News

The European drug authority recommends refusal of marketing authorization after study shows no benefit over placebo.
Elevidys, which is also facing regulatory hurdles in the US, was developed by Sarepta Therapeutics but is sold by Roche outside of the US.
Complete Response Letters recently issued by the FDA signal heightened scrutiny of trial design and reinforce the agency’s shifting regulatory expectations for sponsors and CROs.
This week's episode covers news about Sarepta, babies born following mitochondrial transfer, and AI identifying therapy ...
Sarepta said it accepts the CHMP decision on Elevidys, while partner Roche said it will continue working with the EMA.
The European Union’s health regulatory agency did not endorse approving Elevidys for ambulatory patients with Duchenne ...
The European Medicines Agency determined testing failed to prove Elevidys’ benefit and issued a negative opinion that could ...
Sarepta Therapeutics' brutal week continued Friday after European officials rejected the company's controversial gene therapy ...
Despite a new setback for Elevidys in Europe, Roche—which markets Sarepta’s gene therapy outside the U.S.—remains committed ...
Shares of Sarepta Therapeutics Inc. (NASDAQ:SRPT) plunged 13% on Friday after a major regulatory blow in Europe. The European ...
Separately, Sareptea said last week that it would pause the development of most of its experimental gene therapies for a different type of muscular dystrophy. The stoppage came after one of the ...
Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:SRPT), the leader in precision genetic medicine for rare diseases, acknowledges that the ...