FDA因马卡里治下的混乱叫停黑色素瘤药物


2026年5月15日 / 美国东部时间凌晨5:00 / KFF健康新闻

美国食品药品监督管理局近日叫停一款新型皮肤癌治疗药物的批准决定,令黑色素瘤治疗医生和那些看到该药物在临床试验中延长了三分之一参与者的生存期的患者来说,无异于晴天霹雳。

“这是毁灭性的消息,”辛辛那提大学皮肤科医生特里莎·怀斯-德雷珀说道,她的多名患者参与了该临床试验。

“这可能关系到2000名患者的生死,”大西洋健康系统肿瘤服务医疗主任埃里克·惠特曼补充道。《华尔街日报》的一篇社论抨击了这一决定,指出其“将对药物研发产生寒蝉效应”。

尽管部分患者能从中获益,但肿瘤学家和制药行业分析师表示,这款名为RP1的治疗药物确实存在合理的担忧,这些担忧可能无论如何都会导致FDA否决该药物。他们指出,该公司无视FDA多次提出的修改临床试验设计以寻求药物批准的建议。

在本届政府上台前,FDA的这项决定本不会引发多少质疑。但监管咨询顾问、美国卫生与公众服务部前官员史蒂文·格罗斯曼表示,13个月前上任局长的马蒂·马卡里改变了该机构的文化,破坏了其在监管占美国消费者支出20%的领域数十年来建立的信任。

“人们不得不猜测该机构做出决策的标准和流程,”他说,“这种不确定性对所有人都不利——对患者、药企赞助商和投资者都是如此。”

在马卡里——他已于本周辞职——的领导下,高级官员要么压制或推动了一些药物批准和政策,以响应特朗普总统或卫生与公众服务部部长小罗伯特·F·肯尼迪的要求,无视机构专业人士的建议。在为自己的行为辩护时,马卡里经常避开了该机构传统上对决策持审慎克制的措辞。

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马卡里于2025年3月6日出现在参议院卫生、教育、劳工与养老金委员会的FDA局长确认听证会上。埃里克·哈克勒罗德/KFF健康新闻

例如,在回应叫停这款黑色素瘤治疗药物的批评时,马卡里指责其制造商Replimune“腐败”,称该公司“正在进行企业公关炒作”,企图让FDA形象受损。

“我不为Replimune工作,我为美国人民工作,”马卡里在5月5日接受CNBC采访时说道。肯尼迪在国会预算听证会上为他撑腰,期间肯尼迪错误地声称Replimune临床试验中的患者也接受了化疗。

马卡里没有回应置评请求。

“所有的规范都被抛到了窗外,所以我们不知道机构决策的依据是什么,”曾在FDA任职、现为波士顿制药行业顾问、前参议员爱德华·肯尼迪的参议院助手保罗·金说道,“即使存在合理的科学和监管理由导致药物无法获批,我们也无法确定这是合理理由还是只是一场政治秀。”

一款注定失败的癌症药物

黑色素瘤是美国第五大常见确诊癌症,每年新增病例约11.2万例。美国癌症协会预测,今年美国约有8500人将死于黑色素瘤。惠特曼表示,如果Replimune的治疗药物RP1如临床试验中表现的那样有效,多达2500名患者的生命可以被挽救。

RP1是一种基因工程改造的病毒,旨在破坏肿瘤细胞并提醒免疫系统启动对肿瘤的攻击。Replimune寻求加速批准——一种允许产品在开展更大规模确证性试验期间即可进入市场的捷径——并提交的数据显示,在140名试验参与者中有三分之一的人肿瘤缩小或消失。但FDA在7月曾警告Replimune,除非修改其开发计划,否则可能会被拒绝批准。FDA特别指出,该试验没有设置对照组来将RP1与获批的黑色素瘤治疗药物进行比较。相反,所有患者都接受了RP1与欧狄沃(Opdivo)——一种免疫疗法。

