Bristol’s Opdivo Is First Checkpoint Inhibitor Cleared For Blood Cancer

FDA granted Opdivo an ultra-rapid approval for the treatment of classical Hodgkin lymphoma that has relapsed or progressed, making it the first PD-1 inhibitor approved for hematological cancer.

Even for a drug class accustomed to fast reviews, FDA granted an ultra-rapid accelerated approval to Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.’s Opdivo (nivolumab) with its May 17 clearance for Hodgkin lymphoma.

The approval was fast even by FDA’s recent expeditious standards for life-saving medicines that have been granted breakthrough therapy designation...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Pink Sheet for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Clinical Trials

CAR-T Therapy Trials Involving Chinese Labs Will Face Heightened US FDA Scrutiny

 

The FDA wants to ensure participants in clinical trials involving genetic engineering done in China understand what the agency sees as privacy and security risks. The agency also wants cell therapy processing done outside of “hostile” countries.

EU Sees Unified Pathway For Drug/IVD Studies As Key To Future Research Investment

 
• By 

As the EU tests the feasibility of a radical “all-in-one” procedure for combined drug and IVD studies, sponsors are being urged to approach this novel framework with flexibility and openness.

Woodcock: Do Not Do The Wrong Study, Even If Against US FDA Advice

 

The former CDER director said she tells sponsors not to conduct an FDA-recommended study design or randomized trial if it will not work.

AI Will Bolster, Not Squelch, Patient Voice In Clinical Research, US FDA Says

 
• By 

Artificial intelligence tools used for clinical research should be developed with input from patients and focus on their needs and abilities, FDA experts said.

More from R&D

BIO Notebook: Policy Uncertainty Constraining Dealmaking

 

Highlights from Day Four of the BIO International Convention include policy concerns helping constrain dealmaking, Novartis discussing its approach to partnering, and Generate looking for funding to move into Phase III.

Woodcock: Do Not Do The Wrong Study, Even If Against US FDA Advice

 

The former CDER director said she tells sponsors not to conduct an FDA-recommended study design or randomized trial if it will not work.

AI Will Bolster, Not Squelch, Patient Voice In Clinical Research, US FDA Says

 
• By 

Artificial intelligence tools used for clinical research should be developed with input from patients and focus on their needs and abilities, FDA experts said.