With few treatment options for Omicron, convalescent plasma is ready for a comeback — will the FDA be on board with outpatient use?

New re­search from Johns Hop­kins shows con­va­les­cent plas­ma may work in the out­pa­tient space, which could be key as the Omi­cron vari­ant has ex­tin­guished sev­er­al mon­o­clon­al an­ti­body treat­ments.

The re­sults of this place­bo-con­trolled, mul­ti­cen­ter tri­al led by Hop­kins re­searchers showed that con­va­les­cent plas­ma re­duced the need for hos­pi­tal­iza­tion among more than 1,000 out­pa­tients with Covid-19 who par­tic­i­pat­ed.

The study found that 17 pa­tients out of 592 (2.9%) who re­ceived the high-titer con­va­les­cent plas­ma re­quired hos­pi­tal­iza­tion with­in 28 days of their trans­fu­sion, while 37 out of 589 (6.3%) who re­ceived place­bo con­trol plas­ma al­so were hos­pi­tal­ized. The re­sults open the door for a new pop­u­la­tion who may ben­e­fit from con­va­les­cent plas­ma (the cur­rent EUA is just for hos­pi­tal­ized Covid pa­tients), even as the WHO has ral­lied against the use of con­va­les­cent plas­ma to treat Covid.

Ar­turo Casade­vall, a co-au­thor of the study and pro­fes­sor at Hop­kins, told End­points News that based on the re­sults from this study, pub­lished as a preprint on Tues­day, the FDA could move quick­ly to au­tho­rize the in­fu­sions for out­pa­tients.

Co-au­thor David Sul­li­van, pro­fes­sor of mol­e­c­u­lar mi­cro­bi­ol­o­gy and im­munol­o­gy at the Johns Hop­kins, al­so not­ed in a press con­fer­ence that the FDA is re­view­ing this new da­ta.

‘How long this could take? Could hap­pen very rapid­ly de­pend­ing on how rapid­ly the USG [US gov­ern­ment] moves – mat­ter of days to weeks,’ Casade­vall said via email.

But he al­so not­ed that ‘we won’t have a sup­ply of omi­cron con­va­les­cent plas­ma for 4-6 weeks since we need con­va­les­cents and they must be ful­ly healed. How­ev­er, we have an al­ter­na­tive: peo­ple who had COVID who then were vac­ci­nat­ed have very high titers of an­ti­body that neu­tral­ize omi­cron (preprint at­tached).  Since we have large num­bers of donors in this cat­e­go­ry we can treat peo­ple right away.’

The Hop­kins study, fund­ed by the US De­part­ment of De­fense, al­so shows that con­va­les­cent plas­ma could help to re­place the mon­o­clon­al an­ti­bod­ies from Re­gen­eron and Eli Lil­ly that aren’t ef­fec­tive against Omi­cron, but which helped to keep high-risk peo­ple from the hos­pi­tal while the Delta vari­ant was dom­i­nant.

‘Now that omi­cron has de­feat­ed most of them we have lost a ma­jor line of de­fense to pro­tect peo­ple from get­ting worse and to pro­tect the hos­pi­tals from over-crowd­ing.  You can move con­va­les­cent plas­ma to the out­pa­tient space, dis­pense it in in­fu­sion cen­ters be­ing used to treat pa­tients and have CP com­pen­sate for the loss of mAbs. Ba­si­cal­ly, you are re­plac­ing one an­ti­body ther­a­py with an­oth­er,’ Casade­vall added.

CALQUENCE is a registered trademark of the AstraZeneca group of companies.

At the 2021 American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting & Exposition, blood cancer researchers from around the world gathered virtually to discuss the progress that has been made in the field of hematology. Over the past decade, that progress has been tremendous. We’ve seen not only breakthrough approaches to care, but also significant improvement upon existing novel treatments and exploring combinations within those medicines.1 These advances have transformed expectations of what a blood cancer diagnosis now means for patients. While we’ve come a long way, I believe the most exciting scientific discovery is yet to come, and that future advances will truly transform patient care.

Alzheimer’s disease researchers along with medical professors from Harvard and Johns Hopkins issued a formal statement Monday asking the FDA to quickly pull Biogen’s Aduhelm from the market.

‘An accelerated withdrawal would mitigate some of the harm of its unwarranted accelerated approval,’ they wrote to FDA, explaining how Aduhelm ‘did not meet the FDA’s own criteria for accelerated approval based on surrogate markers because amyloid plaque does not correlate well with symptoms, severity of disease or progression.’

