After a complete response letter (CRL) from the U.S. FDA in 2022 and approvals in Europe, Japan and Australia, Akebia Therapeutics Inc.’s Vafseo (vadadustat) has finally been approved by the FDA. But the uphill climb still isn’t over for Akebia, as it has more hurdles to clear for the drug.
With the U.S. FDA go-ahead Feb. 2 for GSK plc’s oral daprodustat for anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), the picture brightened for would-be competitors in the hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PHI) inhibitor space, including high-profile Akebia Therapeutics Inc., which has appealed last spring’s the complete response letter from gatekeepers with regard to vadadustat.
Hoping its drug, daprodustat, can succeed in the U.S. where two other hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors (HIF-PHIs) have failed so far, GSK plc will present its case Oct. 26 to the FDA’s Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee for the drug's potential use as a treatment for anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease regardless of dialysis dependency.
More than five years after agreeing to collaborate in a deal that had the potential to top $1 billion, Akebia Therapeutics Inc. executed an agreement to terminate its troubled partnership to develop vadadustat with Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. Otsuka will pay Akebia a $55 million settlement fee.
The company conference call related to Akebia Therapeutics Inc.’s complete response letter (CRL) for vadadustat, an HIF prolyl-hydroxylase inhibitor for anemia caused by chronic kidney disease, brought on the ongoing and perhaps inevitable comparisons with a similar product from Fibrogen Inc., rejected by the agency last August.
Opinion on Wall Street said the matter could have gone either way, but in the end Akebia Therapeutics Inc.’s vadadustat, a HIF prolyl-hydroxylase inhibitor for anemia caused by chronic kidney disease (CKD), garnered a complete response letter (CRL) instead of approval from the FDA. The news slammed Akebia shares (NASDAQ:AKBA), which closed at 82 cents, down $1.61, or 66%. Specifically, the agency said that the data in the NDA do not support a favorable benefit-risk assessment of vadadustat in dialysis-dependent (DD) and non-DDs patients.
Akebia Therapeutics Inc. CEO John Butler said “a clear path forward” exists for vadadustat in chronic kidney disease (CKD) despite negative phase III safety findings, and the company plans to file for approval as early as next year in the U.S. and Europe.
As the world awaits more phase III data due any day from Akebia Therapeutics Inc. with vadadustat, its oral hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor (HIF-PHI), in chronic kidney disease (CKD), the company is basking in the approval of the product in Japan as Vafseo as a once-daily treatment for CKD anemia.
Marking a key advance for Akebia Therapeutics Inc. in the global race to establish a new class of medicines for chronic kidney disease-associated anemia, the first of its two pivotal phase III programs proved its lead candidate, vadadustat, noninferior to darbepoetin alfa in adults on dialysis.
“Lack of knowledge is the true bottleneck to clinical translation. We need to stop telling basic scientists, especially trainees, that their work’s value lies in its translatability.” That is the unexpected advice of none other than William Kaelin Jr., whose scientific discoveries have proved to be both top-rate science and very translatable indeed. His work, for which Kaelin has won the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and a host of other awards, has enabled the development of multiple therapies targeting anemia and cancer, including vadadustat.