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FDA Blocked Melanoma Drug as Confusion Reigned Under Makary

The FDA鈥檚 to withhold approval of a new skin cancer treatment fell like a hammer on doctors who treat melanoma and patients who saw that the drug had prolonged the lives of a third of the participants in a clinical trial.

鈥淚t was devastating news,鈥 said Trisha Wise-Draper, a dermatologist at the University of Cincinnati who had patients enrolled in the trial.

鈥淭his is life or death for maybe 2,000 patients,鈥 added Eric Whitman, medical director of the Atlantic Health System鈥檚 oncology service. A assailed the ruling, noting that it 鈥渨ill have a chilling effect on drug development.鈥

Despite the benefit to some patients, oncologists and pharmaceutical industry analysts say there were legitimate concerns about the treatment, called RP1, that may have led the FDA to reject it in any event. The company, they noted, had ignored repeated FDA suggestions that it change the design of the trial used to seek approval for the medication.

The FDA鈥檚 decision would have raised few eyebrows before the current administration took power. But Marty Makary, who took charge as commissioner 13 months ago, altered the agency鈥檚 culture and damaged the trust it had built over decades while regulating 20% of U.S. consumer spending, said Steven Grossman, a regulatory consultant and former Health and Human Services official.

鈥淧eople have to speculate about the standards and processes by which the agency makes decisions,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd that uncertainty is bad for everybody 鈥 patients and sponsors and investors.鈥

Under Makary 鈥 who resigned this week 鈥 senior officials have or some at the behest of President Donald Trump or HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., ignoring the advice of agency professionals. In defending his actions, Makary often eschewed the agency鈥檚 traditionally measured language about its decisions.

In response to criticism for rejecting the melanoma treatment, for example, Makary accused its manufacturer, Replimune, of 鈥渃orruption,鈥 saying it was 鈥渆ngaging in corporate spin鈥 to make the FDA look bad.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 work for Replimune. I work for the American people,鈥 Makary said in a May 5 interview on CNBC. Kennedy backed him up during a congressional budget hearing in which Kennedy mistakenly claimed that patients in Replimune鈥檚 clinical trial had also received chemotherapy.

Makary did not respond to requests for comment.

鈥淎ll the norms have been thrown out the window, so we don鈥檛 know what underlines an agency decision,鈥 said , a former FDA staffer and Senate aide to Sen. Edward Kennedy who鈥檚 now a pharmaceutical industry consultant in Boston. 鈥淓ven when there are legitimate scientific and regulatory reasons why a drug will not be approved, we鈥檙e left guessing whether it鈥檚 legitimate grounds or just a political play.鈥

A Doomed Cancer Drug

Melanoma is the fifth most commonly diagnosed cancer in the United States, with about 112,000 new cases each year. The American Cancer Society projects that from melanoma this year in the U.S. If Replimune鈥檚 treatment, RP1, worked as well as it did in the clinical trial, Whitman said, as many as 2,500 of those patients could be saved.

RP1 is a genetically engineered virus designed to destroy tumor cells and alert the immune system to swing into action against them. Replimune sought accelerated approval 鈥 a sort of shortcut that allows a product to enter the market while a larger confirmatory trial takes place 鈥 by presenting data that showed a third of 140 people in the trial had their tumors shrink or disappear. But the agency had warned Replimune in July that it risked denial unless it changed its development plans. In particular, the FDA noted that the trial had no control arm to compare RP1 to an approved melanoma treatment. Instead, all patients were given RP1 along with Opdivo, a type of immunotherapy.

Replimune's scientists don鈥檛 entirely understand how the drug works, but research indicates that, in addition to destroying cancer cells, it releases chemicals that revive Opdivo鈥檚 capacity to stimulate the immune system. The company argued it would be unethical to give Opdivo alone as a control arm, because all the patients entered in the trial had already stopped getting better while taking only Opdivo or other drugs in its class.

