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Drug receives orphan designation for treatment of PNH

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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to ACH-4471 for the treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

And the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products has recommended the drug receive orphan status for the same indication in the European Economic Area.

ACH-4471 is a factor D inhibitor being developed by Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

In April, the company announced the initiation of a phase 2, three-month, dose-ranging trial with ACH-4471 for patients with untreated PNH (NCT03053102).

The primary objective of the trial is to assess the change from baseline in serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels. Secondary endpoints include changes in hemoglobin, PNH red blood cells, fatigue score (FACIT scale), changes in levels of complement pathway biomarkers such as Bb and factor D, pharmacokinetics, and safety.

The protocol allows for intra-patient dose-escalation. Patients initially receive 100 mg or 150 mg of ACH-4471 three times daily, and doses may be increased during the treatment period.

After patients complete 3 months of treatment and investigators have assessed safety and clinical benefit, patients may be enrolled in the long-term extension trial (NCT03181633).

To date, 200 mg three times daily has been the highest dose of ACH-4471 administered. And Achillion has collected data on 4 patients.

Two of the patients have completed the 3-month trial and entered the long-term extension trial. One patient continues to receive dosing in the 3-month trial, and the fourth patient voluntarily withdrew from the trial on day 41 for reasons unrelated to safety.

Thus far, ACH-4471 has produced clinically meaningful complement inhibition and demonstrated a favorable tolerability profile, with no reports of clinically meaningful increases in liver enzymes. ACH-4471 has improved LDH, hemoglobin, fatigue score, and other measures of response, including PNH clone size.

FDA’s orphan designation

The FDA grants orphan designation to products intended to treat, diagnose, or prevent diseases/disorders that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US.

The designation provides incentives for sponsors to develop products for rare diseases. This may include tax credits toward the cost of clinical trials, prescription drug user fee waivers, and 7 years of market exclusivity if the product is approved.

EMA’s orphan designation

The EMA’s orphan designation provides regulatory and financial incentives for companies to develop and market therapies that treat life-threatening or chronically debilitating conditions affecting no more than 5 in 10,000 people in the European Union, and where no satisfactory treatment is available.

Orphan designation provides a 10-year period of marketing exclusivity if the drug receives regulatory approval. It also provides incentives for companies seeking protocol assistance from the EMA during the product development phase and direct access to the centralized authorization procedure.

The EMA’s Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products adopts an opinion on the granting of orphan drug designation, and that opinion is submitted to the European Commission for a final decision. The commission typically makes a decision within 30 days of the submission.

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Red blood cells

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to ACH-4471 for the treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

And the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products has recommended the drug receive orphan status for the same indication in the European Economic Area.

ACH-4471 is a factor D inhibitor being developed by Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

In April, the company announced the initiation of a phase 2, three-month, dose-ranging trial with ACH-4471 for patients with untreated PNH (NCT03053102).

The primary objective of the trial is to assess the change from baseline in serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels. Secondary endpoints include changes in hemoglobin, PNH red blood cells, fatigue score (FACIT scale), changes in levels of complement pathway biomarkers such as Bb and factor D, pharmacokinetics, and safety.

The protocol allows for intra-patient dose-escalation. Patients initially receive 100 mg or 150 mg of ACH-4471 three times daily, and doses may be increased during the treatment period.

After patients complete 3 months of treatment and investigators have assessed safety and clinical benefit, patients may be enrolled in the long-term extension trial (NCT03181633).

To date, 200 mg three times daily has been the highest dose of ACH-4471 administered. And Achillion has collected data on 4 patients.

Two of the patients have completed the 3-month trial and entered the long-term extension trial. One patient continues to receive dosing in the 3-month trial, and the fourth patient voluntarily withdrew from the trial on day 41 for reasons unrelated to safety.

Thus far, ACH-4471 has produced clinically meaningful complement inhibition and demonstrated a favorable tolerability profile, with no reports of clinically meaningful increases in liver enzymes. ACH-4471 has improved LDH, hemoglobin, fatigue score, and other measures of response, including PNH clone size.

FDA’s orphan designation

The FDA grants orphan designation to products intended to treat, diagnose, or prevent diseases/disorders that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US.

The designation provides incentives for sponsors to develop products for rare diseases. This may include tax credits toward the cost of clinical trials, prescription drug user fee waivers, and 7 years of market exclusivity if the product is approved.

EMA’s orphan designation

The EMA’s orphan designation provides regulatory and financial incentives for companies to develop and market therapies that treat life-threatening or chronically debilitating conditions affecting no more than 5 in 10,000 people in the European Union, and where no satisfactory treatment is available.

Orphan designation provides a 10-year period of marketing exclusivity if the drug receives regulatory approval. It also provides incentives for companies seeking protocol assistance from the EMA during the product development phase and direct access to the centralized authorization procedure.

The EMA’s Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products adopts an opinion on the granting of orphan drug designation, and that opinion is submitted to the European Commission for a final decision. The commission typically makes a decision within 30 days of the submission.

Red blood cells

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to ACH-4471 for the treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

And the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products has recommended the drug receive orphan status for the same indication in the European Economic Area.

ACH-4471 is a factor D inhibitor being developed by Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

In April, the company announced the initiation of a phase 2, three-month, dose-ranging trial with ACH-4471 for patients with untreated PNH (NCT03053102).

The primary objective of the trial is to assess the change from baseline in serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels. Secondary endpoints include changes in hemoglobin, PNH red blood cells, fatigue score (FACIT scale), changes in levels of complement pathway biomarkers such as Bb and factor D, pharmacokinetics, and safety.

The protocol allows for intra-patient dose-escalation. Patients initially receive 100 mg or 150 mg of ACH-4471 three times daily, and doses may be increased during the treatment period.

After patients complete 3 months of treatment and investigators have assessed safety and clinical benefit, patients may be enrolled in the long-term extension trial (NCT03181633).

To date, 200 mg three times daily has been the highest dose of ACH-4471 administered. And Achillion has collected data on 4 patients.

Two of the patients have completed the 3-month trial and entered the long-term extension trial. One patient continues to receive dosing in the 3-month trial, and the fourth patient voluntarily withdrew from the trial on day 41 for reasons unrelated to safety.

Thus far, ACH-4471 has produced clinically meaningful complement inhibition and demonstrated a favorable tolerability profile, with no reports of clinically meaningful increases in liver enzymes. ACH-4471 has improved LDH, hemoglobin, fatigue score, and other measures of response, including PNH clone size.

FDA’s orphan designation

The FDA grants orphan designation to products intended to treat, diagnose, or prevent diseases/disorders that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US.

The designation provides incentives for sponsors to develop products for rare diseases. This may include tax credits toward the cost of clinical trials, prescription drug user fee waivers, and 7 years of market exclusivity if the product is approved.

EMA’s orphan designation

The EMA’s orphan designation provides regulatory and financial incentives for companies to develop and market therapies that treat life-threatening or chronically debilitating conditions affecting no more than 5 in 10,000 people in the European Union, and where no satisfactory treatment is available.

Orphan designation provides a 10-year period of marketing exclusivity if the drug receives regulatory approval. It also provides incentives for companies seeking protocol assistance from the EMA during the product development phase and direct access to the centralized authorization procedure.

The EMA’s Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products adopts an opinion on the granting of orphan drug designation, and that opinion is submitted to the European Commission for a final decision. The commission typically makes a decision within 30 days of the submission.

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