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Myrl Jeffcoat myrlj@jps.net 17 mars, 2005 20:27 MS drug may cause
severe liver damage Biogen's Avonex to carry new warning label, says
company Updated: 7:35 p.m. ET March 16, 2005WASHINGTON - Biogen Idec’s
multiple sclerosis drug Avonex can cause severe liver damage, U.S.
regulatory officials and the company warned Wednesday, the latest in a
series of blows to MS patients “In some cases, these events have occurred in the presence of other drugs that have been associated with hepatic (liver) injury,” the Food and Drug Administration and Biogen said in a statement posted on the agency’s Web site. Biogen shares suffered their second recent drop on the news, which came about two weeks after the company halted sales of its other MS drug, Tysabri, when a patient died from an infection. Company shares closed down 88 cents, or 2.31 percent, to $37.19 on the Nasdaq after earlier falling nearly 9 percent. 'A very rare issue' Biogen spokeswoman Amy Ryan said the change was “a minor
update” to the Avonex label. She said the company had received
“very, very few” reports of liver damage in Avonex patients, but declined
to give specific numbers. “It is a very rare issue,” she said. MS drug withdrawal dashes patients'
hopes At least one analyst downplayed the Avonex warning. “Avonex has been safely used for almost a decade,” said Max Jacobs, a biotech analyst for Mehta Partners. He called the selloff “an overreaction. This basically just says don’t mix Avonex with alcohol.” In February, the company said two cases of a rare but often fatal infection of the central nervous system occurred in patients taking Tysabri in combination with Avonex, an older drug, for more than two years. There was no sign of the condition in patients taking only Tysabri, which Biogen makes with Elan Corp. Plc. Earlier on Wednesday, GlaxoSmithKline Plc said the FDA halted clinical trials of drugs like Tysabri, including its experimental product called SB 683699. Disease affects more than 1 million Dr. Ausim Azizi, head of neurology at Temple University in
Philadelphia, said Avonex’s warning was “relatively mild” and not as
troubling as news about the other, newer drugs. “We have already known quite a bit
about the fact that we need to keep an eye on the liver,” he said. More than 1 million people
worldwide suffer from multiple sclerosis, an auto-immune disorder that can
cause blurred vision, weakness and memory loss. Avonex, which saw $1.42 billion in
sales last year, won FDA approval in 1996 and faces increased competition
from Pfizer Inc’s Rebif and Schering AG’s Betaseron. The three injectable medicines are
beta-interferon drugs, which block the immune system’s white cells from
attacking the protective coating that surrounds nerve fibers.
Biogen’s Ryan said liver trouble has been reported with all drugs in the beta-interferon class. “This is not a product-specific issue,” she said. Pfizer changed Rebif’s label in December to include a strong warning similar to the Avonex update, while Betaseron’s label offers a more mild caution about potential liver problems. Azizi said liver risk for the two competitors to Avonex showed “no major red flags.” Tysabri and GSK’s experimental drug are part of a new class of MS drugs called selective adhesion molecule, or SAM, inhibitors. Biogen said it will revise Avonex’s label to include the new warning starting April 18. Copyright 2005 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7213095/
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