Global Blood’s sickle cell drug wins FDA approval, joining Novartis’ Adakveo

By | November 27, 2019

Dive Brief:

  • The Food and Drug Administration on Monday approved Global Blood Therapeutics’ sickle cell drug voxelotor, completing a rapid review that took the regulator about 90 days. The accelerated OK is conditional on the biotech completing a study to confirm the rise in hemoglobin measured in trials so far yields clinical benefit.
  • Global Blood set a list price of $ 10,417 a month for the drug, which it said will result in a net price of about $ 8,000 for roughly two-thirds of payers. Voxelotor, which will be sold as Oxbryta, will be available within two weeks, the company said.
  • Approval comes just 10 days after the FDA cleared Novartis’ Adakveo for use in the same condition. Emmaus Medical’s Endari was approved in 2017 as the first new sickle cell treatment in 20 years.

Dive Insight:

Like spinal muscular atrophy, sickle cell disease is a rare disorder going through rapid change thanks to a number of new treatments coming onto market and experimental drugs progressing through the clinic.

Oxbryta helps patients with sickle cell disease by increasing hemoglobin’s affinity for oxygen, which is thought to block the characteristic sickling and improve blood flow. The pivotal HOPE trial showed that 51% of patients taking Oxybryta experienced a 1 milligram per deciliter increase in hemoglobin compared with just under 7% of patients receiving placebo.

Anemia, a deficiency of health red blood cells, is one symptom of sickle cell disorder, with patients also often suffering painful episodes called vaso-occlusive crises resulting from the misshapen cells sticking to each other and blood vessel walls. Those are the episodes that Novartis’ Adakveo (crizanlizumab) intends to prevent.

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Depending on pricing, Adakveo will cost between $ 7,000 and $ 9,500 per month, Novartis said.

With accelerated approval, Global Blood Therapeutics will have to confirm the benefit of the drug with a follow-up study. The HOPE-KIDS 2 study to be initiated later this year will measure transcranial doppler flow velocity to determine whether Oxbryta decreases stroke risk in children between age 2 and 15.

The sickle cell space could see yet more change in the near future. Bluebird Bio has planned to start enrolling a Phase 3 trial of its LentiGlobin gene therapy for sickle cell disease by the end of the year, and has a second gene therapy project called BCL11A shRNA in early clinical study.

Bluebird will be presenting early data from the latter of those two experimental treatments as a late-breaking abstract at the American Society of Hematology meeting next month.

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