Mom's Story, A Child Learns About MS

Mom's Story, A Child Learns About MS
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Monday, June 22, 2015

An FDA Approved Generic Form of Copaxone® (Glatiramer Acetate) For Relapsing MS Called Glatopa™ Is Launched In the U.S.

A generic equivalent of daily Copaxone® (glatiramer acetate, 20 mg), called “Glatopa”™ (Sandoz, a Novartis company, developed in collaboration with Momenta Pharmaceuticals) that was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April, has been launched in the U.S. Glatopa is a disease-modifying therapy for people with relapsing forms of MS, including those who have experienced a first clinical episode and have MRI features consistent with MS.
The generic medication is a 20mg dose injected under the skin every day. This approval means that the manufacturer provided evidence that this generic medication is equivalent to the brand-name drug (Copaxone®).
According to Novartis which owns Sandoz, Glatopa would have a wholesale list price of about $63,000 per year. This is an estimated 15- 18 percent less than the list price of daily Copaxone. Sandoz advises that it will offer support services that include financial assistance to qualified patients, personalized injection training and 24-hour access to nurses for non-clinical questions, services not typically offered for generic medications.
“Having a generic option for one of the MS disease-modifying therapies is an important milestone, and it has the potential to increase access to MS therapies,” commented Dr. Bruce Bebo, Executive Vice President, Research at the National MS Society. “As more generic and biosimilar options become available, we are hopeful that we will start to see some price relief for people living with MS” he added.
“Health care professionals and patients can be assured that FDA-approved generic drugs have met the same rigorous standards of quality as the brand-name drug,” said Janet Woodcock, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, in an FDA press release. “Before approving this generic product, given its complexity, we reviewed additional information to make sure that the generic product is as safe and effective as the brand name product.” The FDA’s press release provides additional details (available here) related to how the agency determined the generic’s equivalency.
Selecting a therapy should be done by people with MS in collaboration with their MS doctors, taking into account a variety of factors, including the effectiveness of any therapy they are currently using, and weighing potential risks and benefits, costs and lifestyle factors.
About Glatopa: The FDA has approved a generic medication that has been shown to be equivalent to 20mg daily glatiramer acetate. Glatopa is not a generic version of the 40mg dose of Copaxone taken every three days. Glatiramer acetate is a synthetic protein that mimics myelin basic protein, a component of the myelin that insulates nerve fibers in the brain and spinal cord. This therapy seems to block myelin-damaging T-cells through a mechanism that is not completely understood. The approved generic form of glatiramer acetate is given by subcutaneous (under the skin) injections every day.
Potential benefits: In clinical trials of glatiramer acetate, it was shown to significantly reduce annual relapse rates and new brain lesions as shown on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), when compared to those who were given a placebo. This therapy has had a long track record of effectiveness and safety.
As part of the generic medication approval process, the FDA requires that generics have the same active ingredients, strength, dosage and mode of administration as the brand-name medication, and that they are manufactured according to federal quality control regulations. Clinical trials are generally not required to prove equivalence to a brand-name medication.
Potential risks and side effects: Side effects of glatiramer acetate that generally resolve on their own and do not require medical attention unless they continue for several weeks or are bothersome include injection-site reactions (e.g., swelling, the development of a hardened lump, redness, tenderness, increased warmth of the skin, itching at the site of the injection); runny nose; tremor; unusual tiredness or weakness; and weight gain. There is also the potential for local damage to the skin (necrosis) and underlying tissue (lipoatrophy).
Some people using glatiramer acetate experience, at one time or another, a very temporary reaction immediately after injecting glatiramer acetate. This reaction, which often occurs only once, includes flushing or chest tightness with heart palpitations, anxiety, and difficulty breathing. During the clinical trials, these reactions occurred very rarely, usually within minutes of an injection. They lasted approximately 15 minutes and resolved without further problem.
Unusual side effects of glatiramer acetate that should be discussed as soon as possible with your doctor include hives (an itchy, blotchy swelling of the skin) or severe pain at the injection site.
The National MS Society will provide more information about generic glatiramer acetate as it becomes available.
Download prescribing information (.pdf)
Read a press release from the FDA
Read more about disease-modifying therapies and other treatments for MS and MS symptoms.

Frequently Asked Questions: Approval of Generic Glatiramer Acetate

When will generic glatiramer acetate be available for prescription?
  • There is no information yet about when this medication, called Glatopa, will be available for prescription in the United States.
What will the generic glatiramer acetate cost?
  • Though we don’t have specific costs of Glatopa at this time, according to Novartis which owns Sandoz, the product would have a wholesale list price of about $63,000 per year.
What does it mean for a therapy to go generic – will Copaxone still be available for prescription?
  • As patent protections expire for Copaxone, other manufacturers are free to replicate it and seek drug regulatory agency approval to market it.
  • For many medications available as generics, the brand-name medications remain on the market. From the information currently available, it is expected that Copaxone will continue to be available by prescription in both the 20mg once daily dose, and the 40mg dose taken every three days.
What about insurance coverage for the generic or for Copaxone – will I be forced to switch from my current medication?
  • Coverage of prescriptions differs among various insurers. At this point we don’t know how insurers will handle coverage of Copaxone versus generic glatiramer acetate.
Does this generic medication 20mg dose have the same therapeutic benefit as 20 mg Copaxone?
  • The FDA has a thorough review process and guidelines in place to evaluate the equivalence of proposed generic drugs to brand name drug products.
  • If the FDA reviews and approves a generic medication, it means the medication’s maker has provided sufficient evidence that the generic will have the same therapeutic benefits as the brand-name product.
  • The U.S. FDA is empowered by Congress to evaluate generic drug candidates through Abbreviated New Drug Applications.
  • The National MS Society has confidence in the FDA’s processes.
Will patient support services be available to people who are prescribed Glatopa?
  • According to Sandoz, it will offer support services that include financial assistance to qualified patients, personalized injection training, and 24-hour access to nurses for non-clinical questions.

