Device makers have historically struggled to maintain adequate procedures for corrective and preventive action (CAPA) and complaint handling (CH), and two warning letters posted to the FDA website suggest these are still sore spots. Invacare Corp., of Elyria, Ohio, and Smiths Medical ASD Inc., of Minneapolis, were both cited for CAPA and CH deficiencies.
One of the biggest concerns at the Nov. 30 meeting of the FDA’s Antimicrobial Drugs Advisory Committee is that, if Merck & Co. Inc.-Ridgeback Biotherapeutics Inc.’s antiviral drug, molnupiravir, is authorized for use in treating mild to moderate COVID-19 in patients at high risk of progressing to severe disease, it might be used too broadly, given its potential risks.
Beyondspring Pharmaceuticals Inc. said it received a complete response letter from the FDA regarding the NDA for plinabulin, the company’s lead asset. The FDA said results of a phase III registrational trial were strong enough to show benefit but a second trial is needed to satisfy the agency.
Pricing of VBI Vaccines Inc.’s just-approved hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccine, Prehevbrio, won’t be known before launch in the first quarter of next year, but CEO Jeff Baxter said the company will take into account that the sector is “one of the most price-intensive and price-competitive. A lot of the market-access research says that the wholesale acquisition cost is one of the key determinants” in avoiding sluggish adoption, he said, so that by staying moderate the firm can “supply [its] product on a much quicker basis than you might do, say, if you went with a 30% or 40% premium to standard of care.”
While the FDA’s reaction to the results of the Nov. 30 advisory hearing for the COVID-19 therapy molnupiravir is difficult to predict, demand for rapid antigen tests may jump considerably when this or any such product is approved. That increased demand could crunch supplies of these tests due to the convergence of any such approvals, the upcoming holiday season, and the 2021-22 flu season, a convergence that could hamper efforts to roll out these new therapies.
Following an FDA priority review, Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd.'s oral antiviral, maribavir, has won U.S. approval as the first drug in the country to treat resistant cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and disease in adult and pediatric transplant recipients. The drug will be marketed as Livtencity.
Fennec Inc. received the complete response letter (CRL) it had expected from the FDA, sidelining U.S. development of Pedmark, a formulation of sodium thiosulfate for preventing ototoxicity associated with cisplatin chemotherapy in pediatric patients older than 1 month to those 18 years of age with localized, non-metastatic, solid tumors.
A divided FDA advisory committee voted 13-10 Nov. 30 that the known and potential benefits of the Merck & Co. Inc.-Ridgeback Biotherapeutics Inc.’s antiviral drug, molnupiravir, outweighs its known and potential risks. If granted an emergency use authorization (EUA), molnupiravir would become the first take-at-home oral drug in the U.S. to keep mild and moderate COVID-19 infections from becoming severe in high-risk adults.
The U.S. SEC released guidance Nov. 29 that could impact how drug and medical device companies shape, and report, their executive compensation packages when it comes to "spring-loaded awards.”
As part of its real-world evidence (RWE) program, the U.S. FDA released a draft guidance Nov. 29 on using registries to support regulatory decision-making for drugs and biological products.