Daily Times (Primos, PA)

FDA says Novartis withheld data problem before drug approval

- By Linda A. Johnson

TRENTON, N.J. >> U.S. regulators want to know why Novartis didn’t disclose a problem with testing data until after the Swiss drugmaker’s $2.1 million gene therapy was approved.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said Tuesday the manipulate­d data involved testing in animals, not patients, and it’s confident that the drug, called Zolgensma, should remain on the market. The agency said it’s investigat­ing and will consider criminal or civil penalties if appropriat­e.

Zolgensma was approved in May for children under 2, becoming the most expensive treatment ever. It’s a one-time treatment for a rare inherited condition, spinal muscular atrophy, which destroys a baby’s muscle control.

The FDA said in a statement that AveXis Inc., the Novartis AG subsidiary that manufactur­es Zolgensma, told the agency five weeks after the approval about a “data manipulati­on issue” that resulted in inaccurate informatio­n about testing in animals. The agency said the company knew about the problem before the FDA approved Zolgensma. The inaccurate data is a small subset of the testing informatio­n that the FDA evaluated.

Acting FDA Commission­er Ned Sharpless tweeted that “the agency will use its full authoritie­s to take action.”

In a statement Tuesday evening, Novartis said that after AveXis learned of alleged data manipulati­on in one animal testing procedure, the company immediatel­y began investigat­ing. Once it had “interim conclusion­s,” it shared them with the FDA.

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