Jul 28 2012
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (Nasdaq: VRTX) announced today that
the European Commission has approved KALYDECOTM (ivacaftor)
for people with cystic fibrosis (CF) ages 6 and older who have at least
one copy of the G551D mutation in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane
conductance regulator (CFTR) gene. KALYDECO is the first medicine
to target the underlying cause of the disease in these patients. Cystic
fibrosis is a rare genetic disease caused by defective or missing CFTR
proteins resulting from mutations in the CFTR gene. In people
with the G551D mutation, KALYDECO helps the defective CFTR protein
function more normally. An estimated 1,100 people in Europe have the
G551D mutation. The approval of KALYDECO comes two months after the
European Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) issued a
positive opinion and is the first European approval for Vertex.
"The European approval of KALYDECO is an important step in our
commitment to bring transformative new medicines to people with cystic
fibrosis," said Jeffrey Leiden, M.D., Ph.D., Vertex's Chair, President
and Chief Executive Officer. "We're preparing to supply pharmacies
throughout Europe with KALYDECO and are working closely with national
health authorities to make it available to patients as quickly as
possible."
The European Commission's decision is based on positive findings from
two global Phase 3 studies in which KALYDECO demonstrated significant
and sustained improvements in breathing, weight gain and other measures
of disease for people ages 6 and older with this specific genetic
mutation, compared to placebo. In addition, people who took KALYDECO
were 55 percent less likely to have pulmonary exacerbations, or periods
of worsening in the signs and symptoms of the disease that often require
treatment with antibiotics and hospital visits, than those who received
placebo.
Fewer people in the KALYDECO treatment groups discontinued treatment due
to adverse events than in the placebo groups. The majority of the
adverse events associated with KALYDECO were mild to moderate. Adverse
reactions very commonly observed in those taking KALYDECO (≥1/10)
included headache; upper respiratory tract infection (common cold)
including sore throat and nasal congestion; rash; diarrhoea; and
abdominal pain (stomach ache). Two patients in the group receiving
KALYDECO reported a serious adverse reaction of abdominal pain.
"Cystic fibrosis is a life-threatening genetic disease that causes
devastating effects, particularly in the lungs, including the build up
of thick, sticky mucus which becomes infected and severely limits normal
breathing," said Stuart Elborn, M.D., KALYDECO investigator and
President of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. "KALYDECO is one of
the most important advances in the treatment of cystic fibrosis since
the discovery of the CF gene in 1989. By treating the underlying cause
of the disease in people with the G551D mutation, KALYDECO helped them
breathe more easily, gain weight and resulted in certain improvements in
quality of life."
"KALYDECO is an exciting new beginning in the treatment of cystic
fibrosis, but we're not finished," said Peter Mueller, Ph.D., Chief
Scientific Officer and Executive Vice President of Global Research and
Development at Vertex. "The scientists at Vertex, in collaboration with
doctors, patients and advocates around the world, are working hard to
develop additional new medicines to treat the underlying cause of the
disease in many more people with cystic fibrosis."
Source: Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated