Depicting the plight of patients with chronic and potentially fatal diseases is always a challenge for pharma companies, but Gilead Sciences has quite literally found a novel way forward.Teaming up with British historian, presenter and writer Professor David Olusoga, OBE, Gilead is launching “From the Margins,” (PDF) in what is intended to be one of the most difficult books to read. That’s because the book has every word printed entirely in the margins of the pages in what Gilead and Prof. Olusoga see as a direct inversion of a normal book. The idea is simple: “To tell the profoundly moving personal stories of marginalized people living with HIV, Hepatitis C and cancer,” according to a statement sent to Fierce Pharma Marketing. Gilead markets drugs for all three diseases. The book is specific to Britain and being run to “to raise awareness of the issue of marginalization and health inequality in ...
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) voted nine to three in favour of expanding the label of Alnylam Pharmaceuticals’ Onpattro (Patisiran) at a 13 September Advisory Committee (AdCom) meeting. A possible approval would allow the drug to be used to treat cardiomyopathy caused by a wild-type or hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis (ATTR/ ATTR-CM). At a Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs AdCom meeting, a panel reviewed results from the Phase III (NCT03997383) APOLLO-B trial. In the study, the drug showed favourable effects on functional capacity and quality of life. The drug also demonstrated a good safety profile through the 18 months of treatment with most adverse events being mild or moderate, as per May 2023 interim results. The AdCom discussed if the results from the APOLLO-B study were enough to prove a clinically meaningful benefit for the drug in the new indication. Dr Eric Peterson, a professor of internal medicine at the ...
Recent research shows that about two-third of clinicians have felt physically unsafe at their job. This week, lawmakers introduced bipartisan legislation to address this concerning trend of violence waged against healthcare workers by giving them federal protections that mirror those for aircraft and airport workers. The bill, called the Safety from Violence for Healthcare Employees Act, would make it a federal crime to assault hospital workers. It was introduced by Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Florida) and Joe Manchin (D-West Virginia). The legislation can be thought of as the Senate’s rendition of the SAVE Act — the SAVE Act is a 2019 bipartisan bill that was reintroduced in Congress this year by Reps. Madeleine Dean (D-Pennsylvania) and Larry Bucshon (R-Indiana), but it has failed to advance. Even though nearly 40 states have passed laws to intensify penalties for violent acts committed against healthcare personnel, there is currently no federal law protecting hospital ...
Insulin pump-makers face questions about whether a new category of weight loss drugs will affect their long-term growth prospects. Companies including Insulet and Tandem Diabetes Care saw their stock prices fall after a small study showed that GLP-1 agonists — which include the branded drugs Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro — allowed people with Type 1 diabetes to reduce or stop insulin injections. Shares of Insulet have declined 22% in the last month to $173.90, and shares of Tandem have declined 20% to $23.14. However, physicians surveyed by analysts were skeptical the drugs would change the long-term outlook for diabetes, noting that the study only included 10 patients who started GLP-1s within three months of being diagnosed. William Blair analyst Margaret Kaczor cited interviews with three physicians, including Insulet Medical Director Trang Ly, who all said there was no evidence GLP-1s reverse damage to the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. ...
By Connor Lynch Pictured: Bristol Myers Squibb in New Jersey/iStock, arlutz73 Bristol Myers Squibb has trimmed its development pipeline, announcing at an R&D Day on Thursday that the company would be cutting two mid-stage and four early-stage clinical programs for efficacy and safety reasons. Two Phase II clinical programs were on the BMS chopping block, including an investigational asset targeting heat shock protein 47 (HSP47), a small interfering RNA (siRNA) for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which was licensed from Nitto Denko for an upfront payment of $100 million in 2016. The compound inhibits expression of the heat shock protein, which is associated with excessive collagen buildup such as occurs in NASH, which is the most severe form of fatty liver disease. In 2019, BMS completed a Phase II trial investigating two different doses of the siRNA in 61 patients with scar tissue buildup post-hepatitis C infection. Neither dose performed better than ...
