UPDATE: River Plate Eye Product Gets Thumbs Down From Panel
26 Juin 2009 - 9:21PM
Dow Jones News
A panel of medical experts on Friday said a proposed eyedrop
drug by River Plate Biotechnology Inc. isn't safe and effective
enough to treat patients with dry-eye disease.
The panel of medical experts voted six to one against River
Plate's Rejena eyedrop product. The Food and Drug Administration
will take the panel's thoughts into consideration when making a
final decision on whether to approve the drug.
Privately held River Plate is seeking FDA approval to use Rejena
to treat dry-eye disease, which affects about five million people
in the U.S., the company said. If approved, Rejena would be
marketed by Alcon Inc. (ACL), a large Switzerland-based eye-care
company.
Panel members expressed concerns about two trials the company
presented, saying the trials weren't substantive enough to prove
the product was effective.
Panel member Allen Rutzen, an eye specialist from Severna Park,
Md., voted in favor of Rejena and said it just barely met the
standards for approval. "Although I'm not overly impressed with the
data," the drug did meet standards for approval, Rutzen said in
explaining his position.
FDA officials had said in briefing documents ahead of the
meeting that they questioned the robustness of one of the company's
studies.
River Plate acknowledged problems with the first study but said,
overall, it did what the FDA asked of it. Panelists echoed the
FDA's concerns and had additional questions about a second study
the company submitted.
"I found the first study to be invalid and, in the second, the
design was flawed," said panel member Susan MacDonald, the director
of ophthalmology at Tufts University School of Medicine.
It was the second eye-care product on which the panel voted. The
panel said the first product, a proposed drug made by ISTA
Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ISTA) to treat eye itching associated with
allergies, was safe and effective enough for FDA approval. The FDA
is scheduled to make a final decision on ISTA's drug, Bepreve, by
Sept. 12.
-By Jared A. Favole, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9207;
jared.favole@dowjones.com