鈥淗aving a control arm would have been unethical,鈥 Wise-Draper said. Some of her patients responded extremely well to RP1 and no longer have evidence of melanoma, she said.

Replimune currently has a larger trial that includes a control arm, but 鈥渢he bigger question is whether the company will survive,鈥 Whitman said. The FDA-accelerated approval would have persuaded investors to provide enough cash to finish the larger trial, he said.

Replimune did not respond to repeated requests for comment. But it is firing more than half its staff and closing some operations in the wake of the FDA ruling.

RP1 wouldn鈥檛 have been the first melanoma drug approved based on a single-arm trial. Keytruda, the best-selling Merck cancer drug, was approved to treat melanoma some 12 years ago based on such a trial design. But in its denial statement, the FDA said it wasn鈥檛 convinced that the positive effects of the combination regimen were all due to RP1 and not partly to Opdivo.

Replimune arguably could have found an ethical way to set up a control arm for its treatment, Kim said. On the other hand, the FDA could have 鈥済iven them a provisional yes鈥 with accelerated approval, he said. The whole point of the three-decade-old accelerated approval program is to 鈥渢ake a gamble,鈥 Kim said. The agency鈥檚 statement, stressing the company鈥檚 methodology over the result, 鈥渋s a recalibration of how confident sponsors can be with similar studies,鈥 he said.

Vinay Prasad鈥檚 Final Days at FDA

Much of the criticism of the FDA under Trump has focused on Vinay Prasad, who was fired then rehired last summer and held various leadership roles at the agency. Prasad, an oncologist known for critiquing the statistical bases of studies, repeatedly intervened in approval processes for drugs and vaccines normally decided by lower-ranking FDA professionals.

Prasad, who did not respond to requests for comment, resigned for good May 1, three weeks after the Replimune decision. 鈥淭here鈥檚 this lingering question of whether this was Vinay鈥檚 last stand, or an objective decision made by careful scientists,鈥 Kim said.

Makary ran afoul of Trump administration officials over various decisions, the last being his reluctance to approve flavored vapes for smoking cessation. Trump鈥檚 anti-abortion supporters wanted him ousted for allowing a generic form of mifepristone on the market, and for failing to speed up studies they hoped would lead to the abortion drug鈥檚 withdrawal from the market.

But in the industries regulated by the FDA, ranging from gene therapy to vaccines and cancer, officials are frustrated by the agency鈥檚 uncertain direction. In past administrations, the agency generally swung on a narrow arc between loosening and tightening requirements for drug approvals. Under Makary, 鈥渋t鈥檚 been swinging in every conceivable direction,鈥 Grossman said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very inconsistent; it鈥檚 all over the place,鈥 Whitman said. 鈥淭he inconsistency is part of the concern.鈥

During his tenure, Makary made a series of categorical statements that either claim credit for progress made during earlier administrations or exaggerate the agency鈥檚 ability to move forward on goals.

For example, he set a goal of , which is considered impractical at the moment, Kim said, and moved to artificial intelligence at the FDA 鈥 prematurely, critics say. Makary and Prasad also promised to reduce the from two to one. FDA statutes require two well-controlled clinical trials for drug approvals, but exceptions to that rule are already frequent.

鈥淭he FDA is sending signals that it wants to even further reduce the evidence needed to support drug approval,鈥 said Aaron Kesselheim, a Harvard Medical School professor and an expert on the drug industry. 鈥淥f course, if we鈥檙e talking about vaccines, the total opposite is the case. FDA has been taking real steps to make it harder to get vaccines approved.鈥

The FDA fired about 4,000 staffers at the start of the Trump administration. Makary promised to hire thousands back, but considering the upheavals at HHS and the FDA, these positions may be hard to fill. 鈥淲hat magic trick will get that done?鈥 Grossman asked.

鈥淭he unfortunate thing is that there has been so much chaos at FDA that this Replimune decision, which may have needed to happen, has gotten mired in the controversy,鈥 said Evan Seigerman, leader of healthcare research at BMO Capital Markets.

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