Novo Nordisk A/S: Alhemo® recommended for European approval as first once-daily subcutaneous prophylactic treatment for people living with haemophilia A or B with inhibitors
18 Ottobre 2024 - 11:32AM
UK Regulatory
Novo Nordisk A/S: Alhemo® recommended for European approval as
first once-daily subcutaneous prophylactic treatment for people
living with haemophilia A or B with inhibitors
Bagsværd, Denmark, 18 October 2024 – Novo
Nordisk today announced that the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA)
Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) has adopted a
positive opinion, recommending approval of Alhemo®
(concizumab) as the first once-daily subcutaneous prophylactic
treatment for people aged 12 years or older living with haemophilia
A or B with inhibitors.
Haemophilia is a rare bleeding disorder that impairs the body’s
ability to make blood clots, a process needed to stop bleeding.
Haemophilia is often treated by replacing the missing clotting
factor via intravenous infusions, also known as replacement
therapy. However, sometimes the body can produce inhibitors as an
immune response to the clotting factors in the therapy, which means
replacement therapy does not work and limits treatment options
overall. Currently, it is estimated that up to 30% of people living
with severe haemophilia A develop inhibitors,1 and 5-10%
of those with severe haemophilia B develop
inhibitors.2,3
Alhemo® is an anti-tissue factor pathway inhibitor
(TFPI) monoclonal antibody that, if approved by the European
Commission, will offer the first once-daily subcutaneous
prophylactic treatment to people with haemophilia A or B with
inhibitors.4 Alhemo® is designed to block a
protein called TFPI in the body that stops blood from clotting. By
blocking TFPI, Alhemo® ensures the production of
thrombin, which helps to clot the blood and prevent bleeding, even
when the other clotting factors are missing or deficient.
Importantly, this means Alhemo® allows blood clots to
happen, even in the presence of inhibitors.5
“The positive opinion from the CHMP for Alhemo® is a
major milestone for patients,” said Stephanie Seremetis, chief
medical officer for haemophilia at Novo Nordisk. “If approved,
Alhemo® would be an important addition to our growing
haemophilia portfolio as it offers the potential of everyday
prophylaxis to prevent bleeds for people living with haemophilia
who have developed the complication of inhibitors. It could
alleviate the physical, emotional, and overall treatment burden for
people living with haemophilia, as it is delivered in a pre-filled,
multi-use, portable pen that can be stored at room temperature for
up to four weeks. This could enable patients to have greater
confidence in the pursuit of daily activities, which is especially
important for people living with haemophilia B with inhibitors, who
currently have very limited treatment options.”
The CHMP positive opinion is based on data from the phase 3
explorer7 study, which was designed to evaluate the efficacy and
safety profile of Alhemo® for people living with
haemophilia A or B with inhibitors.6 If approved,
Alhemo® will be provided in a portable, pre-mixed and
prefilled pen, enabling quick and easy subcutaneous administration
with the aim of easing the treatment burden of regular intravenous
infusions.7 Novo Nordisk expects a final approval by the
European Commission within approximately two months.
About Alhemo®
(concizumab)
Alhemo® (concizumab) is an anti-tissue factor pathway
inhibitor (TFPI) monoclonal antibody designed to block a protein in
the body that stops blood from clotting. By blocking TFPI,
Alhemo® ensures the production of thrombin, which helps
to clot the blood and prevent bleeding.5
Alhemo® is currently approved in Australia8
and Switzerland9 for the treatment of adolescents and
adults (12 years or older) with haemophilia A or B with inhibitors.
In Japan,10 Alhemo® is currently approved for
the treatment of adolescents and adults (12 years or older) with
haemophilia A or B with and without inhibitors and is indicated for
routine prophylaxis to prevent or reduce the frequency of bleeding
episodes.
About the explorer7 study
In explorer7, 133 males (aged 12 years or older) were randomised
1:2 to either no prophylaxis (arm one; ≥24 weeks) or concizumab
prophylaxis (arm two; ≥32 weeks) or assigned to concizumab
prophylaxis (arm three and four).11 The primary analysis
compared the number of treated spontaneous and traumatic bleeding
episodes, measured as annualised bleeding rate (ABR), between arms
one and two. The results showed an 86% reduction in treated
spontaneous and traumatic bleeds when on concizumab prophylaxis,
with an estimated mean ABR of 1.7 compared to 11.8 with no
prophylaxis.12 The overall median ABR of concizumab was
zero, compared to 9.8 for no prophylaxis. The safety and
tolerability profile of concizumab in this study was within the
expected range.12
About Haemophilia
Haemophilia is a rare inherited bleeding disorder that impairs the
body’s ability to make blood clots, a process needed to stop
bleeding. It is estimated to affect approximately 1,125,000 people
worldwide.12 Due to the nature of haemophilia being an
x-linked recessive disorder, it often presents differently in males
compared to females, with roughly 88% of people diagnosed with
haemophilia worldwide being
male.13,14 There are different
types of haemophilia, which are characterised by the type of
clotting factor protein that is defective or missing. Haemophilia A
is caused by a missing or defective clotting Factor VIII (FVIII),
and haemophilia B is caused by a missing or defective clotting
Factor IX (FIX).
