Title: FDA Presentation to BPAC: NMRC RESUS Protocol Using HBOC201
1FDA Presentation to BPACNMRC RESUS Protocol
Using HBOC-201
- Toby Silverman MD, LTC, USAR (Ret)
- Branch Chief, Clinical Review Branch
- Division of Hematology, Office of Blood
- December 14, 2006
2Oxygen Therapeutics in Trauma
- FDA recognizes the important role that oxygen
therapeutic agents might play in improving
outcomes in traumatic hemorrhagic shock, and
supports the development of safe and effective
agents for use in resuscitation - FDA recognizes the unmet military and civilian
need for improved outcomes in trauma
3RESUS Trial Protocol Overview
- HBOC-201 vs lactated Ringers solution (LR) for
Rx of life-threatening post-traumatic hemorrhage
in the urban-ambulance setting - Pre-hospital use only
- Waiver from requirements for informed consent (21
CFR 50.24) - Powered to detect 15 relative reduction in
all-cause mortality at 28 days from estimated
58.1 to 49.4 (1130 subjects, p 0.045) - Phase 2, 50-subject study to assess
- Feasibility and ability of study to answer
efficacy and safety outcome questions - Appropriateness of entry criteria to target the
desired population
4RESUS Trial Clinical Hold
- 1. Safety signals arising out of previous phase
2/3 studies - Excess clinically significant AEs (adverse
events) in all analyses - 2. Dosing and administration
- Lack of preclinical/clinical dose response
studies - 3. Mortality estimate
- Wide variability in projected mortality for
individual subjects - 4. Magnitude of treatment effect
- Cannot be derived from animal data
5RESUS Trial Clinical Hold (2)
- 5. Benefit Risk
- SAEs (serious adverse events) observed in
previous trials, uncertainty of the treatment
effect, and wide variability in expected
mortality for individual subjects preclude
determination of a positive benefitrisk ratio. - 6. Risk mitigation strategies proposed by NMRC
- Monitoring and therapeutic interventions may
not suffice to offset risks associated with use
of HBOC-201 -
6Additional Concerns (Non-hold Items)
- Restriction on age (exclusion of subjects 70
years old) - Generalizability of data from RESUS to routine
prehospital emergency care - Complexity of RESUS trial
- Requirement for specialized EMT training
- Requirement for specialized training of
in-hospital personnel - Practicality of calculating RTS (Revised Trauma
Score) under field conditions - Identification of patients for whom use of
product may be appropriate
71. Safety Data Limitations
- Complete Review (CR) letter of July 30, 2003 to
Biopure documented numerous deficiencies in the
conduct of pivotal trial HEM-0115 - Good Clinical Practice
- Data quality/completeness
- Difficulties assessing/verifying seriousness and
frequency of AEs - Laboratory database issues due to co-mingling
central laboratory and site information
81. Safety Data Limitations (2)
- Because of the limitations of the databases, the
dataset provided represents a minimum estimate of
adverse event information - For purposes of discussion, FDA will be
presenting information on AEs derived from a
consensus safety database - FDA and Biopure differ on adjudication of a few
cases which are highlighted in the FDA tables.
9FDA Safety Analysis
- Assumed a priori that a rigorous statistical
assessment of differences between HBOC-201 and
control for a particular AE would not be possible
because of small sample size, even for HEM-0115 - AEs/SAEs were expected to occur with low
frequency - Data were pooled to achieve a larger sample size
from which to estimate frequency of low-incidence
events
101. FDA Safety Analysis (2)
- Subjects in previous studies, including HEM-0115,
were - Stable
- Medically cleared
- Judged not to be at particular cardiovascular
risk - Monitored and treated according to standard care
- Study designs were generally similar
- Administration of HBOC-201 vs control (LR, HES
(Hespan), RBC) - Hb lt threshhold level with/without other
signs/symptoms of anemia, or after fixed volume
blood loss - RBC, crystalloid, and colloid available as needed
- Safety and tolerability vs control
- Effect on allogeneic RBC usage
111. Outcome of Safety Analysis
- Trends seen in the pooled database were also seen
in the individual studies and across different
types of studies (e.g. by control) - The pooled analysis
- Showed safety signals already noted in the
various individual phase 2 studies leading up to
pivotal HEM-0115 - Identified new concerns for further analysis
(e.g. MI, renal failure requiring dialysis, CVA)
12Data Pooling Hypertension (Example)
131. Safety AEs All Clinical Trials
