The study showed that tafamidis reduced all-cause mortality over a
30-month period in patients with transthyretin amyloid
cardiomyopathy to 29.5 percent, versus 42.9 percent in patients who
received a placebo. It also reduced the rate of
cardiovascular-related hospitalization by around 32 percent, Pfizer
said.
The data was presented at the European Society of Cardiology
Congress in Munich.
"The result is really, phenomenally encouraging and gives fantastic
hope for patients with this devastating illness," said Dr. Brenda
Cooperstone, chief development officer of rare disease at Pfizer.
"It's a uniformly fatal disease."
Tafamidis is one of 15 potential blockbuster treatments Pfizer is
trying to develop. The company's chief executive officer, Ian Read,
has touted Pfizer's pipeline, arguing that the growth potential from
these drugs makes undertaking a large transaction unnecessary.
There are currently no approved medications in the United States for
transthyretin cardiomyopathy. The number of patients currently
diagnosed with the progressive disease is exceedingly small --
somewhere in the range of 2,000 to 5,000 patients globally.
But Pfizer believes the disease is underdiagnosed and that there
could be 400,000 to 500,000 patients in developed markets around the
world. Cooperstone said the current diagnosis rate is only around
0.5 percent to 1 percent.
"Part of that is driven by the fact that today there is no therapy -
there's no reason to actually make the diagnosis," she said, noting
that a real treatment should significantly help improve the
diagnosis rate.
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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave the drug breakthrough
status in May after Pfizer released topline results from the study,
which could accelerate the drug's approval.
Cooperstone said Pfizer expects to complete the submission of its
application for tafamidis to the FDA in the fourth quarter. The
agency has committed to reviewing it as fast as possible, she said,
but declined to lay out a timeline for approval.
Until then, Pfizer has established an expanded access program to
make the drug available to patients prior to regulatory approval.
SunTrust Robinson Humphrey analyst John Boris said in a research
note last week that a second-half submission to regulators suggests
approval and launch of the drug in 2019. He said that at an annual
price of $150,000 to $300,000, the drug could bring in $600 million
to $1.2 billion globally.
The study had around 440 patients enrolled.
Tafamidis was previously rejected by the FDA as treatment for a rare
neurodegenerative disease. But it is currently approved, under the
brand name Vyndaqel, in 40 other countries as a treatment for
familial amyloid polyneuropathy, a rare, progressive and fatal
neurodegenerative disease.
While the drug would not currently have any competition, Alnylam
Pharmaceuticals and Ionis Pharmaceuticals Inc are developing drugs
for a similar disease - hereditary TTR amyloidosis - also caused by
a buildup of transthyretin protein in the body.
(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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