FDA Greenlights Vertex's Suzetrigine; A New Hope For Acute Pain Relief
FDA accepts NDA for Vertex's suzetrigine, a potential new non-opioid pain drug, with priority review.
Breaking News
Jul 31, 2024
Mrudula Kulkarni
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated announced today that the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has accepted its New Drug Application
(NDA) for suzetrigine, an investigational oral drug designed to selectively
inhibit NaV1.8 pain signals for treating moderate-to-severe acute pain. If
approved, suzetrigine would be the first new class of medicine for acute pain
management in over two decades. The FDA has given suzetrigine priority review
status and set a Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) target action date of
January 30, 2025. Additionally, suzetrigine has previously received FDA Fast
Track and Breakthrough Therapy designations for the treatment of
moderate-to-severe acute pain.
Nia Tatsis, Ph.D., Executive Vice President, Chief
Regulatory and Quality Officer at Vertex, commented, “Today’s FDA filing
acceptance for suzetrigine marks a critical milestone toward bringing this new,
transformative non-opioid analgesic to the millions of patients suffering from
moderate-to-severe acute pain each year in the U.S. The FDA’s granting of a
priority review further reinforces the high unmet need in treating acute pain,
and the filing brings us one step closer to our objective of filling the gap
between medicines with good tolerability but limited efficacy and opioid
medicines with therapeutic efficacy but known risks, including addictive
potential.”
"In my 24 years practicing medicine, I have seen
firsthand the desperate need for new non-opioid therapies for treating pain.
Too many people today are either undertreated, dealing with negative side
effects of currently available therapies or foregoing pain medications
altogether for fear of becoming dependent on opioids. Prescribers &
pateints deserve new options”, Scott
Weiner, M.D., M.P.H., Vertex Acute Pain Steering Committee Chair, Associate
Professor of Emergency Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Attending
Emergency Physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Brigham and
Women’s Hospital, said in a statement.