FDA. US: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today approved Farydak (panobinostat) for the treatment of patients with multiple myeloma.
Multiple
 myeloma is a form of blood cancer that arises from plasma cells, a type
 of white blood cell, found in bone marrow. According to the National 
Cancer Institute, approximately 21,700 Americans are diagnosed with 
multiple myeloma and 10,710 die from the disease annually.
Primarily
 affecting older adults, multiple myeloma causes plasma cells to rapidly
 multiply and crowd out other healthy blood cells from the bone marrow. 
When the bone marrow has too many plasma cells, the cells may move to 
other parts of the body, which can weaken the body’s immune system, lead
 to anemia and cause other bone and kidney problems.
Farydak works
 by inhibiting the activity of enzymes, known as histone deacetylases 
(HDACs). This process may slow the over-development of plasma cells in 
multiple myeloma patients or cause these dangerous cells to die.
Farydak
 is the first HDAC inhibitor approved to treat multiple myeloma. It is 
intended for patients who have received at least two prior standard 
therapies, including bortezomib and an immunomodulatory agent. Farydak 
is to be used in combination with bortezomib, a type of chemotherapy, 
and dexamethasone, an anti-inflammatory medication.
“Farydak has a
 new mechanism of action that distinguishes it from prior drugs approved
 to treat multiple myeloma, making it a potentially attractive candidate
 agent for the treatment of multiple myeloma,” said Richard Pazdur, 
M.D., director of the Office of Hematology and Oncology Products in the 
FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Farydak’s approval is 
particularly important because it has been shown to slow the progression
 of multiple myeloma.”
In November 2014, the FDA’s Oncologic Drugs
 Advisory Committee advised the agency that, based on the data reviewed,
 the drug’s benefits did not outweigh its risks for patients with 
relapsed multiple myeloma. After the meeting, the company submitted 
additional information supporting Farydak’s use for a different 
indication: patients with multiple myeloma who have received at least 
two prior standard therapies, including bortezomib and an 
immunomodulatory agent.
The safety and efficacy of Farydak in 
combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone was demonstrated in 193 
clinical trial participants with multiple myeloma who received at least 
two prior treatments that included bortezomib and an immunomodulatory 
agent. Participants were randomly assigned to receive a combination of 
Farydak, bortezomib and dexamethasone, or bortezomib and dexamethasone 
alone.
Study results showed participants receiving the Farydak 
combination saw a delay in their disease progression (progression-free 
survival) for about 10.6 months, compared to 5.8 months in participants 
treated with bortezomib and dexamethasone alone. Additionally, 59 
percent of Farydak-treated participants saw their cancer shrink or 
disappear after treatment (response rate), versus 41 percent in those 
receiving bortezomib and dexamethasone.
Farydak carries a Boxed 
Warning alerting patients and health care professionals that severe 
diarrhea and severe and fatal cardiac events, arrhythmias and 
electrocardiogram (ECG) changes have occurred in patients receiving 
Farydak. Because of these risks, Farydak is being approved with a Risk 
Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) consisting of a communication 
plan to inform health care professionals of these risks and how to 
minimize them.
The most common side effects of Farydak were 
diarrhea, tiredness, nausea, swelling in the arms or legs, decreased 
appetite, fever, vomiting and weakness. The most common laboratory 
abnormalities were low levels of phosphorus in the blood 
(hypophosphatemia), low potassium levels in the blood (hypokalemia), low
 levels of salt in the blood (hyponatremia), increased creatinine, low 
platelets (thrombocytopenia), low white blood cell counts (leukopenia) 
and low red blood cell counts (anemia). Healthcare professionals should 
also inform patients of the risk of bleeding in the gastrointestinal 
tract and the lungs, and liver damage (hepatotoxicity).
The FDA 
granted Farydak priority review and orphan product designation. Priority
 review provides for an expedited review of drugs that are intended to 
treat a serious disease or condition and may provide a significant 
improvement over available therapy. Orphan product designation is given 
to drugs intended to treat rare diseases.
The FDA action was taken
 under the agency’s accelerated approval program, which allows approval 
of a drug to treat a serious or life-threatening disease based on 
clinical data showing the drug has an effect on a surrogate endpoint 
reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit to patients. The 
accelerated approval program provides earlier patient access to 
promising new drugs while the company conducts confirmatory clinical 
trials. An improvement in survival or disease-related symptoms has not 
yet been established for Farydak. The company is now required to conduct
 confirmatory trials to verify and describe the clinical benefit of 
Farydak.
Farydak is marketed by East Hanover, New Jersey-based Novartis Pharmaceuticals.
The
 FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
 promotes and protects the public health by, among other things, 
assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary
 drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and 
medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and 
security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, 
products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco 
products.