Eli Lilly says U.S. FDA rejects accelerated approval for Alzheimer's
drug
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[January 20, 2023]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) -Eli Lilly and Co on Thursday said the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration had rejected accelerated approval of its experimental
Alzheimer's drug because it had not submitted enough trial data from
patients who were treated for at least a year.
Lilly said the FDA had sent it a complete response letter for donanemab,
an antibody designed to remove amyloid protein plaques from the brains
of people with early Alzheimer's. Such letters typically outline
concerns and conditions that must be addressed to gain U.S. approval.
The FDA had issued the letter "due to the limited number of patients
with at least 12 months of drug exposure data provided in the
submission," Eli Lilly said. In the mid-stage trial, patients stopped
treatment once their amyloid was cleared - which Lilly said had happened
after six months for 40% of patients.
"I don't think it says anything negative about the drug. It was just a
manifestation of the study design," said Dr. Ronald Petersen, an
Alzheimer's expert at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
The company said it remained on track to report in the second quarter of
this year results from a confirmatory Phase 3 trial of donanemab. That
study, Lilly said, would form the basis of donanemab's application for
traditional FDA approval shortly thereafter.
"I don't see this is an impediment to the process or timeline in any
way," said Dr. Eric Reiman, executive director of Banner Alzheimer's
Institute. "When the Phase 3 trial reads out, I understand it will have
that safety data in at least 100 people."
UsAgainstAlzheimer's chief operating officer Russ Paulsen said the
advocacy group was "disappointed this treatment won’t be made available
to patients sooner," but was encouraged by the reason.
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An Eli Lilly and Company pharmaceutical
manufacturing plant is pictured at 50 ImClone Drive in Branchburg,
New Jersey, March 5, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Segar
"Donanemab worked too well .... The
FDA requires a minimum of 100 patients to be on the drug for at
least 12 months but, due to donanemab's quick action in some
patients, many were able to stop treatment in as little as six
months," he said in an email.
The FDA can grant "accelerated" approval to drugs based on their
impact on a measurement, in this case amyloid brain plaques, likely
to correlate with patient response. Full approval requires clinical
evidence a drug will help patient outcomes.
Shares of Lilly were down 1.4% at $346.02 in after hours trading.
Donanemab is in the same class as aducanumab and lecanemab, the
latter being a treatment for early Alzheimer's that was given
accelerated approval by the FDA earlier this month. It is being
marketed under the brand name Leqembi by partners Eisai Co Ltd and
Biogen Inc, which have said they are in the process of seeking full
FDA approval.
Shares of Biogen were up 2.8% at $288 after hours.
Sales of amyloid-lowering Alzheimer's drugs, which need to be given
by infusion, are expected to be minimal until they receive standard
FDA approval. That is because the U.S. government's Medicare health
plan for people over age 65 currently reimburses amyloid-targeting
drugs with accelerated approval only if patients are enrolled in a
validated clinical study.
(Additional reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago and Sriparna
Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila, David Gregorio and
Chris Reese)
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