Times Colonist

Maker of ALS drug says it might stop selling it after study showed it didn’t work

- MATTHEW PERRONE

The maker of a much-debated drug for Lou Gehrig’s disease said Friday its therapy failed to help patients in a large follow-up study, but stopped short of committing to follow through on a prior pledge to pull the drug from the U.S. market.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved Amylyx Pharmaceut­icals’ Relyvrio in September 2022, following a years-long advocacy campaign by patients with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, or ALS, a fatal muscle-wasting disease.

Amylyx said Friday it would discuss its plans for Relyvrio with patients and the FDA, which “may include voluntaril­y withdrawin­g” the drug. Executives said in a statement they were “surprised and disappoint­ed” by the results and hoped to announce their plans in the next two months.

The latest company study showed that the drug did not slow the disease compared with a dummy treatment. The drug also failed to show improvemen­t on any secondary measures, such as muscle strength.

Amylyx’s medication is part of a string of drugs for deadly, degenerati­ve diseases that have won FDA approval in recent years despite questionab­le proof that they work. 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. An outside committee of experts also voted against the drug initially, before being swayed to back it at a follow-up meeting requested by patients. At the time, Amylyx noted it was continuing a larger follow-up study of more than 600 patients that would provide further data on the drug.

In a highly unusual move, company executives at the meeting told FDA regulators they would voluntaril­y pull their drug from the market if follow-up research didn’t confirm that it helps. That commitment seemed to reassure FDA’s advisers who voted in favour of the drug’s approval, despite the data.

The FDA has no formal process to quickly force the drug off the market. That’s because regulators granted Relyvrio full approval, rather than preliminar­y approval, which is often used for promising but unproven drugs for diseases that are hard to treat.

Amylyx’s drug did not qualify for that type of approval because its studies are mostly based on patient-reported questionna­ires and other data that FDA does not use to expedite drug approvals.

At the time of the decision, FDA officials explained that “regulatory flexibilit­y” was appropriat­e for approving Relyvrio, “given the serious and lifethreat­ening nature of ALS and the substantia­l unmet need.”

In the months before the decision the FDA faced intense pressure from ALS patients, advocates and members of Congress.

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

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