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May
22

People With Rare Diseases Face a Host of Unique Challenges

Posted under access to medicine, biotech regulatory issues, Blog, Companies, Diagnostics, Funding, Health, Health Care, healthcare, Medical Devices, Medical Supply, Pharmaceuticals, rare diseases, Startups, Universities, Videos by biotechnow@bio.org (Biotechnology Industry Organization)

By Dennis Jackman, Senior Vice President, Public Affairs, CSL Behring

Dennis Jackman

Dennis Jackman

People with rare and serious medical disorders encounter a host of unique challenges–from obtaining a correct diagnosis, to identifying an appropriate course of treatment and gaining affordable access to the care they need.  They and their families, caretakers and health care providers face a constant struggle to identify and access available resources, away from the attention of traditional media that focuses on more common disorders such as cancer and heart disease. BIO has recognized the importance of rare disease awareness, and recently established a rare disease working group to assure focus on the critical issues facing therapies and access to them.

Barriers to diagnosis

Going undiagnosed for years or being misdiagnosed can be a serious and often life threatening problem for people with rare diseases. Why is it so difficult to detect rare disorders or diagnose them correctly? There are several factors, physician training being one.  It begins in medical school where students are typically trained to look for the obvious when diagnosing a patient, in other words, if you hear hoof beats, it’s most likely a horse, not a zebra.

Medical schools and physicians might reorient their training to further consider the spectrum of diagnostic possibilities, because rare disease patients do not fit the typical profile for most medical conditions; they are the “zebras.”  This is the motto of the Immune Deficiency Foundation, which is the advocacy group for patients with Primary Immune Deficiencies, a body of individually rare conditions. In addition, physicians who initially treat patients with rare diseases are usually general practitioners, pediatricians and internists with less specialized training in areas such as immunology and hematology.

Availability of therapies

Even when a correct diagnosis is made, there may not be an available therapy to treat the rare condition. There are nearly 7,000 rare medical conditions, but less than 300 have therapies available to treat them. All of these factors add to the isolation of being part of a small patient group whose health care needs are often unmet.

Regulatory harmonization

Achieving greater harmonization between regulatory agencies in the US (FDA) and Europe (EMA) is essential to lowering the cost of therapies and bringing them to market more quickly. This is due to the enormous cost of conducting clinical trials, which often must be replicated because the FDA may not accept the results of a trial conducted in Europe, or the EMA a trial in the US. The average cost of a clinical trial is $100 million+.

Improving access to care

There are a number of ways in which patient advocacy groups, physicians and health care providers, pharmaceutical companies, government and insurers can work together to lower the cost of healthcare and improve access to care for people with rare medical conditions. The following are some examples:

  • Enhance regulatory pathways for orphan drug development and licensing, including appropriate flexibility, earlier communications, expansion of accelerated review, and enhanced regulatory science.  Many such provisions are in PDUFA-V and the TREAT act legislation.
  • Eliminate specialty tiers that healthcare insurers or payers use to create restrictions that increase the cost to patients with rare disorders for certain prescription drugs, and prevent them from seeing specialists.
  • Support the orphan drug tax credit in the US to encourage R&D for innovative therapies to treat rare diseases.
  • Allow orphan designation for all orphan products, not just clinically superior ones.  Each orphan product available contributes to care and should not be discouraged.
  • Implement tort reform in the US with limits on liability.
  • Work with regulatory agencies for a realistic pathway to clinical trials that work for rare diseases.
  • Base treatment protocols on what is best for the patient, not on outdated or misinterpreted insurance coverage criteria.
  • Eliminate “non tariff barriers” and other discriminatory practices that are an impediment to trading products for treating rare diseases globally.

Future outlook

Individuals with rare diseases can look forward to new and innovative products for treating rare disorders that are planned or that are in development. Much new research is being performed in partnership with academic institutions, and there will clearly be continued collaboration among patient groups, manufacturers, physicians and government agencies. The primary strategy for improving patient access to diagnosis and care remains focused on advocacy, improved knowledge and appropriate reimbursement.

At CSL Behring, we are doing our part to increase the availability of biotherapies for treating rare medical conditions through our substantial and ongoing investment in R&D and manufacturing. That investment is reflected in an expanding portfolio of therapies for unmet patient needs, and cutting-edge manufacturing facilities combining state-of-the-art, industrial-scale filtration technology, highly efficient separation processes and advanced formulation to generate plasma therapies. In fact, we have received 15 regulatory approvals for new rare disease products or indications in the last eight years, and there are more in our pipeline.