About Novo Nordisk
Novo Nordisk is a leading global healthcare company, founded in
1923 and headquartered in Denmark. Our purpose is to drive change
to defeat serious chronic diseases, built upon our heritage in
diabetes. We do so by pioneering scientific breakthroughs,
expanding access to our medicines, and working to prevent and
ultimately cure disease. Novo Nordisk employs about 69,000 people
in 80 countries and markets its products in around 170 countries.
For more information, visit novonordisk.com,
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YouTube.
Contacts for further information
Media: |
|
Ambre
James-Brown
+45 3079 9289
abmo@novonordisk.com
|
Liz
Skrbkova (US)
+1 609 917 0632
lzsk@novonordisk.com
|
Investors: |
|
Jacob
Martin Wiborg Rode
+45 3075 5956
jrde@novonordisk.com
|
David
Heiberg Landsted
+45 3077 6915
dhel@novonordisk.com
|
Sina
Meyer
+45 3079 6656
azey@novonordisk.com
|
Ida
Schaap Melvold
+45 3077 5649
idmg@novonordisk.com
|
Frederik
Taylor Pitter
+1 609 613 0568
fptr@novonordisk.com
|
|
References
1 Kim JY, You CW. The prevalence and risk factors of
inhibitor development of FVIII in previously treated patients with
hemophilia A. Blood Res. 2019 Sep;54(3):204-209. doi:
10.5045/br.2019.54.3.204
2 Srivastava A, Santagostino E, Dougall A, et al. WFH
Guidelines for the Management of Hemophilia, 3rd edition.
Haemophilia. 2020;26 Suppl 6:1-158. doi:10.1111/hae.14046
3 Male C et al. Inhibitor incidence in an unselected
cohort of previously untreated patients with severe haemophilia B:
a PedNet study. Haematologica. 2021 Jan 1;106(1):123-129. doi:
10.3324/haematol.2019.239160. PMID: 31919092; PMCID: PMC7776246
4 Shapiro AD. Concizumab: a novel anti-TFPI therapeutic
for hemophilia. Blood Adv. 2021;5(1):279
5 Matsushita T, Shapiro A, Abraham A, et al. Phase 3
Trial of Concizumab in Hemophilia with Inhibitors. N Engl J Med
2023;389:783-794 Available at:
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2216455 Accessed:
October 2024
6 Frei-Jones M, Cepo K, d’Oiron R, et al. Subcutaneous
concizumab prophylaxis in patients with hemophilia A or B with
inhibitors: efficacy and safety results by hemophilia subtype from
the phase 3 explorer7 trial. Abstract presented at the 64th
American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting and exposition
2022.
7 Kahr Rasmussen et al. The Concizumab Pen-Injector is
Easy to Use and Preferred by Hemophilia Patients and Caregivers: A
Usability Study Assessing Pen-Injector Handling and Preference.
Patient Preference and Adherence 2024:18 1713–1727
8 Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), Product
Information. Available at:
https://www.tga.gov.au/resources/auspar/auspar-alhemo
9 SwissMedic. Switzerland Product Information. Available
at:
https://www.swissmedic.ch/swissmedic/en/home/about-us/publications/public-summary-swiss-par/public-summary-swiss-par-alhemo.html
10 Japanese Product Information. Latest revision date:
June 2024
11 Jiménez-Yuste V, Angchaisuksiri P, Castaman G, et
al. Concizumab prophylaxis in patients with haemophilia A or B
with inhibitors: Efficacy and safety results from the 32-week
primary analysis of the phase 3 explorer7 trial. Presented at ISTH
2022
12 Iorio A, Stonebraker JS, Chambost H, Makris M, Coffin
D, Herr C, Germini F; Data and Demographics Committee of the World
Federation of Hemophilia. Establishing the Prevalence and
Prevalence at Birth of Hemophilia in Males: A Meta-analytic
Approach Using National Registries. Ann Intern Med. 2019 Oct
15;171(8):540-546. doi: 10.7326/M19-1208.
13 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. What is
Hemophilia? Available at:
https://www.cdc.gov/hemophilia/about/?CDC_AAref_Val=https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/hemophilia/facts.html
Accessed: October 2024
14 Statista. Distribution of people with bleeding
disorders worldwide in 2020, by gender. Available at:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/495675/percentager-of-people-with-bleeding-disorders-in-worldwide-bygender/#:~:text=This%20statistic%20displays%20the%20percentage,with%20hemophilia%20A%20were%20males
Accessed: October 2024
- PR241018-Concizumab-CHMP-opinion
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