Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1995. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
PR Newswire - December 7, 1995
"This is some of the most hopeful news in years for people living with AIDS," said HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala. "Today's approval introduces a new class of drugs for treating AIDS. This drug was approved in just 97 days -- evidence that FDA is carrying through on the Clinton Administration's priority to review new drugs, especially the most promising new drugs, on the fastest possible track consistent with safety."
Commissioner of Food and Drugs David A. Kessler, M.D., pointed out that five of the six AIDS therapies approved so far were reviewed in six months or less.
"The review of saquinavir is the fastest approval of any AIDS drug so far, and demonstrates FDA's flexibility in situations when saving time can mean saving lives," Kessler said. "When it comes to AIDS and other life-threatening diseases, we have learned to take greater risks in exchange for greater potential health benefits."
Both protease inhibitors and nucleoside analogues chemically inhibit replication of the human immunodeficiency virus, although at different points in the replication process. Nucleoside analogues include the already-approved anti-HIV drugs AZT, ddC, ddI, d4T and 3TC.
The agency based its approval of saquinavir on clinical trials comparing three drug combinations in more than 900 HIV-infected individuals: saquinavir with AZT, saquinavir with ddC, and saquinavir with both AZT and ddC. The primary measure of drug effect was changes in patients' CD4 cell counts, an indication of immune system strength. (values greater than 800 per milliliter of blood are normal in healthy individuals.)
Over 16 weeks of treatment, CD4 cell counts increased an average of 30 to 40 cells above entry levels in patients on saquinavir in combination with ddC or AZT or AZT plus ddC. Effects were attributable to combinations of saquinavir and a nucleoside analogue to which a patient had not been previously exposed. Saquinavir doses of less than 600 mg three times a day did not produce increases in CD4 cell counts. The duration of CD4 cell increases is not fully determined, although in general it lasted for at least the 16 weeks of the trials.
Few adverse events were associated with saquinavir, and for most patients the drug was well tolerated.
FDA's approval of the saquinavir marketing application was granted as an accelerated approval, a regulatory mechanism under which the agency bases early approval for a product on laboratory markers such as CD4 cell counts, rather than on clinical endpoints such as delay in death or reduction in opportunistic infections.
FDA may withdraw the approval of products granted accelerated approval if post-marketing studies fail to verify clinical benefits. Trials designed to demonstrate clinical benefits of saquinavir in combination with other nucleoside analogues are ongoing.
Saquinavir is manufactured by Roche Laboratories under the trade name Invirase.
Antiretrovirals Currently Approved For HIV Infection and AIDS-Related Conditions
Product Approval Review Time To Approval
Retrovir (AZT) March 1987 3.5 months Videx (ddI) October 1991 6 months Hivid (ddC) June 1992 8.5 months Zerit (d4T) June 1994 6 months Epivir (3TC) November 1995 6 months Invirase (saquinavir) December 1995 3 months
Dates of Approval: Invirase (Saquinavir) Dates of Approval by U.S., France, Germany and U.K.
U.S. December 1995 France (not yet approved) Germany (not yet approved) United Kingdom (not yet approved)
Dates of Approval: Epivir (3TC) Dates of Approval by U.S., France, Germany and U.K.
U.S. November 1995 France (not yet approved) Germany (not yet approved) United Kingdom (not yet approved)
Dates of Approval: Zerit (d4T) Dates of Approval by U.S., France, Germany and U.K.
U.S. June 1994 France (not yet approved) Germany (not yet approved) United Kingdom (not yet approved)
Dates of Approval: ddC (Hivid) Dates of Approval by U.S., France, Germany and U.K.
U.S. June 1992 France January 1994 Germany January 1994 United Kingdom September 1994
Dates of Approval: ddI (Videx) Dates of Approval by U.S., France, Germany and U.K.
U.S. October 1991 France May 1992 Germany August 1992 United Kingdom February 1994
Dates of Approval: Retrovir (AZT) Dates of Approval by U.S., France, Germany and U.K.
U.S. March 1987 France March 1987 Germany April 1987 United Kingdom March 1987
Other Products Currently Approved For HIV Infection and AIDS-R Conditions
Interferon A Dronabinol Ganciclovir Megestrol Acetate Fluconazole Trimetrexate Pentamidine Clarithromycin Erythropoietin HIVIG Foscarnet TMP/SMX Itraconazole Doxorubicin Atovaquone Amphotericin B Rifabutin
Expanded Access Enrollment
Drug Dates # Enrolled
AZT 1986-87 4,804 trimetrexate 1988-94 753 pentamidine 1989 728 ddI 1989-91 >21,000 ddC 1990-92 6,705 atovaquone 1991-93 1,054 rifabutin 1992-93 2,506 d4T 1992-94 12,551 3TC 1993-95 29,430 saquinavir 1995 2,200 indinavir 1995 1,500
FDA ON THE INTERNET: http://www.fda.gov/
NOTE TO EDITORS: ATTENTION TV BROADCASTERS: Please use open caption for the hearing impaired./ CONTACT: Arthur Whitmore of the Food and Drug Administration, 301-443-3285, or home, 202-547-4961/ 10:25 EST
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