GENE ONLINE|News &
Opinion
Blog

2022-11-01| Trials & Approvals

Santhera, ReveraGen’s Duchenne Drug Accepted By EMA While Anticipating FDA Priority Review

by Joy Lin
Share To

Swiss biotech Santhera and its partner ReveraGen have announced that the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has accepted their marketing authorization application (MAA) for vamorolone for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Vamorolone, positioned as an alternative to current corticosteroids, will now be reviewed by EMA’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP). 

Santhera is expecting a positive opinion from the CHMP recommending vamorolone for European Commission (EC) approval in late Q3 2023, according to the company’s press release

In the US, Santhera and ReveraGen have completed the new drug application (NDA) filing to the US FDA. The companies are seeking priority review and will know in 60 days if the FDA has granted their application. If granted, vamorolone will be set to become available to patients in the US in the second half of 2023, Santhera said

Read More: Janssen Drops Out of Prostate Cancer Clinical Trial Due to Lack of Patients

Primary Endpoint Met 

Vamorolone is a synthetic steroid designed to bind to the same receptor as corticosteroids to exert anti-inflammatory activity and counter the progressive muscle degeneration caused by Duchenne. 

In the pivotal VISION-DMD study assessing vamorolone in two doses for Duchenne, the drug met the primary endpoint of Stand velocity versus placebo at 24 weeks of treatment. In the high-dose arm (6 mg/kg a day) vamorolone-treated patients reduced the time from lying flat to standing from 6 seconds to 4.6 seconds, compared to the placebo (5.4 seconds to 5.5 seconds).

Adverse events ranging from mild to moderate severity included cushingoid features, vomiting, and vitamin D deficiency. 

Delays For The Duchenne Drug

Santhera’s attempts to get a Duchenne treatment into the market have been met with setbacks and delays. The company was forced to restructure and focus on vamorolone after their now-defunct DMD drug idebenone failed an interim analysis in Phase 3 in 2020.

In late June, vamorolone’s rolling submission to the FDA hit a bump after Santhera’s third-party contract manufacturing partner said it could not prepare the drug for FDA inspection, which pushed the regulatory timeline for the drug back by several months.  

©www.geneonline.com All rights reserved. Collaborate with us: service@geneonlineasia.com
Related Post
ImmunityBio’s ANKTIVA® Granted FDA Approval: Breakthrough IL-15 Receptor Agonist First-in-Class for BCG-Unresponsive Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer
2024-04-24
FDA Requests for a $7.2 Billion Budget in FY 2025 for Critical Health Initiatives
2024-03-12
Wegovy Expands Its Reach: First Weight-Loss Medication Approved to Reduce Cardiovascular Risk
2024-03-11
LATEST
The Gene & Cell Therapy Landscape: Recent Approvals and Upcoming Therapeutics of Interest
2024-05-06
Exploring Key Areas of RNA Therapeutics Development: Your Blueprint for Maximizing ASGCT Content
2024-05-06
Mastering Gene & Cell Therapy: Your Blueprint for Maximizing ASGCT Content
2024-05-06
Pfizer’s Q1 2024 Revenue Declines, Offset by Strong Performance of Non-COVID-19 Products
2024-05-03
Novo Nordisk Revises Outlook: Reports 24% Growth in Q1 2024 Sales, Reaching DKK 65.3 Billion
2024-05-03
UC Riverside Scientists Unveil RNA-based Vaccine Strategy, Potentially Avoiding Endless Booster Shots
2024-05-02
Lilly’s Q1 2024 Financial Report: Full-Year Revenue Outlook Raised by $2 Billion, with a 67% Net Income Increase
2024-05-02
EVENT
Scroll to Top