Pfizer And Lilly Preparing To Resume Phase 3 Chronic Pain Program For Tanezumab

On March 23, 2015 Pfizer Inc. and Eli Lilly and Company reported that they are preparing to resume the Phase 3 clinical program for tanezumab (Press release, Eli Lilly, MAR 23, 2015, View Source;item=137402 [SID:1234513834]). As a result, Pfizer expects to receive a $200 million upfront payment from Lilly in accordance with their collaboration agreement. This announcement follows a decision by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to lift the partial clinical hold on the tanezumab development program after a review of a robust body of nonclinical data characterizing the sympathetic nervous system response to tanezumab. The data were submitted to the FDA in February 2015.
In the prior clinical studies of more than 11,000 patients, tanezumab demonstrated clinically meaningful efficacy vs. placebo and other select commonly used pain medicines. A partial clinical hold has been in place for tanezumab and all other anti-nerve growth factor antibodies since December 2012 due to adverse changes in the sympathetic nervous system of mature animals. Studies in terminal cancer pain were allowed to proceed.

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"We are pleased with the FDA’s decision as chronic pain remains an area of significant unmet medical need and we believe tanezumab has potential to offer a new, non-narcotic option," said Steve Romano, MD, senior vice president and head of Global Medicines Development at Pfizer’s Global Innovative Pharmaceuticals Business.

"We’re pleased to work with Pfizer to resume the Phase 3 program, and we’re confident that tanezumab, if approved, can be an innovative treatment with the potential to help millions suffering from painful conditions," said David Ricks, Lilly senior vice president and president, Lilly Bio-Medicines.
It is estimated that nearly one in five adults suffer from chronic pain.

About Tanezumab
Tanezumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody that selectively targets nerve growth factor (NGF), a regulator of pain processing and sensitivity. NGF levels increase as a result of injury or inflammation and in chronic pain states. Tanezumab selectively binds to NGF, thereby inhibiting this protein from activating pain-signaling neurons.