Literature DB >> 33368420

Regulatory environment for novel therapeutic development in mitochondrial diseases.

Michio Hirano1, Andres Berardo1, Emanuele Barca1, Valentina Emmanuele1, Catarina Quinzii1, Camilla V Simpson2, Kristin Engelstad1, Xiomara Q Rosales1, John L P Thompson3.   

Abstract

At present, there is just one approved therapy for patients with mitochondrial diseases in Europe, another in Japan, and none in the United States. These facts reveal an important and significant unmet need for approved therapies for these debilitating and often fatal disorders. To fill this need, it is critical for clinicians and drug developers to work closely with regulatory agencies. In the United States, mitochondrial disease patients and clinicians, the United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation, and pharmaceutical industry members have engaged with the Food and Drug Administration to educate each other about these complex and heterogeneous diseases and about regulatory requirements to obtain approvals for novel therapies. Clinical development of therapies for rare diseases has been facilitated by the 1983 US Orphan Drug Act (ODA) and similar legislation in Japan and the European Union. Further legislation and regulatory guidance have expanded and refined regulatory flexibility. While regulatory and financial incentives of the ODA have augmented involvement of pharmaceutical companies, clinicians, with patient advocacy groups and industry, need to conduct natural history studies, develop clinical outcome measures, and identify potential supportive surrogate endpoints predictive of clinical benefit, which together are critical foundations for clinical trials. Thus, the regulatory environment for novel therapeutic development is conducive and offers flexibility for mitochondrial diseases. Nevertheless, flexibility does not mean lower standards, as well-controlled rigorous clinical trials of high quality are still required to establish the efficacy of potential therapies and to obtain regulatory agency approvals for their commercial use. This process is illustrated through the authors' ongoing efforts to develop therapy for thymidine kinase 2 deficiency.
© 2020 SSIEM.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Food and Drug Administration; TK2; mitochondrial disease; therapy; thymidine kinase 2

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33368420      PMCID: PMC9326497          DOI: 10.1002/jimd.12353

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Inherit Metab Dis        ISSN: 0141-8955            Impact factor:   4.750


  22 in total

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2.  Clinical and molecular spectrum of thymidine kinase 2-related mtDNA maintenance defect.

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Review 3.  Biomarkers and surrogate markers: an FDA perspective.

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5.  FDA Approval and Regulation of Pharmaceuticals, 1983-2018.

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6.  Thymidine kinase 2 (H126N) knockin mice show the essential role of balanced deoxynucleotide pools for mitochondrial DNA maintenance.

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9.  Oral pharmacological chaperone migalastat compared with enzyme replacement therapy in Fabry disease: 18-month results from the randomised phase III ATTRACT study.

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Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2016-11-10       Impact factor: 6.318

10.  Retrospective natural history of thymidine kinase 2 deficiency.

Authors:  Caterina Garone; Robert W Taylor; Andrés Nascimento; Joanna Poulton; Carl Fratter; Cristina Domínguez-González; Julie C Evans; Mariana Loos; Pirjo Isohanni; Anu Suomalainen; Dipak Ram; M Imelda Hughes; Robert McFarland; Emanuele Barca; Carlos Lopez Gomez; Sandeep Jayawant; Neil D Thomas; Adnan Y Manzur; Karin Kleinsteuber; Miguel A Martin; Timothy Kerr; Grainne S Gorman; Ewen W Sommerville; Patrick F Chinnery; Monika Hofer; Christoph Karch; Jeffrey Ralph; Yolanda Cámara; Marcos Madruga-Garrido; Jana Domínguez-Carral; Carlos Ortez; Sonia Emperador; Julio Montoya; Anupam Chakrapani; Joshua F Kriger; Robert Schoenaker; Bruce Levin; John L P Thompson; Yuelin Long; Shamima Rahman; Maria Alice Donati; Salvatore DiMauro; Michio Hirano
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2018-03-30       Impact factor: 6.318

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