LONDON – The U.K. Medicines and Healthcare products Agency (MHRA) is inviting manufacturers to submit electronic cigarettes for approval as medical devices, after drawing up new guidance on the standards that will be required for approval. The move means the U.K. could become the first country in the world where e-cigarettes are available on prescription as smoking cessation aids.
Once upon a time, Intarcia Therapeutics Inc. was a biotech unicorn valued at $3.5 billion. Its allure was its implantable Medici drug delivery system that consisted of a mini pump about the size of a matchstick. But a unicorn’s life is never completely charmed. Intarcia faced obstacles along the way – two complete response letters from the U.S. FDA and the denials of three formal dispute resolution requests. Now it looks like this story won’t have a happy ending.
An update from China’s NMPA clarifying registration requirements and classification methods for drug-device combination products has been welcomed by industry as the regulator seeks to keep pace with fast-moving developments in the sector.
Visus Therapeutics Inc. has expanded its ophthalmic drug portfolio, in-licensing investigational therapies for glaucoma and age-related macular degeneration from Cella Therapeutics LLC, which will be developed by Finland’s Delsitech Ltd. using its extended-release depot technology.
Approval could come next year for Furoscix from Scpharmaceuticals Inc. (Scpharma), a solution of the standard-of-care heart failure diuretic furosemide formulated to a neutral pH and designed for outpatient use.
Among the low-hanging fruit for pruning back U.S. drug prices is the development of generics referencing complex drugs, a category that includes drug-device combination products and nonbiologic drugs with a complex molecular base, route of administration or formulation, such as abuse-deterrent opioids.
Boston Scientific Corp. has scooped up an approval from the U.S. FDA for the Ranger drug-coated balloon to help those with peripheral artery disease in the superficial femoral artery and proximal popliteal artery.
With only days left before Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc. planned to initiate a phase II/III trial of its COVID-19 DNA vaccine candidate, INO-4800, and its accompanying delivery device, the FDA placed a partial clinical hold on the company’s study. This is the study’s second delay as the company originally planned to begin in July or August. November is now the earliest potential start date. Inovio told BioWorld that the company and its partners are continuing to prepare for the phase II/III trial “following resolution of the FDA’s partial clinical hold.”
The FDA came through at last for Athlone, Ireland-based Innocoll Holdings Ltd., greenlighting the drug-device combo Xaracoll (bupivacaine HCl) for acute postsurgical pain relief for up to 24 hours in adults after open inguinal hernia repair.
The matter of how adhesion of its Viaskin Peanut allergy patch relates to efficacy became a major problem for DBV Technologies SA, which drew a complete response letter (CRL) for the once-daily epicutaneous (EPIT) product. Shares of the Montrouge, France-based firm (NASDAQ:DBVT) closed Aug. 4 at $2.34, down $1.76, or 43%, in reaction to the CRL for the patch, designed to protect children ages 4 to 11. The FDA wants DBV to modify the patch, which means a new human-factor study; officials also are requiring clinical data for the modified patch.