The drug, sintilimab, from Chinese cancer drug developer Innovent
Biologics Inc and U.S. drugmaker Eli Lilly and Co, has been
developed and commercialized under a global agreement.
Lilly and Innovent currently sell the drug, marketed as Tyvyt in
China, where it was approved for relapsed or resistant to treatment
classic Hodgkin's lymphoma after at least two lines of chemotherapy.
Jiangsu-based Innovent's marketing application was accepted for
review by the FDA in May.
In a late-stage study, Innovent said the drug in combination with
Lilly's Alimta and platinum chemotherapy met the main goal of
progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with advanced or
recurrent nonsquamous non-small cell lung cancer - the most
lucrative cancer market.
PFS - the time it takes for the cancer to begin to worsen - was
almost 9 months for sintilimab versus 5 months among those who
received a placebo.
In a briefing document published on Tuesday ahead of the meeting,
FDA staff reviewers said the patient population in the single
country trial does not reflect the diversity of the American
population.
The comments highlight the challenge facing drugmakers including
Britain-based AstraZeneca Plc, Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding and
U.S. biotech Amgen Inc that have made big investments in the hopes
of benefiting from cheaper trial costs in China.
The FDA reviewers said multi-national clinical trials are the
preferred international standard for drug development and allow for
an evaluation of consistency of treatment effects in many
geographies.
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Innovent in its briefing document said the drug
has demonstrated a positive benefit-risk
profile, adding that clinical practice standards
are similar between China and the United States.
Lilly, which has the exclusive license for the drug outside China,
said last week it believes the study data are applicable to the U.S.
population.
Richard Pazdur, director of the FDA's Oncology Center of Excellence,
expressed concerns about an increasing number of cancer drugs based
solely or predominantly on clinical data from China in an essay
published last week in Lancet Oncology.
The trial raises questions regarding the data from a single foreign
country to support U.S. approval and if the data can be generalized
to the American population, Pazdur wrote in the article titled,
"Importing oncology trials from China: a bridge over troubled
waters?"
Jefferies equity analysts said the committee is likely to recommend
that additional clinical trials be required to demonstrate the
drug's applicability in U.S. patients and to suggest the agency
defers a regulatory decision.
(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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