Qalsody (SOD1 mutation)
ALS – tofersen · Neurology (SOD1-ALS)
About Qalsody
Qalsody (SOD1 mutation) is a antisense manufactured by Biogen, used in the treatment of ALS – tofersen. It received FDA approval in 2023 under the Accelerated pathway.
Note: Tofersen.
Accessing Qalsody through Reserve Meds
We help patients in the Middle East, India, Africa, and other regions access Qalsody via established Named Patient Program (NPP) and personal-import pathways. Every order requires a prescription from a licensed physician in the destination country.
What we need from you
- A prescription from a licensed physician in your country of residence.
- A clinical justification from the prescribing physician (why Qalsody for this patient).
- Destination-country NPP or personal-import paperwork (we help prepare these).
- Patient consent for cross-border drug import under the applicable pathway.
Typical timeline
From request to delivery, most orders for Qalsody are completed in 2-6 weeks. Timing varies by destination country regulatory review speed and physician documentation turnaround.
Indication context
Qalsody is indicated for ALS – tofersen. The condition falls within Neurology (SOD1-ALS). For patients with this condition in countries where Qalsody is not yet registered, NPP access is typically the primary legal pathway for obtaining treatment.
About the manufacturer
Qalsody is manufactured by Biogen. We source drug supply exclusively through DSCSA-compliant US specialty wholesalers, ensuring every unit is authentic, serialized, and chain-of-custody documented.
International regulatory status
- United States: FDA approved (2023).
- EMA (EU): Approved.
- MHRA (UK): Approved.
- Other countries: Approval status varies. Reserve Meds coordinates access under each destination country's NPP pathway.
Start a request for Qalsody
If you or a family member needs Qalsody and it is not available in your country, submit a request. Our clinical team will review eligibility and respond within one business day.
Qalsody — country access pages
Information on how patients in different countries access Qalsody through Named Patient Program pathways.
- Qalsody in United Arab Emirates — The UAE recognises a formal Named Patient / compassionate-use pathway via MOHAP and the Department of Health Abu Dhabi (DoH). Physicians apply on behalf of individual patients for drugs not registered in-country.
- Qalsody in Saudi Arabia — The Saudi Food and Drug Authority (SFDA) operates a Personal Import / Unregistered Medicine pathway for named patients, typically requiring physician justification and hospital ethics-committee review.
- Qalsody in India — India's CDSCO permits import of unapproved drugs under Rule 36 for personal use by patients with a prescription from a registered medical practitioner. Named Patient import is common for rare-disease indications.
- Qalsody in Kuwait — Kuwait's Ministry of Health operates a Personal Import pathway for specialty drugs not registered locally, typically through a hospital pharmacy with physician attestation.
- Qalsody in Qatar — Qatar's MoPH permits unregistered drug import under a named-patient pathway with physician and MoPH approval; Hamad Medical Corp frequently sponsors.
- Qalsody in Bahrain — Bahrain's NHRA accepts named-patient import requests for rare-disease and specialty drugs not registered locally.
Safety, interactions, and handling
Drug interactions: Before dispatch, our clinical team reviews every patient's full medication list against published FDA drug-interaction data. If a significant interaction is identified, we notify the prescribing physician and hold shipment until an alternative dose or timing is confirmed.
Contraindications: This medication is not appropriate for every patient. Refer to the US FDA label for full contraindication list. Patients with active infection, pregnancy, known hypersensitivity, or specific organ-system comorbidities may be excluded. Prescribing-physician judgement applies.
Cold chain and storage: Biologics, monoclonals, and cell/gene therapies require validated cold-chain shipping (2-8°C) with continuous temperature monitoring. On arrival we document temperature logs; out-of-spec shipments are flagged and replaced.
Adverse event reporting: Any adverse event should be reported to both the local national regulator and to Reserve Meds's pharmacovigilance team at pv@reservemeds.com. We forward serious events to the US manufacturer within 15 days per ICH E2D guidance.
Last medically reviewed: 2026-04-22 by AI Clinical Review Agent (see Trust & Compliance).