| Literature DB >> 31382625 |
Abstract
Several expedited regulatory review projects for innovative drugs and regenerative medical products have been developed in the US, the EU, and Japan. Each regulatory agency has elaborated an original regulatory framework and adopted regulatory projects developed by the other regulatory agencies. For example, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) first developed the breakthrough therapy designation, and then the Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) and European Medicines Agency (EMA) introduced the Sakigake designation and the priority medicines (PRIME) designation, respectively. In addition, the necessity of the product being first development in Japan is the original feature of the Sakigake designation, while actively supporting the development of advanced-therapy medicinal products (AMTPs) by academia or small/medium-sized sponsors is the original feature of the PRIME; these particular features are different from the breakthrough therapy designation in the US. In this review article, flexible and expedited review processes for new drugs, and cell and gene therapies in the US, the EU, and Japan are described. Moreover, all the drugs and regenerative medical products that were granted conditional approval or Sakigake designation in Japan are listed and analyzed herein.Entities:
Keywords: EMA; FDA; PMDA; PRIME; RMAT; Sakigake; accelerated approval; breakthrough; conditional approval
Year: 2019 PMID: 31382625 PMCID: PMC6696404 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20153801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Priority review.
| US (Priority Review) | EU (Accelerated Assessment) | Japan (Priority Review) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Features | Target total review time for original new drug applications (NDA)/biologics license applications (BLA): eight months (six months plus 60 filing days) | Target total review time: 150 days (excluding the time that applicants require for responses to the CHMP’s questions) (standard assessment: 210 days) | Target total review time: nine months (standard review: 12 months) |
| Requirements | Significantly improves safety or effectiveness Treatment for a serious disease | Important in terms of public health and innovation, Strong evidence Fulfills an unmet medical need | No standard existing therapy or superior clinical usefulness as compared with the existing products in terms of quality of life of patients, efficacy, or safety Applicable to serious diseases or orphan drug designation |
Orphan drug designation.
| US | EU | Japan | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Features | Financial incentives Seven-year marketing exclusivity | Financial incentives Ten-year market exclusivity | Financial incentives Ten-year market exclusivity Priority review |
| Requirements | Intended for the effective and safe treatment, prevention, or diagnosis of rare diseases with fewer than 200,000 people in the US; or which affect more than 200,000 people but where the costs of marketing and developing the products are not expected to be recovered | Developing the treatment, diagnosis, or prevention of rare diseases (fewer than five in 10,000 people in the EU) Very serious/life-threatening diseases | Fewer than 50,000 patients or intractable diseases with unknown mechanisms for which standard therapy has not yet been established Indicated for the treatment of serious diseases with high medical needs (no standard therapy exists or possessing superior clinical usefulness as compared with the existing products in terms of efficacy or safety) Strong rationale for the target disease and an appropriate development plan |
Conditional approval.
| US (Accelerated Approval) | EU (Conditional Marketing Authorization) | Japan (Conditional and Term-Limited Approval) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Features | The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or a company may withdraw marketing authorization of products granted accelerated approval if the postmarketing confirmatory clinical trials cannot demonstrate a clinical benefit or the company cannot conduct any clinical trials that the FDA requested as a postmarketing requirement | Applicable to applications of initial marketing authorization only, with efficacy supplement applications being beyond the scope Active for one year only with an annual renewal of the approval continuing until the European Medicines Agency (EMA) converts the conditional approval to standard authorization | Only for regenerative medical products Valid for no more than seven years |
| Requirements | Drugs treating serious conditions Demonstrating a meaningful advantage over other available drugs based on a surrogate endpoint that is reasonably likely to infer a clinical benefit Postmarketing confirmatory studies are required to demonstrate benefits | Fulfilling an unmet medical need Pertaining to life-threatening, serious, or emergency diseases, or orphan products The company being able to provide clinical data comprehensively A positive benefit/risk balance | Promising results of early-phase phase I/II registration trials in terms of efficacy and safety Sponsors must conduct postmarketing clinical studies and so on to confirm the efficacy and safety and resubmit applications for regular approval within a predetermined period (no more than seven years) (recent examples indicate that postmarketing randomized comparative studies are not necessary and postmarketing comparative clinical studies with external control group are acceptable) |
Marketing authorization under exceptional circumstances.
