y FDA reopens National Forensic Chemistry Center after expansion and renovation By www.flickr.com Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 13:48:25 -0700 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration posted a photo: Scientists explain the work they do to guests attending a ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the completion of a 64,000-square-foot expansion and renovation of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s National Forensic Chemistry Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 24, 2024. The NFCC is a specialty laboratory that serves as the FDA’s national forensic laboratory providing specialized laboratory services in analytical chemistry and molecular/microbiology related to adulteration/contamination, counterfeiting, and product tampering of FDA regulated commodities including drugs, dietary supplements, foods, cosmetics, veterinary feeds, and medical devices. FDA photo by Matthew MacRoberts Full Article
y FDA reopens National Forensic Chemistry Center after expansion and renovation By www.flickr.com Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 13:49:15 -0700 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration posted a photo: Scientists explain the work they do to guests attending a ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the completion of a 64,000-square-foot expansion and renovation of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s National Forensic Chemistry Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 24, 2024. The NFCC is a specialty laboratory that serves as the FDA’s national forensic laboratory providing specialized laboratory services in analytical chemistry and molecular/microbiology related to adulteration/contamination, counterfeiting, and product tampering of FDA regulated commodities including drugs, dietary supplements, foods, cosmetics, veterinary feeds, and medical devices. FDA photo by Matthew MacRoberts Full Article
y Off-Label Promotion: Best Resolved by Congress, Not Courts By www.fdamatters.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Dec 2012 20:25:56 +0000 On December 3, a federal appeals court ruled against one of the FDA’s untouchable restrictions on industry—thou shalt not promote the off-label use of pharmaceutical products. An industry that is little interested in constitutional law suddenly finds itself talking about the First Amendment and whether, and on what grounds, the case will be appealed. Meantime, the court’s decision left FDA Matters torn between cheering and booing. Patients are poorly served if their doctor is prescribing drugs without being able to tap into all sources of relevant knowledge. However, permitting off-label promotion undercuts the incentive for companies to thoroughly investigate the safety and efficacy of a drug for a second or third use. Full Article Drug Approval and Access FDA and Congress FDA and Industry Insight on FDA-regulated Industries
y FDA Post-Election: Continuity and Progress Likely to Mark 2013 By www.fdamatters.com Published On :: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 22:51:00 +0000 Looking back over the last 40 years at FDA (as I have), there are three characteristics that create a more progressive environment at the agency: continuity of leadership, presidential support, and increased funding. For FDA in 2013 (as the saying goes): 2 out of 3 ain’t bad. In particular, medical innovation seems poised to flourish in an FDA environment where there is continuity of policy and leadership, instead of a new team learning the ropes. I explore this and other themes in the latest issue of Pharmaphorum.com. You can read my thoughts at: http://www.pharmaphorum.com/2013/01/29/fda-post-election-continuity-and-progress-likely-to-mark-2013/. Full Article Drug Approval and Access FDA Appropriations FDA Leadership Planning for FDA's Future
y The State of the FDA—February 2013 By www.fdamatters.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Feb 2013 15:54:00 +0000 FDA is the only federal agency that touches the lives of every American several times every day. Despite this, FDA will probably not be mentioned when President Obama delivers his State of the Union (SOTU) address to Congress on February 12. Instead, FDA Matters provides its third annual “State of the FDA.” As reflected in last week’s column, I think that FDA did well in 2012. And 2013 is very promising. Potential funding cutbacks are the primary impediment to future successes. Full Article Drug Approval and Access FDA and Congress FDA and Industry FDA Leadership
