Reuters Health Information: FDA postpones decision on Intercept's lead liver drug
FDA postpones decision on Intercept's lead liver drug
Last Updated: 2015-12-18
By Reuters Staff
(Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has
postponed by three months its decision on Intercept
Pharmaceuticals Inc's marketing application for its lead drug,
to treat a kind of liver disease.
The company's shares were down 6.6% at $155 in extended
trading on Thursday.
Intercept said the FDA would hold an advisory committee
meeting on April 7 and announce its decision on May 29 as it
required more time to analyze additional clinical data submitted
by the company.
The drug, obeticholic acid, is for primary biliary cirrhosis
(PBC), a rare liver disease that results from autoimmune
destruction of the bile ducts in the liver.
Intercept is seeking approval for the drug to be used in
combination with the generic drug ursodeoxycholic acid.
The company is also conducting late-stage studies on the
same drug to treat nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which
has no approved treatment.
The NASH indication remains the jewel in Intercept's
pipeline.
"The obvious longer-term ICPT reality is this is a NASH
story not a PBC story and expectations don't seem overly high
for PBC," RBC analyst Michael Yee said in a note earlier this
month.
"The bigger picture value creation will likely be driven by
success in NASH."
After Gilead Sciences Inc hit the jackpot with its hepatitis
C drugs, Sovaldi and Harvoni, drugmakers have been turning their
attention to other liver diseases.
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