FDA Study 0115-5405 and study 0107-0403 Study
0101-725 ?Study 0115-4308
141. Safety AEs by Type of Control Solution
FDA Study 0115-5405 and study 0107-0403 Study
0101-725 ?Study 0115-4308
151. Safety AEs Stratified by Age
FDA Study 0115-5405 and study 0107-0403 Study
0101-725 ?Study 0115-4308
16Pivotal Trial HEM-0115 (48 of BLA)
- Design Multicenter, randomized, single-blind,
RBC-controlled, parallel-group - Population 693 subjects undergoing non-emergent
orthopedic surgery - Randomization at first transfusion decision
- HBOC-201 given as 60 g (2 x 30 g bags) to a
maximum of 300 g (10 units) for low Hb (gt6.5 but
lt10 g/dL) at least one additional sign or
symptom of anemia - Primary Endpoint Avoidance of RBC transfusion
during 6-week study period
171.Safety Clinically Important AEs in HEM-0115
Subject 5405 and 4308
181. Safety AEs in HEM-0115
- Biopure hypothesized that
- Inaccurate dosing guidelines led to over-infusion
of the product (e.g., pulmonary edema) - More test subjects than control subjects had a
history of cardiac disease - However, within HBOC-201 cohort, post hoc
stratification presence/absence of history of
heart disease ? no difference in incidence of AEs
19Safety AEs in HEM-0115 (2)
- HH HBOC-201 subjects who did not receive RBC
- HR HBOC-201 subjects who also received RBC
- R- RBC subjects who received 3 units
- R RBC subjects who received gt 3 units
201. Safety AEs in HEM-0115 (2)
- Biopure hypothesized that
- Total Hb lower in HBOC-201 arm - ? risk of
ischemia - However,
- Mean 1.23 g/dL difference between HBOC-201 and
RBC in total Hb for lowest recorded value
probably does not explain the excess of AEs for
HBOC-201 - Within HBOC-201 cohort, post hoc stratification
by nadir total Hb lt 8 g/dL or 8 g/dL ? no
difference in incidence of high frequency AEs
such as hypertension, elevated troponin levels,
or oliguria
211. Safety Conclusions
- Excess adverse events are consistently associated
with use of HBOC-201 - RBC-controlled surgery studies
- Crystalloid/colloid controlled surgery studies
- Age stratification in surgery studies
- Total Hb and history of heart disease do not
appear to be independent predictors of adverse
event imbalances when assessed in post hoc
stratification of HBOC-201 cohort in HEM-0115 - FDA considers these AEs important to consider
when thinking about RESUS
222. Dosing and Administration
- Default administration rate 50 mL/min (actual
rate determined by judgment of EMS provider) - Preclinical animal studies of hemorrhagic shock
- Range gravity infusion (not otherwise
quantified) to 10 mL/kg/min - No dose-ranging studies
- Limited clinical data
- Infusion rate 3.8 mL/min in Phase 2
crystalloid/colloid studies - Mean infusion rate 5.5 mL/min in HEM-0115
- 4/ 353 subjects at rates 40 mL/min
- No dose-ranging studies
232. Dosing and Administration (2)
- Limited safety data for product administration at
higher dosing rates and doses is a principal
concern given the known intrinsic properties of
HBOCs (vasoactivity and vascular injury) and the
AE profile of HBOC-201 in previous trials
243. Mortality Estimate Challenges
- Wide variability in projected mortality for
individuals based on proposed RESUS entry
criteria - Proportion of trauma population who can
potentially benefit from any life-saving therapy
is a very small subset of the total trauma
population - RESUS represents lt1 of total trauma population
- Information on proportion of serious trauma
patients alive at the scene who expire before
reaching the ER is not readily available -
-
253. Basis for Mortality Estimate in RESUS
- Enrollment of subjects at higher risk of dying
from hemorrhagic shock - SBP lt90 mm Hg
- Weighted Revised Trauma Score (RTS, full range
0-7.84) - Enrollment criteria ranging from 1 to lt 5
- Exclusion of subjects for whom blood is readily
available within 10-15 minutes
263. Mortality Estimate
- The Revised Trauma Score is calculated based on
three parameters Glasgow Coma Score, systolic
blood pressure, and respiratory rate - GCS has 3 components- eye opening, verbal
response, motor response
RTS 0.9368 GCS 0.7326 SBP 0.2908 RR
27Revised Trauma Score Issues
- RTS cannot be computed unless data from all three
components captured - Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) heavily confounded by
intubation, severe facial injury, intoxication,
etc. - No consensus in literature for allocating verbal
response scores for intubated or
pharmacologically paralyzed patients - Studies report a loss of cases for analysis of
3-28 - Usually it is the GCS that is missing
