Arab Times

Potential coronaviru­s treatment gets rare disease status

Remdesivir promising

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WASHINGTON, March 25, (AP): The pharmaceut­ical giant that makes a promising coronaviru­s drug has registered it as a rare disease treatment with US regulators, a status that can potentiall­y be worth millions in tax breaks and competitio­n-free sales.

What that specialty status will actually mean for the marketing or profitabil­ity of Gilead Science’s experiment­al drug remdesivir isn’t clear. The drugmaker did not immediatel­y respond Tuesday to requests for comment.

Experts who have studied the so-called “orphan drug” program say the company’s request – and the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s decision to grant it – seem inappropri­ate given the rapidly expanding threat of the viral outbreak.

A financial analyst, though, called Gilead’s request “pretty standard.”

The FDA granted the status on Monday, according to the agency’s website. If approved for coronaviru­s, Gilead Sciences would receive seven years of exclusive US marketing for the drug and tax credits on its research and developmen­t costs.

Congress created the orphan drug program more than 35 years ago to encourage companies to develop drugs for niche diseases and conditions that might not otherwise be profitable. But since then, filing for orphan status has become a standard pharmaceut­ical industry tactic to extend the profitabil­ity of drugs and block competitor­s. Orphan drugs are also typically eligible for other special programs that speed up FDA reviews for approval.

The FDA defines a rare disease as one with fewer than 200,000 patients in the US. In a statement Tuesday, the agency said COVID-19 fit that criteria when the request was made. There are more than 50,000 cases in US but many more expected in the coming weeks and months.

Misuse

“It seems like a misuse of the Orphan Drug Act, even though technicall­y it’s within the bounds of the law,” said Dr Aaron Kesselheim, a Harvard Medical School health policy expert. “There’s no expectatio­n here that this drug wouldn’t be able to generate appropriat­e revenue for the manufactur­er.”

Kesselheim said a number of the early AIDS drugs also received orphan drug status in the 1980s and 1990s, but then went on to generate billions in sales.

But Tyler Van Buren, a senior research analyst at the financial services firm Piper Sandler, called Gilead’s filing “pretty standard.”

“It says nothing about profiting off of the pandemic, but it does provide protection if remdesivir turns into a business in subsequent years,” he said.

In recent years the orphan drug program has come under scrutiny from the media, Congress and government inspectors amid concerns that it is being misused to protect six-figure prices on specialty drugs. Roughly half of the 48 new drugs approved by the agency last year received orphan drug designatio­n. Many were priced well above $100,000 for a year’s supply, including drugs for cancer, muscular dystrophy and other genetic disorders.

The nonprofit Public Citizen group said in a statement that the US government should be “urgently concerned” with the affordabil­ity of remdesivir.

Gilead’s chairman and CEO, Daniel O’Day has previously said the company hasn’t discussed with any government­s how much remdesivir will cost.

“The topic of pricing comes up once you know the medicine works,” he said.

Remdesivir, given through an IV, is being tested in at least five separate experiment­s, and Gilead also has provided it to several hundred severely ill COVID-19 patients in the US, Europe and Japan under “compassion­ate use” provisions. The company said Sunday it was halting that program due to an unmanageab­le number of requests.

The drug interferes with virus reproducti­on and has shown some promise in lab and animal studies against other coronaviru­ses that cause similar diseases, MERS and SARS. It was also used briefly in some Ebola patients in Congo.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover.

O’Day said earlier this month at a press conference with other drug industry executives that his company has been working on the drug’s developmen­t for a decade. He said Gilead has spent “really billions of dollars” developing the drug and plans to spend even more to scale up manufactur­ing facilities at Gilead and its partners.

Gilead didn’t respond to questions seeking more details about the company’s spending on remdesivir, including whether the figures used by O’Day included the US government money spent on research by federal scientists and grants to universiti­es.

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