FDA/CDC

FDA approves afamelanotide for treatment of rare condition with light-induced pain


 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved afamelanotide (Scenesse) to “increase pain-free light exposure” in adults with a history of phototoxic reactions from erythropoietic protoporphyria, a rare condition that causes extremely painful reactions when skin is exposed to light, according to an FDA announcement.

A stamp saying "FDA approved." Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

This is the first treatment approved to help patients with this condition increase their exposure to light, according to the release.

Afamelanotide, administered in a subcutaneous implant, is a melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1-R) agonist, which “increases the production of eumelanin in the skin independent of exposure to sunlight or artificial light sources,” the release says.

Approval is based on a pair of parallel-group clinical trials that compared the number of hours spent in sunlight in the treatment and placebo groups. The first trial enrolled 93 patients; 48 received afamelanotide. The treated patients spent a median of 61 hours in total over 180 days in direct sunlight between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. on days with no pain, compared with 41 hours for patients taking placebo.

The second trial assessed the total number of hours over 270 days spent outdoors between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on days with no pain for which “most of the day” was spent in direct sunlight. In this study, 38 patients treated with afamelanotide spent a median total of 6 hours, compared with 0.75 hours among the remaining 36 who were taking a placebo.

The most common side effects include implant site reaction, nausea, and oropharyngeal pain. The implant should be administered only by trained professionals. Because afamelanotide may cause skin darkening, it’s recommended that patients should undergo twice-yearly skin examinations. Patients are also encouraged to maintain sun protection measures to help prevent phototoxic reactions.

“Today’s approval is one example of the FDA’s ongoing commitment to encourage industry innovation of therapies to treat rare diseases, and work with drug developers to make promising new therapies available to patients as safely and efficiently as possible,” said Julie Beitz, MD, director of FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Office of Drug Evaluation III in the FDA release.

Recommended Reading

FDA advisors recommend nintedanib for SSc interstitial lung disease
Federal Practitioner
Hospital slashes S. aureus vancomycin resistance
Federal Practitioner
Treatment Facility: An Important Prognostic Factor for Dedifferentiated Liposarcoma Survival (FULL)
Federal Practitioner
Favorable Ebola results lead to drug trial termination, new focus
Federal Practitioner
Disseminated Invasive Candidiasis in an Immunocompetent Host
Federal Practitioner
Can we eradicate malaria by 2050?
Federal Practitioner
New genotype of S. pyrogenes found in rise of scarlet fever in U.K.
Federal Practitioner
USPSTF: Screening pregnant women for asymptomatic bacteriuria cuts pyelonephritis risk
Federal Practitioner
mIDH1 inhibitor ivosidenib improves progression-free survival in advanced cholangiocarcinoma
Federal Practitioner
C-Path and NORD team up to speed development of treatments for rare disorders
Federal Practitioner