- Difficulty in coding GCS portion of RTS can lead
to large variation in the RTS
283. Mortality Estimate (2)
www. Trauma .org
293. Mortality Estimate RTS Issues
- Number of subjects and number of deaths are not
equally distributed throughout the range of RTS
scores - Greatest potential benefit to offset risk is
distributed predominantly to those with lower
proposed RTS scores - Least potential benefit to offset risk is
distributed to those with higher proposed RTS
scores - Small imbalances in RTS scores can have greater
effect on outcome than the therapeutic
intervention
30 3. Mortality Estimate NTDB
313. Mortality Estimate NTDB
Mortality and N in hypotensive subjects lt 70 y/o
admitted to US trauma centers with/without TBI
(NTDB Hospital Arrival Data)
N2441
1168
516
367
390
323. Mortality Estimate UAB/UMD
33Mortality Estimate UAB/UMD
N234
44
95
55
40
343. Mortality Estimate Conclusions
- The patient population is likely to be
heterogeneous - While ranges for mortality differ in the three
available databases, all indicate a very wide
range of survival probabilities - While the overall average mortality rate is
58, many subjects will have a probability of
death that is much lower than the average
354. Treatment Effect
- There is no clinical or preclinical basis to
allow the numerical estimate of treatment effect
for HBOC-201 in pre-hospital trauma resuscitation - Not possible to estimate the potential magnitude
of the treatment effect from clinical trials
using HBOC-201 in elective surgery - No prospective, randomized, controlled Phase 2
studies in consenting trauma subjects
with/without TBI have been conducted/completed
with HBOC-201
364. Treatment Effect (2)
- Sponsor bases its estimate of treatment effect
and its assessment of likely safety for RESUS on
results of a subset of preclinical animal models
of trauma and hemorrhagic shock
374. Treatment Effect Limitations of Models
- Limitations inherent to the animal models that
preclude direct extrapolation of results to
humans. - Models of hemorrhagic shock
- Basic physiology vs survival
- Controlled vs uncontrolled hemorrhage
- Vascular vs parenchymal organ hemorrhage
- With/without TBI
- Resuscitation strategies
- Fixed volume vs fixed BP vs BP/HR-controlled
- Periods of observation
- Hypotensive vs normotensive resuscitation
- Volume ratios of resuscitation fluids
- Short vs long transit times
384. Treatment Effect (3)
- Preclinical tests are not intended to supplant
data derived from adequate and well-controlled
trials in humans, nor is safety information
derived from animal studies intended to supplant
safety data derived from clinical trials
performed in humans - Results of preclinical studies
- do not establish a quantitative estimate of
treatment effect and - do not negate safety findings in completed
clinical trials in humans
48 FR 26720 IND Regulation Rewrite See preamble
394. Conclusions About Treatment Effect
- Proof of concept that HBOC-201 might sustain life
in trauma has been shown by animal studies in
narrowly defined models of lethal hemorrhagic
shock - Nevertheless, preclinical data could potentially
support studies of HBOC-201 in settings where an
extremely high mortality rate is expected (e.g.
massive hemorrhage with/without prolonged delay
to definitive care, TBI)
405. Potential Concerns Using HBOC-201 for
Uncontrolled Hemorrhage in the Ambulance
- Risk of fluid under-resuscitation
- Limitations inherent to the ambulance setting
- Risk of increased bleeding or re-bleeding due to
hypertension- of concern in all trauma patients
but especially those with head trauma
415. Potenial Concerns Using HBOC-201 for
Uncontrolled Hemorrhage in the Ambulance
- Fluid under-resuscitation
- BP used as a surrogate for perfusion
- BP gt 100 mm Hg using vasoactive HBOC-201 could
mislead healthcare providers to withhold needed
crystalloid, resulting in tissue underperfusion - Unclear how to interpret classic signs of occult
shock (e.g. thready pulse, cool extremities) when
using HBOC-201
425. Limitations of the Ambulance
435. Potential Concerns Using HBOC-201 for
Uncontrolled Hemorrhage in the Ambulance
- Increased bleeding and re-bleeding
- Although thrombus after an arterial injury is
formed almost immediatelyit is initially soft
and jelly-like Transformation to a more rigid
hemostatic plug requires at least 20-30 minutes
following injury - Resuscitation strategies which cause abrupt
increase in blood pressure and flow may increase
hemorrhage volume. -
- Stern, S. Low-volume fluid resuscitation for
presumed hemorrhagic shock helpful or harmful?