Frequently Asked Questions: Generic Therapies for the Treatment of MS

The MS therapy landscape is continuously evolving. Two decades ago there were no disease-modifying therapies available, and now there are more than a dozen. We have also reached the point where “generic” versions of MS therapies are entering the marketplace. The following provides information about generic drugs and what they may mean for the MS community.
What is a generic medication?
  • A generic medication is a product that is equivalent to a brand-name drug whose patent protections have expired.
  • As part of the generic medication approval process, the FDA requires that generics have the same active ingredients, strength, dosage and mode of administration as the brand-name medication, and that they are manufactured according to federal quality control regulations.
  • Generic makers are required to show that the generic drug delivers the same amount of active ingredients to the person’s bloodstream in the same amount of time as the brand-name product (referred to as “bioequivalency”).
What is the Society’s view of generic therapies for MS?
  • The National MS Society advocates for increased treatment options for people with all forms of MS. Early and ongoing treatment is currently the best known way to reduce future disease activity.
  • Having approved generics has the potential to increase individuals’ access to MS therapies and provides the MS community with more options.
Does the National MS Society recommend the use of this new generic MS therapy?
  • The National MS Society does not make individual treatment recommendations, but as we do for all other approved therapies, we make information available to constituents so that they can make informed decisions about their treatment choices.
Do generic medications have the same therapeutic benefit as name-brand medications?
  • The FDA has a thorough review process and guidelines in place to evaluate the equivalence of proposed generic drugs to brand name drug products.
  • If the FDA reviews and approves a generic medication, it means the medication’s maker has provided sufficient evidence that the generic will have the same therapeutic benefits as the brand-name product.
  • The U.S. FDA is empowered by Congress to evaluate generic drug candidates through Abbreviated New Drug Applications.
  • The National MS Society has confidence in the FDA’s processes.
Will there be equivalent medications for all MS therapies?
  • It’s possible that eventually there will be. But before any medication may be copied, the patents protecting the brand-name medication must expire. Then a maker of equivalent medications would need to apply to the FDA with a request for approval of its medication.
  • The term “generic” technically applies to products that are considered drugs made through a chemical manufacturing process. Some of the MS therapies are classified as chemical drugs, and so when their patents expire, they would likely be eligible to be manufactured as generics. These FDA-approved therapies are classified as chemical drugs: Aubagio, Copaxone, Gilenya and Tecfidera.
  • The other MS therapies -- Avonex, Betaseron, Extavia, Lemtrada, Plegridy, Rebif, and Tysabri -- are technically classified as “biologics.” Biologics are generally more complex and they are made from human or animal materials rather than chemical processes. The technical term for equivalent medications for biologics is “biosimilar” or “follow-on biologic.”
  • The FDA has long-established requirements for the approval of generic medications, and has recently released guidelines related to the approval of biosimilars.
What is the current progress toward developing equivalent medications for MS therapies?
  • The FDA just approved a generic form of glatiramer acetate, and the agency has received Abbreviated New Drug Applications for other generic forms of this medication.
  • With the exception of Novantrone and Copaxone, no other disease-modifying MS medications are available in a generic form.
Where can I get more information about generic drugs and biosimilars?
The FDA’s Website has information about generic drugs and biosimilars and processes for their approval.
Copaxone is a registered trademark of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries LTD.
Glatopa is a trademark of Novartis AG

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

New Discovery

Travis Gettys

03 Jun 2015 at 11:02 ET                   
Brain and central nervous system (Shutterstock)
Brain and central nervous system (Shutterstock)
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Researchers have discovered tiny vessels connecting the brain to the immune system – which could profoundly alter the treatment of autism, Alzheimer’s disease, and multiple sclerosis.
The team at the University of Virginia School of Medicine found the brain – like every other tissue – is connected to the immune system through lymphatic vessels, although these had never been detected despite a thorough mapping of the body.
“I really did not believe there are structures in the body that we are not aware of. I thought the body was mapped,” said Jonathan Kipnis, a neuroscience professor and director of the university’s Center for Brain Immunology and Glia. “I thought that these discoveries ended somewhere around the middle of the last century — but apparently they have not.”
The vessels are “well hidden” along a major blood vessel that travels down into the sinuses, the researchers said, and were discovered only after devising a new way to examine the membrane covering the brain on a single microscope slide.
Antoine Louveau, one of the researchers, noticed vessel-like patterns in the immune cells on his slides, and tests revealed they were lymphatic vessels.
“The first time these guys showed me the basic result, I just said one sentence: ‘They’ll have to change the textbooks,’” said Kevin Lee, chair of the university’s neuroscience department.
The discovery could radically alter the study and treatment of neurological diseases because brain diseases can now be understood mechanically instead of abstractly, researchers said.
“It changes entirely the way we perceive the neuro-immune interaction,” Kipnis said. “We always perceived it before as something esoteric that can’t be studied – but now we can ask mechanistic questions.”
For example, Kipnis said scientists already understand that Alzheimer’s disease is the result of protein accumulations in the brain, but the discovery suggests the lymphatic vessels – which change with age – simply don’t remove them efficiently enough.
The findings have been published in the journal Nature, and the researchers said they could radically alter the way scientists understand the central nervous system’s relationship with the immune system.