Current:Home > ScamsFDA pulls the only approved drug for preventing premature birth off the market -Financium
FDA pulls the only approved drug for preventing premature birth off the market
View
Date:2025-04-24 23:19:57
The Food and Drug Administration is pulling its approval for a controversial drug that was intended to prevent premature births, but that studies showed wasn't effective.
Following years of back-and-forth between the agency and the drugmaker Covis Pharma, the FDA's decision came suddenly Thursday. It means the medication, Makena, and its generics are no longer approved drug products and can no longer "lawfully be distributed in interstate commerce," according to an agency statement.
"It is tragic that the scientific research and medical communities have not yet found a treatment shown to be effective in preventing preterm birth and improving neonatal outcomes," FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf said in a statement on Thursday.
Hundreds of thousands of babies are born preterm every year in the U.S. It's one of the leading causes of infant deaths, according to a report released by the March of Dimes last year. And preterm birth rates are highest for Black infants compared to other racial and ethnic groups. There is no other approved treatment for preventing preterm birth.
Last month, Covis said it would pull Makena voluntarily, but it wanted that process to wind down over several months. On Thursday, the FDA rejected that proposal.
Makena was granted what's known as accelerated approval in 2011. Under accelerated approval, drugs can get on the market faster because their approvals are based on early data. But there's a catch: drugmakers need to do follow-up studies to confirm those drugs really work.
The results of studies later done on Makena were disappointing, so in 2020 the FDA recommended withdrawing the drug. But because Covis didn't voluntarily remove the drug at the time, a hearing was held in October – two years later – to discuss its potential withdrawal.
Ultimately, a panel of outside experts voted 14-1 to take the drug off the market.
But the FDA commissioner still needed to make a final decision.
In their decision to pull the drug immediately, Califf and chief scientist Namandjé Bumpus quoted one of the agency's advisors, Dr. Anjali Kaimal, an obstetrics and gynecology professor at the University of South Florida.
Kaimal said there should be another trial to test the drug's efficacy, but in the meantime, it doesn't make sense to give patients a medicine that doesn't appear to work: "Faced with that powerless feeling, is false hope really any hope at all?"
veryGood! (4728)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Kids are losing the Chuck E. Cheese animatronics. They were for the parents, anyway
- Regulators’ recommendation would mean 3% lower electric rates for New Mexico residential customers
- Expert witnesses for Trump's defense billed almost $900,000 each for testifying on his behalf at fraud trial
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Daddy Yankee retiring from music to devote his life to Christianity
- AP PHOTOS: Moscow hosts a fashion forum with designers from Brazil, China, India and South Africa
- Heavy fighting in south Gaza as Israel presses ahead with renewed US military and diplomatic support
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- 3 Alabama officers fired in connection to fatal shooting of Black man at his home
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Shohei Ohtani signs with Dodgers on $700 million contract, obliterating MLB record
- Tibetans in exile accuse China of destroying their identity in Tibet under its rule
- Agriculture gets its day at COP28, but experts see big barriers to cutting emissions
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Ukraine condemns planned Russian presidential election in occupied territory
- Bo Nix's path to Heisman finalist: from tough times at Auburn to Oregon stardom
- Europe reaches a deal on the world's first comprehensive AI rules
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
High school students lift car to rescue woman, 2-year-old child in Utah: Watch video
Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin lies motionless on ice after hit from behind
Turkey’s Erdogan accuses the West of ‘barbarism’ and Islamophobia in the war in Gaza
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Unbelievably frugal Indianapolis man left $13 million to charities
Hundreds of Georgians march in support of country’s candidacy for European Union membership
Tomb holding hundreds of ancient relics unearthed in China