The digital therapeutics market has seen an explosion of innovative products and interested investors. Regulators, too, have acknowledged their potential to improve outcomes in patients with chronic or debilitating conditions – often at lower cost and with less side effects than traditional drug therapies. To that end, the FDA has granted breakthrough device designation to Swing Therapeutics Inc. for its prescription digital therapeutic for the management of fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia is an often debilitating condition, characterized by chronic pain throughout the body that can leave patients fatigued, depressed and unable to perform even the simplest of activities. While a handful of drugs have been approved to treat this autoimmune disorder, they can have unpleasant side effects and do not benefit all patients. To that end, the FDA has granted a breakthrough device designation to Neurometrix Inc.’s Quell wearable neurostimulation device for treating the symptoms of fibromyalgia in adults.
Tonix Pharmaceuticals Holding Corp.’s failure last December in the phase III study called Recovery with TNX-102 SL (cyclobenzaprine HCl sublingual tablets) 5.6 mg dented hopes for patients with civilian and military-related post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but other developers remain in the game.
Pfizer Inc. was a swinging door today as it sold its small molecule for treating patients with behavioral and neurological symptoms to Biogen Inc., while licensing reboxetine’s data and intellectual property and granting esreboxetine’s development and commercialization rights to Axsome Therapeutics Inc.