In a statement posted on the patient advocacy website Cure Duchenne,
Marathon's chief executive, Jeffrey Aronin, said the company was
pausing the launch amid "concerns about how the pricing and
reimbursement details will affect individual patients and
caregivers."
The company said it would maintain its "expanded access program"
under which 800 patients currently receive the drug for nothing. It
said patients currently importing the drug from overseas would
continue to be able to do so.
The furore is the latest in a series related to U.S. drug prices,
including Mylan NV's emergency EpiPen allergy treatment, that have
drawn the ire of patients and lawmakers of all political stripes.
Marathon's drug, Emflaza, known generically as deflazacort, is a
steroid, one of a class of drugs commonly used to treat Duchenne's
that patients could import for personal use because it was not
available in the United States. Last week it won U.S. approval, in
theory closing off that option.
Earlier on Monday independent Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and
Democratic congressman Elijah Cummings of Maryland, called on
privately held Marathon to justify the price of the drug by
documenting the cost involved in bringing it to market.
Marathon, the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Aronin, did not after
all develop the product, which has been around for decades. The
company acquired rights to two clinical trials that had already been
completed. And it conducted further toxicology and other tests to
bring it through the U.S. regulatory process.
Marathon argues that the studies it conducted had value in
determining proper dosing, potential side effects and drug-to-drug
interactions, allowing physicians to prescribe "with confidence."
In a separate statement, Marathon said it appreciated the
opportunity to discuss "the value of an FDA approval of a medicine"
with Sanders and Cummings "and futhering our shared goal that every
patient who needs this drug receives it."
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President Donald Trump has said he wants to lower drug prices
and increase competition though he has not spelled out how.
The Food and Drug Administration approved Emflaza under its "orphan"
drug program that provides incentives to drugmakers to develop
treatments for diseases with small patient populations. The
incentives include seven years of market exclusivity. Duchenne's, a
devastating muscle-wasting disease, affects some 15,000 patients in
the United States, mostly young boys.
"Marathon will have a monopoly on deflazacort for years to come,
preventing less expensive generic competitors from entering the
market, despite the fact that this drug is already available in
generic form in other countries," Sanders and Cummings wrote.
(Reporting by Toni Clarke; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Andrew Hay)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|