Stephen Hahn and Donald Trump, AP Images
The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis on Monday questioned former FDA commissioner Stephen Hahn on whether he acquiesced to political pressure in authorizing the use of hydroxychloroquine and convalescent plasma early in the pandemic, despite limited evidence of their effectiveness.
Hahn publicly disavowed any political interference in any of his agency’s EUA decisions, but behind the scenes, the pressure clearly caught up with him. As Endpoints News previously reported last May, when the FDA announced the convalescent plasma EUA at a Sunday evening press conference last August with former President Trump in tow, Hahn falsely claimed that the plasma might increase survival by 35% overall, when in actuality it was a 35% relative reduction in mortality.
He later apologized, claiming he misspoke, but an internal email that the House committee also returns to shows earlier that Sunday, he was planning to make the inflated claim all along.
‘Given the sustained campaigns to promote the use of dubious coronavirus treatments, the Select Subcommittee seeks to understand the full extent and impact of Trump Administration officials’ efforts to influence these FDA decisions,’ subcommittee chair Jim Clyburn (D-SC) wrote in a letter to Hahn on Monday. Amy Abernethy, former FDA deputy commissioner who has since moved over to Verily, also texted Hahn in April, almost 2 weeks after the HCQ EUA was issued, pointing to a study finding chloroquine was potentially unsafe.
‘I will send you the slides on the Brazil study. Bottom line is that the dose of CQ[chloroquine] rec by Chinese led to increased deaths and cardiovascular events. DSMB [Data and Safety Monitoring Board] stopped study for safety,’ she texted. The EUA for hydroxychloroquine was revoked two months later. The House subcommittee, which is seeking an interview with Hahn, is also seeking to understand the full extent of Trump officials’ efforts to interfere with the FDA’s coronavirus vaccine authorizations. While Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows reportedly gave Hahn an ultimatum to resign or authorize the vaccine, Trump also tweeted, ‘Get the dam [sic] vaccines out NOW, Dr. Hahn.’
But Hahn, who did not respond to a request for comment, previously insisted the political pressure did not sway him. Similarly, Anand Shah, the former top FDA official in medical and scientific affairs, told Endpoints that the pressure didn’t have an impact on their decision making.
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The cell and gene therapies (CGT) sector offers unprecedented opportunities for patient disease management across virtually all therapeutic areas. However, finding the right accredited clinical teams to take a therapy through to the clinic and manage the regulatory process can be a major challenge for biotechs with a CGT product.
Joan Perelló, Sanifit CEO
Joan Perelló beat all the odds with his little Spanish biotech startup Sanifit.
Working on the far perimeter of the big US/European drug development scene, he took a drug born out of his PhD work and got enough seed cash to get started. That’s one near miracle. In the second near miracle he gathered a previously unheard of venture raise in Spain — helping build an industry ecosystem from scratch — to pursue a successful search for solid human data for his drug, SNF472. And while gathering a virtual team of developers from Europe and the US, the CEO/co-founder steered it into the late-stage arena.
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Emma Walmsley, GlaxoSmithKline CEO (Fang Zhe/Xinhua/Alamy Live News)
As activist investors champ at the bit for change at drug giant GlaxoSmithKline, the pharma giant has turned over many rocks to find an R&D success to present to its detractors. In NASH, a field strewn with failures, GSK hopes a new license deal can churn out a much-needed winner.
GSK will pay $120 million in upfront cash and $910 million in downstream milestones to develop and sell ARO-HSD, Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals’ RNA interference drug targeting fatty liver disease nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), the companies said Monday.
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Most people know if they’re ‘Team Pfizer’ or ‘Team Moderna,’ but few know if they got the Comirnaty or Spikevax Covid-19 vaccine. Those are the brand names of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, respectively, however they have yet to take hold with consumers, media or even medical professionals.
And there are others. Covid vaccine brand names also include AstraZeneca’s Vaxzevria, Novovax’s Nuvaxovid, and Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline’s Vidprevtyn. J&J’s Janssen-developed Covid vaccine is the lone major holdout and is still yet to be named, if ever. In EMA filings approving its conditional use, the brand name is listed simply as ‘Covid-19 Vaccine Janssen.’
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Ugur Sahin (L) and Özlem Türeci (Bernd von Jutrczenka/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images)
Pfizer and BioNTech are planning to file for full approval of their Covid-19 vaccine for all of those over the age of 12 after they said longer-term analysis of the vaccine in teens continued to show strong protection against symptomatic cases of Covid-19 more than four months after the second dose.
With no serious safety concerns at least 6 months after the second dose for those ages 12 through 15, the companies said the data will form the basis for a planned upgrade from EUA to supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA).
Paul Hudson, Sanofi CEO (Eric Piermont/AFP via Getty Images)
Back in June, Sanofi unveiled a big project to reshape its R&D around the future of mRNA, and followed that up Monday by taking a step toward achieving that goal.
The French drugmaker signed a deal with Chinese tech giant Baidu to access its AI algorithm for mRNA-based therapeutics, Baidu said Monday morning. It’s for an undisclosed sum, but Baidu noted its platforms will be used to ‘contribute to the optimization of mRNA sequences’ in Sanofi’s drug development processes.
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Ronald Lorijn, NeuExcell CEO
Pennsylvania’s already well-established biotech scene got word of a boost last week with several announcements, including the building of a massive life sciences manufacturing center in Pittsburgh thanks to some funding from an area nonprofit and a local university. But those jawns in Philadelphia aren’t letting go of its stranglehold on the state easily.
NeuExcell Therapeutics, a preclinical gene therapy biotech that focuses on neurodegenerative diseases, announced that it signed a deal with The Discovery Labs in King of Prussia, about 25 miles northwest of downtown Philly.
Ameet Mallik, Rafael Holdings CEO
Ameet Mallik left Novartis to claim the CEO spot at Rafael Holdings back in May, taking the reins from founder Howard Jonas. Now — one month after a stock-crushing pivotal failure in pancreatic cancer that sent Rafael’s team back to the drawing board — Mallik is taking off for greener pastures.
Mallik will hand his chief executive responsibilities back to Jonas on Feb. 1 as part of an overhaul that’s set to shake up the highest rungs of the company, Rafael announced Monday.
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Bluebird bio may, at long last, get a gene therapy approved in the US.
The Cambridge, MA biotech announced Monday that the FDA had accepted and given priority review for Zynteglo, its gene therapy for the rare blood disorder beta-thalassemia. The announcement sets up an expedited FDA decision by May 20, 2022.
A priority review doesn’t guarantee approval, and more than a few recent biotechs have been spurned after receiving the designation, including Incyte, Sesen, and Provention. But it represents a substantial step forward for a therapy that has seen repeated setbacks and an application that was slapped down with a refuse-to-file letter.
https://endpts.com/house-committee-wants-former-fda-commissioner-to-come-clean-on-covid-related-political-interference/