4 PHARMA & HEALTHCARE | 7/05/2012
@ 12:47PM A biotech company has been accused of releasing preliminary and
misleading information about a clinical trial. The company, Osiris
Therapeutics, is the manufacturer of a cultured mesenchymal stem cell therapy
called Prochymal, which is being studied in a phase 2, placebo-controlled study
in post-MI patients. Earlier this week Osiris issued a press release announcing
preliminary results from the trial, in which 220 patients have been randomized,
claiming that Prochymal “significantly reduces hypertrophy, arrhythmia and
progression to heart failure in patients suffering a heart attack.” But Adam
Feuerstein, a veteran biotech reporter for The Street, accuses the company of
distorting the truth about the trial. Osiris “disappeared” important data in
its press release, Feuerstein writes in his detailed analysis of the press
release. He quotes the press release: Patients receiving Prochymal had
significantly less cardiac hypertrophy, as measured by cardiac MRI, compared to
patients receiving placebo (p [less than] 0.05). Patients treated with
Prochymal also experienced significantly less stress-induced ventricular
arrhythmia (p [less than] 0.05).
Feuerstein comments: Sounds impressive except none of the Prochymal benefits disclosed by
Osiris are predefined endpoints in the phase II trial. Osiris appears to have
thrown out the real endpoints called for in the phase II trial and replaced
them with new endpoints which just happen to show Prochymal in the best light.
Why would Osiris do this? Perhaps the pre-defined endpoints in the study all
failed? That’s a pretty safe assumption when companies decide to swap out trial
endpoints with no disclosure or explanation. Feuerstein points out that the
primary endpoint of the trial, as listed on Clinicaltrials.gov, is left
ventricular end systolic volume (ESV), while the secondary endpoints are left
ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), infarct size and major adverse
cardiovascular events (MACE). Writes Feuerstein: “Osiris’ silence on the
outcomes of these two important endpoints (ESV and LVEF) should be deafening to
investors — and not in a good way.”
The Osiris press release also claims “a statistically significant
reduction in heart failure”: In the study, seven patients who were treated with placebo have
progressed to heart failure requiring treatment with intravenous diuretics,
compared to none of the Prochymal patients (p=0.01). Furthermore, patients
receiving placebo tended to require re-hospitalization for cardiac issues
sooner than the patients receiving Prochymal (median 27.5 days vs. 85.5 days). However,
as Feuerstein writes, “these weren’t predefined endpoints”: Importantly, Osiris
doesn’t disclose the time point at which these purported benefits occurred, nor
does the company tell us anything about the number of patients analyzed. How
was heart failure defined? Osiris doesn’t say. What was the baseline incidence
of heart failure in the study? Osiris doesn’t say. The study only allowed for a
single infusion of Prochymal or a placebo immediately after the first heart
attack but patients were followed for six months or a year, so how do follow-up
therapies in each arm of the study compare? Were they balanced? Again, Osiris
doesn’t say. In the press release a company official announces an extension of
the trials duration: Given the quality of the data and highly encouraging
results observed thus far, we are extending the trial’s duration to capture a
better understanding of the long-term clinical benefits of MSCs.” But the
company offers no explanation for the extension. Writes Feuerstein: Perhaps
Osiris is extending the phase II study to delay the reporting of negative
results? Again, that’s a pretty safe assumption absent a better explanation. Note:
I’ve requested comments from Osiris and from several trial investigators.
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