The Boston Globe

FDA clears drug to help treat multiple myeloma patients

- By Robert Weisman GLOBE STAFF Robert Weisman can be reached at robert.weisman@globe.com.

BioLineRx, an Israeli biotech that set up US operations in Waltham last year, said Monday that it has won federal approval to sell a new drug that helps doctors collect stem cells to treat patients with multiple myeloma, the second most common form of blood cancer.

Food and Drug Administra­tion officials cleared Aphexda, which stimulates the release of more stem cells into the blood of patients who need bone marrow transplant­s, also known as stem cell transplant­s.

The transplant­s replace defective blood-forming cells with healthy ones in multiple myeloma patients. They are done to delay relapse after patients have already been treated with other drugs to bring their blood cancer into remission.

Aphexda, which is delivered with an injection under the skin, helps doctors and technician­s collect more of the healthy stem cells from patients’ bone marrow in a shorter time.

The injectable will be used in combinatio­n with another drug called Filgrastim, which is already used to flush stem cells into the blood of multiple myeloma patients during harvesting sessions at transplant centers. The California biotech firm Amgen makes Filgrastim.

About 8,000 patients in the United States have stem cell transplant­s each year.

“The idea here is to mobilize more cells than the current treatments allow, and to allow it to be done in a minimum amount of [collection] sessions,” said BioLineRx chief executive Phil Serlin, who is based at the company’s headquarte­rs in Modi’in, Israel, outside Tel Aviv.

In a clinical trial that used Aphexda along with Filgrastim, researcher­s were able to collect enough stem cells in a single day for about 90 percent of multiple myeloma patients undergoing bone marrow transplant­s. The cell mobilizati­on can currently take as many as five days, depending on the age and health of the patient.

BioLineRx, a 20-year-old company that initially worked on treatments for skin lesions, pivoted in recent years to developing drugs that aid in harvesting of stem cells. Last year, it opened its US headquarte­rs in Waltham and named Holly May, a veteran of the Genzyme rare disease business, to lead operations here.

The company now has 43 employees in Waltham and about 45 in Israel.

More than a dozen smaller biotechs in Israel and across Europe have set up US operations in the Boston area to gain access to skilled scientists and researcher­s while tapping the large US market for medicines.

“The biotech mecca in the United States is Boston,” said May, president of BioLineRx USA, who joined the company last fall. “We’re able to attract really great talent by locating our headquarte­rs here.”

FDA’s clearance of Aphexda is the drug’s first regulatory approval anywhere in the world, but BioLineRx will also seek to launch it in other countries.

BioLineRx is also developing other therapies for cancers and rare diseases, including pancreatic cancer and sickle cell disease.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? BioLineRx’s new drug, Aphexda, helps harvest stem cells to treat the form of blood cancer by replacing defective cells.
ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS BioLineRx’s new drug, Aphexda, helps harvest stem cells to treat the form of blood cancer by replacing defective cells.

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