A more than three-year commercial hold built up an estimated $1 billion in demand for Becton, Dickinson and Co.’s (BD) Alaris infusion system and BD has every intention of meeting that demand as quickly as possible now that it has FDA clearance for the updated device. The clearance allows the company to resume commercial sales and undertake remediation of its installed base of point-of-care units with enhanced features for its pumps and monitoring systems as well as new software and upgraded cybersecurity and interoperability.
Nearly five years after submitting its first NDA seeking U.S. approval for Vanflyta (quizartinib) for treating a subset of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), Daiichi Sankyo Co. Ltd. finally cleared the last hurdle. The FDA on July 20 approved the FLT3 inhibitor for use in combination with cytarabine and anthracycline induction and cytarabine consolidation, and as maintenance monotherapy following consolidation chemotherapy, for the treatment of adult patients with newly diagnosed disease that is FLT3 ITD-positive.
Summer is the time when device makers press their cases for add-on and pass-through payments from the Medicare program, and this year’s draft hospital outpatient prospective payment system for calendar year 2024 is no exception. Both Cook Medical and Philips North America are pushing CMS for new technology pass-through (NTPT) payments for their offerings, but these two larger firms have a lot of company in the NTPT sweepstakes.
U.S. FDA warning letters to device makers seemed to be on pause for a couple of years, but the agency is picking up the pace with two warnings posted July 18. Outset Medical Inc., of San Jose, Calif., was previously known to be the recipient of a warning letter, but Edge Biologicals Inc. of Memphis, Tenn., took in a warning letter that is replete with repeat violations disclosed in 2015 and 2018, as well as a warning letter issued 11 years ago.
In a pivotal milestone for Memed Ltd., the U.S. FDA cleared its Memed BV test on whole blood samples, which will help health care providers distinguish between bacterial and viral infections. The test, which yields results in as little as 15 minutes, can reduce the risk of unnecessary prescriptions which is a key driver of antibiotic resistance.
GC Biopharma Corp., formerly Green Cross Corp., said July 17 that it refiled the BLA for its intravenous immune globulin agent Alyglo (GC-5107B; IVIG-SN 10%) to the U.S. FDA – nearly a year and a half after the regulator’s initial rejection.
Elevar Therapeutics Inc. said that the U.S. FDA accepted its NDA for oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor rivoceranib in combination with PD-1 inhibitor camrelizumab (Airuika) as a first-line treatment for liver cancer. The FDA stamped an official PDUFA target action date of May 16, 2024.
Recalls are a fact of life in the medical technology space, and Medtronic plc and Quidel Cardiovascular Inc., have both been forced to report class I recalls. Dublin-based Medtronic announced a recall of more than 348,000 cardiac electrophysiology devices due to issues that could prevent high-voltage therapy while San Diego-based Quidel is recalling nearly 7,800 Triage cardiac panels because of a risk of false negatives for patients being assessed for an infarct.
Sanofi SA and Astrazeneca plc had a lot to celebrate July 17 when the FDA approved Beyfortus (nirsevimab) ahead of schedule, making it the first respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) prophylactic for infants in the U.S. “This is just really an historic day,” Michael Greenberg, a Sanofi vice president and medical head of the company’s North America vaccines unit, told BioWorld. The companies had been expecting the FDA decision later this quarter. The earlier approval suggests the FDA appreciated the urgency of having time for health systems and doctors to get the drug ahead of the next RSV season, Greenberg said.