martes, 30 de junio de 2020

FDA rejects Intercept Pharma's drug for fatty liver disease

FDA rejects Intercept Pharma's drug for fatty liver disease

The Readout

Damian Garde & Meghana Keshavan

The FDA might have shifted the goalposts in NASH

Yesterday, Intercept Pharmaceuticals revealed that the FDA rejected its treatment for NASH, a prevalent fatty-liver disease. But the implications could go far beyond a single company, changing the definition of success in one of the drug industry’s biggest targets.

As STAT’s Adam Feuerstein reports, Intercept’s drug significantly reduced liver scarring, a hallmark of NASH, in a pivotal trial. But that wasn’t enough to convince the FDA, which concluded that the “predicted benefit” of the company’s drug “does not sufficiently outweigh the potential risks,” Intercept said in a statement.

That could mean that the FDA is unwilling to approve NASH treatments based on scarring alone, which would affect a multitude of drugs in development. Conversely, the rejection could stem from an issue specific to Intercept’s drug. Until there’s more information, no one can be sure.

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