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FDA panel votes against approval of China-developed cancer drug
Becker's Hospital Review ^ | February 11, 2022 | Erica Carbajal

Posted on 02/11/2022 7:24:18 PM PST by buckalfa

An FDA advisory panel has voted against the approval of a lung cancer immunotherapy drug developed and tested in China, The New York Times reported Feb. 10.

Five notes:

1. The drug in question is sintilimab, which goes by the brand name Tyvyt. It is a checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy intended for use in combination with chemotherapy for patients with metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer. It was developed by Eli Lilly and its Chinese partner Innovent Biologics.

2. Sintilimab was tested only in China, a large factor in the advisory panel's vote against agency approval of the drug, the Times reports. The FDA has expressed concern about the quality of the clinical trial results and whether the results would be applicable to U.S. patients.

"We have nothing against drugs being developed in China," said Richard Pazdur, MD, director of the FDA's Oncology Center of Excellence. "Our issue is, are those results generalizable to the U.S. population?" he told The Wall Street Journal, adding that it is difficult to determine whether a drug would have the same benefits and safety profile in the U.S. when it is tested primarily in a single country.

3. The panel voted to recommend requiring another trial that would be applicable to U.S. patients in order to get the drug approved.

4. Eli Lilly and Innovent Biologics had planned to roll out the drug this year and sell it at a lower price than other immunotherapy drugs on the market.

5. In a Feb. 10 statement following the vote, Eli Lilly said it was disappointed with the outcome, but "appreciated the opportunity to publicly discuss the application and broader issues related to single-country clinical trials," adding that it will "continue to work with the FDA as it competes its review of the sintilimab application."


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Science
KEYWORDS: cancer; china; fda
Hmmm 🤔. The BIG GUY's check for 10% must not have cleared.
1 posted on 02/11/2022 7:24:18 PM PST by buckalfa
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To: buckalfa
Eli Lilly and Innovent Biologics had planned to roll out the drug this year and sell it at a lower price than other immunotherapy drugs on the market.

Which likely explains the FDA’s “decision”.

And at first I thought, a drug from China? No thanks.

But now I am beginning to suspect that in addition to being cheaper, it probably actually works.

We can’t have any of that actually CURING people stuff going on, now can we?

2 posted on 02/12/2022 1:04:03 AM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith….)
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