| US (None) | EU (Marketing Authorization Under Exceptional Circumstances) | Japan (Conditional Approval) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Features | - | Applicants do not need to submit comprehensive data in order to convert to normal authorization | Conditional approval for drugs Priority review |
| Requirements | - | Applicants are not able to provide clinical data comprehensively because of the rarity of the disease for example Applicable to life-threatening or serious diseases | No standard therapy exists or superior clinical usefulness is demonstrated as compared with the existing products in terms of quality of life of patients, efficacy, or safety Applicable to serious diseases It is difficult or it would take too long to conduct a confirmatory study Exploratory clinical studies show efficacy and safety Surveillance or clinical studies must be conducted as a post-marketing requirement (recent examples indicate that postmarketing comparative studies are not necessary and postmarketing surveillance is acceptable) |
Regenerative medical products granted approval in Japan as of 31 May 2019.
| Brand Name (Company) | Non-proprietary Name | Indication | Approval Date | Number of Enrolled Patients (Japanese) | Primary Endpoint | Post-Marketing Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JACE (Japan Tissue Engineering) | Human Autologous Epidermis-derived Cell Sheet | Serious and Extensive Burns | 29 October 2007(Regular Approval) | 2 (2) | Epidermal Replacement Rate at Four Weeks | Epidermal replacement rate at four weeks in a single-arm study with 30 patients (Completed) |
| JACC (Japan Tissue Engineering) | Human Autologous Cartilage Cells | Traumatic | 27 July 2012 | 33 (33) | Improvement in Function and Cartilage Repair at 12 Months | None (Post-marketing Surveillance Only) |
| TEMCELL HS (JCR Pharma) | Human Allogeneic Bone Marrow-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells | Acute Graft Versus Host Disease | 18 September 2015 (Regular Approval) Orphan Designation | 25 (25) | Complete Response Rate with ≥28 Days Duration | None (Post-marketing Surveillance Only) |
| Heart Sheet (Terumo) | Human Autologous Skeletal Myoblast -derived Cell Sheet | Serious Heart Failure by Ischemic Heart Disease | 18 September 2015 | 7 (7) | Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction at 26 Weeks | Compare time to cardiac event-related death prospectively between 60 patients treated with Heart Sheet and 120 patients with severe heart failure who are potentially eligible for Heart Sheet but are receiving other treatment as the external control group (Ongoing) |
| JACE (Japan Tissue Engineering) | Human Autologous Epidermis-derived Cell Sheet | Giant Congenital Melanocytic Nevus | 29 September 2016 | 11 (11) | ≥95% Epithelialization of Grafted Area at 12 Weeks | None (Post-marketing Surveillance Only) |
| JACE (Japan Tissue Engineering) | Human Autologous Epidermis-derived Cell Sheet | Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa and Junctional Epidermolysis Bullosa | 28 December 2018 | 4(4) | Epidermal Replacement Rate at four Weeks | None (Post-marketing Surveillance Only) |
| STEMIRAC (Nipuro) | Human Autologous Bone Marrow-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cell | Neurological Symptoms and Functional Disorders Associated with Spinal Cord Injury | 28 December 2018 | 17 (17) | Improvement in American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale at 220 Days | Compare improvement in American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale prospectively between 198 patients treated with STEMIRAC and 414 patients with spinal cord injury who are potentially eligible for STEMIRAC but are receiving other treatment as the external control group (Ongoing or Not Started) |
| Kymriah (Novartis) | Tisagenlecleucel (CD19 CAR T-cell) | Relapsed and Refractory CD19-positive B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (B-ALL) | 26 March 2019 | B-ALL: 92 (6) | B-ALL: Complete Response Rate | None (Post-marketing Surveillance Only) |
| Collategen (AnGes) | Beperminogene Perplasmid (Hepatocyte Growth Factor Plasmid) | Chronic Arterial Occlusion (Arteriosclerosis Obliterans and Buerger’s Disease) | 26 March 2019 | Arteriosclerosis Obliterans: 44 (44) | Arteriosclerosis Obliterans: Improvement in Pain Visual Analogue Scale or Ulcer Size at 12 Weeks | Compare complete occlusion of ulcer rate prospectively between 120 patients treated with Collategen and 80 patients with Arteriosclerosis Obliterans and Buerger’s Disease who are potentially eligible for Collategen but are receiving other treatment as the external control group (Ongoing or Not Started) |
Drugs granted conditional approval in Japan as of 31 May 2019.
