Literature DB >> 26473192

The Urgent Need for Clinical Research Reform to Permit Faster, Less Expensive Access to New Therapies for Lethal Diseases.

David J Stewart1, Gerald Batist2, Hagop M Kantarjian3, John-Peter Bradford4, Joan H Schiller5, Razelle Kurzrock6.   

Abstract

High costs of complying with drug development regulations slow progress and contribute to high drug prices and, hence, mounting health care costs. If it is exorbitantly expensive to bring new therapies to approval, fewer agents can be developed with available resources, impeding the emergence of urgently needed treatments and escalating prices by limiting competition. Excessive regulation produces numerous speed bumps on the road to drug authorization. Although an explosion of knowledge could fuel rapid advances, progress has been slowed worldwide by inefficient regulatory and clinical research systems that limit access to therapies that prolong life and relieve suffering. We must replace current compliance-centered regulation (appropriate for nonlethal diseases like acne) with "progress-centered regulation" in lethal diseases, where the overarching objective must be rapid, inexpensive development of effective new therapies. We need to (i) reduce expensive, time-consuming preclinical toxicology and pharmacology assessments, which add little value; (ii) revamp the clinical trial approval process to make it fast and efficient; (iii) permit immediate multiple-site trial activation when an eligible patient is identified ("just-in-time" activation); (iv) reduce the requirement for excessive, low-value documentation; (v) replace this excessive documentation with sensible postmarketing surveillance; (vi) develop pragmatic investigator accreditation; (vii) where it is to the benefit of the patient, permit investigators latitude in deviating from protocols, without requiring approved amendments; (viii) confirm the value of predictive biomarkers before requiring the high costs of IDE/CLIA compliance; and (ix) approve agents based on high phase I-II response rates in defined subpopulations, rather than mandating expensive, time-consuming phase III trials. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26473192     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-3246

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  11 in total

1.  Advancing Clinical Trials to Streamline Drug Development.

Authors:  Susan E Bates; Donald A Berry; Sanjeeve Balasubramaniam; Stuart Bailey; Patricia M LoRusso; Eric H Rubin
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2015-10-15       Impact factor: 12.531

Review 2.  Next-Generation Sequencing to Guide Clinical Trials.

Authors:  Lillian L Siu; Barbara A Conley; Scott Boerner; Patricia M LoRusso
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2015-10-15       Impact factor: 12.531

3.  Impact of the pan-Canadian Oncology Drug Review on provincial concordance with respect to cancer drug funding decisions and time to funding.

Authors:  A Srikanthan; H Mai; N Penner; E Amir; A Laupacis; M Sabharwal; K K W Chan
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2017-10-25       Impact factor: 3.677

4.  Treatment Access, Health Economics, and the Wave of a Magic Wand.

Authors:  David J Stewart; John-Peter Bradford; Gerald Batist
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 3.677

Review 5.  Approaches to modernize the combination drug development paradigm.

Authors:  Daphne Day; Lillian L Siu
Journal:  Genome Med       Date:  2016-10-28       Impact factor: 11.117

Review 6.  DNA Methylation Events as Markers for Diagnosis and Management of Acute Myeloid Leukemia and Myelodysplastic Syndrome.

Authors:  Geórgia Muccillo Dexheimer; Jayse Alves; Laura Reckziegel; Gabrielle Lazzaretti; Ana Lucia Abujamra
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2017-09-06       Impact factor: 3.434

7.  Unintended Regulatory Caused Early Death-A Difficult Endpoint in Cancer Patient Care and Treatment.

Authors:  Wolfgang E Berdel
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-03-22       Impact factor: 6.639

8.  Branded prescription drug spending: a framework to evaluate policy options.

Authors:  Jeromie Ballreich; G Caleb Alexander; Mariana Socal; Taruja Karmarkar; Gerard Anderson
Journal:  J Pharm Policy Pract       Date:  2017-10-02

Review 9.  Emerging Use of Early Health Technology Assessment in Medical Product Development: A Scoping Review of the Literature.

Authors:  Maarten J IJzerman; Hendrik Koffijberg; Elisabeth Fenwick; Murray Krahn
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 4.981

10.  The importance of greater speed in drug development for advanced malignancies.

Authors:  David J Stewart; Andrew A Stewart; Paul Wheatley-Price; Gerald Batist; Hagop M Kantarjian; Joan Schiller; Mark Clemons; John-Peter Bradford; Laurel Gillespie; Razelle Kurzrock
Journal:  Cancer Med       Date:  2018-03-30       Impact factor: 4.452

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