- FDA - loses its credibility
- Alzheimer's patients - are given false hope and may end up taking 'snake oil' for many years down the road
- Patient Advocacy Group - Alzheimer's Association was unhappy with Biogen's $56,000/year/patient price tag.
- Medicare/Medicaid/Insurance Companies - extremely high cost associated with Aduhelm ($56,000/year/patient) and the broad label for Aduhelm can cost them a lot of money
- FDA Adcom Committee - insulted by FDA's decision to approve even though the Adcom voted overwhelmingly against the approval
- Regulatory science - FDA has touted for years about the regulatory science and the strict rules to be followed for drug approval - these rules are not followed by the FDA - what can you do?
- FDA statisticians - It is clear that the FDA statistical reviewers had their dissenting opinions and questioned the data / results from two pivotal studies that were prematurely discontinued due to futility. Statisticians' opinions were overruled.
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- Aducanumab Approved to Treat Alzheimer’s Disease
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- New Alzheimer’s Drug Heightens Debate Over FDA Accelerated Approval Process
- The F.D.A.’s Extraordinary Approval of a Questionable Treatment for Alzheimer’s
- 6 ways the FDA’s approval of Aduhelm does more harm than good
- Biogen Alzheimer’s drug approval was 'surprising for a lot of people': Eli Lilly CEO
- The FDA Is Failing the American People
- New Alzheimer's drug sets dangerous precedent
- How the new Alzheimer’s drug works—and why the FDA is under fire for approving it
- Pharma industry insiders disavow FDA's approval of Aduhelm
- New Alzheimer's drug approval fallout: Public Citizen seeks removal of FDA's Woodcock, Cavazzoni and Dunn
- Controversial drug approval stokes concern about lack of a permanent FDA chief
- Key senator calls for Woodcock's removal as FDA fallout from Biogen Alzheimer's approval heats up
- Aduhelm Approval Raises Concerns About US FDA Leadership, Senate Finance Chair Suggests
- Biogen says FDA didn't push for trial before Alzheimer's approval
- Biogen's $56K price on Aduhelm 'simply unacceptable,' Alzheimer's Association says after vouching for FDA approval
- AdComm member quits over FDA approval of Biogen's Aduhelm
- AdComm exodus: 2nd expert quits over FDA approval of Biogen's Aduhelm
- Third member of FDA expert committee resigns over controversial Alzheimer’s therapy decision
- Why a controversial decision won’t stop me from serving on FDA advisory committees
- Aduhelm Approval Firestorm Raises Question: What Are US FDA Advisory Committees For, Anyway?
- Opinion: The FDA is in desperate need of some soul-searching
- The approval of aducanumab isn’t the end of the story. It’s just the beginning
- New FDA documents show internal dissent on Aduhelm approval
- What controversy? Eli Lilly plots Alzheimer's BLA filing later this year as FDA taps more anti-amyloid drugs as breakthroughs
- ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE: Open the Floodgates
- New York Times: A New Alzheimer’s Drug Offers More Questions Than Answers
- New York Times: How Aduhelm, an Unproven Alzheimer’s Drug, Got Approved - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
- How cozy is too cozy? FDA and Biogen offer up a test case – Endpoints News (endpts.com)
- We’re seeing what happens when the FDA loses credibility
- ICER: FDA Has Failed In Its Responsibility To Protect Patients From Harm
- Aducanumab Glass Half Empty. No, It's Half Full | MedPage Today
- CNN: The road to Aduhelm: What one ex-FDA adviser called 'probably the worst drug approval decision in recent US history' for an Alzheimer's treatment
In the drug development field, pre-specification is critical. The regulatory pathway, the number of clinical trials for clinical development program, the clinical trial design, study endpoints, and statistical analysis plan have to be discussed and agreed upon with FDA. As Eli Lilly's CEO said that in drug development, "where the gold standard for approval is you call your shot, and then you hit your shot, like Babe Ruth pointing at the left-field and then hitting his home run there." The sub-group analyses and post-hoc analyses are for hypothesis-generating and can not be used to support the regulatory approval. In Biogen's case, it is obvious that an additional clinical trial is needed before the approval. By switching to the accelerated approval pathway, FDA essentially agreed that the pivotal studies with cognitive and function measures provided insufficient evidence for approval and they had to retrofit to find accelerated approval that is based on the biomarker (amyloid).
