I've been on Kaftrio for a year now! 🥳
Still haven't had a hospital admission since last January. Bless the NHS.
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I've been on Kaftrio for a year now! 🥳
Still haven't had a hospital admission since last January. Bless the NHS.
5 Obat Baru di Bulan Mei 2017 yang Disetujui FDA
5 Obat Baru di Bulan Mei 2017 yang Disetujui FDA
Farmasetika.com – Food and Drug Adminsitration (FDA) Amerika Serikat berhasil memberikan 5 persetujan terhadap produk baru dan perluasan indikasi baru yang pada bulan Mei 2017.
Berikut selengkapnya
1. Bavencio
FDA memperluas indikasi injeksi avelumab (Bavencio) dari Pfizer pada tanggal 9 Mei 2017. Dengan persetujuan ini, Bavencia sekarang dapat digunakan untuk pengobatan pasien dengan karsinoma…
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Vertex Eyes a Half Billion Dollar Boost with Upcoming sNDA Decision
At the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco this week, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (NASDAQ:VRTX) reported its financial guidance for full year 2015. The company said it expects to report 2015 revenues of $980 million, with its two lead products, Kalydeco and Orkambi, accounting for $180 million and $220 million respectively. Going forward, however, the company expects the former to ramp up in net sales, with a low end target of $670 million during 2016. The majority of these gains will come from extended indications, and if the company is to meet its target, the FDA will need to give the green light to a few supplemental new drug applications (sNDA). One of these is set for review in just a couple of weeks, and if accepted, would open up a market worth just shy of half a billion dollars to Vertex. Ahead of the FDA decision, let’s have a look at what the sNDA addresses, and try and ascertain its chances of gaining approval come PDUFA.
The sNDA is targeting an extension of Kalydeco’s population target size to include people ages two years and older with one of twenty-three residual function mutations, in cystic fibrosis (CF). The drug’s current approval targets a specific mutation that causes circa 4% of the CF cases in the US, and if approved, the sNDA will expand the company’s market by about 1,500 individuals. On the face of it, this doesn’t sound like a massive expansion – cost of trials and the time it takes to negotiate the terms of an sNDA with the FDA should, from an economic perspective, inhibit this sort of small scale expansion. When considered in cahoots with the price of the drug however, things look a little better. When Kalydeco hit markets on the back of its FDA approval back in 2012, Vertex received widespread criticism for its pricing of the drug. On release, Kalydeco cost a little over $260,000 per patient. Today it costs a minimum of $300,000, rising to $360,000 in some instances. The drug is the first (and still the only) drug that targets the underlying cause of CF, rather than the symptoms of the disease, which gives Vertex an essential monopoly in the space – hence its seemingly exorbitant pricing.
Regardless, given that there are no currently available treatments for the 1,500 US individuals with the 23 mutations that Vertex is targeting with Kalydeco and its latest sNDA, chances are the company can hit pretty high penetration on approval. Given the low end price of $300,000, an accepting of the extension from the agency will open up a $450 million (conservative) market. It’s likely that Vertex’s full year 2016 guidance for the drug relies heavily on the company realizing a large portion of this potential.
PDUFA date comes in on February 6, with the drug having been accepted for priority review back in October. The data on which the application is based came out of a phase IIa study, which is not unusual for this type of expansion application, in which 24 people with the mutations in question underwent a course of treatment with Kalydeco. The trial met its endpoint, with all patients in the study showing noticeable improvement from baseline, giving the application some promise from an efficacy perspective. From a safety and tolerability viewpoint, there have been no really serious adverse events reported by the population currently receiving Kalydeco, and for a drug that has been on the market since 2012, this bodes well. The one tripping point might be the pediatric indication. The company is targeting (as mentioned) a minimum age threshold of two years, and the FDA is notoriously (and arguably rightly) very strict on pediatric drugs. Having said this, the drug is currently in use with pediatric patients, and so even though there is an element of risk, in all likelihood the FDA should have no issues.
Chances are we won’t get an advisory panel review before the FDA makes its final decision, as this one looks pretty straight forward. With this in mind, keep an eye out for an update ahead of, or on, PDUFA date. A green light will open up a potentially huge revenue stream for Vertex and – as such – will translate to some immediate upside in its market capitalization. One to watch.