Replimune的科学家并不完全了解该药物的作用机制,但研究表明,除了破坏癌细胞外,它还会释放化学物质,恢复欧狄沃刺激免疫系统的能力。该公司辩称,将欧狄沃单独作为对照组是不道德的,因为所有参与试验的患者在仅接受欧狄沃或该类别其他药物治疗时已不再出现病情不再好转。

“设置对照组是不道德的,”怀斯-德雷珀说道。她表示,她的一些患者对RP1反应极佳,已无黑色素瘤迹象。

Replimune目前正在开展一项包含对照组的更大规模试验,但惠特曼说,“更大的问题是该公司能否存活下去”。他表示,FDA的加速批准本可以说服投资者提供足够的资金,以完成这项更大规模的试验。

Replimune没有回应多次置评请求。但该公司告诉记者,在FDA做出裁决后,将解雇一半以上的员工并关闭部分业务。

RP1并非首款基于单臂试验获批的黑色素瘤药物。默克公司最畅销的癌症药物可瑞达(Keytruda)约12年前基于此类试验设计获批用于治疗黑色素瘤。但FDA在否决声明中表示,不确定联合疗法的积极效果是否完全由RP1引起,还是部分归功于欧狄沃。

金表示,Replimune本可以找到一种合乎道德的方式为其治疗设置对照组。另一方面,FDA本可以“给予他们有条件的批准”。他说,已有三十年的加速批准计划的全部意义在于“承担风险”。该机构强调公司研究方法而非试验结果的声明,“重新校准了赞助商对类似研究的信心程度”。

维奈·普拉萨德在FDA的最后日子

特朗普治下FDA受到的批评大多集中在维奈·普拉萨德身上。他先是被解雇,去年夏天重新被聘用,并在该机构担任过多个领导职务。以批评研究统计依据的肿瘤学家普拉萨德多次干预原本应由FDA低级专业人士决定的药物和疫苗审批流程。

普拉萨德没有回应置评请求,他于5月1日正式辞职,距Replimune裁决三周。“人们不禁要问,这是维奈的最后一搏,还是由严谨科学家做出的客观决定,”金说道。

马卡里因多项决策与特朗普政府官员产生矛盾,最后一件事是他不愿批准用于戒烟的调味电子烟。特朗普的反堕胎支持者因他将米非司酮的仿制药投放市场,以及未能加快他们希望导致堕胎药物退出市场的研究,而希望将他赶下台。

但在FDA监管的基因治疗、疫苗和癌症等行业,官员们对该机构不确定的方向感到沮丧。格罗斯曼表示,在历届政府中,该机构通常在放宽和收紧药物批准要求之间小幅波动。但在马卡里治下,“该机构一直在朝各个可能的方向摇摆”。

“这非常不一致,完全混乱,”惠特曼说道,“这种不一致本身就是担忧的一部分。”

在他的任期内,马卡里发表了一系列绝对化的声明,要么将前几届政府期间取得的进展归功于自己,要么夸大了该机构推进目标的能力。

例如,金表示,他设定了结束动物试验的目标,而这在当前被认为是不切实际的,并且推动在FDA积极推行人工智能——批评人士称此举为时过早。马卡里和普拉萨德还承诺将所需临床试验的标准数量从两次减少到一次。FDA的法规要求药物批准需进行两项对照良好的临床试验,但该规则的例外情况已经很常见。

“FDA正在传递信号,表明它希望进一步减少支持药物批准所需的证据,”哈佛医学院教授、制药行业专家亚伦·凯塞尔海姆说道,“当然,如果讨论疫苗时情况则完全相反。FDA一直在采取切实措施,加大疫苗获批的难度。”

特朗普政府初期,FDA解雇了约4000名员工。马卡里承诺重新招聘数千人,但考虑到卫生与公众服务部和FDA的动荡,这些职位可能很难填补。“要做到这一点需要什么魔法?”格罗斯曼问道。

“不幸的是,FDA内部混乱不堪,以至于本可能需要做出的Replimune裁决,却陷入了争议的泥潭,”蒙特利尔银行资本市场医疗保健研究主管埃文·西格曼说道。

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FDA blocked melanoma drug as confusion reigned under Makary

May 15, 2026 / 5:00 AM EDT / KFF Health News

The Food and Drug Administration’s recent decision to withhold approval of a new skin cancer treatment fell like a hammer on doctors who treat melanoma and patients who saw that the drug had prolonged the lives of a third of the participants in a clinical trial.

