UPDATE:FDA Panel:Separate Test Approval Needed Before Omapro Approval
23 March 2010 - 8:31AM
Dow Jones News
A U.S. Food and Drug Administration panel said Monday the agency
needs to review a test to determine if patients with chronic
myeloid leukemia have a particular type of mutation before taking
action on proposed cancer drug Omapro.
The drug, also known by its generic name omacetaxine, is being
developed by ChemGenex Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (CXSPY, CXS.AU) to
treat a subgroup of patients with CML.
Specifically, the company is seeking approval for Omapro to
treat patients with a mutation known as T315I that can develop in
some patients after being treated with Gleevec. Gleevec, by
Novartis AG (NVS, NOVN.VX) is currently the mainstay of treatment
for chronic myeloid leukemia, or CML.
However, the agency said there is no commercially available
method to test patients to see if they have the T315I mutation. The
agency said 35% of patients in the study didn't have their mutation
status confirmed when they entered the study, and that the response
of patients in the study to the drug was considered "low."
The FDA asked the panel for advice on whether a diagnostic test
that can determine if a patient has a T3151 mutation should be
required and reviewed by the FDA before it considers whether to
approve Omapro. The panel voted 7 to 1 in favor of the question.
The panel didn't vote on whether it thinks the FDA should approve
the product.
Adam Craig, ChemGenex's chief medical officer, said the company
has a meeting with FDA's medical device division next month to
discuss how to get a diagnostic test approved but couldn't
speculate on a timeline for approval of the test.
In an interview last month, Greg Collier, ChemGenex's chief
executive, explained the T3151 mutation also prevents other drugs
approved to treat CML, such as Tasigna, also from Novartis and
Sprycel from Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMY). Tasigna and Sprycel
are approved for use in patients who don't respond to treatment
with Gleevec.
Omapro is designed to work through a different mechanism than
Gleevec to keep cancer cells from proliferating by stopping the
production of certain so-called short-lived oncoproteins that are
present in leukemia cells.
One study involving Omapro involved 81 patients with CML who
were all at different stages of the disease. The response rate to
the drug ranged from 35% to 86% of patients depending on the phase
of the disease, with better responses seen among less sick
patients.
Chronic myeloid leukemia is one of four types of leukemia, a
type of blood cancer in which abnormal white cells are produced,
limiting the body's ability to fight infection. About 5,000 new
cases are diagnosed each year in the U.S. according to the National
Cancer Institute.
-By Jennifer Corbett Dooren, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9294;
jennifer.corbett@dowjones.com
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