UPDATE: FDA Panel Calls for More Data on Dynavax Hepatitis B Vaccine 
  Last Update: 11/15/2012 3:05:40 PM 
  --FDA panel says more safety information is needed on Dynavax's hepatitis B  vaccine 
  --Panel says vaccine appears effective 
  --FDA to make final approval decision 
  (Updates with additional information on proposed vaccine starting in fifth  paragraph.) 
  By Jennifer Corbett Dooren 
  WASHINGTON--A federal advisory panel Thursday said more safety information is  needed for a proposed hepatitis B vaccine being developed by Dynavax Technologies  Corp. (DVAX), which could delay the vaccine's approval. 
  The company is seeking Food and Drug Administration approval for use of the  vaccine, called Heplisav, in adults who are 18 to 70 years old. 
  Dynavax's vaccine was reviewed by the FDA's vaccines advisory committee, which is  made up of non-FDA medical experts. The panel voted 8-5 against a question that  asked if the company submitted enough data to support the vaccine's safety. One  person abstained from voting. However, the same panel voted 13-1 saying that data  submitted by the company supported the vaccine's effectiveness. 
  Some of the panel members who voted against the vaccine's safety said larger and  longer studies should be conducted before the vaccine is approved, but others  suggested it might be done after approval. The FDA will make the final decision. 
  There are already hepatitis B vaccines on the market from GlaxoSmithKline PLC  (GSK, GSK.LN) and Merck & Co. (MRK), according to the FDA. 
  Heplisav is designed to be administered twice in a one-month period, while the  other vaccines are given to adults as a three-dose series during a six-month time  period, which the company said has the potential to improve vaccination rates and  protection against hepatitis B in adults. The vaccine also contains a new  ingredient, called an adjuvant, that is designed to boost the body's immune  response to a vaccine. Because of the new ingredient, some advisory committee  panel members said additional safety information is needed. 
  The vaccine's safety was studied in about 5,800 patients, but none of the studies  lasted for more than a year, according to the FDA. About 1,400 study participants  received a GlaxoSmithKline vaccine as a comparison. Agency reviewers said there  were no major safety differences between the vaccines. 
  "There's a lot of enthusiasm around the table from the yes and no voters that  this is a very promising vaccine approach," said Robert Daum, the panel chairman  and doctor at the University of Chicago. 
  Hepatitis B is a liver disease caused by infection with the hepatitis B virus,  which is most often spread through sexual contact or the sharing of needles or  other drug-injection equipment. Since 1992, babies and toddlers in the U.S. have  been routinely vaccinated against hepatitis B, but many adults remain  unvaccinated. Last year, a federal vaccine advisory panel recommended certain  adults with diabetes receive the hepatitis B vaccine. 
  Write to Jennifer Corbett Dooren at jennifer.corbett@dowjones.com 
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