Health

FDA Approves Pombiliti Plus Opfolda for Late-Onset Pompe Disease

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Pompe disease, a rare genetic disorder that causes severe and often life-threatening heart and lung problems in newborns and young children — and which can also occur later in life, causing progressive muscle and breathing dysfunction in children, teens, and adults — has historically had few viable treatment options.

However, that has started to change in recent years with the advent of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) — and now, this category of treatments has expanded with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, on September 28, 2023, of Pombiliti plus Opfolda, a combination of the drugs cipaglucosidase alfa (Pombiliti) and miglustat (Opfolda).

The new drug combination is specifically approved for adults weighing at least 40 kilograms (88 pounds) who are not improving on their current enzyme replacement therapy.

“This is a potential lifesaving therapy for Pompe disease, yet it has limitations,” says Priya S. Kishnani, MD, medical director of the Y.T. and Alice Chen Pediatrics Genetics and Genomics Center at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, and an expert in Pompe disease. “Like other next-generation therapies, it allows for better targeting to the skeletal muscles,” which are adversely affected by the disorder.

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