| Drug | Indication | Approval Date | Number of Enrolled Patients (Japanese) | Primary Endpoint | Post-marketing Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lorlatinib | Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase fusion-positive Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer | 21 September 2018 | 197 (31) in one phase 2 study | Overall Response Rate | Post-marketing surveillance |
| Pembrolizumab | Microsatellite Instability-high solid cancer | 21 December 2018 | 155 (14) in two phase 2 studies | Overall Response Rate | Post-marketing surveillance Final analysis of the ongoing two phase 2 studies |
Breakthrough therapy designation.
| US (Breakthrough Therapy Designation or Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) Designation) | EU Priority Medicines (PRIME) | Japan (Sakigake) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Features | Rolling review (Fast Track Designation) FDA’s intensive guidance on a drug development program Organizational commitment involving senior management Priority review if applicable, with the FDA finishing its review at least one month earlier than the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) V goal date (Help with addressing potential ways to support accelerated approval and satisfy post-approval requirements only for RMAT) | The appointment of a rapporteur from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) or the Committee for Advanced Therapies (CAT) to provide continuous support The organization of a kick-off meeting with the rapporteur and experts to provide guidance on development plan and regulatory strategy The assignment of a dedicated point of contact The provision of scientific advice at key development milestones Potential for accelerated assessment | Prioritized consultation (reduced waiting time) Substantial pre-application consultation Expedited review (a target total review time of six months for drugs, devices, and IVDs, and a designated priority review) (the total review time for Sakigake -designated regenerative medical products is not established) Assignment of a Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) concierge An extended reexamination period |
| Requirements | (Breakthrough Therapy Designation) It is intended to treat a serious condition Preliminary clinical evidence indicates that the drug demonstrates substantial improvements on a clinically significant endpoint over available therapies The drug is a regenerative medicine therapy, which is defined as a cell therapy, therapeutic tissue engineering product, human cell and tissue product, or any combination product using such therapies or products It is intended to treat, modify, reverse, or cure a serious condition The preliminary clinical evidence indicates that the regenerative medicine therapy has the potential to address unmet medical needs for the condition | Products under development are not approved in the EU and for which a sponsor intends to apply for an initial marketing authorization application through the centralized procedure via the EMA It targets conditions with an unmet medical need (no satisfactory method of diagnosis, prevention, or treatment, or is of major therapeutic advantage to patients) (identical to the accelerated assessment criteria) It demonstrates the potential to address the unmet medical need in terms of maintaining and improving the health and is of major public health interest from the viewpoint of therapeutic innovation (identical to the accelerated assessment criteria) | Medical products for diseases with unmet medical need The medical product has been first developed in Japan, and a sponsor is planning to submit a marketing authorization application Early-phase clinical studies, non-clinical studies, and the mechanism of action suggest prominent effectiveness |
Biological medical products that were granted the breakthrough therapy designation, which were granted marketing authorization in the US as of 30 June 2019.
