The Federal Ministry of Health of Germany (Bundesministerium fur Gesundheit, BfArM) has granted marketing authorization to pSivida's Iluvien for the treatment of vision impairment associated with chronic diabetic macular edema (DME) considered insufficiently responsive to available therapies.
Iluvien is an injectable, sustained-release intravitreal insert that releases sub-microgram levels of fluocinolone acetonide (FAc) for up to 36 months for the treatment of chronic DME. pSivida is developing an insert of the same design for the treatment of uveitis affecting the posterior of the eye.
This marketing authorization follows the completion of the Decentralized Regulatory Procedure (DCP) in the European Union (EU), in which the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the United Kingdom, serving as the Reference Member State (RMS), delivered a positive outcome for Iluvien along with six Concerned Members States (CMS), specifically Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal and Spain. The German authorization is the fifth national approval in the EU, preceded by Austria, Portugal, the UK and France.
"We are very pleased Iluvien has received marketing authorization in Germany. Our product now has marketing authorization in five of the seven targeted EU countries," said Dr. Paul Ashton, president and chief executive officer of pSivida. "We look forward to Iluvien's commercial launch in these countries and to it receiving approval in the two remaining CMS countries, Italy and Spain, in the coming months."
The International Diabetes Federation estimates that more than five million people are currently living with diabetes in Germany, and according to estimates of Alimera Sciences, pSivida's licensee of Iluvien for the treatment of DME, more than 215,000 people suffer from vision loss associated with DME.
pSivida Corp., headquartered in Watertown, Massachusetts, develops tiny, sustained release, drug delivery products designed to deliver drugs at a controlled and steady rate for months or years.