FDA Grants Special Protocol Assessment (SPA) Agreement for Starpharma Phase 3 Recurrent BV Trial
July 14 2014 - 4:35AM
Business Wire
Starpharma Holdings Ltd (ASX:SPL) (OTCQX:SPHRY) today announced
that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Special
Protocol Assessment (SPA) agreement on the design and planned
analyses of the phase 3 clinical studies of the VivaGel® bacterial
vaginosis (BV) product for the prevention of recurrent BV.
The favourable SPA outcome provides a binding agreement from the
FDA that the phase 3 clinical study design, endpoints, statistical
analyses and other aspects of the planned studies adequately
address objectives in support of a US regulatory submission for
approval of the product.
The granting of SPA agreement by the FDA follows the earlier
agreement of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) on the design of
the phase 3 studies.
Starpharma will now commence its two pivotal phase 3 clinical
trials of VivaGel® for the prevention of recurrent BV at sites in
North America, Europe and Asia.
The two phase 3, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled
trials will be identical in design and will compare the rate of BV
recurrence in women using VivaGel® to the rate of recurrence in
women using a placebo gel during a 16 week treatment period.
Approximately 600 women will be recruited into each study.
Starpharma Chief Executive Officer, Dr Jackie Fairley, said:
“Receiving agreement on the SPA is an important and very positive
development as it effectively eliminates the US regulatory risk
associated with clinical development, by specifying upfront the
FDA’s agreed trial design. This significantly reduces overall
development risk for VivaGel®. SPA agreement from the FDA is
protected by US law and gives Starpharma certainty and confidence
that the studies will support a regulatory submission for the
approval of VivaGel® for the prevention of recurrent BV in the
US.”
VivaGel® (SPL7013, astodrimer sodium) is a non-antibiotic agent
formulated as a vaginally applied gel for prevention of BV
recurrence. It is also being developed for the management of BV
symptoms, which include unpleasant vaginal odour and discharge, and
regulatory submissions to support the symptomatic relief indication
are also planned for 2HCY14.
There are no approved products for the prevention of recurrent
BV and so VivaGel® will be a world-first therapy for this
troublesome condition. Bacterial vaginosis affects around 1 in 3
women and recurs in approximately 50 per cent of women within 12
months.
In the previous exploratory phase 2 clinical trial, more than 80
per cent of women receiving 1% VivaGel® remained BV-free at 16
weeks and the product also provided protection against the
occurrence of BV symptoms. Formal market research with both
patients and clinicians and from Key Opinion Leaders strongly
supports the demand for a product such as VivaGel® in the
management of BV.
About BV
Bacterial vaginosis is the most common cause of vaginal
infection for women of childbearing age affecting around 30% of
women in the US. It is a highly recurrent condition with 50-60% of
sufferers having it recurrently. Bacterial vaginosis is caused by
an imbalance of naturally occurring bacterial flora (the usual
bacteria found in a woman's vagina). Smoking and the use of some
hygiene products are linked to a higher risk of developing BV.
BV results in unpleasant and embarrassing symptoms such as odour
and vaginal discharge. It has been linked to still birth, pregnancy
complications, pelvic inflammatory disease, and lower rates of
fertility. It also is associated with increased susceptibility of
women to HIV and other STIs, and an increased risk of transmission
of HIV from women to men.
Buchan ConsultingRebecca Wilson, +61 417 382
391rwilson@buchanwe.com.auorStarpharmaDr Jackie Fairley, +61 3 8532
2704Chief Executive OfficerNigel BaadeCFO and Company
SecretaryInvestor.relations@starpharma.comwww.starpharma.com
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