Alzheimer's drugmakers seek accelerated FDA review despite U.S. coverage
decision
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[April 09, 2022]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - Eisai Co Ltd and Eli Lilly and Co on Friday said they still
plan to seek accelerated U.S. approval for experimental Alzheimer's
drugs even after the Medicare health plan decided to severely limit
coverage of medicines approved in that manner.
On Thursday, after a months-long review and a pressure campaign from
patient advocacy groups, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) said it would only pay for Biogen Inc's Aduhelm, and other drugs
that work in a similar fashion, for patients enrolled in valid clinical
studies, unless the treatments demonstrate clear evidence of patient
benefit.
Medicare covers nearly 64 million Americans age 65 and older, so the
coverage decision could affect 85% of people who might otherwise use the
medications for the age-related condition.
Eisai's lecanemab and Lilly's donanemab, like Aduhelm, are monoclonal
antibodies designed to remove beta-amyloid, a type of protein fragment
that accumulates in the brains of Alzheimer's patients. The two
drugmakers said they expect upcoming Phase III trial results to
eventually validate earlier-stage data under review by the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration.
A fourth plaque-targeting antibody, gantenerumab, is in late-stage
development at Roche Holding AG, which is not seeking an accelerated FDA
review.
The FDA in June authorized Biogen's Aduhelm - the first drug in this
class and first U.S. approved Alzheimer's treatment in 20 years - under
the agency's accelerated pathway based on the drug's plaque-clearing
ability, rather than proof it slows cognitive decline in Alzheimer's
patients.
Medicare, however, has decided to allow standard reimbursement only for
Alzheimer's drugs approved under the traditional FDA process based on "a
direct measure of clinical benefit."
Eisai, which is partnered with Biogen, said it aims to complete a
rolling FDA application for lecanemab, under the accelerated pathway, by
mid-year. The Japanese drugmaker said it also expects results from its
1,800-patient, Phase III trial this fall.
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If those results are positive, Eisai
said it believes the large study could meet the "high level of
evidence" criteria set by Medicare in its coverage decision.
The study is designed to show that lecanemab can slow by at least
25% the rate of cognitive and functional decline.
"It is a disease-modifying drug," Ivan Cheung,
Eisai's U.S. chairman, said in a recent interview with Reuters. "You
expect to see separation between the treated and untreated groups
that improves over time."
Roche also expects to report Phase III trial results for
gantenerumab later this year.
Lilly, in a statement, said it intends to complete its current,
rolling application for accelerated FDA approval of donanemab this
year. It does not expect to have results from a Phase III trial of
the drug until mid-2023.
The Indianapolis-based company said it believes Medicare coverage
restrictions are "unnecessary, restrictive and inappropriate" for
FDA-approved drugs.
The idea that removing amyloid plaques is reasonably likely to slow
cognitive and functional decline in people living with early
Alzheimer’s is known as the "amyloid hypothesis," a theory that has
led to long history of drugs that tried and failed to clear the
plaques or help patients.
Greg Rippon, neuroscience and Alzheimer's Disease medical lead at
Roche's Genentech unit, explained in a recent interview that the
theory is supported by analysis of inherited forms of Alzheimer's,
which are all caused by mutations in amyloid processing.
He said more recent studies have shown that the build-up of amyloid
is a precursor to other brain dysfunction that speeds
neurodegeneration for patients with Alzheimer's.
"Obviously, it comes down to clinical data and demonstrating that
clinical benefit and that's where a lot of skepticism is centered,"
Rippon said.
(This story refiles to correct spelling of 'plaques' in paragraph
15)
(Reporting By Deena Beasley; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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