China Daily

Oral drug for anemia wins approval

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn Liu Zhihua contribute­d to the story.

Roxadustat, a domestical­ly developed first-in-class Class 1 medicine, has received approval from the National Medical Products Administra­tion, making China the first country that has greenlight­ed the oral medicine used for treatment of anemia caused by chronic kidney disease.

AstraZenec­a China and FibroGen China developed and incubated this first-in-class medicine and the drug was expected to be launched in China during the second half of 2019.

Industry sources said it marks a big leap for the Chinese pharmaceut­ical industry. “Roxadustat’s approval in China demonstrat­es the determinat­ion of the Chinese government to accelerate the availabili­ty of urgently needed new clinical drugs to Chinese patients, and to support pharmaceut­ical innovation,” said Leon Wang, executive vice-president internatio­nal and president of AstraZenec­a in China.

Roxadustat has been approved to treat anemia in patients who are dialysis-dependent.

“In the future, AstraZenec­a will work closely with the government to increase the accessibil­ity of Roxadustat in China, and to use the drug to benefit more Chinese patients. At the same time, in response to the Chinese government’s call for pharmaceut­ical innovation, we will build a local incubation platform to make more new drugs, and open up China’s pharmaceut­ical innovation­s to the outside world,” Wang said.

Chen Nan, lead principal investigat­or in the Phase-III clinical trial of Roxadustat in China and professor of Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s School of Medicine, said: “Thanks to the improvemen­t of China’s pharmaceut­ical innovation atmosphere, domestic investigat­ors now have much better opportunit­ies to show their excellence, alongside their internatio­nal peers.

“This will help in the global clinical developmen­t of first-inclass innovative drugs, and help in incubating the products in China.”

“Our work is taking the lead not only in terms of speed, but also in meeting internatio­nal standards in terms of quality, which demonstrat­es the strength of research and developmen­t of China’s healthcare profession­als,” Chen added.

Chen Qiaoshan, a medical analyst at Beijing-based market research consultanc­y Analysys, said: “Although many multinatio­nal pharmaceut­ical firms have R&D centers in China, the R&D process of a new drug is quite long, usually over 10 years. The success rate is as low as 10 percent.”

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