Unlock this story instantly and join 126,200+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.

Michel Vounatsos, Biogen CEO (Credit: World Economic Forum/Valeriano Di Domenico)

In a surprise move, Biogen announced Monday that it will cut the price of its controversial Alzheimer’s drug Aduhelm in half, slashing the cost from $56,000 to $28,000.

The sudden discount marks a sudden turnaround for the big biotech as it struggles to turn around a drug whose stuck-in-the-mud sales and political ramifications have sent the company into turmoil and triggered the ousting of its longtime chief scientist. Biogen’s leadership had resisted calls since June to reduce the price of the drug.

Unlock this story instantly and join 126,200+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.

The FDA may soon sign off on two new pills from Merck and Pfizer to help treat Covid-19 before those infected end up in the hospital, according to a Bloomberg report.

An announcement from the agency may come as early as Wednesday, according to three Bloomberg sources, which would create more options for those who are unvaccinated and need quick and early treatment.

Most recently, the FDA’s antimicrobial drugs advisory committee on Tuesday voted 13-10 in favor of the Merck pill’s benefits outweighing the risks for adults within 5 days of developing Covid symptoms. But Merck offered little explanation for why its potential Covid-19 antiviral was less effective in reducing Covid hospitalizations and deaths in a full analysis of a Phase III trial versus an interim look, and mutagenesis concerns remain.

Angie You and Volker Schellenberger, Amunix

Sanofi is crashing the year-end M&A party with a deal of its own.

Immuno-oncology is the name of the game as it swallows Mountain View, CA-based Amunix for $1 billion upfront and up to $225 million in biobucks, tagging a suite of T cell engagers and cytokine therapies as well as a tech platform for making ‘conditionally activated biologics.’

‘The Amunix technology platform utilizes a next generation smart biologics approach to precisely tailor-deliver medicines to become active only in tumor tissues while sparing normal tissues,’ said Sanofi R&D chief John Reed, ‘thus bringing the promise of more effective and safer treatment options for cancer patients.’

Unlock this story instantly and join 126,200+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.

Right as the new Omicron variant is poised to increase rapidly across the US, the federal government has effectively run out of the only monoclonal antibody treatment that works against it, and at least one major hospital system is now halting all mAb infusions.

Late last month, the federal government paused shipments of GlaxoSmithKline and Vir’s mAb treatment sotrovimab in order to conserve supplies of the only treatment that might work against the Omicron variant. Last week, however, HHS told Endpoints News that the move to hold back sotrovimab was unrelated to Omicron, and due to a surplus of Eli Lilly mAbs, which aren’t effective against Omicron.

Graphic: Alexander Lefterov for Endpoints News

Drug pricing reform has been a political football for years, with both Donald Trump and Joe Biden championing changes during their presidencies. Little has moved the needle on Capitol Hill, however, thanks in part to the drug industry’s powerful lobbyists.

In the most recent example, Democrats tried to allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices — an immediate non-starter for biopharma proponents. After months of negotiation, the measure fell apart in favor of provisions on a small subset of drugs that passed the House but marked a far cry from Biden’s promises and what many activists had hoped for. The bill, included as part of Biden’s broad social policy agenda, now appears dead after Democrats failed to secure 50 votes in the Senate.

Unlock this story instantly and join 126,200+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.

A long-acting injectable treatment for the prevention of HIV has been given the go-ahead by the FDA for use in adults and children weighing at least 77 pounds.

Apretude is first given as two injections given a month apart from each other, and then every two months after. Patients are given the option to start treatment with Apretude or the oral cabotegravir Vocabria for four weeks to assess how well to tolerate the drug.

A young man with Duchenne muscular dystrophy has died in Pfizer’s Phase Ib trial of its mini-dystrophin gene therapy, triggering a halt in screening and dosing — and a clinical hold imposed by the FDA.

Pfizer informed the Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy of the death in a community letter. The patient was participating in the non-ambulatory cohort of the trial, the company wrote, adding:

At this time, we do not yet have complete information and are actively working with the trial siteinvestigator to understand what happened.
https://endpts.com/with-few-treatment-options-for-omicron-convalescent-plasma-is-ready-for-a-comeback-will-the-fda-be-on-board-with-outpatient-use/