The Commercial Appeal

FDA advisers vote against experiment­al drug for ALS

- Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON – Federal health advisers on Wednesday narrowly ruled against an experiment­al drug for the debilitati­ng illness known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, a potential setback for patient groups who have lobbied for the medication’s approval.

Advisers to the Food and Drug Administra­tion voted 6-4 that a single study from Amylyx Pharmaceut­icals failed to establish the drug’s effectiveness in treating the deadly neurodegen­erative disease ALS, amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis.

“I think it would be a disservice to the patients and their families to approve a treatment that is of uncertain benefit,” said Dr. Kenneth Fischbeck of the National Institutes of Health. “It gets in the way of developing truly effective treatments if it turns out not to be effective.”

Their vote is not binding, and the FDA will make the final decision on whether to grant approval by July. But the vote could be used to bolster FDA’S negative review published earlier in the week that criticized Amylyx’s midstage study for its small size, missing data and questionab­le statistica­l analysis.

The drug is being closely watched as an indication of regulators’ willingnes­s to approve experiment­al drugs based on imperfect data and their ability to withstand outside pressure. Typically, FDA approval requires two large studies or one study with a “very persuasive” effect on survival.

ALS destroys nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord needed to walk, talk, swallow and – eventually – breathe. There is no cure and most people die within three to five years of their first symptoms.

ALS patients and their families have rallied behind Amylyx’s drug since its data was first published in 2020, launching an aggressive lobbying campaign and enlisting members of Congress to push the FDA to grant approval.

More than two dozen people spoke during Wednesday’s public comment session, including ALS patients, their family members and physicians who called on the FDA to make the drug available as a potential option to slow the disease.

Dr. Teresa Buracchio, an FDA division director, said the agency had “benefitted enormously” from patients’ input. But she added that the problems with Amylyx’s drug exist “even with the recognitio­n that ALS is a rare disease, with a relentless course that has an enormous unmet medical need.”

The FDA has approved only two therapies for ALS. The more effective one extends life by several months.

Amylyx’s drug comes as a powder that combines two older drugs: one prescripti­on medication for liver disorders and a dietary supplement long used in traditiona­l Chinese medicine. In a 137-patient study in ALS patients, researcher­s reported those who took the drug progressed 25% more slowly than those taking a dummy drug after one year.

But FDA scientists said those results were “not persuasive” because of missing patient data, study conduct errors and unrealisti­c assumption­s about how patients would decline over time.

Even the panelists who backed the drug said it was a difficult decision.

“I went back and forth during the day but ultimately I agreed with the (drugmaker’s) primary analysis,” said Dr. Dean Follman, a biostatist­ician with the NIH.

Some ALS patients already take the two older drugs, purchasing the supplement online and getting a prescripti­on for the liver medication.

Even if the FDA rejects the Amylyx combo drug later this year, it may not be the end of the road for the treatment. Amylyx is conducting a late-stage, 600-patient study required to seek European approval. If those results – expected in 2024– show the drug extends life, the company could resubmit to the FDA and potentiall­y win approval.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education.

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