Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

ALS drug Relyvrio will be taken off market

Study showed it didn’t benefit users

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — The maker of a drug for Lou Gehrig’s disease that recently failed in a large study said Thursday it will pull the medicine from the market, acknowledg­ing it didn’t help patients with the deadly neurologic­al condition.

Amylyx Pharmaceut­icals announced it will voluntaril­y halt sales and marketing of the drug in the U.S. and Canada, where new patients will no longer be able to get a prescripti­on.

“While this is a difficult moment for the ALS community, we reached this path forward in partnershi­p with the stakeholde­rs who will be impacted and in line with our steadfast commitment to people living with ALS,” company co-founders said in a statement.

Patients already taking the therapy who wish to continue will be able to enroll in a program to receive it for free.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the much-debated drug, Relyvrio, in September 2022, following a yearslong advocacy campaign by patients with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, or ALS.

The drug’s failure is a bitter disappoint­ment for patients and advocates, who have pressed the FDA and other federal agencies to fund and approve more experiment­al therapies for the fatal muscle-wasting disease.

Relyvrio’s withdrawal leaves just three ALS medicines available to U. S. patients, only one of which has been shown to extend survival by several months.

Cambridge, Massachuse­tts-based Amylyx also said Thursday it will lay off 70% of its more than 350 employees as part of a major restructur­ing effort. Company executives said they plan to continue studying Relyvrio and another experiment­al drug for several rare diseases, including Wolfram syndrome, which causes childhood diabetes and blindness.

Company shares climbed more than 7.5% in trading Thursday morning.

Amylyx said last month it was considerin­g pulling its drug after a clinical trial in

600 patients failed to show any improvemen­ts in survival or other health measures, such as muscle strength or walking ability.

The company’s voluntary action resolves what could have been a major dilemma for the FDA. The agency’s regulators would not have had a clear path to quickly force the drug from the market if the company had refused to remove it. That’s because the FDA granted the drug full approval, despite the preliminar­y nature of the company’s data on effectiven­ess.

The 2022 approval was mainly based on results from one small, mid-stage study that was criticized by some of the agency’s own internal scientists. Normally the agency requires two large, late-stage studies that show a clear benefit before granting approval. But at the time FDA officials explained that “regulatory flexibilit­y” was appropriat­e when reviewing Relyvrio, “given the serious and life-threatenin­g nature of ALS and the substantia­l unmet need.”

The medication is part of a string of drugs for deadly, degenerati­ve diseases that have won FDA approval in recent years despite questionab­le evidence they work.

ALS gradually destroys the nerve cells and connection­s needed to walk, talk, speak and breathe. Most patients die within three to five years of a diagnosis.

Relyvrio is a powder that combines two older drugs: a prescripti­on medication for liver disorders and a dietary supplement associated with traditiona­l Chinese medicine.

Amylyx faced criticism for pricing the drug at $158,000 for a year’s supply. Sales were disappoint­ing, with some patients discontinu­ing the medicine after only a few months.

 ?? Amylyx Pharmaceut­icals via AP ?? The maker of Relyvrio, the newest treatment approved for amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, said Thursday that it would withdraw the drug from the market because a large clinical trial did not produce evidence that the treatment worked.
Amylyx Pharmaceut­icals via AP The maker of Relyvrio, the newest treatment approved for amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, said Thursday that it would withdraw the drug from the market because a large clinical trial did not produce evidence that the treatment worked.

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