The U.S. FDA cleared teclistamab from Janssen Pharmaceutical Cos. as the first bispecific antibody for treating patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma (MM), joining other BCMA-targeted drugs, including an antibody-drug conjugate and CAR T therapies.
GSK plc may have pushed the door open Oct. 26 for the use of a new class of oral drugs to treat anemia in U.S. patients with chronic kidney disease who are dialysis dependent. The U.S. FDA’s Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee voted 13-3 that the benefits of GSK’s daprodustat outweighed the risks in that population. However, the committee didn’t push the door wide enough for patients not on dialysis, voting 5-11 on the question of whether the drug’s benefits outweighed its risk in the nondialysis population, even though that group conceivably could see a greater benefit. The test now is whether the FDA will follow the committee’s lead.
Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Nervgen, Regenerx, Rznomics, Timber.
Expanding its mandate to accelerate access to essential medicines to people in low- and middle-income countries, the Medicines Patent Pool signed its first voluntary licensing agreement for a cancer treatment, Novartis AG’s Tasigna (nilotinib).
Device makers often need the assistance of physicians to aid in device design and development, but this is a practice that comes with some legal hazards. A session held here in Boston on enforcement in the U.S. made clear that manufacturers must exercise caution in these consulting arrangements, such as documenting the need for outside help with the device, lest the manufacturer end up with a hefty, multimillion-dollar fine imposed by U.S. enforcement agencies.
Medicare coverage of breakthrough medical devices is in its fourth iteration under the rubric of Transitional Coverage of Emerging Technologies (TCET) and two managers at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recently penned an op-ed in a leading medical journal about the TCET program, which generated at least as many questions as answers.
Regulatory snapshots, including global submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Akeso, Astrazeneca, Biontech, Carsgen, GSK, Kira, Moderna, Novavax, Pfizer, Roche, Telix, Zhiyu.
Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Abbvie, Acumen, Astrazeneca, Daiichi, JJP, Leo, Merck & Co., Novaliq, Novavax, Sensorion, Vanda, Vaxxinity.
The U.S. FDA recently released its guidance agenda for fiscal 2023, a plan that de-emphasizes the oft-promised draft guidance for change control for artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms, which is listed as a B priority instead of an A draft guidance priority. At this year’s Medtech Conference here in Boston, the FDA’s Melissa Torres disavowed the notion that any national regulatory authority is delaying another authority’s policy on software change control, but she acknowledged that these conversations about regulatory harmonization typically predate formal policy development.
It’s been a long road, but Astrazeneca plc’s anti-CTLA4 antibody, tremelimumab, finally earned its first U.S. FDA nod, cleared for use in combination with anti-PD-L1 drug Imfinzi (durvalumab) to treat patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The commercial impact of the dual checkpoint therapy, however, remains to be seen, as it goes up against Roche Holding AG’s combination of Avastin (bevacizumab) and Tecentriq (atezolizumab), which gained standard-of-care status in first-line HCC in 2021.