April 25, 2024

An Experimental Drug’s Bitter End

It was the first time she had ever heard her son say he loved her — or say much of anything for that matter. Parker, now 14, has fragile X syndrome, which causes intellectual disability and autistic behavior.

Ms. Usrey-Roos is certain that Parker’s new verbal ability resulted from an experimental drug he was taking in a clinical trial, and has continued to take for three years since then. She said she no longer had to wear sweaters to cover up the bruises on her arms she used to get from Parker hitting or biting her.

Now, however, the drug is being taken away. It has not met the goals set for it in clinical trials testing it as a treatment for either autism or fragile X syndrome. And Seaside Therapeutics, the company developing it, is running out of money and says it can no longer afford to supply the drug to former participants in its trials.

The setback is a blow in the effort to treat autism since the drug, arbaclofen, was one of the furthest along in clinical trials. And the company’s decision has caused both heartbreak and outrage among some parents.

“I waited 10 and a half years for him to tell me he loved me,” said Ms. Usrey-Roos, who lives in Canton, Ill. “With fragile X, you’re like living in a box and someone is holding the lid down. The medication opened the lid and let Parker out.”

“I don’t want to go back to the way life was,” she added.

The situation raises questions about what, if anything, drug companies owe to patients participating in their clinical trials. It also points out the difficulties in developing drugs to treat autism and fragile X syndrome. If the drug worked so well in some patients, why has it not succeeded so far in clinical trials?

One reason is that the symptoms and behaviors associated with autism and fragile X vary widely among individuals, making it hard to capture the effects of a drug by looking at any one measure, like irritability or social withdrawal. Seaside and doctors who participated in the trials said that there were improvements in some aspects of behavior in some studies, just not those considered critical to a trial’s overall success.

But could it also be that the parents are deluding themselves into seeing changes that are not there? Could improvements be the result of the children simply growing older?

“It’s kind of hard to make the argument that the company should keep providing it if it’s not working,” said Dr. Michael R. Tranfaglia, medical director of the Fraxa Research Foundation, of Newburyport, Mass., which provides money for research on fragile X syndrome.

Dr. Tranfaglia, whose son has fragile X but was not in a Seaside trial, said arbaclofen appeared to significantly help about a third of patients. It also made some patients worse. Without being able to tell in advance which patients would benefit, it would be hard for the drug to succeed in a clinical trial and win approval, he said.

Similar situations have risen occasionally in the past. In 2004, patients with Parkinson’s disease protested when Amgen stopped providing an experimental drug that some patients said had restored their lives. Amgen said the drug had failed in a clinical trial and might even be dangerous.

Two patients even sued, but a court ruled the company had no obligation to continue to supply the drug to participants in its trials.

In the case of arbaclofen, parents are appealing to Congress and have started an online petition hoping to find financing for the drug’s development. They are also organizing through social media.

Seaside executives declined to be interviewed.

Until recently, Seaside, one of the few companies pursuing autism drugs, was considered a shining light by family members of those with the condition.

The company, in Cambridge, Mass., grew out of the research of Mark F. Bear, a neuroscience professor at the M.I.T. Its co-founder and chief executive, Dr. Randall L. Carpenter, has a sister with an intellectual disability.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/07/business/an-experimental-drugs-bitter-end.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Prescriptions: F.D.A. Approves Cell Therapy for Wrinkles

Blood stem cells, as from a bone marrow transplant, are used to treat serious cancers. Therapies using other types of stem cells, mostly still experimental, are envisioned to help repair damaged organs and to treat scourges like diabetes and Parkinson’s disease.

But cell therapy can also have its more trivial applications, like smoothing wrinkles. The Food and Drug Administration late Tuesday approved a therapy that uses a person’s own skin cells to help improve the appearance of the smile lines that can extend from the bottom of the nose to the sides of the mouth.

The treatment, called laViv, was developed by Fibrocell Science of Exton, Pa. It involves taking a sample of skin cells called fibroblasts, which make collagen, from behind the person’s ear. The sample is sent to the company’s laboratory, where the fibroblasts are multiplied in cell culture, a process that takes 11 to 22 weeks.

The cells are then sent back to the doctor, who injects them into the smile lines, (or frown lines), which are technically known as nasolabial folds.

The treatment was evaluated in two clinical trials with a total of 421 patients in which participants received either three treatments with laViv or three treatments with an injection that did not contain the cells. Six months after the third treatment, both the patients and their doctors, neither of whom knew whether the treatment or control was given, assessed the results.

In one study, 57 percent of the patients who got laViv thought the appearance of their own wrinkles had significantly improved, while only 30 percent of those in the control group thought so, according to the drug’s label. In the other study, 45 percent of those who got the treatment and 18 percent of those who got the control thought the appearance had improved.

Their doctors were a bit more critical. They thought the wrinkles’ appearance improved significantly in only 33 percent of the patients who received LaViv in one study and 19 percent in the other. But those figures were still higher than the 7 percent improvement in both studies for the control group.

The most common side effect, occurring in two-thirds of patients, were injection site reactions including redness, bruising, swelling, pain and hemorrhage.

LaViv will compete with various dermal fillers. Fibrocell has not announced a price, but a spokeswoman said it was expected to be $1,000 to $2,000 to create the personalized cell bank, and then perhaps $300 to $500 for each of the three treatment sessions.

Lack of funding has hindered development of the treatment. The company pursuing it, once known as Isolagen, filed for bankruptcy protection in 2009, but emerged a few months later as FibroCell.

Fibrocell’s shares, traded on the OTC Bulletin Board, were up 11 cents to $1.27 at 1:54 p.m.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=ea7b61dbab9e0293c6773d73430541f9