Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Adverum, Annovis, Bausch + Lomb, Clovis, Diamedica, Innocare, Pfizer, Xortx.
The U.S. FDA has applied a class I designation to the recall of Flow-c and Flow-e anesthesia systems manufactured by Getinge AB of Gothenburg, Sweden, due to reports of faulty on-off switches, which could lead to a failure to provide the needed suction. While no injuries or fatalities have been reported in connection with the problem, the FDA said one possible consequence of device failure is pulmonary obstruction that could ultimately lead to death.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed insider trading charges against Doron Tavlin, formerly the vice president of business development for Mazor Robotics Ltd., of Caesarea, Israel, over a transaction that took place four years ago. The SEC is charging Tavlin with disclosing the then-impending acquisition of Mazor by Dublin-based Medtronic plc. to a personal friend, but these types of activities are becoming easier to detect thanks to analytics used by the SEC.
A few weeks ago, the odds of the deeply divided U.S. Congress passing drug pricing reforms that would allow direct Medicare negotiation seemed pretty slim. But those odds improved significantly July 6 when Senate Democrats reached a compromise on their version of the pricing provisions included in the Build Back Better bill, H.R. 5376, passed by the House last November.
Three serious adverse events have led the U.S. FDA to place a clinical hold on Diamedica Therapeutics Inc.’s phase II/III study of DM-199, a synthetic form of human tissue kallikrein-1 for treating acute ischemic stroke. The blood pressure in three participants dropped to a significantly low level shortly after receiving an I.V. dose of the therapy. All three bounced back to normal within minutes of stopping the I.V.
Regulatory snapshots, including global submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Arcoma, Renovia, Zsquare.
Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Ascletis, Biogen, Chinook, Coherus, Junshi, Inflarx, Kazia, Olix, Pyramid, Roche, Sensorion, Takeda, Titan, Turnstone.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) affirmed its proposed order to force Intersect ENT Inc., of Menlo Park, Calif., to divest itself of Fiagon AG before Dublin-based Medtronic plc., can complete its acquisition of Intersect. The announcement comes as no surprise, but serves as a reminder that the FTC is standing by previous threats to tightly control the mergers and acquisitions market in the U.S., a policy stance that has been duplicated in the European Union.
The U.S. FDA’s efforts to improve medical device quality includes a recent draft guidance that pertains to the pilot version of a voluntary improvement program, but stakeholders see a number of critical issues with the draft. A coalition of device makers said this pilot program should include disclosure guardrails that parallel similar guardrails provided for medical device reports (MDRs), a provision related to discovery during product liability litigation that is seen as critical if device makers are to take part in the voluntary improvement pilot.
While the U.S. Congress struggles to patch together statutory restraints on prescription drug prices, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), with the FDA’s help, is taking steps to cut back the patent thickets some drug companies are using to ward off the competition that would bring those prices down.