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3 March, 2026 |
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Yes, we've got MORE news about the FDA and the impacts of its approach on rare diseases, following this morning's story on the shutdown of EveryOne Medicines. Today, Prime Medicine said that it plans to seek accelerated approval for a previously shelved therapy for a rare immune disease, a decision based in part on the agency's new rare disease guidances. |
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Drew Armstrong |
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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by Lei Lei Wu
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While other drugmakers have criticized the FDA’s recent judgment on rare disease treatments, Prime Medicine says the agency’s rhetoric pushed it to move forward with a rare immune disease therapy it had previously sidelined. The gene editing company said Tuesday it plans to ask the FDA for accelerated approval of a treatment for chronic granulomatous disease that so far generated promising data in just two patients. It's a change of heart from Prime’s decision in May to shelve the therapy because the cost of getting it to approval was too high. | |
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by Nicole DeFeudis
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The FDA has agreed to the rare step of holding a formal evidentiary public hearing for Vanda Pharmaceuticals, in which the company will argue that the agency should not have rejected its sleep disorder drug Hetlioz for use in treating jet lag. The hearing is the latest development in a long saga between Vanda and the FDA. The agency first rejected
Hetlioz for jet lag in 2019, and then turned it down again last month after raising concerns about Vanda’s clinical trial protocols. In between those denials, the company has filed formal dispute requests, and challenged the FDA's initial denial of a hearing in court. No date or agenda for the hearing have been set yet, Vanda's CFO Kevin Moran told Endpoints News on Tuesday. | |
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by Zachary Brennan
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The drug pricing watchdog ICER is calling on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to lower the price of Takeda's blockbuster ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease drug Entyvio so that it's on par with J&J's Stelara and its biosimilars. ICER on Tuesday released its modeling as part of a report on the relative advantage of Entyvio compared to Stelara and Merck's Remicade and associated biosimilars, finding that it should not be priced above Stelara but should be priced slightly more than Remicade. "Current evidence supports a 30-day premium of $210 to $230 above what CMS is currently paying for infliximab ," ICER wrote. But when compared to Stelara, Entyvio "was not
associated with important health gains in ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease. Modeling confirmed that the evidence does not support a price premium" over Stelara. | |
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by Zachary Brennan
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The FDA has just outlined which applications might be newly eligible for three years of exclusivity, including ones where a drug may have been approved in a previous form. Building off definitions from a 1994 rule, the 14-page draft guidance spells out what types of follow-on pharma applications and clinical activity would allow a company to win the three years of clinical investigation exclusivity — not to be confused with the five years of protection for new chemical entities or the seven-year exclusivity for orphan drugs treating diseases that affect fewer than 200,000 people. The new dist |
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