| Drug | Indication | Date of Granting the Breakthrough Therapy Designation Disclosure | Approval Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meningococcal Group B Vaccine | Active immunization to prevent invasive meningococcal disease caused by N. meningitidis serogroup B in individuals 10 through 25 years of age | 20 March 2014 | 29 October 2014 |
| Meningococcal Group B Vaccine | Active immunization to prevent invasive meningococcal disease caused by N. meningitidis serogroup B in individuals 10 through 25 years of age | 7 April 2014 | 23 January 2015 |
| Tisagenlecleucel | For the treatment of pediatric and young adult patients (age 3-25 years) with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia that is refractory or in second or later relapse. | 7 July 2014 | 30 August 2017 |
| Axicabtagene Ciloleucel | Treatment of adult patients with relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma after two or more lines of systemic therapy, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) not otherwise specified, primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma, high grade B-cell lymphoma, and DLBCL arising from follicular lymphoma. Axicabtagene ciloleucel is not indicated for the treatment of patients with primary central nervous system lymphoma. | 7 December 2015 | 18 October 2017 |
| Voretigene Neparvovec | The treatment of patients with confirmed biallelic RPE65 mutation-associated retinal dystrophy. | 24 September 2014 | 19 December 2017 |
| Tisagenlecleucel | For the treatment of adult patients with relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma who are ineligible for autologous transplant. | 18 April 2017 | 1 May 2018 |
| Coagulation Factor Xa (Recombinant), Inactivated-zhzo | Indicated for patients treated with rivaroxaban and apixaban, when reversal of anticoagulation is needed due to life-threatening or uncontrolled bleeding. | 25 November 2013 | 3 May 2018 |
| Onasemnogene abeparvovec | Indication-treatment of pediatric patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) Type 1 with or without disease onset. | 20 July 2016 | 24 May 2019 |
Medical products that were granted the priority medicine (PRIME) designation that were granted marketing authorization in the EU as of 7 June 2019.
| Drug | Indication | Date of Granting the PRIME | Approval Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tisagenlecleucel | Treatment of pediatric patients with relapsed or refractory B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia | 23 June 2016 | 22 August 2018 |
| Axicabtagene ciloleucel | Treatment of adult patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma who have not responded to their prior therapy, or have had disease progression after autologous stem cell transplant | 26 May 2016 | 23 August 2018 |
| Autologous CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells transduced with lentiviral vector encoding the human βA-T87Q-globin gene (Lentiglobin) | Treatment of transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia | 15 September 2016 | 29 May 2019 |
Sakigake-designated drugs in Japan as of 31 May 2019.
| Non-Proprietary Name (Company) | Country Where the Head Quarter Office of the Company That Is Primarily Developing the Product Exists | Characteristics | Indication | Designation Date | Marketing Authorization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sirolimus (Nobelpharma) | Japan | Mammalian Target of Rapamycin inhibitor | Skin lesions associated with tuberous sclerosis complex | 27 October 2015 | Approved on 23 March 2017 |
| NS-065/NCNP01 (Nippon Shinyaku) | Japan | Exon 53 skipping of a dystrophin mRNA | Duchenne Muscle Dystrophy | 27 October 2015 | No |
| Baloxavir marboxil (Shionogi) | Japan | Cap-dependent endonuclease inhibitor | Influenza A or B virus infections | 27 October 2015 | Approved on 23 February 2018 |
| BCX7353 (BioCyst Pharmaceuticals -> Integrated Development Associates) | Foreign | Kallikrein inhibitor | Hereditary Angioedema | 27 October 2015 | No |
| Gilteritinib fumarate (Astellas Pharma) | Japan | FLT3 inhibitor | Relapsed or refractory FLT3 mutation-positive acute myeloid leukemia | 27 October 2015 | Approved on 21 September 2018 |
| Pembrolizumab (MSD) | Foreign | Anti-PD 1 antibody | Advanced Gastric Cancer | 27 October 2015 | No |
