Shares of Alkermes Plc (NASDAQ: ALKS) lost
more than 20 percent early Monday morning after the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration said it won't review the company's therapy ALKS-5461.
What Happened
Alkermes, which mostly focuses on treatments for central nervous system diseases, said in a press
release it received a Refusal to File letter from the FDA regarding its New Drug Application (NDA) for ALKS-5461.
ALKS-5461 is a once daily-oral investigational medicine for the adjunctive treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) in
patients with an inadequate response to standard antidepressant therapies. The FDA is unable to complete a review of the therapy's
regulatory package due to "insufficient evidence of overall effectiveness for the proposed indication, and that additional
well-controlled clinical trials are needed."
The FDA also requested that Alkermes oversee a biovailability study to generate additional bridging data between ALKS 5461 and
the reference listed drug, buprenorphine.
Why It's Important
The FDA's action represents a "blow" to Alkermes and its investors who hoped the approval of ALKS-5461 would boost the company's
revenue growth, Stat News' Adam Feuerstein wrote.
The refusal also represents a "black mark" for the company's CEO Richard Pops, who has been telling investors for months that the
clinical data available was compelling enough to secure a regulatory approval.
What's Next
Alkermes said it "strongly disagrees" with the FDA's conclusions and will appeal the decision. The company's management hopes to
gain further information in a Type A meeting with the FDA to determine what the next appropriate step will be and what additional
information is required to resubmit the NDA.
At time of publication, the stock was trading down 18.8 percent at $47.
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