By Tristan Manalac Pictured: AbbVie corporate office in California/iStock, vzphotos AbbVie will not exercise its exclusive licensing option for Harpoon Therapeutics’ HPN217 program, being developed for the treatment of multiple myeloma, the immuno-oncology biotech announced Wednesday. Harpoon will retain exclusive ownership over HPN217, for which it is running a Phase I clinical trial. The company will complete the study and plans to advance the candidate through its next phases of development. Despite AbbVie’s decision, Harpoon CEO Julie Eastland said in a statement that the biotech remains “confident in HPN217’s potential” to offer multiple myeloma patients “a differentiated treated option.” The company will share interim results from the candidate’s Phase I study at the upcoming International Myeloma Society (IMS) Annual Meeting, scheduled for Sept. 28, Eastland said. Developed using Harpoon’s proprietary TriTAC technology, HPN217 targets the B-cell maturation antigen, a protein highly and specifically expressed on myeloma cells. TriTAC, which stands ...
AbbVie has shared positive top-line results from a head-to-head study of its interleukin-23 inhibitor Skyrizi (risankizumab) in Crohn’s disease. The late-stage study, SEQUENCE, has been evaluating the drug against Johnson & Johnson’s Stelara (ustekinumab) in patients with moderately to severely active disease who have failed one or more traditional anti-TNF agents. Skyrizi was shown to match Stelara in terms of clinical remission at week 24, with remission rates of 59% in the Skyrizi group and 40% in the Stelara cohort. On the second primary endpoint of endoscopic remission at week 48, Skyrizi demonstrated superiority to Stelara, with remission rates of 32% and 16%, respectively. All secondary endpoints achieved statistical significance for superiority versus Stelara, AbbVie said, and safety results were consistent with the overall safety profile of Skyrizi. Crohn’s disease is a chronic, progressive condition of the digestive system, causing symptoms such as persistent diarrhoea and abdominal pain. It is ...
Merck & Co. was the first drugmaker to sue over the controversial Medicare price negotiation provisions in last year’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). But the New Jersey drug giant “lacks standing” to challenge the law in court, the Biden administration argued in a new filing. Monday, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) argued that Merck can’t sue the agency because it isn’t the primary manufacturer for the diabetes med Januvia—one of 10 medications up for the first round of price negotiations in 2026. Simply put, HHS argues a Merck subsidiary is the company set to face the negotiation process, not Merck itself. Merck has argued it stands to suffer harm from the price negotiations because it developed and markets Januvia. But that assertion is “incorrect,” according to HHS, because a “non-party” to the lawsuit, Merck Sharp & Dohme, holds the FDA license to Januvia. “Accordingly, [the Centers for ...
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has accepted Takeda’s biologics license application (BLA) for the company’s investigational subcutaneous administration of Entyvio (vedolizumab) for the treatment of Crohn’s disease. The BLA, which is for maintenance therapy of moderate to severe active forms of the disease after induction therapy with IV vedolizumab, will now be reviewed by the FDA alongside a separate BLA submitted by Takeda for the same formulation indicated for ulcerative colitis treatment. Dr Vijay Yajnik, vice president and head of US Medical for Gastroenterology at Takeda said in a statement: “With two applications for a subcutaneous option of Entyvio now under FDA review, we remain firm in our commitment to the inflammatory bowel disease community—adults with ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease—and the healthcare professionals actively managing their care.” Takeda submitted the most recent BLA with data from a Phase III clinical trial demonstrating that Entyvio led to a ...
Avalo Therapeutics will divest three compounds in its rare disease AVTX-800 series to AUG Therapeutics, marking a further development in the company’s tumultuous past months that included a negative trial readout and a default. The divestment is expected to be completed in Q4 2023, according to a 12 September press release. AUG will make an upfront payment of $150,000 for each of the three compounds bought from Avalo. This includes AVTX-801 (D-galactose), AVTX-802 (D-mannose) and AVTX-803 (L-fucose). In addition to the upfront payment, AUG will make a contingent payment of $15m if the first US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval is for an indication that is not a rare paediatric disease. AUG will also assume up to $150,000 of certain liabilities incurred before the agreement, based on the 12 September press release. Avalo’s AVTX-801 is a therapeutic dose of D-galactose that was developed for the treatment of the rare ...
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