We also conduct a dynamic advocacy program with stakeholder partners, that is helping to enhance access to care and protect patients’ rights. We understand the many difficulties that people with rare medical disorders must live with every day. And we believe that isolation and lack of access to appropriate care should not be among them.

For more information and links to useful resources, please visit http://www.cslbehring.com/knowledge-center.

May
22

Study: Countries angling to lure U.S. biopharma companies

Posted under Blog, Companies, Diagnostics, Funding, Medical Devices, Medical Supply, Pharmaceuticals, PhRMA, R&D, Regulatory, Startups, Universities, Videos by Damian Garde

In a study commissioned by PhRMA, Battelle reports that countries around the globe are boosting their investments in R&D and instituting innovation-friendly policies to attract biopharma outfits. PhRMA CEO John Castellani said in a statement that regulatory uncertainty and strict IP laws could put the U.S. at a disadvantage, leading big-earning biopharma companies to flee overseas. Castellani points to Germany, which used to be "the world's medicine cabinet," and cautions that if the U.S. government doesn't reaffirm its commitment to biomedical innovation, it could lose its standing in the industry. Release

May
22

TheStreet: A roundup of the top drug studies left in 2012

Posted under ArQule, bapineuzumab, Biogen Idec, Blog, Celgene, Clinical Trials, Companies, Diagnostics, Funding, hemophilia, Medical Devices, Medical Supply, Pharmaceuticals, Pipeline, solanezumab, Startups, tivantinib, Universities, Videos by John Carroll

Any forward-looking student of the biotech industry will have to check out Adam Feuerstein's review in TheStreet of 22 Phase II and III clinical trials--21 drugs and one diagnostic test--which are expected to read out by the end of this year.

One of the savviest analysts in the business, Feuerstein runs through snaps on studies for Arqule (the closely watched tivantinib cancer study), Biogen Idec (trying to diversify into hemophilia and ALS), Celgene (apremilast for RA and psoriasis) and, of course, the big Alzheimer's studies for solanezumab and bapineuzumab, among others. 

As Feuerstein notes in his report, big studies have a way of either rehabilitating developers' share prices or driving them into the ground. Over the second half of this year we're likely to see plenty of examples of both scenarios as the data hits.

- here's the story from TheStreet

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Analysts tap Amgen, Celgene as potential 2012 dealmakers

May
22

Lilly posts clean safety data on PhIII diabetes blockbuster hopeful

Posted under Blog, Clinical Trials, Companies, Diabetes, Diagnostics, Eli Lilly, Funding, Medical Devices, Medical Supply, Pharmaceuticals, Pipeline, Startups, Universities, Videos by John Carroll

The FDA's demanding requirements on cardio safety data has made diabetes one of the most challenging diseases in the drug development world. Today, Eli Lilly ($LLY) demonstrated that its late-stage diabetes drug dulaglutide cleared an important cardiovascular safety hurdle, impressing analysts with a savvy clinical game plan on an important experimental product in its pipeline.

Eli Lilly CEO John Lechleiter has already made it clear that dulaglutide is one of the company's top blockbuster hopefuls in its late-stage pipeline. Now investigators have data from a mid-stage study of 755 patients--two thirds of whom were diagnosed as hypertensive--demonstrating that dulaglutide is comparable with a placebo in its effect on systolic blood pressure.  

In addition, Lilly reported, "the 1.5 mg dulaglutide dose significantly reduced mean 24-hour SBP (systolic blood pressure) compared to placebo." And at the end of 16 and 26 weeks the drug--a once-weekly GLP1 therapy that could end up competing with Bydureon--significantly reduced average blood glucose levels.

"We are very encouraged by these clinical trial results, in addition to the rest of the clinical trial data we've seen to date for dulaglutide," said Gwen Krivi, Ph.D., vice president of product development at Lilly Diabetes in a statement. "Dulaglutide is currently in Phase III clinical trials, where it will continue to be evaluated on its efficacy to lower blood glucose levels, overall safety, weight effects and effects on cardiovascular outcomes. We believe dulaglutide, if approved, can bring significant benefits to people with type 2 diabetes."

- get the press release
- here's the story from Reuters
- read the report from Dow Jones

Related Articles:
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Lilly's losses put pressure on key Alzheimer's program