Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

FDA delays action on Alzheimer’s medication

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The Food and Drug Administra­tion has decided to delay action on a closely watched Alzheimer’s drug, donanemab, which the agency was widely expected to approve this month. The FDA will instead require donanemab to undergo the scrutiny of a panel of independen­t experts, the drug’s maker, Eli Lilly and Company, said Friday.

“The FDA has informed Lilly it wants to further understand topics related to evaluating the safety and efficacy of donanemab, including the safety results in donanemab-treated patients and the efficacy implicatio­ns of the unique trial design,” the company said in a statement.

The decision is likely to surprise many Alzheimer’s experts, doctors and patients who had expected the medication would soon be on the market. The FDA’s move was startling to the company, which had been planning for the agency to greenlight the drug during the first quarter of this year.

“We were not expecting this,” Anne White, an executive vice president of Lilly and president of its neuroscien­ce division, said in an interview. She said that while the FDA often calls on such independen­t advisory committees when it has questions about drugs, it was unusual to do so “at the end of the review cycle and beyond the action date that the FDA had given us.”

The FDA did not say anything publicly about the move, which will delay any decision about whether to approve donanemab until at least later this year. Lilly officials said they expected it would be a few months before the advisory committee holds a hearing.

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