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Monday, March 18, 2024

FDA Action Alert: Orchard, ITF, Merck and More

 The FDA’s busy March continues with six target action dates remaining on the calendar. Over the next two weeks, the regulator will decide on investigational therapies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy, chronic kidney disease anemia, a rare metabolic disorder and more.

Read below for more.

Orchard/Kyowa Kirin Eye First FDA Approval for Metachromatic Leukodystrophy

Orchard Therapeutics is proposing Libmeldy (atidarsagene autotemcel) for the treatment of metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD), a rare metabolic disease. The FDA’s target action date is March 18, 2024.

If approved, Libmeldy would become the first treatment for early-onset MLD in the U.S. The approval would also mark the first major regulatory victory for Kyowa Kirin since it acquired Orchard in October 2023 for approximately $477.6 million.

Affecting one in every 100,000 live births, MLD is a heritable and life-threatening disease characterized by the toxic build-up of sulfatides in the brain, liver, kidneys and other organs. This accumulation can lead to organ damage and neurological issues such as cognitive, behavioral and motor decline. MLD patients also suffer from severe seizures and over time lose their ability to talk, swallow, eat, move and see.

MLD is caused by a pathological mutation in the arylsulfatase-A (ARSA) gene. Libmeldy, an autologous gene therapy, addresses the underlying mechanism of MLD by using a patient’s own stem cells to deliver functioning copy of the ARSA gene. The European Union approved Libmeldy for the treatment of MLD in December 2020.

In the U.S., Libmeldy, also known as OTL-200, has been granted the FDA’s Rare Pediatric Disease and Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy designations. Its Biologics License Application (BLA), which the regulator accepted in September 2023, has been given Priority Review.

Libmeldy’s regulatory bid is backed by data from the OTL-200 clinical development program, which enrolled a total of 39 pediatric patients and used data from 49 untreated natural history controls. Results showed that Libmeldy could preserve motor function and cognitive development in treated patients.

ITF Awaits Verdict for DMD Candidate

ITF, the U.S. subsidiary of Italian pharma Italfarmaco Group, is proposing its investigational HDAC blocker givinostat for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). The FDA’s verdict is due on March 21, 2024.

Designed to be orally available, givinostat works by blocking histone deacetylases (HDACs), a group of enzymes that affect gene expression in muscles. The “deregulation of HDACs is a major consequence of the lack of dystrophin associated with DMD,” ITF head Matt Trudeau told BioSpace in a previous interview.

Givinostat’s mechanism of action can potentially “inhibit HDAC pathological overactivity and thereby impact the cascade of events leading to muscle damage which, in turn, may counteract disease pathology and slow muscle deterioration,” Trudeau explained.

ITF’s New Drug Application (NDA), which was submitted in June 2023, includes data from the Phase III EPIDYS trial, which enrolled 179 ambulant boys aged six years and older. Givinostat was given on top of steroid treatment. Patients who received the HDAC blocker showed a significantly slower decline than placebo recipients in the time it took to climb four stairs, according to a June 2022 readout.

Givinostat also aced its secondary endpoints, including the time to rise test and the North Star Ambulatory Assessment, which measures patient function.

Givinostat was initially granted Priority Review and was due for an FDA decision in December 2023. However, the regulator informed Italfarmaco weeks before its target action date that it would extend the review period by three months to allow additional review time.  

Merck Seeks to Open New Treatment Approach for PAH

By March 26, the FDA will release its decision on Merck’s investigational activin signaling inhibitor sotatercept, which the company is proposing for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH).

In a statement alongside the BLA acceptance, Joerg Koglin, senior vice president of global clinical development at Merck Research Laboratories, said sotatercept “has the potential to transform the treatment of patients with PAH.”

Sotatercept is a fusion protein therapeutic composed of the extracellular domain of the human activin receptor and the Fc domain of an IgG1 antibody. This structure allows sotatercept to trap TGF-β ligands, thereby helping to restore balance between growth-promoting and growth-limiting pathways. Preclinical models have demonstrated that sotatercept’s mechanism of action can modulate vascular cell proliferation and reverse vascular and ventricle remodeling.

Merck is supporting sotatercept’s regulatory bid with data from the pivotal Phase III STELLAR study, a double-blinded and placebo-controlled trial that enrolled more than 320 patients. The results, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, showed that sotatercept could significantly increase six-minute walk distance after 24 weeks.

Sotatercept likewise outperformed placebo in several secondary metrics, including pulmonary vascular resistance, improvement in WHO functional class and time to death or clinical worsening.

Akebia Anticipates Long-Awaited Decision for CKD Anemia Drug

After a long back and forth, the FDA is set to announce its verdict on Akebia’s NDA seeking approval for vadadustat in anemia due to chronic kidney disease (CKD) in adult patients on dialysis.

