New Alzheimer’s Drug Heightens Debate Over FDA Accelerated Approval Process
FDA’s approval of Biogen’s treatment for Alzheimer’s disease has raised questions about the agency’s accelerated approval process.
FDA’s surprise decision this week to approve Biogen’s treatment for Alzheimer’s disease has raised serious questions about the validity and value of the agency’s accelerated approval process. The
The broad labeling approved for the new drug, moreover, has generated heated debate among scientists, researchers, patients, and payers as to the long-term impact of the approval decision on the credibility and independence of FDA decisions. Coming in the wake of an assessment of several cancer therapies that gained accelerated approval but failed to document long-term benefit, the decision has raised questions about approving new drugs and biologics based on preliminary evidence of possible benefit that awaits later confirmation. FDA emergency use authorizations (EUAs) for some questionable and harmful anti-COVID-19 treatments already have eroded public confidence in the scientific and medical validity of some agency actions, and many research leaders fear this recent decision will heighten those concerns.
The very high price tag set by Biogen for the treatment also is heightening the debate over pharmaceutical costs, reimbursement, and prescribing. In setting a price of $56,000 a year, way above the cost-effective threshold of $2500 to $8000 calculated by the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER), Biogen stands to earn some $17 billion a year from the drug, according to Wall Street analysts, particularly with a label that opens prescribing to both early and severely debilitated Alzheimer’s patients. All eyes are on how Medicare and health and drug plans will set coverage parameters and how doctors and medical authorities will identify those individuals most suitable for treatment.
Undermining early approvals
FDA’s
In April 2021, FDA held an
It remains to be seen whether the flexibility applied by FDA reviewers to the new Alzheimer’s drug reflects a broader, less rigorous approach to approving treatments for devastating conditions with urgent need of treatment. The significance of FDA’s action is apparent in a personal message from Patrizia Cavazzoni, director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). She notes that
Some industry analysts predict that this more flexible approval standard will drive a surge in R&D for additional Alzheimer’s drugs as well as other experimental treatments for rare and lethal diseases. Several leading pharma companies are testing new Alzheimer’s treatments that also aim to reduce amyloid in the brain or to clear other invasive substances. But many scientists fear that approvals based on limited evidence of clinical benefit may generate confusion and uncertainty that only deters investment in R&D.
One outcome, though, is that FDA analysts and pundits no longer will assume that agency reviewers will follow the recommendations of its advisory committees, as usually is the case. The advisory committee that assessed the Biogen drug last November voted almost unanimously against approval based on the limited evidence of effectiveness, but FDA reached its own conclusion.
Newsletter
Stay current in clinical research with Applied Clinical Trials, providing expert insights, regulatory updates, and practical strategies for successful clinical trial design and execution.
Related Articles
- Tips to Rescue a Clinical Trial Before It’s Too Late
May 3rd 2024
- Is Trust the Secret Ingredient for Digital Product Success?
December 12th 2023
- FDA Inspections Face Continued Overhaul and Changes
October 13th 2023
- Reaching for the ‘White Spots’ in Rare Disease
September 27th 2023
- The EU Regulations Catching US Pharma Companies Off Guard
September 25th 2023