Gilead withdraws special-status request for virus drug
Bowing to criticism that it was exploiting the coronavirus pandemic, drugmaker Gilead said Wednesday it would no longer seek orphan-drug status for remdesivir, an experimental drug that is being tested as a possible treatment.
The Food and Drug Administration had only granted the special designation Monday — which gives drug companies a sevenyear monopoly on sales, tax credits and expedited approval. Gilead said it asked the agency to rescind the status.
The company’s decision to seek orphan status for the drug had drawn immediate criticism. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, called it “truly outrageous,” noting that Gilead had received “tens of millions” of dollars from the federal government to develop the drug.
Consumer group Public Citizen and other health groups sent a letter Wednesday to Gilead’s chief executive, Daniel O’Day, asking him to reverse course.
“This is an unconscionable abuse of a program designed to incentivize research and development of treatments for rare diseases,” the letter said. “Calling COVID-19 a rare disease mocks people’s suffering and exploits a loophole in the law to profiteer off a deadly pandemic.”
No treatment has been proved to be effective against COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, and Gilead is just one of several companies with drugs in trials around the world.
The Orphan Drug Act, passed in 1983, was intended to encourage development of drugs that treat
diseases affecting fewer than 200,000 people in the United States. But in recent years, drug companies have been accused of exploiting the law to reap millions, if not billions, in sales.
Although fewer than
200,000 Americans have contracted the virus thus far, the infection rate is expected to grow exponentially. A drug like Gilead’s remdesivir or another treatment could ultimately be administered to millions of people around the world over the course of the pandemic.
Gilead said it had sought the orphan status to expedite approval of the drug,
in particular a required pediatric study that, without such a designation, the company said could have taken up to 210 days to complete. But Gilead said that after speaking to regulators, it was confident the application would move quickly.
“Gilead recognizes the urgent public health needs posed by the COVID-19 pandemic,” the drugmaker said.