| Olipudase Alfa (Sanofi) | Foreign | Recombinant human acid sphingomyelinase | Acid sphingomyelinase deficiency | 21 April 2017 | No |
| Aducanumab (Biogen) | Foreign | Anti-Amyloid beta antibody | Alzheimer’s Disease | 21 April 2017 | No |
| DS-5141b (DAIICHI SANKYO) | Japan | Exon 45 skipping of a dystrophin mRNA | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 21 April 2017 | No |
| SPM-011 (STELLA PHARMA) | Japan | Boron Neutron Capture Therapy | Recurrent malignant glioma, unresectable local recurred head and neck cancer, and advanced non squamous cell carcinoma | 21 April 2017 | No |
| Nivolumab (ONO PHARMACEUTICAL) | Japan | Anti-PD 1 antibody | Cholangiocarcinoma | 21 April 2017 | No |
| RTA402 (Kyowa Kirin) | Japan | Nrf2 activator | Diabetic Nephropathy | 27 March 2018 | No |
| JR-141 (JCR Pharma) | Japan | Anti-transferin receptor antibody-fused iduronate-2-sulfatase | Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (Hunter syndrome) | 27 March 2018 | No |
| tafamidis meglumine (Pfizer) | Foreign | Transthyretin stabilizer | Transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis | 27 March 2018 | Approved on 26 March 2019 |
| MSC2156119J (Merck Biopharma) | Foreign | c-MET inhibitor | MET exon 14 skipping-positive NSCLC | 27 March 2018 | No |
| Trastuzumab deruxtecan (DAIICHI SANKYO) | Japan | Anti-HER2 antibody-drug conjugate | Relapsed HER2-positive gastric cancer | 27 March 2018 | No |
| Entrectinib (Chugai Pharmaceutical) | Japan | TRK inhibitor | Adult and pediatric NTRK fusion gene-positive solid cancer | 27 March 2018 | No |
| Valemetostat (DAIICHI SANKYO) | Japan | EZH 1/2 inhibitor | Relapsed and refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma | 8 April 2019 | No |
| Ixazomib (Takeda Pharmaceutical) | Japan | Proteasome inhibitor | AL amyloidosis | 8 April 2019 | No |
| TAK-925 (Takeda Pharmaceutical) | Japan | Orexin 2 Receptor-selective agonist | Narcolepsy | 8 April 2019 | No |
| ASP-1929 (Rakuten Medical) | Japan | Cetuximab and IRDye 700DX activated with red light using a proprietary investigational laser and fiber optics | Head and neck cancer | 8 April 2019 | No |
| E7090 (Eisai) | Japan | FGFR 1/2/3 inhibitor | FGFR2 fusion gene-positive Cholangiocarcinoma | 8 April 2019 | No |
Sakigake-designated regenerative medical products in Japan as of 31 May 2019.
| Product Name (Company) | Country where the Head Quarter Office of the Company That Is Primarily Developing the Product Exists | Characteristics | Indication | Designation Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| STEMIRAC (Nipuro) | Japan | Human Autologous Bone Marrow-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cell | Neurological Symptoms and Functional Disorders Associated with Spinal Cord Injury | 10 February 2016 |
| G47 Delta (DaiichiSankyo) | Japan | Oncolytic Herpes Simplex Virus-1 | Malignant Glioma | 10 February 2016 |
| JRM-001 (Japan Regenerative Medicine) | Japan | Human Autologous Cardiac Progenitor/Stem Cells | Pediatric Congenital Heart Disease (Single Ventricle Physiology) | 10 February 2016 |
| CLS2702C/D (CellSeed) | Japan | Human Autologous Oral Mucosal Epithelial Cell Sheet | Prevention of Esophageal Partial Narrowing after Endoscopic Submucosal Dissection | 28 February 2017 |
| None (Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma) | Japan | Human Allogeneic iPS-derived Dopamine Neural Progenitor Cells | Parkinson’s Disease | 28 February 2017 |
| HLCM051 (Healios) | Japan | Human Allogeneic Bone Marrow Progenitor/Stem Cells | Cerebral Infarction | 28 February 2017 |
| TBI-1301 (Takara Bio and Otsuka Pharmaceutical) | Japan | NY-ESO-1 siTCR Gene Therapy | Synovial Sarcoma | 27 March 2018 |
| CLBS12 (Caladrius Biosciences) | Foreign | Human Autologous CD34-positive Peripheral Blood Cells | Critical Limb Ischemia | 27 March 2018 |
| AVXS-101 (AveXis and Novartis) | Foreign | Human SMN Adeno-associated Virus 9 Gene Therapy | Spinal Muscular Atrophy | 27 March 2018 |
| OBP-301 (Oncolys BioPharma) | Japan | hTERT Promotor Oncolytic Adenovirus | Esophageal Cancer | 8 April 2019 |
| SB623 (SanBio) | Japan | Adult Allogeneic Bone Marrow-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells | Chronic Motor Deficit Resulting from Traumatic Brain Injury | 8 April 2019 |
Figure 1Summary of all procedures discussed in this article.