After years of back-and-forth with the FDA over Hetlioz's potential use as a jet lag disorder treatment, Vanda Pharmaceuticals is pursuing a new route to establish the drug in the space.
Hetlioz was approved more than a decade ago for non-24-hour sleep-wake disorder, a circadian rhythm condition, and expanded its label in 2020 to target nighttime sleep disorders associated with the rare neurodevelopmental disorder Smith-Magenis syndrome.
In 2019, the FDA issued a complete response letter regarding Vanda’s application to expand Hetlioz's label to include people experiencing sleep issues from jet lag.
Following an unsuccessful attempt to dispute the snub, Vanda requested a hearing on the application in 2022; a few months later, when that process had failed to advance, the company sued the FDA over its alleged failure to abide by required timelines.
The dispute came to a head in the spring of 2024 with the FDA’s official rejection of both the hearing request and the supplemental application for Hetlioz.
An FDA rejection is typically the end of the road for most drugmakers, at least until they resubmit a filing, but Vanda is treating it as more of a speed bump. The pharma this week filed suit against the agency once again, this time protesting the rules around promoting drugs’ off-label uses.
Though doctors are legally allowed to prescribe medications for uses other than those listed on their FDA-approved labels, companies are restricted in the information they can share with healthcare providers and patients about unapproved uses.
The April 9 complaint, filed in federal district court in Texas on behalf of Vanda, a doctor and a frequent flier, disputes the “chilling effect” of the FDA’s “restrictive regulatory regime” that allegedly violates Vanda’s right under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution to communicate information about its product’s uses, approved or otherwise.
Drugmakers are largely barred from promoting unapproved uses of their approved drugs, and, as Vanda noted in the filing, the FDA has frequently taken legal action against companies that engage in what it deems “misbranding.” There is, however, some leeway when it comes to sharing scientific information about off-label usage.
A recently finalized guidance document (PDF) from the FDA offers recommendations for firms looking to share such information with healthcare providers. Among other stipulations, the information should be “truthful and non-misleading” as well as “scientifically sound,” according to the document.
Further, the communications should be accompanied by information about the FDA-approved labeling and a statement “that the unapproved use(s) of the medical product has not been approved by FDA and that the safety and effectiveness of the medical product for the unapproved use(s) has not been established,” the guidance doc explains.
Overall, per the FDA, scientific information that companies provide about off-label drug use can’t be seen in any way as encouraging or persuading doctors of the benefits of such usage; it should merely offer them objective information that they can then use to “make their own clinical decisions.”
In its lawsuit, Vanda said it maintains a “credible fear” of being prosecuted for sharing clinical efficacy data about Hetlioz’s use in treating jet lag disorder—even if that information is accurate. The company also refuses to “contradict the extensive evidence confirming the safety and efficacy of Hetlioz” with the FDA's suggested disclaimer.
“Because FDA’s regulations prevent pharmaceutical manufacturers from sharing their new discoveries with doctors and condition speech on an obligation to mislead doctors about the safety and efficacy of their products, patients ultimately suffer,” the plaintiffs wrote.
Vanda said it contacted the FDA in 2022 detailing certain information it wished to share about off-label use of Hetlioz and received only a “vague response” stating that the proposal “raised some concerns” for the FDA, with no further follow-up. The company said this feedback confirmed its fear of prosecution if it were to share the materials.
The 63-page complaint details the clinical data that Vanda would like to share, which it says demonstrates Hetlioz’s ability to improve sleep in people with jet lag disorder, plus mockups of various cover sheets for the data. The filing also veers at one point into a re-litigation of Vanda’s application for approval in the indication, calling the FDA’s reasons for rejection “mistaken in multiple ways” and proceeding to dispute several aspects of the decision.
Vanda concludes by asking the court to confirm that the statements it wants to make about off-label use of Hetlioz are truthful and non-misleading, and to uphold the First Amendment rights of both the company and the public to make and receive such statements.
In response to a request from Fierce Pharma Marketing, a spokesperson for the FDA’s parent agency said the Department of Health and Human Services “does not comment on ongoing litigation.”
Editor's note: This story was updated with a response from the HHS.