“It was devastating news,” said Trisha Wise-Draper, a dermatologist at the University of Cincinnati who had patients enrolled in the trial.

“This is life or death for maybe 2,000 patients,” added Eric Whitman, medical director of the Atlantic Health System’s oncology service. A Wall Street Journal editorial assailed the ruling, noting that it “will have a chilling effect on drug development.”

Despite the benefit to some patients, oncologists and pharmaceutical industry analysts say there were legitimate concerns about the treatment, called RP1, that may have led the FDA to reject it in any event. The company, they noted, had ignored repeated FDA suggestions that it change the design of the trial used to seek approval for the medication.

The FDA’s decision would have raised few eyebrows before the current administration took power. But Marty Makary, who took charge as commissioner 13 months ago, altered the agency’s culture and damaged the trust it had built over decades while regulating 20% of U.S. consumer spending, said Steven Grossman, a regulatory consultant and former official at the Department of Health and Human Services.

“People have to speculate about the standards and processes by which the agency makes decisions,” he said. “And that uncertainty is bad for everybody — patients and sponsors and investors.”

Under Makary — who resigned this week — senior officials have either suppressed or pushed forward some drug approvals and policies at the behest of President Trump or HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., ignoring the advice of agency professionals. In defending his actions, Makary often eschewed the agency’s traditionally measured language about its decisions.

Marty Makary appears before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions on March 6, 2025, for his confirmation hearing to lead the FDA. Eric Harkleroad/KFF Health News

In response to criticism for rejecting the melanoma treatment, for example, Makary accused its manufacturer, Replimune, of “corruption,” saying it was “engaging in corporate spin” to make the FDA look bad.

“I don’t work for Replimune. I work for the American people,” Makary said in a May 5 interview on CNBC. Kennedy backed him up during a congressional budget hearing in which Kennedy mistakenly claimed that patients in Replimune’s clinical trial had also received chemotherapy.

Makary did not respond to requests for comment.

“All the norms have been thrown out the window, so we don’t know what underlines an agency decision,” said Paul Kim, a former FDA staffer and Senate aide to Sen. Edward Kennedy who’s now a pharmaceutical industry consultant in Boston. “Even when there are legitimate scientific and regulatory reasons why a drug will not be approved, we’re left guessing whether it’s legitimate grounds or just a political play.”

A doomed cancer drug

Melanoma is the fifth most commonly diagnosed cancer in the United States, with about 112,000 new cases each year. The American Cancer Society projects that about 8,500 people will die from melanoma this year in the USA. If Replimune’s treatment, RP1, worked as well as it did in the clinical trial, Whitman said, as many as 2,500 of those patients could be saved.

RP1 is a genetically engineered virus designed to destroy tumor cells and alert the immune system to swing into action against them. Replimune sought accelerated approval — a sort of shortcut that allows a product to enter the market while a larger confirmatory trial takes place — by presenting data that showed a third of 140 people in the trial had their tumors shrink or disappear. But the agency had warned Replimune in July that it risked denial unless it changed its development plans. In particular, the FDA noted that the trial had no control arm to compare RP1 to an approved melanoma treatment. Instead, all patients were given RP1 along with Opdivo, a type of immunotherapy.

