French healthcare company Sanofi S.A. (Euronext Paris:SAN) (Nasdaq:SNY) reported on Tuesday that the European Commission has approved Cenrifki (tolebrutinib) for the treatment of secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) without relapses in the last two years.
This decision follows a positive opinion from the European Medicines Agency's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use.
The therapy is positioned as the first disability-targeting medicine for this patient population.
Approval was based on the Phase 3 HERCULES study in non-relapsing SPMS (nrSPMS), supported by data from the GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Phase 3 studies in relapsing multiple sclerosis. HERCULES demonstrated that Cenrifki significantly delayed the onset of disability progression in patients with nrSPMS.
Safety profile was consistent across the clinical programme, with the most common adverse events including COVID-19 and upper respiratory tract infections, while significant liver enzyme elevations and drug-induced liver injury were highlighted as risks requiring strict liver monitoring and prompt management.
Sanofi plans to launch Cenrifki in Germany this year with support from local medical teams, multiple sclerosis specialists, a Risk Management Program, and a Patient Support Program.
Secondary progressive multiple sclerosis is a debilitating stage of the disease characterised by continuous disability accumulation, including fatigue, cognitive impairment, mobility difficulties, and loss of independence, often without available treatment options.
Transgene expands myvac platform into non-small cell lung cancer with TG4070
Fusion Antibodies secures Canadian patent allowance for antibody library technology
Replicate Bioscience awarded Gates Foundation grant to advance srRNA vaccine candidates for TB
Sanofi's Sarclisa SC formulation gains Japanese approval to treat multiple myeloma
Arletta Pharma Solutions names new chief medical officer
Kither Biotech completes Phase 1 KIT2014 clinical study
Solvonis reports positive bridging data for SVN-002 ahead of planned US Phase 2b
uniQure reports initial six‑month data from first AMT‑260 dose cohort
Incyte Japan wins approval for Minjuvi combination therapy in relapsed or refractory DLBCL
Teijin and Merz secure Japanese approval for additional XEOMIN indications
Alvotech raises USD165m in public offering and private placement
Oncoinvent reports recruitment milestone in Phase 2 study of Radspherin in ovarian cancer
Nortiva Bio launches to develop long-acting oral medicines using LYNX platform