y FDA Funding: Agency Mission “At Risk”, Says Alliance President By www.fdamatters.com Published On :: Thu, 28 Feb 2013 19:56:17 +0000 FDA’s mission is “at risk” because of inadequate funding. So says Alliance for a Stronger FDA President Diane Dorman, testifying before the FDA Science Board. Her remarks come 5 years after the Science Board made a similar declaration, concluding that decades of underfunding had left FDA without the resources to fulfill its mandate and make science-based decisions. Congress responded with more monies for the agency, but since then the FDA’s workload has increased even faster. The current threat to FDA comes from two sources: four major new laws to implement since 2009; and changes in the environment in which FDA operates, notably acceleration of globalization and increasing scientific complexity. Ms. Dorman’s remarks are reprinted below. If you care about FDA, FDA Matters urges you to read her testimony, go to the Alliance’s site (www.StrengthenFDA.org) and join. Full Article Drug Approval and Access FDA and Congress FDA and Industry FDA Appropriations
y A Salmon on Every Plate/The Hard Road of Innovation By www.fdamatters.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Mar 2013 18:32:50 +0000 Chicken was once an expensive delicacy. In 1928, America’s quest for a better diet and a better standard of living was summarized by the campaign promise of “a chicken in every pot.” Today, chicken is a ubiquitous, low-cost source of protein, which we largely take for granted. Despite depletion of ocean-based stocks, fish hold similar potential. To begin this transformation, FDA must approve a scientifically-based innovative product—a faster growing genetically-engineered (GE) Atlantic salmon. When FDA Matters wrote about this subject 18 months ago, I believed the agency was near to approval of this first-ever food product from a GE animal. It is still not resolved and there are implications for all innovations that require FDA approval. Full Article FDA and Congress FDA and Industry FDA Leadership Food Issues
y Minnesota Becomes 18th State to Adopt Consumer Data Privacy Law By cohealthcom.org Published On :: Wed, 05 Jun 2024 15:27:53 +0000 On May 24, Governor Tim Walz signed into law Minnesota’s new comprehensive data privacy law, the Minnesota Consumer Data Privacy Act (HF 4757 referenced as the MCDPA). The MCDPA goes into effect on July 31, 2025, with some exceptions for colleges and universities (who have until 2029). The MCDPA is similar to other state privacy laws, […] Full Article Data Privacy Legislative consumer privacy data privacy legislation Minnesota MN Washington Privacy Act
y NY Passes Two Kids Privacy Bills to Restrict Access to Addictive Algorithmic Feeds By cohealthcom.org Published On :: Wed, 12 Jun 2024 13:03:44 +0000 The New York legislature passed two bills on June 7, 2024 directed at children’s use of online technologies – the Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation (SAFE) for Kids Act (S7694) that restricts access to addictive algorithmic feeds and the New York Child Data Protection Act (S7695) that bans sites from collecting, using, sharing or selling personal […] Full Article Data Privacy Legislative Addictive Algorithms child data privacy data privacy legislation New York NY
y Rhode Island Governor Vetoes Consumer Data Privacy Act By cohealthcom.org Published On :: Wed, 03 Jul 2024 14:32:46 +0000 On June 25th, Rhode Island Governor Daniel McKee transmitted without signature (effectively a pocket veto) the Rhode Island Data Transparency and Privacy Protection Act (SB 2500 / HB 7787). The act is based on the Washington Privacy Act model but diverges from the prevalent forms of that model in two ways. First, the act contains a unique […] Full Article Data Privacy Legislative consumer privacy data privacy legislation Rhode Island RI veto Washington Privacy Act
y California Adopts a Bundle of AI & Privacy Laws, Most Controversial Bills Vetoed (Updated) By cohealthcom.org Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 19:05:07 +0000 Sorry, but you do not have permission to view this content. Full Article Artificial Intelligence (AI) Data Privacy Legislative child data privacy CO Colorado consumer privacy data privacy legislation Jim Potter
y A COVID-19 Cardiac MRI Study: What Went Wrong? By www.cardiobrief.org Published On :: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 22:30:07 +0000 We still don’t know what COVID-19 is doing to the heart or how we should be investigating it and treating it. Last month JAMA Cardiology published a German cohort study of 100 patients recently recovered from COVID-19… A number of striking problems with the study were noted on Twitter…...Click here to continue reading... Full Article People Places & Events Policy & Ethics Prevention Epidemiology & Outcomes COVID-19 MRI scientific misconduct
