U.S. panel backs claim Lilly diabetes
drug cuts cardiac death
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[June 29, 2016]
By Toni Clarke
(Reuters) - Eli Lilly & Co and Boehringer
Ingelheim should be allowed to claim that their diabetes drug Jardiance
cuts the risk of cardiovascular death, an advisory panel to the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration concluded on Tuesday.
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The FDA is not obliged to follow the advice of its advisory
committees but typically does so.
Jardiance, also known as empagliflozin, was approved in 2014 to help
lower blood sugar in patients with type 2 diabetes. The companies
are seeking approval to claim that it also cuts the risk of death
from heart attacks and strokes.
The panelists voted 12-11 to allow the claim that it cuts the risk
of cardiovascular death. The panel voted unanimously that it does
not add to the risk of cardiovascular problems.
When the FDA approved Jardiance it asked the company to conduct a
study to show the drug did not increase the risk of cardiovascular
problems.
Results showed the drug cut the combined risk of cardiac death,
non-fatal heart attack and non-fatal stroke by 14 percent.
The result was driven by a 38 percent reduction in cardiovascular
death. There was no significant reduction in non-fatal heart attacks
or non-fatal strokes.
The trial showed an overall reduction in death from any cause of 32
percent.
Panelists wrestled with concerns that the data emerged from a single
trial. The FDA typically requires two trials before approving a
claim of this nature. Panelists also struggled to make sense of a
number of unexplained deaths, which may have distorted the actual
result.
Dr. Robert Smith, a professor of medicine at Brown University and
chair of the panel, said the mortality data is "very robust," but he
was uncertain whether results could be replicated in a second trial.
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Analysts on average expect Jardiance sales to reach $3.1 billion by
2021, a figure that partially reflects a bet that the FDA will allow
the cardiac death claim, according to a recent report by Seamus
Fernandez, an analyst at Leerink.
Jardiance belongs to a new family of treatments called SGLT2
inhibitors that include Johnson & Johnson's $1.3 billion-a-year
Invokana and AstraZeneca Plc's Farxiga. Other diabetes drug makers,
including Novo Nordisk A/S are also seeking label expansions for
heart risk.
(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis,
Bernard Orr)
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