Following the advisory committee meeting, further discussion within FDA considered the uncertainty introduced by the conflicting results of Study 302 and Study 301 and the committee’s discussion of that uncertainty. Our discussions raised further consideration of the accelerated approval pathway; a topic discussed earlier in the development program but not directly discussed during the advisory committee meeting given the focus at that meeting on the evidence of clinical benefit. As you may be aware, the accelerated approval pathway is for drugs to treat serious diseases that are expected to provide a meaningful advantage over available therapy, but where there is residual uncertainty regarding the drug’s ultimate clinical benefit. To be approved under this pathway, there must be substantial evidence of the drug’s effectiveness on a surrogate endpoint—usually an endpoint that reflects the underlying disease pathology (accelerated approval can also use an intermediate clinical endpoint). An effect on this surrogate endpoint must be shown to be reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit. We concluded that these requirements were met for aducanumab, with substantial evidence that the drug reduces amyloid beta plaque, and that this reduction is reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit. For drugs approved using the accelerated approval pathway, further study is required to verify anticipated clinical benefits
FDA's controversial Aduhelm decision leaves ALS patients feeling spurned
In general, to demonstrate substantial evidence of effectiveness of the drug, two adequate and well-controlled trials are needed. In Biogen's case, two adequate and well-controlled trials ENGAGE and EMERGE to evaluate the efficacy and safety of aducanumab in patients. When two studies gave contradicting results (one positive and one not positive), a third adequate and well-controlled study will be needed (before the drug approval, not after the drug approval). I remembered other examples: Pirfenidone was developed for treating the rare disease of IPF (idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis). The sponsor conducted two pivotal studies with one study positive (p=0.01) and one study negative (p=0.5). Initial NDA submission with these two studies was rejected by the FDA. FDA demanded the sponsor to conduct a third study. A third study gave a positive result (p<0.01) and NDA was resubmitted, and FDA approved the Perfenidone for IPF. Another example is ciprofloxacin dispersion in non-CF bronchiectasis (rare disease without approved treatment). The sponsor conducted two identical phase III studies ORIBIT-3 and ORBIT-4 - two studies gave contradicting results (one positive and one not positive). The NDA was rejected by FDA and additional studies were not conducted due to funding issues - ciprofloxacin dispersion remains not approved for non-CF bronchiectasis.The FDA's controversial approval of Biogen's Aduhelm drug for Alzheimer's disease has been met with fierce resistance from all corners of the biopharma industry, but few seem to be as upset with the decision as ALS patients and advocacy groups.
For all that's already been written and discussed about the agency's announcement, from the drug's exorbitantly high price of $56,000 per year to criticism over lowered standards, ALS patients see something more. ALS patients and associations say they largely regarded Aduhelm's approval as a bittersweet double standard: happy that those with Alzheimer's have a new drug available, but questioning how the FDA evaluated Biogen's drug compared to the experimental programs being studies for their own disease.
Nothing punctuated the feeling harder than the agency's announcement in April that a promising drug under development by the biotech Amylyx would need another study to confirm efficacy. This program, called AMX0035, hit the primary endpoint for improving function specifically laid out in the FDA's 2019 guidelines for new ALS treatments, whereas Biogen halted two pivotal Aduhelm studies early because of futility in its own function measurements.
- The Saga of Biogen’s Alzheimer Drug Aducanumab
- FDA advisory committee meeting on Biogen's aducanumab in Alzheimer's Disease
- Aducanumab approved label
- FDA aducanumab review documents
- Letter to AdCom "Accelerated Approval of Aducanumab NDA for Alzheimer’s disease"
- Alzheimer’s Disease: Developing Drugs for Treatment Guidance for Industry
- FDA Guidance: Expedited Programs for SeriousConditions – Drugs andBiologics
- Listen: Two Alzheimer’s experts with opposing viewpoints on Aduhelm
- Podcast: Every angle on the FDA's polarizing approval of Biogen's Alzheimer's drug
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