y Cardiology Research: Business As Usual During the Pandemic By www.cardiobrief.org Published On :: Thu, 29 Oct 2020 16:33:14 +0000 At this moment in time the pre-pandemic cardiology research agenda needs to be completely reprioritized. There are two broad areas that now take precedence over all existing research concerns. On the one hand, researchers need to achieve a better understanding of the staggering incidence of deferred or delayed treatment of cardiovascular events and conditions as...Click here to continue reading... Full Article Epidemiology & Outcomes People Places & Events Policy & Ethics coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic research agenda
y Regulatory update for post-registration of biological products in Brazil By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 09:23:29 +0000 <p>On 3<sup> </sup>June 2024, Resolution RDC No. 876 was published in Brazil in the Official Journal of the Union (DOU)[1], modifying the current regulations regarding the post-registration of biological products (RDC 413/2020).</p> Full Article
y Top nine biological drugs by sales in 2023 By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 09:38:14 +0000 <p>The global biologicals market surged to an impressive US$419.07 billion in 2023. Blood and blood products led the market, commanding a dominant 66% share. Oncology stood out as the leading application segment, accounting for 36% of the market. North America held the largest revenue share, at 46%, while the Asia-Pacific region emerged as a rising star, poised to be the fastest-growing region over the next decade.</p> Full Article
y FDA approves biosimilars: ustekinumab Otulfi and eculizumab Epysqli By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 09:49:30 +0000 <p>The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted approval for two biosimilars, Formycon’s FYB202/Otulfi (ustekinumab-aauz) and Samsung Bioepis’ Soliris biosimilar, Epysqli (eculizumab-aagh), on 27 September and 22 July 2024, respectively. FYB202/Otulfi, a biosimilar referencing Johnson & Johnson’s Stelara, while Epysqli is a biosimilar referencing Alexion’s Soliris.</p> Full Article
y Medicines for Europe 23rd Regulatory Affairs Conference 2025 By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:04:58 +0000 <p> <b>23rd Regulatory Affairs Conference 202</b><b>5</b><br /> <b>27</b><b>‒</b><b>28 February 2025</b><br /> Hilton Amsterdam Airport Schiphol<br />Amsterdam, The Netherlands</p> Full Article
y NPRA Malaysia trials new timelines for variation applications By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:13:55 +0000 <p>In May 2024, Malaysia’s National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency (NPRA) announced that it will trial new timelines for variation applications of registered pharmaceutical products and natural health supplements (TMHS).</p> Full Article
y EC approval for three ustekinumab biosimilar: Eksunbi, Fymskina, Otulfi By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:15:00 +0000 <p>The European Commission (EC) granted marketing authorization for<b> </b>three ustekinumab biosimilars<b>: </b>Samsung Bioepis’ Eksunbi on 12 September 2024; Formycon’s Fymskina, and Fresenius Kabi’s Otulfi on 25 September 2024.</p> Full Article
y RPS and pharmacy students' association call for rethink over overseas exam decision By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Tue, 9 Feb 2021 16:42 GMT The Royal Pharmaceutical Society and the British Pharmaceutical Students’ Association have called for all overseas candidates to sit the March 2021 registration assessment in their home countries. Full Article
y Pharmacy negotiators in talks over plans to distribute COVID-19 treatments in primary care By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Feb 2021 15:25 GMT The Pharmaceutical Services Negotiating Committee is in talks with the government over potential plans to distribute COVID-19 treatments in primary care. Full Article
y Prime minister vows to reimburse community pharmacy's COVID-19 costs 'as soon as possible' By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Thu, 11 Feb 2021 12:29 GMT Community pharmacies should be reimbursed for their additional costs during the COVID-19 pandemic “as soon as possible”, the prime minister has told The Pharmaceutical Journal. Full Article
y Regulator looking at 'flexibility' that would allow overseas candidates to sit registration assessment By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Thu, 11 Feb 2021 14:53 GMT The General Pharmaceutical Council has said it is “double, treble, quadruple-checking” for any “flexibility” that would allow all overseas candidates to sit the March 2021 registration assessment exam in their countries of residence. Full Article
y Risk of mortality drops in COVID-19 patients given anticoagulation within a day of hospital admission, research finds By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Fri, 12 Feb 2021 13:58 GMT Starting COVID-19 patients on prophylactic anticoagulation within 24 hours of being admitted to hospital has been linked to a reduced risk of mortality. Full Article
