Now that President Joe Biden has drug his heels as long as possible in selecting a new FDA commissioner, we’re set to welcome the new boss — same as the old boss.
Janet Woodcock, whose public legacy may now boil down to the approval of an unproven Alzheimer’s drug and whose industry legacy centers on putting the agency in sync with the largest drug developers, is set to step aside as Robert Califf makes his way back to the helm. And the industry largely appears to think that’s just fine.
We asked our readers what they thought about the move — which Washington insiders believe is largely a slam dunk given the last vote in Califf’s favor. And 58% offered a quick and emphatic thumbs up. True, right at 1 in four were not happy about the move. But with another 18% lined up among the undecideds, it’s clear he won’t face much if any criticism from insiders, who mostly like him fine.
Califf, notes one supporter, ‘knows what he is doing. FDA is in a good place and does not need reinventing. He will have to avoid Biogen like issues, but that is not hard.’
A key moment in his past experience running the FDA occurred when Califf let Woodcock move ahead with her controversial OK for Sarepta’s still experimental Duchenne MD drug. After delaying the start of its confirmatory trial, Sarepta will need more than 9 years to see through its post-approval study. Biogen also gets 9 years. And no one is looking for the FDA to make things much harder for the average drug developer.
Califf will always look a little lackluster compared to Scott Gottlieb, a dynamic commish who also helped spotlight the revolving door between the FDA and industry by leaping straight to Pfizer’s board. Califf is jumping in from Verily. But he got his academic cred at Duke, and he gets a lot of support for that alone.
— He’s the clear best option among some not-great candidates (aside from Scott Gottlieb, who apparently was not interested in the job).
‘We need an FDA head and there isn’t anyone else who seems better,’ notes another reader.
Others find that hard to believe.
— This is a critical time in the FDA’s future and it is time for new blood.
‘Too closely connected to industry and current government,’ writes another in a comment repeatedly echoed among the critics.
That insider knowledge, though, can cut both ways with this crowd.
— Pragmatic leader with an excellent understanding of the clinical development process and a true commitment to innovation for patients that improve patient outcomes.
— Thoughtful, dedicated, great perspective, trained as a clinician and clinical researcher, so he sees the field of therapeutic development from a wonderful perspective. Cares about people and public health, does not view himself as a ‘regulator’. He has all the right skills to lead FDA back to a trusted position of leadership and public service in these fraught times of public opinion.
But the praise was largely muted:
— Good enough considering the alternatives.
At this point, just making a choice and clearing up any uncertainty will be reassuring to a large segment of industry leaders. And whatever Janet Woodcock does next, her dominant spirit will continue to influence events at the FDA.
For years, paper-based processes and individual point solutions dominated the clinical research landscape, and patient participation in clinical trials was largely an in-person engagement. But when the COVID-19 pandemic took a stronghold, traditional clinical trial methods emerged as inadequate, putting clinical trials and the life sciences industry at a crossroads. Practically overnight, the industry had to rapidly shift to decentralized clinical trial methods, while maintaining data quality and regulatory compliance.
Al Sandrock (Biogen via Youtube)
Two years after Al Sandrock jumped from CMO to the top post in R&D — and just months after the hyper-controversial approval of the experimental Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab (Aduhelm) — Sandrock is planning to step out of his long career at Biogen.
Late Monday evening the big biotech put out word that Sandrock, a longtime fixture in the company after a 23-year stint, is hitting the exit.
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The US Securities and Exchange Commission has launched a probe into claims that Cassava Sciences, an Austin-based drug developer, manipulated data key to its case for its experimental Alzheimer’s drug simufilam, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
The report comes just two days after Cassava in an SEC filing revealed that ‘certain government agencies’ had asked the biotech for documentation. It wasn’t clear which agencies were inquiring or what information they sought, and Cassava went out of its way to say the requests weren’t accusations of wrongdoing.
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A cell containing smallpox viruses, as captured by transmission electron microscopy
Smallpox was declared eradicated in 1980 by the World Health Organization, after an effort to vaccinate the globe. But several vials labeled as the disease were found at a Pennsylvania vaccine research facility belonging to Merck, when a laboratory worker was cleaning out a freezer.
There’s no indication that anyone was exposed to the vials, the CDC told CNN in an email. The lab worker was wearing gloves and a face mask, and the FBI is now investigating.
A few weeks after Jennifer Doudna introduced CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing to the world, one of her old students decided to take the central part of the biology-altering invention and kill it.
CRISPR/Cas9, as the name implies, is a two-part system: a string of letters called a guide RNA, that says where to cut the DNA. And an enzyme, Cas9, that does the cutting. Often compared to molecular scissors, it was the first system that allowed researchers to cut DNA with ease and precision, promising potential cures for genetic diseases such as sickle cell and cystic fibrosis.
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Frank D’Amelio, Pfizer CFO
Frank D’Amelio, Pfizer’s legendary chief financial officer of the last 15 years, would often say his job was about understanding the ‘rhythm of the numbers.’ Now — as the company’s on track to drum up the largest single-year sales for a medical product ever — he’s hitting the exit on a high note.
D’Amelio is retiring from his position as CFO and executive vice president of global supply, Pfizer revealed Wednesday. CEO Albert Bourla has already begun an external search for his successor, and D’Amelio will stay on board through the transition.
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Francis deSouza, Illumina CEO (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Ahead of expected objections by European regulators Wednesday to its deal to acquire Grail, Illumina defended itself in papers submitted to the agencies Tuesday.
Illumina is anticipating a formal bloc objection to the $8 billion Grail buyout, it said in a briefing document for EU competition authorities, and tried to preempt the move by asserting the deal is not anti-competitive. It’s an argument Illumina has used previously, but it’s unclear whether or not the new brief will prove persuasive.
Michel Vounatsos, Biogen CEO (Credit: World Economic Forum/Valeriano Di Domenico)
Following an oral explanation held at the November meeting of the EMA’s human medicines committee, Biogen received ‘a negative trend vote’ on its marketing application for its controversial Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab, the company said Wednesday morning.
The setback is just the latest in a string of negatives — from an anemic launch to rejection of coverage from the VA — since the surprising June approval of the drug by the FDA that led to multiple resignations from an advisory committee that unanimously rejected it.
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Albert Bourla, Pfizer CEO (AP Images)
If you thought Pfizer was raking it in with megablockbuster sales of its BioNTech-partnered Covid-19 vaccine — last projected at $36 billion for 2021 — think again.
As the pharma giant sends off its EUA submission for its antiviral pill to the FDA, the Washington Post, New York Times and others are reporting that the US government is planning a $5 billion contract to purchase 10 million courses of the treatment, dubbed Paxlovid.
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