Curr Opin Crit Care 2001 7 422-430
445. Vasoactivity of HBOC-201
455. Percent of Hypotensive (SBP 90 mm Hg)
HEM-0115 Subjects With SBP Responses gt 130 mm Hg
9
4
3
2
2
0
1
1
465. Potential Safety Concerns in the Ambulance
Summary
- HBOC-201 is a vasoactive product with a duration
of action lasting hours - BP can continue to increase after HBOC-201 is
stopped at 120 mm Hg - BP elevations cannot be treated in the ambulance
- Abrupt BP elevations can increase bleeding
- Increased bleeding is problematic for all
subjects with uncontrolled bleeding in the
ambulance, but especially for subjects with TBI
476. Benefit and Risk
- 1999- Workshop on Safety and Efficacy evaluation
of oxygen therapeutics when used as red blood
cell substitutes and as resuscitation fluids - 2004- Draft guidance
- Hierarchical approach to evaluation of safety
- Initial evaluation in situations where AEs
expected to be uncommon to facilitate detection
of potential safety problems - Subjects medically cleared, carefully monitored,
medically managed according to in-hospital
standard of care guidelines - RBC control
- Demonstration of adequate safety profile when
compared with RBC allows evaluation in less
stable trauma subjects able to provide consent,
or unstable trauma subjects unable to provide
consent
486. Benefit and Risk (2)
- In field setting, oxygen therapeutic should have
superior survival outcome when compared to an
asanguinous solution - Possible for oxygen therapeutic to have an
inferior safety profile when compared with blood,
and yet reduce mortality in trauma in the field
when compared with asanguinous solutions - Very difficult to design clinical trial
- Not easy to weigh relative importance of observed
safety signals and AEs vs. potential benefit in
terms of lives saved, particularly if findings
suggesting clinical benefit have not been
observed in other settings
496. Benefit and Risk (3)
- Wide variability in projected mortality for
individual subjects means that benefits to offset
risks are not evenly distributed - Magnitude of treatment effect cannot be estimated
from animal studies - Prior studies in humans do not provide a basis
for estimating treatment effect in trauma
506. Benefit and Risk- Challenges
- HBOC-201 was associated with 50 increase (1
absolute excess) deaths due to SAEs - Additional deaths due to SAEs will offset
potential benefit in terms of lives saved with
HBOC-201 - Reduce power of study to detect a beneficial
effect
516. Benefit and Risk Challenges
- Victims of trauma, even young ones, may not have
a lower risk for AEs, but rather, may have a
higher risk than older, medically cleared
subjects undergoing elective surgeries - Excess AEs noted in HBOC-201 treatment arm in
elective surgery could potentially be greater in
critically ill trauma subjects - Transport times in urban ambulance setting are
short and window of opportunity for benefit is
small
526. Benefit and Risk Conclusions
- FDA performed an extensive sensitivity analysis,
varying assumptions for deaths due to SAEs,
effect size, and the underlying mortality rate - FDA found that the trial, as designed, is very
sensitive to small fluctuations in the
assumptions and is not robust
53RiskBenefit Analysis 3 by NMRC
- The detailed methods and other information
underlying the NMRC risk assessment in the Issue
Summary have not been submitted to FDA and
therefore could not be reviewed adequately. - However, FDA has preliminary concerns with the
model as presented - Documentation on validation of the model is
lacking - Sensitivity analyses performed are incomplete and
do not take power of the study for each scenario
into account - Analysis using retrospective post hoc subsetting
of patient groups in HEM-0115 is problematic and
may not be valid
547. Risk Mitigation Restrictions on Age
- FDAs position is that the trial should not have
an upper age limit - Fastest growing segment of trauma population is
population gt 50 years old and more particularly,
gt 70 years old (www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars/default/
htm) - Distinguishing subjects above or below a
particular age, under field conditions, likely to
be difficult - Older subjects may be at greater risk of ischemic
consequences of severe hemorrhage and therefore
might also potentially benefit more from
administration of an oxygen-carrying
resuscitation fluid
55Summary
- FDA has a number of concerns about RESUS
- 1. Excess clinically significant AEs in all
analyses - 2. Lack of preclinical/clinical dose response
studies to support proposed dosing - 3. Wide variability in projected mortality for
individual subjects - 4. Magnitude of treatment effect cannot be
derived from animal data
56Summary
- 5. SAEs observed in previous trials, uncertainty
of the treatment effect, and wide variability in
expected mortality for individual subjects
preclude determination of a positive benefitrisk
ratio. - 6. Monitoring and therapeutic interventions may
not suffice to offset risks associated with use
of HBOC-201 - 7. Excluding the elderly may not reduce risks
associated with use of HBOC-201
57Summary
- FDA asks the Advisory Committee to consider the
following questions
58Question 1
- Please discuss the following safety concerns
raised by FDA - Safety signals and adverse events in previous
clinical studies - Demonstrated vasoactivity of the product
- Limited safety data for higher doses and rates of
administration
59Question 2
- Please discuss whether the available preclinical
and clinical data are sufficient to estimate a
treatment benefit for all-cause mortality at 28
days in the proposed RESUS trial
60Question 3
- After considering all of the available data, do
the benefits outweigh the risks for individual
subjects in the RESUS trial?
61Question 4
- Are there additional data that could help inform
an assessment of benefitrisk in the RESUS trial?
62Question 5
- Please comment on any modifications to the study
design that might improve the benefitrisk ratio
in the RESUS trial - For example, a trial targeting a group with
higher predicted mortality.