| Literature DB >> 34209541 |
Piotr Witkowski1, Jon Odorico2, Jordan Pyda3, Roi Anteby4,5, Robert J Stratta6, Beth A Schrope7, Mark A Hardy7, John Buse8, Joseph R Leventhal9, Wanxing Cui10, Shakir Hussein11, Silke Niederhaus12, Jason Gaglia13, Chirag S Desai14, Martin Wijkstrom15, Fouad Kandeel16, Piotr J Bachul1, Yolanda Tai Becker1, Ling-Jia Wang1, R Paul Robertson17, Oyedolamu K Olaitan18, Tomasz Kozlowski19, Peter L Abrams20, Michelle A Josephson21, Kenneth A Andreoni22,23, Robert C Harland24, Raja Kandaswamy25, Andrew M Posselt26, Gregory L Szot26, Camillo Ricordi27.
Abstract
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has been regulating human islets for allotransplantation as a biologic drug in the US. Consequently, the requirement of a biological license application (BLA) approval before clinical use of islet transplantation as a standard of care procedure has stalled the development of the field for the last 20 years. Herein, we provide our commentary to the multiple FDA's position papers and guidance for industry arguing that BLA requirement has been inappropriately applied to allogeneic islets, which was delivered to the FDA Cellular, Tissue and Gene Therapies Advisory Committee on 15 April 2021. We provided evidence that BLA requirement and drug related regulations are inadequate in reassuring islet product quality and potency as well as patient safety and clinical outcomes. As leaders in the field of transplantation and endocrinology under the "Islets for US Collaborative" designation, we examined the current regulatory status of islet transplantation in the US and identified several anticipated negative consequences of the BLA approval. In our commentary we also offer an alternative pathway for islet transplantation under the regulatory framework for organ transplantation, which would address deficiencies of in current system.Entities:
Keywords: Food and Drug Administration; allogenic islet cell transplantation; pancreas
Year: 2021 PMID: 34209541 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10132878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241