Replimune’s scientists don’t entirely understand how the drug works, but research indicates that, in addition to destroying cancer cells, it releases chemicals that revive Opdivo’s capacity to stimulate the immune system. The company argued it would be unethical to give Opdivo alone as a control arm, because all the patients entered in the trial had already stopped getting better while taking only Opdivo or other drugs in its class.

“Having a control arm would have been unethical,” Wise-Draper said. Some of her patients responded extremely well to RP1 and no longer have evidence of melanoma, she said.

Replimune currently has a larger trial that includes a control arm, but “the bigger question is whether the company will survive,” Whitman said. The FDA-accelerated approval would have persuaded investors to provide enough cash to finish the larger trial, he said.

Replimune did not respond to repeated requests for comment. But the company told reporters it is firing more than half its staff and closing some operations in the wake of the FDA ruling.

RP1 wouldn’t have been the first melanoma drug approved based on a single-arm trial. Keytruda, the best-selling Merck cancer drug, was approved to treat melanoma some 12 years ago based on such a trial design. But in its denial statement, the FDA said it wasn’t convinced that the positive effects of the combination regimen were all due to RP1 and not partly to Opdivo.

Replimune arguably could have found an ethical way to set up a control arm for its treatment, Kim said. On the other hand, the FDA could have “given them a provisional yes” with accelerated approval, he said. The whole point of the three-decade-old accelerated approval program is to “take a gamble,” Kim said. The agency’s statement, stressing the company’s methodology over the result, “is a recalibration of how confident sponsors can be with similar studies,” he said.

Vinay Prasad’s final days at FDA

Much of the criticism of the FDA under Trump has focused on Vinay Prasad, who was fired then rehired last summer and held various leadership roles at the agency. Prasad, an oncologist known for critiquing the statistical bases of studies, repeatedly intervened in approval processes for drugs and vaccines normally decided by lower-ranking FDA professionals.

Prasad, who did not respond to requests for comment, resigned for good May 1, three weeks after the Replimune decision. “There’s this lingering question of whether this was Vinay’s last stand, or an objective decision made by careful scientists,” Kim said.

Makary ran afoul of Trump administration officials over various decisions, the last being his reluctance to approve flavored vapes for smoking cessation. Trump’s anti-abortion supporters wanted him ousted for allowing a generic form of mifepristone on the market, and for failing to speed up studies they hoped would lead to the abortion drug’s withdrawal from the market.

But in the industries regulated by the FDA, ranging from gene therapy to vaccines and cancer, officials are frustrated by the agency’s uncertain direction. In past administrations, the agency generally swung on a narrow arc between loosening and tightening requirements for drug approvals. Under Makary, “it’s been swinging in every conceivable direction,” Grossman said.

“It’s very inconsistent; it’s all over the place,” Whitman said. “The inconsistency is part of the concern.”

During his tenure, Makary made a series of categorical statements that either claim credit for progress made during earlier administrations or exaggerate the agency’s ability to move forward on goals.

For example, he set a goal of ending animal testing, which is considered impractical at the moment, Kim said, and moved to aggressively implement artificial intelligence at the FDA — prematurely, critics say. Makary and Prasad also promised to reduce the standard number of required clinical trials from two to one. FDA statutes require two well-controlled clinical trials for drug approvals, but exceptions to that rule are already frequent.

“The FDA is sending signals that it wants to even further reduce the evidence needed to support drug approval,” said Aaron Kesselheim, a Harvard Medical School professor and an expert on the drug industry. “Of course, if we’re talking about vaccines, the total opposite is the case. FDA has been taking real steps to make it harder to get vaccines approved.”

The FDA fired about 4,000 staffers at the start of the Trump administration. Makary promised to hire thousands back, but considering the upheavals at HHS and the FDA, these positions may be hard to fill. “What magic trick will get that done?” Grossman asked.

“The unfortunate thing is that there has been so much chaos at FDA that this Replimune decision, which may have needed to happen, has gotten mired in the controversy,” said Evan Seigerman, leader of healthcare research at BMO Capital Markets.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

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