Don Tracy, Associate Editor Treatment approved in combination with ravulizumab or eculizumab, representing minority demographic still suffering after receiving C5 inhibitor therapy for extravascular haemolysis. Alexion, AstraZeneca Rare Disease announced that the FDA has approved Voydeya (danicopan) as an add-on therapy for the treatment of extravascular haemolysis (EVH) in adults with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), in combination with ravulizumab or eculizumab. According to the company, the medication treats patients with significant EVH despite receiving C5 inhibitor therapy. The approval was based on positive results from the Phase III ALPHA trial, which found that Voydeya improved hemoglobin levels while providing the benefit of avoiding transfusions after a primary 12-week period. Additionally, there was no significant increases reported related to safety concerns, with common adverse reactions including headache, nausea, arthralgia, and diarrhea.1 “The approval of first-in-class, Factor D inhibitor Voydeya marks an important advancement in the treatment of PNH and builds on ...
Alexion, AstraZeneca Rare Disease has received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for Voydeya (danicopan) as an add-on therapy to treat extravascular haemolysis (EVH) in adults with paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria (PNH). A first-in-class, oral Factor D inhibitor, Voydeya has been developed for patients who continue to suffer from EVH despite treatment with C5 inhibitors such as Ultomiris (ravulizumab) or Soliris (eculizumab). The FDA’s decision is grounded in the positive outcomes of the ALPHA Phase III trial, which demonstrated that Voydeya met its primary endpoint of haemoglobin change from baseline to week 12, alongside all key secondary endpoints. The drug was generally well-tolerated with no new safety concerns. As part of the ALPHA double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple-dose trial, patients were enrolled and randomised to receive Voydeya or placebo apart from their ongoing Soliris or Ultomiris therapy over 12 weeks. It aimed to assess the superiority of Voydeya as an ...
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has revealed insider trading charges against five—including former Alexion Vice President Joseph Dupont and a Massachusetts police chief—who allegedly took advantage of prior knowledge of Alexion’s 2020 acquisition of Portola Pharmaceuticals. Dupont, 44, of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, was the head of go-to market transformation and business operations for Alexion until April of this year. He is alleged to have tipped off his childhood friend Shawn Cronin, the police chief of Dighton, Massachusetts, about the company’s intent to buy out Portola. Cronin, 43, is alleged to have passed the information to two other friends, one of whom told Paul Feldman, 48, of the deal. In all, four bought stock in Portola, which netted them more than $2.3 million, including $1.73 million to Feldman, the SEC said. One of the friends, Slava Kaplan, 45, who made $472,000 from his trades, texted Feldman in Russian: “Let’s hope our ...
Alexion Pharmaceuticals has offered to buy Wilson Therapeutics in a deal worth around $855 million. Wilson is a Swedish biopharma developing novel therapies for patients with rare copper-mediated disorders.
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (ALXN) and Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc. (HALO) announced a collaboration and license agreement that enables Alexion to use Halozyme’s ENHANZE® drug-delivery technology in the development of subcutaneous formulations for their portfolio of products. The agreement provides Alexion with the opportunity for exclusive development of up to four targets, including a next generation subcutaneous formulation of ALXN1210 (ALXN1210 SC), the company’s investigational long-acting C5 complement inhibitor, to potentially further extend the dosing interval of ALXN1210 SC to once every two weeks or once per month.
Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. is set to secure even more revenue from its blockbuster drug Soliris, the most expensive drug in the world.
AstraZeneca is acquiring Amolyt Pharma to get eneboparatide, a drug in Phase 3 development for treating hypoparathyroidism. Takeda Pharmaceutical markets the only FDA-approved treatment for this rare disease, but the Japanese pharmaceutical giant plans to stop making the drug. By FRANK VINLUAN AstraZeneca is bolstering its rare disease pipeline with a deal to buy Amolyt Pharma, a biotech company in late-stage development with a therapy designed to treat a rare hormone deficiency whose only FDA-approved treatment will soon cease production. According to deal terms announced Thursday, AstraZeneca is paying Amolyt shareholders $800 million up front. Another $250 million is tied to the achievement of a regulatory milestone that was not disclosed. Considering that the drug is in Phase 3 testing, that milestone could be a regulatory approval. Lyon, France-based Amolyt is developing a therapy for hypoparathyroidism, a disease in which the parathyroid glands do not produce enough parathyroid hormone. This ...
AstraZeneca’s rare disease unit has received a recommendation from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) for the use of its enzyme replacement therapy in infants with Wolman disease. Alexion’s Kanuma (sebelipase alfa), which has been specifically recommended for use in patients who are aged two years or younger when administration begins, will now become the first treatment available on the NHS for the rapidly-progressive rare genetic disease. Occurring in around one in 350,000 births, Wolman disease causes a build-up of fat in cells in the liver, heart, blood vessels and digestive system. Symptoms in infants include enlarged liver and spleen, poor weight gain, low muscle tone, jaundice, vomiting, diarrhoea, developmental delay and anaemia. Until now, standard care for the disease has been palliative and limited to managing symptoms, with patients normally not surviving past the age of one without treatment. Administered as weekly intravenous infusions which can ...
By Tristan Manalac AstraZeneca, through its rare disease division Alexion, has entered into a multi-target agreement with Verge Genomics to discover and develop drugs against novel targets in rare neurodegenerative and neuromuscular diseases, the companies announced Friday. Under the agreement, Alexion will make a $42 million payment in upfront fees, as well as equity and near-term investments. Counting milestones, the four-year collaboration can yield up to $840 million for Verge, plus potential royalties down the line. Alongside the drug discovery pact, AstraZeneca will also take an equity position in Verge. In return, Alexion will gain access to the California biotech’s proprietary full-stack CONVERGE platform, which applies machine learning to human tissue data in order to identify novel disease targets that have a high probability of yielding clinical success. Friday’s partnership will apply the AI-driven approach to several yet-undisclosed rare neurodegenerative and neuromuscular conditions. Alexion will have the option to select ...
After a postmarketing study of AstraZeneca’s bleeding reversal agent Andexxa met its primary endpoint earlier than planned, AZ is ending the study at the recommendation of a data monitoring board.In the study, investigators tested Andexxa versus standard care in more than 450 patients with intracranial bleeding who have received blood thinners called factor Xa inhibitors. Those who received the AstraZeneca drug experienced superior hemostatic efficacy compared with the control arm, AZ said in a Monday release. Hemostatic efficacy is a measure of the body’s ability to stop the flow of life-threatening brain bleeds. “We are proud to offer the first and only approved treatment to specifically reverse FXa inhibitor activity and help achieve haemostasis, providing an effective and reliable treatment when immediate care is required,” AZ’s executive vice president of biopharmaceuticals R&D, Mene Pangalos, Ph.D., said in a statement. Now, the company will look to convert Andexxa’s speedy approvals in ...
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