U.S. drugmaker Pfizer Inc. said on Thursday its experimental gene therapy for the treatment of haemophilia B, a rare inherited blood disorder, met its main goal in a late-stage study.
Data from the study showed that a single dose of the therapy was superior to the current standard of care in helping reduce the bleeding rate in patients with moderately severe to severe forms of haemophilia B.
The disorder hampers the body's ability to make a blood-clotting protein called factor IX.
Pfizer's therapy, fidanacogene elaparvovec, is designed to help patients produce factor IX themselves after a one-time treatment, as opposed to current treatments, which focus on regular infusions of the protein.
The drugmaker licensed its hemophilia B gene therapy from Roche's Spark Therapeutics unit in 2014 for a $20-million upfront payment.
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Pfizer plans to discuss the late-stage data with regulatory authorities in Europe and the United States and share additional data for the experimental therapy at a scientific conference in early 2023.
According to government data, the estimated prevalence of haemophilia in the United States is 12 cases per 100,000 males for haemophilia A and 3.7 cases per 100,000 males for haemophilia B. In November, the U.S. health regulator approved the first gene therapy, CSL Ltd and uniQure's Hemgenix, to treat haemophilia B.
Pfizer is also testing other experimental gene therapies in late-stage trials as potential treatments for the bleeding disorder haemophilia A and muscular disorder Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
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