Roche gets boost from FDA
in bid to expand uses for Actemra
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[October 05, 2016]
ZURICH (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and
Drug Administration has granted breakthrough status to Roche's
rheumatoid arthritis medication Actemra for giant cell arteritis, the
Swiss drugmaker said, a step which could help it broaden applications
for the medicine.
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Giant cell arteritis is a chronic, potentially life-threatening
autoimmune condition caused by inflammation of large and
medium-sized arteries, most often in the head but also in the aorta
and its branches.
It generally affects people over the age of 50.
After first winning approval for the drug in 2010, Roche continues
to look for new uses for Actemra, known as RoActemra in European
markets, to combat additional autoimmune diseases. The FDA's
breakthrough therapy tag expedites review of drugs that demonstrate
potentially substantial improvements over existing therapies.
Actemra is Roche's fifth-best-selling medicine, with first-half 2016
sales rising 17 percent to 814 million Swiss francs ($833 million)
as doctors prescribed it for rheumatoid arthritis and juvenile
idiopathic arthritis.
"The FDA Breakthrough Therapy designation for giant cell arteritis
underscores our continued commitment to explore Actemra/RoActemra in
autoimmune diseases with significant unmet need," Roche Chief
Medical Officer Sandra Horning said in the release, adding this
would be the first new treatment for the condition in 50 years.
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According to an earlier study whose results were released in June,
Roche said Actemra initially combined with a six-month steroid
regimen more effectively sustained remission through one year
compared with a six- or 12-month steroid-only regimen that today is
the standard therapy.
Basel-based Roche plans to present full data from the study later
this year.
($1 = 0.9775 Swiss francs)
(Reporting by John Revill; editing by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi)
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