Doctors Continue Prescribing Sarepta's Elevidys Amid Safety Concerns and Market Challenges

September 16, 2025
Doctors Continue Prescribing Sarepta's Elevidys Amid Safety Concerns and Market Challenges
  • Following three patient deaths linked to the drug—two in non-ambulatory patients due to liver injury and one in a limb-girdle muscular dystrophy trial—the FDA requested Sarepta to halt shipments in July, but this suspension was later lifted after regulatory discussions.

  • Despite the regulatory setbacks, Sarepta's market performance has been severely impacted, with its stock down 85% year-to-date, though demand for Elevidys persists.

  • In response to safety concerns, Sarepta has proposed new dosing guidelines that include the immunosuppressant sirolimus to reduce liver-related side effects, and 80% of surveyed doctors believe this will improve the safety profile.

  • However, doctors remain cautious; if a death occurs in ambulatory patients, roughly half would stop prescribing Elevidys and wait for further safety updates, although such an event has not yet happened.

  • Despite safety concerns and recent regulatory scrutiny, about 90% of surveyed doctors continue prescribing Sarepta's Elevidys for Duchenne muscular dystrophy, mainly for ambulatory patients, as no deaths have occurred in this group.

  • Since July 28, 27 patients have been infused with Elevidys, generating approximately $95 million in sales, even as Sarepta reported a 25% decline in sales in its second quarter earnings.

  • Elevidys is approved for ambulatory patients aged four and older with confirmed DMD mutations, and also for non-ambulatory patients under accelerated approval, which requires ongoing demonstration of benefit for full approval.

  • The drug's use has been linked to three patient deaths—two in non-ambulatory patients due to liver injury and one in a limb-girdle muscular dystrophy trial—raising safety concerns related to AAV vector gene therapies.

Summary based on 1 source


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