Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
Talk about extremes. To make the decision, Alnylam needs to talk to regulatory authorities in the U.S. and EU about its latest data.
Alnylam ran a phase 2b trial on lung transplant patients infected with RSV that can lead to bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome, or BOS, which restricts the airway and increases the mortality rate in transplant patients. In patients with confirmed RSV infections, ALN-RSV01 decreased the rate of BOS by 55%, but just barely missed being statistically significant. Unfortunately one patient died of an unrelated cancer, which is treated as a BOS event even though the patient didn't have BOS the last time they were observed by trial investigators. That one patient would have pushed the trial into statistical significance.
This is only a phase 2 trial, so close enough really is good enough. Even using the tougher criteria, which the FDA would likely require, the trial would be statistically significant with a 55% reduction in BOS if the company just enrolled more patients.
So why is Alnylam considering putting the drug on the shelf? It's all about return on investment. There are only 500 to 1,000 at-risk lung transplant patients per year in the U.S. and Europe, although there are other immune-compromised patients that might be appropriate for the drug.
With a limited potential return, how much Alnylam has to invest -- the size and scope of the phase 3 program -- will likely determine whether the program moves on, especially since the biotech has limited resources and a pipeline of promising drugs to fund. This trial took a couple of years to complete and a phase 3 trial would likely need to be even larger.
Cubist Pharmaceuticals
Stay tuned: Alnylam plans to let investors know its plans for ALN-RSV01 in the second half of the year.
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