US FDA approves Sanofi's bleeding disorder therapy

Reuters
29 Mar
UPDATE 3-US FDA approves <a href="https://laohu8.com/S/GCVRZ">Sanofi</a>'s bleeding disorder therapy

Adds pricing and availability in paragraph 4

By Sriparna Roy and Padmanabhan Ananthan

March 28 (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved French drugmaker Sanofi's SASY.PA hemophilia therapy, introducing a new type of treatment administered every two months for patients with the rare blood clotting disorder, the regulator said on Friday.

U.S.-listed shares of Paris-based Sanofi closed 1.7% higher.

Sanofi's subcutaneous, or under-the-skin, therapy helps prevent bleeding and lowers antithrombin, a protein that delays blood clotting, for hemophilia patients aged 12 and older.

Branded as Qfitlia, the therapy will be available in April with an annual list price of $642,000 for the majority of patients, Brian Foard, head of specialty care at Sanofi, told Reuters ahead of the approval.

The first-in-class treatment is given bimonthly for people with hemophilia A or B, with or without inhibitors, compared with treatments such as Pfizer's PFE.N weekly injection Hympavzi and Novo Nordisk's NOVOb.CO daily Alhemo.

"If you can take a drug every other month, that's also an incredible simplification and improvement in your quality of life," said Margaret Ragni, professor at the University of Pittsburgh.

The hemophilia market has been dominated by factor replacement therapies for decades. However, recently, gene therapies such as CSL's CSL.AX Hemgenix and BioMarin Pharmaceutical's BMRN.O Roctavian have been approved as an alternative in the United States.

People with hemophilia have a defect in a gene that regulates the production of proteins called clotting factors, causing spontaneous and severe bleeding following injuries or surgery.

Hemophilia A is caused by a lack of blood clotting factor VIII, while those with hemophilia B lack factor IX.

As many as 33,000 males are estimated to be living with hemophilia in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In trials, Qfitlia reduced annualized bleeding rates by 90%, compared to the control arms, showing a meaningful improvement in bleeding episodes over on-demand treatments.

(Reporting by Padmanabhan Ananthan, Sriparna Roy and Puyaan Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber and Vijay Kishore)

((Padmanabhan.Ananthan@thomsonreuters.com ; Sriparna.Roy@thomsonreuters.com))

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