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New drug approved to manage sickle cell disease

Linda A. Johnson/AP Medical Writer | 11/27/2019, 6 p.m.
U.S. regulators have approved a new medicine that can help reduce extremely painful sickle cell disease flare-ups.
Vials of Adakveo, a new drug by Novartis, are lined up for distribution to help patients with sickle cell anemia. Novartis via Associated Press

U.S. regulators have approved a new medicine that can help reduce extremely painful sickle cell disease flare-ups.

The Food and Drug Administration on Nov. 15 approved Novartis AG’s Adakveo for patients age 16 and older. The monthly infusion, which halves occurrences of sickle cell pain episodes, will carry a list price of roughly $85,000 to $113,000 per year, depending on dosing. Insured patients generally will pay less.

Sickle cell disease is one of the most common inherited blood disorders, af- fecting about 100,000 Americans, most of them African-American, and about 300 million people worldwide.

Its hallmark is periodic episodes in which red blood cells stick together, blocking blood from reaching organs and small blood vessels. That causes intense pain and cumulative organ damage that shortens the lives of people with the disease.

“The duration and severity of these pain crises worsens with aging. Often patients die during one of these crises,” said Dr. Biree Andemariam, chief medical officer of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America.

Dr. Andemariam, a former Novartis adviser, said the drug appears to work better the longer patients receive it.

The Swiss drug company is continuing patient testing to determine whether Adakveo, also known as crizanlizumab, lengthens patients’ lives, said Ameet Mallik, the company’s head of U.S. oncology and blood disorders.

He said severe pain episodes send U.S. patients to emergency departments about 200,000 times per year. About 85 percent are hospitalized for days to a week, running up big bills.

The debilitating condition also causes anemia, delayed growth, vision damage and painful swelling in hands and feet, making it hard for some people to maintain jobs or at- tend school.

Current treatments include a 21- year-old cancer drug called hydroxyurea and Endari, approved in 2017.

In patient studies, Endari reduced frequency of pain episodes about 25 percent and hydroxyurea reduced them by half. Hydroxyurea can have serious side effects and requires weekly blood tests. Both drugs have complicated dosing and don’t work — or stop working — in some patients.

In a one-year study of 198 patients, those getting the higher of twoAdakveo doses averaged 1.6 pain episodes over that year and 36 percent had none. A comparison group on placebo averaged three pain episodes that year and 17 percent had none. Adakveo’s side effects included influenza and high fever.

Danielle Jamison of Islandton, S.C., has suffered with sickle cell pain episodes since shortly after birth. The 35-year-old previously had a half-dozen pain crises requiring hospital trips each year. Those lessened by about half when she began taking hydroxyurea nine years ago.

She hasn’t been in the hospital since she started taking crizanlizumab two years ago as part of a patient study. She still has mild daily pain, but she said she can now take care of her home and drive her 9-year-old daughter to activities.

“It’s made a huge difference in how much I’m able to do,” Ms. Jamison said.

All three drugs work through different mechanisms, so doctors may switch patients to Adakveo or to add it to their current treatment, said Dr. Andemariam, head of the University of Connecticut’s sickle cell treatment and research program.

Meanwhile, numerous drugs to treat sickle cell disease and gene therapies to possibly cure it are being tested.