
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration said Friday it will add a new warning and other limitations to a gene therapy for Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy that's been linked to two patient deaths.
The infused therapy from Sarepta Therapeutics will carry a boxed warning — the most serious type — alerting doctors and patients to the risk of potentially fatal liver failure with the treatment, the FDA said in a release.
The one-time therapy, Elevidys, has been under FDA scrutiny since the company reported the first of two deaths of teenage boys in March. Following a second death reported in June, the FDA briefly called for halting all shipments of the drug. But the agency quickly reversed course after facing pushback from patient families and libertarian activists close to President Donald Trump.
Elevidys is the first U.S.-approved gene therapy for Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy, a fatal muscle-wasting disease that affects boys and young men.
In addition to the boxed warning, the FDA is also limiting the drug's approved use to patients who are 4 years old and up and can still walk. Previously the FDA had allowed the drug's use in immobile patients, who generally have more advanced disease.
New labeling will also recommend weekly liver function monitoring for the first three months of treatment, as well as other precautionary steps.
Elevidys is Sarepta's best-selling product and recent headwinds against the drug have weighed heavily on the company and its stock. In July, the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company announced it would lay off 500 employees.
Sarepta Therapeutics Inc. shares rose 7.7% in trading after the FDA announcement, reflecting improved visibility for investors about the company's outlook.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Air India chief resigns 10 months after devastating Ahmedabad crash and amid mounting financial troubles - 2
Images of Bangladeshi motorcyclists sleeping at petrol pumps are AI-generated - 3
Single women risk rape and exploitation in search for better life in Europe - 4
New funding transforms lives by expanding electricity access across Africa - 5
The Strait of Hormuz Isn’t Just an Oil Problem, It’s Now a Food Problem
Vote In favor of Your Favored Video Conferencing Administration
Wonderful Sea shores All over the Planet
Korean Air takes emergency action as fuel prices soar
Find the Future of Outsourcing: Exploring the Gig Economy
From Novice to Master: Dominating a Side interest
In the background: Visiting Notable Film Areas All over the Planet
NASA releases stunning first images of Earth taken by the Artemis II astronauts
Overseeing Individual budgets Successfully
December's overlooked meteor shower peaks next week — will the Ursids surprise us?












