Genentech Halts Trial of Allergy Drug
- Share via
Genentech Inc., the world’s second-biggest biotechnology company, stopped a clinical trial of a peanut-allergy treatment over safety concerns about some reactions and not the drug itself.
A so-called Phase II trial involving Xolair, an asthma drug cleared by U.S. and European Union regulators, was stopped because of hypersensitivity reactions, Chief Executive Art Levinson said last week, according to a Thomson StreetEvents transcript of the call.
A Phase II trial includes patients. The reactions were reported in two cases, RBC Capital Markets analyst Jason Kantor wrote in a report.
Along with co-developers Novartis and Tanox Inc., South San Francisco-based Genentech is testing Xolair as a treatment for peanut allergies. The injectable drug prevents the immune system from overreacting and obstructing airways.
Genentech will discuss alternative plans for the treatment with the Food and Drug Administration “early this year,” Levinson said, according to the transcript.
A call after hours to the office of Genentech spokeswoman Debra Charlesworth wasn’t immediately returned.
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.