y Nearly 200 women were prescribed valproate during pregnancy between April 2018 and September 2020 By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Fri, 12 Feb 2021 15:47 GMT Some 180 women were prescribed valproate, a medicine used to treat epilepsy and bipolar disorder, during their pregnancy within a 2.5 year interval, NHS data has revealed. Full Article
y Everything you should know about the coronavirus pandemic By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 11:25 GMT The latest information about the novel coronavirus identified in Wuhan, China, and advice on how pharmacists can help concerned patients and the public. Full Article
y MHRA to consult on making two progestogen-only contraceptives available without a prescription By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 12:22 GMT Consultations on the reclassification of two progestogen-only contraceptive pills from prescription-only to pharmacy medicines have been launched. Full Article
y Pharmacies estimated to receive one referral per month through hospital-to-pharmacy referral service By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 15:27 GMT Community pharmacies will receive an estimated 12 referrals from the Discharge Medicines Service per year. Full Article
y Everything you need to know about the COVID-19 therapy trials By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 16:51 GMT Researchers around the world are working at record speed to find the best ways to treat and prevent COVID-19, from investigating the possibility of repurposing existing drugs to searching for novel therapies against the virus. Full Article
y Overseas candidates will be allowed to sit registration assessment remotely, regulator says By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Tue, 16 Feb 2021 12:05 GMT The General Pharmaceutical Council has said most candidates living in countries with a two-hour or more time difference from the UK will be able to apply to sit the registration assessment at home. Full Article
y Health boards say around half of pharmacies have expressed interest in providing COVID-19 vaccines By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Tue, 16 Feb 2021 15:19 GMT Around half of Wales’ community pharmacies have expressed interest to health boards in providing COVID-19 vaccinations as part of the national programme. Full Article
y Chiesi launches postal asthma inhaler recycling scheme By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Wed, 17 Feb 2021 14:34 GMT The UK’s first postal inhaler recycling scheme has been launched by pharmaceutical company Chiesi to support a more sustainable way of living for people with respiratory illnesses. Full Article
y New drug cuts the risk of death in bladder cancer by 30% compared with chemotherapy, study suggests By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Thu, 18 Feb 2021 15:30 GMT A new type of drug that targets chemotherapy directly to cancer cells reduces the risk of death from the most common type of bladder cancer by 30%, a phase III trial in the New England Journal of Medicine has suggested. Full Article
y Pharmacy negotiators discuss patient registration with community pharmacies By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Thu, 18 Feb 2021 17:07 GMT Pharmacy negotiators have discussed proposals to take “a patient registration-based approach” to the community pharmacy contractual framework. Full Article
y Half of asthma patients in the UK overusing SABAs, study finds By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Thu, 18 Feb 2021 17:10 GMT More than half of patients with asthma in the UK are “potentially overusing” short-acting β2-agonists, according to research. Full Article
y RPS pays tribute to pharmacy law and ethics pioneer Joy Wingfield By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Fri, 19 Feb 2021 16:10 GMT The Royal Pharmaceutical Society has expressed its sadness at the death of Joy Wingfield, honorary professor of Pharmacy Law and Ethics at the University of Nottingham. Full Article
y IFM’s Hat Trick and Reflections On Option-To-Buy M&A By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Mar 2024 11:00:37 +0000 Today IFM Therapeutics announced the acquisition of IFM Due, one of its subsidiaries, by Novartis. Back in Sept 2019, IFM granted Novartis the right to acquire IFM Due as part of an “option to buy” collaboration around cGAS-STING antagonists for The post IFM’s Hat Trick and Reflections On Option-To-Buy M&A appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Capital efficiency Exits IPOs M&As External R&D IFM option deals Option To Buy