Vertex Eyes a Half Billion Dollar Boost with Upcoming sNDA Decision was originally published on Market Exclusive
New Post has been published on http://www.booksbycarolinemiller.com/musings/social-media/thinking-makes-it-so/
Thinking Makes It So
When I revealed in an earlier blog that, prior to the election of George W. Bush, I’d been a registered Republican, readers admitted they were surprised. We live in a complex world, I replied, and I’m not averse either to profits or the stock market. (Blog 5/19/15) Not to put too fine a point ...
Clinical Trials and Studies are Underrated
Growing up with CF, my family and I have always been approached about me participating in different clinical trials or studies. When I was in pediatrics my parents always said no thank you to the people conducting research studies and I never really asked why. I just assumed that it must be a bad thing if my parents didn’t want me to be apart of them. I’ve now realized that it was a lot of the fact that my parents both worked and weren’t capable of driving me downtown to doctors appointments all the time for the studies or the potential of the any unknown risks of the drug scared them a bit.
Now that I’m an adult and able to make the decisions on my own, I’ve realized how amazing they really are! The first study I ever did was last summer while I was in-patient at my hospital. The study was checking how high doses of Vitamin D interacted with health in people with Cystic Fibrosis. They just gave me extra vitamin D for two days and monitored my blood levels. That easily I made $25.
Monday morning I went in for a study on nutrition in CF patients. They had me come in fasting, took a bunch of blood levels, my vitals, urine and sputum sample, answer a few questionnaires, took a DEXA scan of my body, and did a test to check how many calories I burned while at rest. In roughly two hours, I made $75 and a free lunch.
I was approached today by my CF team and the hospital’s research coordinator about doing a 42-day study for a Phase 2 drug that works basically the same was as Kalydeco and the new Ivacaftor x Lumacaftor combination drugs, just made by a different company. It will be for patients with two copies of the Delta F508 gene (like I do) and work to repair the faulty gene/protein. I will get paid over $600 and have the chance to get this amazing new drug! All I have to do is come in 5 times total (2 visits are 9hrs long and 3 visits are 2-6hrs long), take my meds for two weeks, and basically let them see how my body reacts to either the new medication or placebo. Pretty easy considering it’s $600, plus they pay for my gas, parking, and any food I buy to eat on the visit days. PLUS, Hopefully I can help the CF world become one step closer to find some pretty amazing drugs and eventually a cure! As long as my right arm doesn’t fall off or get killed off by this new medicine, I have no idea why I could ever say no!
Kalydeco
Just started it today and I'm so excited. But I'm also nervous because what if this is another medication that my body will react to. Trying to ignore the fact I'm allergic to 9 medications. Set in my mind to have no reaction. I got this.
Vertex Outlines 2015 Business Priorities to Support the Development, Approval and Launch of New Medicines for the Treatment of People with Cystic Fibrosis
Vertex Outlines 2015 Business Priorities to Support the Development, Approval and Launch of New Medicines for the Treatment of People with Cystic Fibrosis
-Priority Review granted for combination of lumacaftor and ivacaftor in people with cystic fibrosis ages 12 and older who have two copies of the F508del mutation; PDUFA date of July 5, 2015-
-More than 3,700 people with CF expected to be eligible to receive KALYDECO by end of 2015 supporting continued growth in KALYDECO global revenues; 2015 KALYDECO net revenue guidance of $560 – $580 million-
-…
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U.S. Food and Drug Administration Approves KALYDECO® (ivacaftor) for Use in People with Cystic Fibrosis Ages 6 and Older Who Have the R117H Mutation
U.S. Food and Drug Administration Approves KALYDECO® (ivacaftor) for Use in People with Cystic Fibrosis Ages 6 and Older Who Have the R117H Mutation
–Approximately 500 people with cystic fibrosis ages 6 and older have the R117H mutation in the United States–
BOSTON–(December 29, 2014)– Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (Nasdaq: VRTX) today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a supplemental new drug application (sNDA) for the use of KALYDECO® (ivacaftor) in people with cystic fibrosis (CF) ages 6 and older who…
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