Three members of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisory committee have resigned after the agency this week approved a new drug for Alzheimer disease despite a lack of strong proof that it provides any benefits to patients.
Aduhelm (aducanumab)—a monthly infusion priced at $56,000 per year—is the first treatment for Alzheimer disease approved by the FDA in 18 years, and its approval was pushed by patient advocacy groups because there are only five other treatments available, The New York Times reported. Drug maker Biogen plans to begin distributing the drug in about two weeks and expects more than 900 sites nationwide to soon be ready to administer it.
However, none of the 11 members of the FDA advisory committee that reviewed the new treatment considered the drug ready for approval. Ten voted against approval and one was uncertain, The Times reported. The FDA is not required to follow its advisory committees’ recommendations. The committee said there was no conclusive evidence that Aduhelm could slow mental decline in people in the early stages of Alzheimer disease and noted that it could cause potentially serious side effects of brain swelling and brain bleeding.
Joel Perlmutter, M.D., a neurologist at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, was the first to resign from the advisory committee after the FDA approved Aduhelm. “Approval of a drug that is not effective has serious potential to impair future research into new treatments that may be effective,” he said, The Times reported. “In addition, the implementation of aducanumab therapy will potentially cost billions of dollars, and these dollars may be better spent in either developing better evidence for aducanumab or other therapeutic interventions.”
For months, several experts, including some involved in the drug’s clinical trials, have said the available evidence about Aduhelm raises significant doubts about its effectiveness. They also suggested that even if it achieves the claimed benefit of slowing the symptoms of Alzheimer disease for about four months over 18 months, that might be barely noticed by patients and would not outweigh the risks for brain side effects, The Times reported.
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