Vadadustat is an investigational inhibitor of the hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PH) enzyme, which is involved in the cellular response to low oxygen levels. Vadadustat mimics the physiological effects of altitude on oxygen availability and can promote the production of red blood cells and the delivery of oxygen to tissues.

In March 2022, the FDA rejected vadadustat, citing safety concerns. Phase III data for the candidate, released in September 2020, showed that while vadadustat aced its primary and key secondary endpoints, it failed its chief safety outcomes. Compared with darbepoetin alfa, major adverse cardiovascular events occurred more readily in the vadadustat arm.

To demonstrate a more favorable risk-benefit profile, the FDA suggested that Akebia conduct new clinical trials to support vadadustat.

Following the rejection, Akebia in November 2022 filed a Formal Dispute Resolution Request with the FDA, insisting on the “favorable balance of the benefits and risks of vadadustat,” CEO John Butler said in an investor call at the time. The FDA then requested additional information to support Akebia’s appeal, but in February 2023 ultimately decided to defer the decision to the Office of New Drugs.

In May 2023, the FDA handed Akebia a victory when it decided the biotech no longer needed to conduct additional studies for a resubmission. Instead, it could refile its NDA to target CKD patients on dialysis and include post-approval data from Japan. The new application would also include the risk of heart- or liver-related side effects in the proposed label.

Esperion Seeks Expanded Label for Cholesterol Drugs

Esperion is proposing to expand the labels for its bempedoic acid drugs Nexletol and Nexlizet, allowing their use to lower cardiovascular risk in patients with or at risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The FDA’s decision is due on March 31.

Bempedoic acid is a non-statin oral drug that lowers low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) via the inhibition of the ATP citrate lyase enzyme. The drug was first approved in February 2020 as Nexletol, becoming the first FDA-approved non-statin therapy to lower LDL-C since 2002.

In March 2023, Esperion presented full data from the Phase III CLEAR study demonstrating that Nexletol cut the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) by 13% to 15%. The drug also lowered the risk of heart attack and coronary revascularization by 23% and 19%, respectively, Esperion reported.

In an accompanying statement, Esperion CEO Sheldon Koenig called the results “practice changing.” In an investor call, he added that if the label expansion is approved, Esperion could see major growth in sales and Nexletol could reach blockbuster status.

Investors were not as impressed, however, and the biotech’s shares dropped around 20% in reaction to the readout.

Esperion’s partner Daiichi Sankyo was also unimpressed with the data, refusing to pay a $300 million milestone that Esperion insists it will be owed once cardiovascular risk reduction data are included in Nexletol’s European label. According to an SEC filing from Esperion, it was entitled to a milestone payment if Nexletol could show at least a 20% cardiovascular risk reduction. The 23% decrease in heart attack risk, according to the biotech, qualified it for the milestone. Daiichi Sankyo disagreed, insisting that the analysis should focus on the 13% drop in MACE risk, which fell short of this milestone.  

In January 2024, the partners reached an amicable end to the payment spat, with Daiichi Sankyo agreeing to pay Esperion $125 million in two separate tranches.

Regeneron Eyes Follicular Lymphoma, DLBCL Approval for Bispecific Antibody

Capping off the FDA’s month is a target action date for Regeneron’s BLA proposing its investigational bispecific antibody odronextamab for relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma (FL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The regulator is set to release its verdict on March 31.

Regeneron is supporting its application with data from Phase I and pivotal Phase II trials, which were presented at the 64th American Society of Hematology meeting in December 2022.

One study evaluated odronextamab as a treatment for grade I to IIIa relapsed or refractory FL and found it elicited an 82% objective response rate (ORR), with 75% seeing a complete response. The median response time was 20.5 months. The trial also found that median progression-free survival was 20 months, while median overall survival at the time had not been reached.

The second study tested odronextamab in relapsed or refractor DLBCL, for which the investigational antibody demonstrated a 49% objective response rate in CAR-T-naïve patients. In this subgroup, 31% achieved complete response. In those who had previously been exposed to CAR-T therapy, the ORR was 48%, with a 32% complete response rate.

Odronextamab is an investigational bispecific antibody designed to target CD20, which is typically expressed on cancer cells, and CD3, which is found on T cells. This mechanism of action allows odronextamab to bring the immune cell closer to the tumor cell, facilitating the body’s cancer-killing activity.

