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U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
U.S. News
FDA Panel to Consider Pfizer's Second-Line HIV Drug
February 9, 2007 On April 24, the Food and Drug Administration's antiviral drugs advisory panel will review maraviroc, a new CCR5 antagonist candidate made by Pfizer. The agency said Thursday its panel will evaluate the twice-daily pill's safety and efficacy data. CCR5 antagonists block HIV from entering white blood cells through a pathway found in most patients with the virus. Pfizer will administer the drug along with a test made by Monogram Biosciences Inc. that evaluates whether patients are likely to respond to the treatment. Rival drug companies are also developing second-line HIV drugs, these are typically for use by highly treatment-experienced patients with drug-resistant virus. However, UK-based GlaxoSmithKline stopped development of its candidate aplaviroc in 2005 after some patients developed signs of liver damage. At Schering-Plough Corp., mid-stage trials of a new second-line candidate are continuing, though the company reported some patients developed lymphomas. Pfizer reports its trials of maraviroc have gone smoothly so far. Back to other news for February 9, 2007 Associated Press 02.08.2007; Matthew Perrone This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. |