y Pharmacology: The Anchor for Nearly Every Diligence By lifescivc.com Published On :: Thu, 25 Apr 2024 11:00:33 +0000 By Haojing Rong and Aimee Raleigh, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC This blog post is the second in a series on key diligence concepts and questions. If you missed the intro blog post yesterday, click The post Pharmacology: The Anchor for Nearly Every Diligence appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Biotech investment themes Drug discovery From The Trenches Science & Medicine Translational research Efficacy IVIVc PD pharmacology PK
y Mariana Oncology’s Radiopharm Platform Acquired By Novartis By lifescivc.com Published On :: Mon, 06 May 2024 10:42:46 +0000 Novartis recently announced the acquisition of Mariana Oncology, an emerging biotech focused on advancing a radioligand therapeutics platform, for up to $1.75 billion in upfronts and future milestones. The capstone of its three short years of operations, this acquisition represents The post Mariana Oncology’s Radiopharm Platform Acquired By Novartis appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Exits IPOs M&As Leadership Portfolio news Talent #RLT Mariana Oncology Novartis radioligand therapy Radiopharm
y Has Spring Sprouted New Growth in Immuno-Oncology? By lifescivc.com Published On :: Thu, 09 May 2024 10:38:33 +0000 By Jonathan Montagu, CEO of HotSpot Therapeutics, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC As Boston’s weather has started its turn from the frigid darkness that is a northeast winter to the longer days and lighter conditions The post Has Spring Sprouted New Growth in Immuno-Oncology? appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article From The Trenches Science & Medicine Cancer CBL-b I/O Immuno-Oncology
y Boiling It Down: Conveying Complexity For Decision-makers By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 22 May 2024 11:00:28 +0000 By Ankit Mahadevia, former CEO of Spero Therapeutics, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC Drug development is complex. So is running a business. Sometimes, the work of doing both can make your head spin. In my The post Boiling It Down: Conveying Complexity For Decision-makers appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article From The Trenches Leadership
y Neuro-Immunology: The Promise Of A Differentiated Approach To Neurodegenerative Disease By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 05 Jun 2024 11:00:30 +0000 By Ivana Magovčević-Liebisch, CEO of Vigil Neuroscience, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC In the last decade, our industry has made great strides in combating cancer by harnessing the body’s own immune system. As it was The post Neuro-Immunology: The Promise Of A Differentiated Approach To Neurodegenerative Disease appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Drug discovery From The Trenches Science & Medicine neurodegeneration neuroimmunology neuroinflammation TREM2
y A Primer on Early-Stage Biotech VC By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 31 Jul 2024 11:00:55 +0000 By Aimee Raleigh, Principal at Atlas Venture, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC From the outside, one might assume all biotech venture capital (VC) firms are more similar than different. However, once you look under the The post A Primer on Early-Stage Biotech VC appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Biotech startup advice From The Trenches Talent
y Medicinal Chemistry In The Age Of Artificial Intelligence By lifescivc.com Published On :: Mon, 05 Aug 2024 11:00:53 +0000 By Peter Tummino, CSO of Nimbus Therapeutics, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC “Over the next five to 10 years, our goal is to become a company that’s leading the world in personalized medicines, a company The post Medicinal Chemistry In The Age Of Artificial Intelligence appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Drug discovery From The Trenches R&D Productivity
y Keeping It Simple: What Really Matters For Emerging Enterprises By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 04 Sep 2024 11:00:46 +0000 By Ankit Mahadevia, chairman of Spero Therapeutics, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC A common theme in startup literature is that by cutting a range of unnecessary tasks, a step-change in results will follow. I’ve found The post Keeping It Simple: What Really Matters For Emerging Enterprises appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Bioentrepreneurship Biotech startup advice Corporate Culture From The Trenches
y Reflections On My Experience As A Board Member By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Sep 2024 11:00:01 +0000 By Ivana Magovčević-Liebisch, CEO of Vigil Neuroscience, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC In an industry where boom and bust cycles occur regularly and 90 percent of drug candidates fail to reach the market, an outstanding The post Reflections On My Experience As A Board Member appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Boards and governance From The Trenches Leadership