If approved, odronextamab would become the first bispecific antibody authorized to treat both FL and DLBCL.

https://www.biospace.com/article/fda-action-alert-orchard-itf-merck-and-more/

Sunday, March 17, 2024

NY lawmakers fight gov’s plan to reform murky $6B Medicaid program

 Albany lawmakers are rejecting Gov. Kathy Hochul’s efforts to rein in a popular $6 billion Medicaid homecare program that critics say is extremely susceptible to abuse.

Legislators are going on the offensive after the release of their own budget proposals last week, calling the governor’s slated reforms to the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program, or CDPAP, an attack on elderly and disabled people who rely on the program as an affordable means to get homecare.

“I’m terrified I’ll be forced into deadly and abusive facilities in light of the governor’s proposed draconian budget cuts to homecare, specifically the Consumer Directed Personal Assistant Program,” Geri Mariano, 56, a recipient within the program said at a recent press conference hosted by the powerful healthcare union 1199 SEIU.

Geri Mariano, left in wheel chair, was one of several people who utilize home care aides paid for using CDPAP that spoke at a press conference criticizing Gov. Kathy Hochul’s proposed cuts to the program.Mark Vergari/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK

“Honest to God, I don’t know why Governor Hochul hates me and all others wanting to remain in our homes with these programs,” Mariano continued.

The program allows relatives, friends or other close acquaintances of disabled or elderly adults below a certain income level to get paid more than $43,000 a year to act as a caregiver.

Funding for the caregivers flows through financial middlemen, which pay the caregivers and get reimbursed through state and federal Medicaid dollars — while taking a small cut.

Critics of the program argue that it lacks sufficient oversight or structural checks-and-balances to prevent fraud and abuse.

Gov. Kathy Hochul is proposing a few measures to increase checks on CDPAP, including giving the Department of Health more authority to regulate financial middlemen.Getty Images

A 2020 bust by the FBI alleged that a Brooklyn-based agency was manipulating the hours its clients in the CDPAP were working, scalping millions of dollars of state and federal Medicaid dollars in the process.

Investigators found some aides had been billing hours while they were really on a cruise or sipping wine at a New Jersey vineyard.

As part of her $233 billion state budget proposal, Hochul is calling for several new reforms for CDPAP. These include limiting the number of hours a single caregiver can work in a week as well as giving the state Department of Health broader authority to regulate how the financial middlemen in the system operate.

Hochul estimates these regulatory changes could save the state $100 million per year.

Additionally, Hochul wants to eliminate the $1.55-per-hour boost to the minimum wage for CDPAP aides in New York City and Westchester, Nassau and Suffolk counties. The governor’s budget office estimates that cut would also save the state around $100 million per year.

The governor has made reigning in Medicaid spending — the second costliest part of the state’s discretionary budget behind school funding — a major priority.

New Yorker taxpayers are expected to spend over $30 billion on Medicaid programs in the 2025 budget.

The powerful healthcare union, 1199SEIU, is fighting Hochul’s proposed Medicaid reforms.Tania Savayan / USA TODAY NETWORK

“The cost of this program has spiked by a massive 1,200% in just eight years, threatening our ability to pay for other critical health care services and balance our budget,” a Hochul spokesperson told The Post.

“We need common sense reforms to protect New Yorkers who rely on home health care and to safeguard taxpayer dollars.”

Lawmakers who showed up for the 199SEIU healthcare workers union’s press conference in Yonkers Friday questioned the governor’s assertions about fraud within the program.

“The legislature is right to reject the Governor’s dangerous cuts to worker wages and consumer hours in the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program,” 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East wrote in a statement to the Post.1199SEIU/ Twitter

“For me, I haven’t seen evidence,” state Sen. Shelley Mayer (D-White Plains) told the Post.

“To the extent that there are specific, identifiable, evidence-produced examples that need fixing in the policy, of course, the door is open,” Mayer added.

Mayer also flatly rejects the idea of removing the $1.55 wage boost for CDPAP aides in New York’s most expensive counties.

Around a quarter of a million New Yorkers utilize CDPAP as of last year, up more than 78% from 140,000 beneficiaries in 2015 according to Department of Health data. The exploding popularity of the program is evident as agencies try to recruit more caregivers — taking out subway ads, TV commercials and even enlisting TikTok influencers to spread the word about the program.

“That is one of the things that has been talked about, ‘We’re going on TikTok saying take care of grandma and get paid,’” Assemblywoman Maryjane Shimsky (D-Tarrytown) said.

A United Healthcare Workers East Local 1199 SEIU rally outside of Good Samaritan Hospital in Suffern, New York on Feb. 22, 2024.Tania Savayan/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK

“You know, what? People who take care of grandma should be able to make some money, first of all. And second of all, this is a great public policy option,” she said, pointing to the much higher costs of caring for elderly and disabled people in nursing homes.

199SEIU, one of the state’s most politically influential unions, has already been working to thwart Hochul’s Medicaid reform efforts.

