Salem Radio Network News Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Health

US FDA declines to approve Regeneron’s blood cancer therapy for second time

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By Siddhi Mahatole

(Reuters) -Regeneron said on Friday the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has once again declined to approve its blood cancer therapy, this time in relation to observations from the regulator’s inspection at a third-party manufacturing site.

The company was seeking approval for its drug odronextamab to treat follicular lymphoma — a type of cancer that begins in the lymph system, a part of the immune system — in patients whose cancer has returned and who have received at least two prior lines of treatment.

The regulator had first declined to approve the therapy in March last year, seeking more data from enrollments in dose-finding and confirmatory portions of trials testing it.

Regeneron said on Friday the latest FDA decision was due to its inspection at contract manufacturer Catalent’s Indiana site, which was acquired by Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk.

Catalent’s Bloomington, Indiana facility is a fill-finish site for Regeneron’s Eylea HD and odronextamab, and handles the final stages of drug preparation and packaging.

CEO Leonard Schleifer said the FDA’s concerns are not related to major structural issues — such as the need to rebuild parts of the facility — but rather to procedural or process-related matters.

He added that the issues have “a good chance of being resolved expeditiously.”

The observations at the inspection have also resulted in delays to three applications for the high-dose version of its eye disease drug Eylea, Regeneron said, adding that Novo expects to submit its response next week.

There is clear frustration and exhaustion with the repeated regulatory setbacks, said Cantor analyst Carter Gould.

Regeneron said the inspection was completed in mid-July and it anticipates an expeditious resolution of the issues.

Odronextamab belongs to a class of treatments called bispecific antibodies, which are designed to attach to a cancer cell and an immune cell bringing them together so that the body’s immune system can kill the cancer.

The drug was approved by the European Commission in August 2024 to treat follicular lymphoma, and is branded as Ordspono in the region.

(Reporting by Puyaan Singh, Mariam Sunny and Siddhi Mahatole in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)

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