from Dec. 30 to Jan. 10.

In Moscow, a remote learning period for secondary school students was extended beyond Dec. 6 to the end of the year.

With 2,347,401 infections, Russia only has fewer COVID-19 cases than the United States, India and Brazil. It has recorded 41,053 deaths related to COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-russia-putin/putin-orders-russia-to-begin-large-scale-covid-19-vaccinations-next-week-idUSKBN28C21E

US: U.N. COVID-19 meeting is stage for Chinese propaganda

 The United States on Wednesday claimed a United Nations meeting of world leaders on the COVID-19 pandemic was being designed to allow Beijing to spread propaganda, stoking months of bickering at the world body between the superpowers.

The two-day meeting of the U.N. General Assembly begins Thursday with some 53 heads of state, 39 heads of government and 38 ministers due to make pre-recorded video statements, including U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the special session of the 193-member General Assembly should have been held earlier, that it had been “pre-engineered to serve China’s purposes” and complained that questions at panel discussions on Friday would be restricted.

China would use the setting to its advantage, the official said, adding, “I expect them to make a very, very effective propaganda play out of these two days.”

A spokesperson for China’s mission to the United Nations in New York said the U.S. “politicization of the issue is not in the interest of the international community.”

Without naming the United States, the spokesperson said: “If certain a country insists, it will once again find itself isolated and end in failure. China will strengthen communication and collaboration with other member states and make positive and constructive contributions.”

U.S. President Donald Trump cut funding to the World Health Organization (WHO) earlier this year and announced plans to quit the Geneva-based body over accusations it was a puppet of China, which the WHO denied. The U.S. withdrawal would have taken effect in July next year, but U.S. President-elect Joe Biden said he will rescind the move.

Trump administration officials said they expected Beijing to push a narrative at the United Nations this week that the virus existed abroad before it was discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan last year, a claim the WHO has called “highly speculative.”

Long-simmering tensions between the United States and China hit boiling point over the pandemic at the United Nations, spotlighting Beijing’s bid for greater multilateral influence in a challenge to Washington’s traditional leadership.

‘ALREADY TOO LATE’

Azar will not attack China directly in his video statement, but took aim at what he called a lack of “necessary information sharing” about the outbreak, according to a text of his prepared remarks. “This dereliction of duty has been absolutely devastating for the entire globe,” Azar said.

China has denied the U.S. assertions that a lack of transparency worsened the global outbreak.

The senior U.S. official, who spoke to Reuters on the condition of anonymity, underscored the severity of the pandemic: “I’m not going to call it a weapon of war, but we have to regard it as a serious threat. It is in fact the threat to international peace and security.”

Chinese scientists are carrying out research into the origins of the coronavirus and a WHO-led international team formed in September will develop plans for longer-term studies building on China’s findings.

The U.S. official also said it was “wholly unacceptable” that the WHO probe would not be completed for nearly a year.

Britain has called for prioritizing the investigation and ensuring its outcome is grounded in “robust science,” while Germany, speaking for the European Union, has called for “full transparency and cooperation” throughout the investigation.

The U.N. General Assembly agreed in October to hold the COVID-19 special session by adopting a resolution with 150 votes in favor. The United States, Israel and Armenia abstained and the remaining members didn’t vote. The meeting was proposed by the General Assembly president, Turkish diplomat Volkan Bozkir.

Bozkir’s spokesman Brenden Varma said the president thought that the meeting was “already too late” and should have happened in the summer. Varma added the meeting was created as a way to promote multilateralism in a time of crisis.

The point is “to bring countries together, along with U.N. actors, with the private sector, with vaccine developers to work together ... to take stock and to identify gaps and challenges,” Varma said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-un-usa/u-s-says-u-n-covid-19-meeting-is-stage-for-chinese-propaganda-idUSKBN28C3CB

U.N. drug agency loosens global controls on cannabis, following WHO advic

 The U.N. drug agency’s member states on Wednesday narrowly voted to remove cannabis from the most tightly controlled category of narcotic drugs, following the World Health Organization’s recommendation to make research into its medical use easier.

The annual Commission on Narcotic Drugs, the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime’s governing body, voted 27-25 with one abstention to remove cannabis and cannabis resin from Schedule IV of the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, a global text governing drug controls, a U.N. statement said.

The vote followed a 2019 WHO recommendation that “cannabis and cannabis resin should be scheduled at a level of control that will prevent harm caused by cannabis use and at the same time will not act as a barrier to access and to research and development of cannabis-related preparation for medical use.”

Other drugs in Schedule IV include heroin, fentanyl analogues and other opioids that are dangerous and often deadly. Cannabis, by contrast carries no significant risk of death and it has shown potential in treating pain and conditions such as epilepsy, the WHO found.

The U.N. statement on the meeting in Vienna of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs did not say which countries backed or opposed the change, or why the vote was so close.

The convention states that a party to it will take “any special measures of control which in its opinion are necessary having regard to the particularly dangerous properties” of a drug listed in Schedule IV.

Schedule I, the next strictest level of control, which includes cocaine, does not carry that stipulation. The WHO recommended that cannabis still be listed there, noting “the high rates of public health problems arising from cannabis use.”

The commission did not, however, back other WHO recommendations, such as removing “extracts and tinctures of cannabis” from Schedule I, the statement said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-un-drugs-cannabis/u-n-drug-agency-loosens-global-controls-on-cannabis-following-who-advice-idUSKBN28C32L