1199SEIU and their close ally, the Greater New York Hospital Association, launched a new ad campaign earlier this year criticizing Hochul for proposing Medicaid reforms.

Recent reporting by the Post found that state taxpayers spent $49 million to bail out a floundering 1199SEIU health insurance fund for its own homecare workers.

“The legislature is right to reject the Governor’s dangerous cuts to worker wages and consumer hours in the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program,” 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East wrote in a statement to the Post.

https://nypost.com/2024/03/17/us-news/ny-lawmakers-fight-govs-plan-to-reform-murky-6b-medicaid-program/

Adams’ ‘right to shelter’ agreement will actually make NYC’s migrant crisis worse

 Mayor Adams’ agreement, announced Friday, to limit the time migrants can stay in shelters at taxpayer expense, is smoke and mirrors. 

It’s designed to fool you into thinking he’s solving a problem when he’s actually caving to the migrant-industrial complex.

Adams claims the agreement with the Legal Aid Society and the Coalition for the Homeless will allow the city to evict adult migrants from city-run shelters after 30 days, saving taxpayers money and limiting the need for more shelters.

Not true.   

The fine print says migrants have a shot at staying longer if they obtain a driver’s license, follow shelter rules and show good behavior or — get this one — apply for public benefits.

And this is a “non-exhaustive” list of reasons making migrants eligible to stay longer.  

The agreement also applies only to single adults age 24 and up.

A staggering 78% come with children and get priority placement in hotels. 

The city spends a whopping $387 a night for food and a roof alone for each family and shells out more money for free medical care, education and legal services. 

This agreement does zero to alleviate those staggering costs. 

The deal dooms New York City to fiscal disaster because it will continue to be the No. 1 destination for migrants seeking a free roof over their heads.

The Big Apple is now Migrant Central.

Worst of all, nothing in the agreement empowers the mayor to evict troublemakers who have repeat run-ins with police.

The migrants who beat up cops in Times Square were living in shelters, courtesy of taxpayers, and already had long rap sheets. 

When troublemakers are arrested and give a shelter address, the shelter should be contacted and told they no longer qualify. 

Why should taxpayers be footing the bill to house criminals?

Notorious gangs like Tren de Aragua and MS-13 recruit from the shelters. 

How convenient that taxpayers pay to house these gangs’ lackeys.

In October, Adams imposed a 30-day limit on adult migrants but wound up in court when Legal Aid and the Coalition challenged.

A long negotiation ensued, ending with Friday’s agreement.

Since suing in 1979 and winning a consent decree in 1981, Legal Aid and the Coalition have fought successfully to impose a “right to shelter” on New York.

Now these two self-appointed guardians of the downtrodden — not elected by anyone — insist the “right” applies not just to New Yorkers but anyone from anywhere in the world who wants shelter here.

That’s crazy.

After months of negotiating, Adams capitulated.

No one at the table was looking out for taxpayers or New Yorkers who see their services being cut and their neighborhoods disrupted by the proliferation of shelters.

The multibillion-dollar shelter industry came out a winner, but Joe Public got shafted.

As the agreement was announced, Deputy Mayor Anne Williams-Isom praised the “right to shelter” and Legal Aid Society for the work it does.

They’re all in bed together.

Josh Goldfein, a Legal Aid attorney, explained that despite the settlement, no migrant would be left to sleep on the street.

In fact, the agreement bans the city from even making migrants sleep overnight in chairs while waiting to be placed, imposing stricter shelter requirements than before.   

A “right to shelter” for anyone who shows up on Gotham’s doorsteps means New Yorkers who want sanitation services, police and fire protection and other city amenities go to the back of the line.

Their services get cut to pay for sheltering migrants.

Adams needs to battle aggressively, up through the highest courts, to get that “right” reexamined.

Only New York has a “right to shelter,” and it makes the city the top destination for migrants.

It’s an even bigger problem than sanctuary-city status.

New York City spends more than 10 times as much as Los Angeles per migrant and more than five times as much as Chicago.

To top it off, the agreement and the Adams administration are renaming migrants “new arrivals,” whitewashing the laws they broke to get here. 

Expect hundreds of thousands more to see these welcome signs and come. Who wouldn’t come?

On Sunday, Adams praised the city’s “responsible policies” and blamed “Republican extremists” for the border crisis.

Sorry, Mr. Mayor. But the crisis here in New York City is due to the lavish benefits local Democrats insist on offering “new arrivals.”

There’s no whitewashing that.

Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York.

https://nypost.com/2024/03/17/opinion/mayor-adams-right-to-shelter-agreement-will-actually-make-nycs-migrant-crisis-worse/