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Bluebird bio’s blood disorder therapy effective – FDA staff

Reuters - 07/06/2022 - Bluebird bio's Beta-thalassemia treatment demonstrates "clinically meaningful" benefit in patients, staff reviewers at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said in briefing documents published on Tuesday.

The company has applied for approval of beti-cel as a one-time gene therapy for the treatment of Beta-thalassemia patients dependent on blood transfusions.

Data provided in the application supports the effectiveness of beti-cel for treatment of these patients, the FDA staff said in materials posted online (https://bit.ly/3ayztrJ) ahead of a June 9-10 meeting of the Cellular, Tissue, and Gene Therapies Advisory Committee.

The reviewers also published documents for bluebird's other gene therapy, eli-cel, for treatment of a rare neurological disease, cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD), in patients below 18 years, raising safety concerns.

It is unclear whether the benefit of eli-cel outweighs the significant and unknown long-term risk of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), the reviewers wrote.

The agency put the eli-cel program on clinical hold last year after three trial patients developed MDS, a type of cancer. The staff said on Tuesday there was a causal relationship between the treatment and two of the cases and expects longer follow-up will uncover additional cases.

It will mark a defining moment for the gene therapy field, as it is the first time the Cellular, Tissue, and Gene Therapies Advisory Committee has met since 2017. The panel had then recommended approval for Spark Therapeutics' Luxturna for inherited retinal disease, the first gene therapy to be approved in the United States.

The meeting's outcome is also seen as critical for bluebird after the company in March flagged "going concern" doubts and also unveiled in April plans to cut 30% of its workforce.

"The company is in a very precarious financial position now, given cash runway...(the decision) is not only big for the gene therapy space, but pivotal for the company as well," William Blair analyst Raju Prasad told Reuters.

By Reuters Staff



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