y Biotech Risk Cycles: Assets And Platforms By lifescivc.com Published On :: Mon, 28 Oct 2024 10:00:52 +0000 Today’s market likes products. Platforms aren’t in vogue anymore. Investors, especially in the public markets, only want late stage de-risked assets. Pharma only seems to be buying these kinds of asset. VCs need to focus on clinical stage companies. Or The post Biotech Risk Cycles: Assets And Platforms appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Biotech financing Biotech investment themes Capital efficiency Capital markets Exits IPOs M&As
y Tell the UK’s research regulator to do more on clinical trial transparency By www.alltrials.net Published On :: Mon, 29 Jul 2019 13:41:09 +0000 The UK body that oversees health research is writing a new strategy on clinical trial transparency and it wants to hear opinions on it. The Health Research Authority (HRA) says its strategy aims to “make transparency easy, make compliance clear and make information public.” It has opened a public consultation on the strategy and some […] Full Article News
y Can FDA's New Transparency Survive Avandia? By www.placebocontrol.com Published On :: Wed, 05 Jun 2013 03:53:00 +0000 PDUFA V commitments signal a strong commitment to tolerance of open debate in the face of uncertainty. I can admit to a rather powerful lack of enthusiasm when reading about interpersonal squabbles. It’s even worse in the scientific world: when I read about debates getting mired in personal attacks I tend to simply stop reading and move on to something else. However, the really interesting part of this week’s meeting of an FDA joint Advisory Committee to discuss the controversial diabetes drug Avandia – at least in the sense of likely long-term impact – is not the scientific question under discussion, but the surfacing and handling of the raging interpersonal battle going on right now inside the Division of Cardiovascular and Renal Products. So I'll have to swallow my distaste and follow along with the drama. Two words that make us mistrust Duke: Anil Potti Christian Laettner Not that the scientific question at hand – does Avandia pose significant heart risks? – isn't interesting. It is. But if there’s one thing that everyone seems to agree on, it’s that we don’t have good data on the topic. Despite the re-adjudication of RECORD, no one trusts its design (and, ironically, the one trial with a design to rigorously answer the question was halted after intense pressure, despite an AdComm recommendation that it continue). And no one seems particularly enthused about changing the current status of Avandia: in all likelihood it will continue to be permitted to be marketed under heavy restrictions. Rather than changing the future of diabetes, I suspect the committee will be content to let us slog along the same mucky trail. The really interesting question, that will potentially impact CDER for years to come, is how it can function with frothing, open dissent among its staffers. As has been widely reported, FDA reviewer Tom Marciniak has written a rather wild and vitriolic assessment of the RECORD trial, excoriating most everyone involved. In a particularly stunning passage, Marciniak appears to claim that the entire output of anyone working at Duke University cannot be trusted because of the fraud committed by Duke cancer researcher Anil Potti: I would have thought that the two words “Anil Potti” are sufficient for convincing anyone that Duke University is a poor choice for a contractor whose task it is to confirm the integrity of scientific research. (One wonders how far Marciniak is willing to take his guilt-by-association theme. Are the words “Cheng Yi Liang” sufficient to convince us that all FDA employees, including Marciniak, are poor choices for deciding matter relating to publicly-traded companies? Should I not comment on government activities because I’m a resident of Illinois (my two words: “Rod Blagojevich”)?) Rather than censoring or reprimanding Marciniak, his supervisors have taken the extraordinary step of letting him publicly air his criticisms, and then they have in turn publicly criticized his methods and approach. I have been unable to think of a similar situation at any regulatory agency. The tolerance for dissent being displayed by FDA is, I believe, completely unprecedented. And that’s the cliffhanger for me: can the FDA’s commitment to transparency extend so far as to accommodate public disagreements about its own approval decisions? Can it do so even when the disagreements take an extremely nasty and inappropriate tone? Rather than considering that open debate is a good thing, will journalists jump on the drama and portray agency leadership as weak and indecisive? Will the usual suspects in Congress be able to exploit this disagreement for their own political gain? How many House subcommittees will be