Thursday, January 25, 2018

SMA Expert Arthur Burghes, Speaking in Poland

Underscoring the enormous progress researchers have made understanding spinal muscular atrophy, Dr. Arthur Burghes called for newborn screening for the incurable degenerative disease and the urgent approval of new therapies for it.

Burghes’ remarks came in a keynote lecture at today’s start of the International Scientific Congress on Spinal Muscular Atrophy in Kraków, Poland. The Jan. 25-27 event is the first in Europe dedicated specifically to the disorder, which occurs in roughly one in every 10,000 births.

Burghes, a professor of biological chemistry and pharmacology at Ohio State University College of Medicine, spoke on the subject “Where Have We Come, Where Do We Go?” The SMA expert, who has a PhD from the University of London and did post-doctoral work at the University of Toronto, has spent 30 years studying the disorder.

“During the time I’ve been researching SMA, we’ve gone from not knowing the gene [underlying the condition], to identifying the gene, to having mice models of the disease, to having large animal models, to actually having therapies,” Burghes told SMA News Today in phone interview Jan. 18 from his lab in Columbus, Ohio. “When those therapeutics are given early in the disease course or even before symptoms occur, they have a major effect on the progression of the disease.”


EU Approval of Spinraza a Turning Point

The conference that Burghes and 400 other SMA experts are attending comes six months after the European Union approved Biogen’s Spinraza (nusinersen) for SMA types 1, 2 and 3.

Type 1, the most severe form of the disease, is usually diagnosed at birth or within the first six months of life. It is caused by mutations of the SMN1 gene that lead to a shortage of the survival motor neuron, or SMN, protein. Spinraza works by altering SMN2, a gene nearly identical to SMN1 that in healthy people generates only a small amount of SMN. The drug’s aim is to cause SMN2 to produce enough functional SMN protein to increase the survival of motor neurons, nerve cells that control movement.

“What pathway is critical for the destruction of motor neurons, or is it a combination of pathways with SMN functioning? What do those pathways each contribute?” Burghes asked. “We don’t really know the answers to these questions, but what’s critical in answering them is to have suppressors that suppress each of those specific pathways and have them tested in mice, so we can learn how the actual biochemistry of the disease works.”

He added that “there are definitely modifiers of the SMA phenotype. Can these modifiers be identified and used in combination with therapies already out there? We don’t know.”

More Approved Therapies Bring Prices Down

Spinraza, which is delivered by injection, has a list price of $125,000 per dose, so the first year’s six injections cost $750,000. This makes it one of the world’s most expensive medications.

Last August, Switzerland’s Roche began enrolling infants with SMA type 1 in a Phase 2 study of RO7034067, a therapy that targets SMN2. The move came after positive early results in a similar study of the compound in older children with type 2 and 3 SMA.

“Spinraza, gene therapy and the Roche compound all induce [trigger the production of] SMN. We need all three of these therapies approved,” Burghes said. “Why? Because it allows competition in the marketplace. If these therapies have to compete against each other, the price will be immediately reduced. So one of the first things we need to do is push forward these clinical studies.”

He explained that “we’ve developed treatments that work very well when given early. They work less well when given in symptomatic cases. That means they don’t have as dramatic an effect, and we would all like the most dramatic effect. So which therapies can you put together to get a more dramatic effect, and how should those go together?”

Full text: https://smanewstoday.com/2018/01/25/sma-expert-arthur-burghes-in-a-speech-in-poland-urges-universal-newborn-screening?utm_content=buffere6ae7&utm_medium=organic+social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Monday, January 8, 2018

AveXis Announces Alignment with FDA on Next Steps Toward a BLA Submission for AVXS-101 in SMA Type 1

CHICAGO, Jan. 04, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- AveXis, Inc. (NASDAQ:AVXS), a clinical-stage gene therapy company developing treatments for patients suffering from rare and life-threatening neurological genetic diseases, today provided an update following the receipt of minutes from the end-of-Phase 1 meeting with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) conducted on December 5, 2017, regarding the company’s primary gene therapy candidate, AVXS-101, for the treatment of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) Type 1.

The goal of the end-of-Phase 1 meeting was to review the non-clinical, clinical and Chemistry, Manufacturing and Controls (CMC) data that has been generated by AveXis to date, and to align with the FDA on next steps leading to a Biologics License Application (BLA) submission. The FDA provided detailed information requests in each of the areas discussed, which the company plans to address by submitting the requested information to the investigational new drug (IND) application on an on-going basis. AveXis has been working on many of these areas of focus in anticipation of the requests at some point during the review process. AveXis also plans to provide available data from its on-going pivotal trial of AVXS-101 in SMA Type 1 (STR1VE) prior to the pre-BLA meeting.

“We are very pleased that the constructive and collaborative discussion during the end-of-Phase 1 meeting resulted in the identification of the specific next steps we must take on our path to a BLA submission for AVXS-101 in SMA Type 1,” said Sean Nolan, President and Chief Executive Officer of AveXis. “We greatly appreciate the level of clarity we received from the FDA and will provide our responses on an on-going basis through a series of submissions to the IND, with the expectation that we will request a pre-BLA meeting in the second quarter of 2018.”

The general purpose of the pre-BLA meeting is to outline what information is to be submitted in the BLA and how that information will be submitted. AveXis intends to make the requested data submissions to the IND in advance of the pre-BLA meeting, which may allow the meeting itself to focus on how the BLA and supportive information will be submitted.

Today’s Conference Call Information

AveXis will host a conference call and webcast at 4:30 pm EST today, January 4, 2018. Analysts and investors can participate in the conference call by dialing (844) 889-6863 for domestic callers and (661) 378-9762 for international callers, using the conference ID 8188476. The webcast can be accessed live on the Events and Presentations page in the Investors and Media section of the AveXis website, www.AveXis.com. The webcast will be archived on the company’s website for 90 days and will be available for telephonic replay for 14 days following the call by dialing (855) 859-2056 (Domestic) or (404) 537-3406 (International), conference ID 8188476. Full text:https://globenewswire.com/news-release/2018/01/04/1283628/0/en/AveXis-Announces-Alignment-with-FDA-on-Next-Steps-Toward-a-BLA-Submission-for-AVXS-101-in-SMA-Type-1.html


Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Today started 2018 New Year

Hi, everyone!

Today started 2018 New Year. Past year was wonderfull year, because in that year was approved first in the world drug for treatment SMA. I think that it is super news for everyones. And I very happy for all my friends who was accepted on this drug.
I wish to you everyone happy and hope on the best... Because I always believe in miracle.