summoning Janet Woodcock in the coming weeks? I think what Bob Temple and Norman Stockbridge are doing is a tremendous experiment in open government. If they can pull it off, it could force other agencies to radically rethink how they go about crafting and implementing regulations. However, I also worry that it is politically simply not a viable approach, and that the agency will ultimately be seriously hurt by attacks from the media and legislators. Where is this coming from? As part of its recent PDUFA V commitment, the FDA put out a fascinating draft document, Structured Approach to Benefit-Risk Assessment in Drug Regulatory Decision-Making. It didn't get a lot of attention when first published back in February (few FDA documents do). However, it lays out a rather bold vision for how the FDA can acknowledge the existence of uncertainty in its evaluation of new drugs. Its proposed structure even envisions an open and honest accounting of divergent interpretations of data: When they're frothing at the mouth, even Atticusdoesn't let them publish a review A framework for benefit-risk decision-making that summarizes the relevant facts, uncertainties, and key areas of judgment, and clearly explains how these factors influence a regulatory decision, can greatly inform and clarify the regulatory discussion. Such a framework can provide transparency regarding the basis of conflicting recommendations made by different parties using the same information. (Emphasis mine.) Of course, the structured framework here is designed to reflect rational disagreement. Marciniak’s scattershot insults are in many ways a terrible first case for trying out a new level of transparency. The draft framework notes that safety issues, like Avandia, are some of the major areas of uncertainty in the regulatory process. Contrast this vision of coolly and systematically addressing uncertainties with the sad reality of Marciniak’s attack: In contrast to the prospective and highly planned studies of effectiveness, safety findings emerge from a wide range of sources, including spontaneous adverse event reports, epidemiology studies, meta-analyses of controlled trials, or in some cases from randomized, controlled trials. However, even controlled trials, where the evidence of an effect is generally most persuasive, can sometimes provide contradictory and inconsistent findings on safety as the analyses are in many cases not planned and often reflect multiple testing. A systematic approach that specifies the sources of evidence, the strength of each piece of evidence, and draws conclusions that explain how the uncertainty weighed on the decision, can lead to more explicit communication of regulatory decisions. We anticipate that this work will continue beyond FY 2013. I hope that work will continue beyond 2013. Thoughtful, open discussions of real uncertainties are one of the most worthwhile goals FDA can aspire to, even if it means having to learn how to do so without letting the Marciniaks of the world scuttle the whole endeavor. [Update June 6: Further bolstering the idea that the AdCom is just as much about FDA's ability to transparently manage differences of expert opinion in the face of uncertain data, CDER Director Janet Woodcock posted this note on the FDA's blog. She's pretty explicit about the bigger picture: There have been, and continue to be, differences of opinion and scientific disputes, which is not uncommon within the agency, stemming from varied conclusions about the existing data, not only with Avandia, but with other FDA-regulated products. At FDA, we actively encourage and welcome robust scientific debate on the complex matters we deal with — as such a transparent approach ensures the scientific input we need, enriches the discussions, and enhances our decision-making. I agree, and hope she can pull it off.] Full Article data quality drug safety Duke FDA GSK Tom Marciniak transparency
y Preview of Enrollment Analytics: Moving Beyond the Funnel (Shameless DIA Self-Promotion, Part 2) By www.placebocontrol.com Published On :: Fri, 21 Jun 2013 16:59:00 +0000 Are we looking at our enrollment data in the right way? I will be chairing a session on Tuesday on this topic, joined by a couple of great presenters (Diana Chung from Gilead and Gretchen Goller from PRA). Here's a short preview of the session: Hope to see you there. It should be a great discussion. Session Details: June 25, 1:45PM - 3:15PM Session Number: 241 Room Number: 205B 1. Enrollment Analytics: Moving Beyond the Funnel Paul Ivsin VP, Consulting Director CAHG Clinical Trials 2. Use of Analytics for Operational Planning Diana Chung, MSc Associate Director, Clinical Operations Gilead 3. Using Enrollment Data to Communicate Effectively with Sites Gretchen Goller, MA Senior Director, Patient Access and Retention Services PRA Full Article DIA metrics patient recruitment