190 likes | 378 Views
FDA EID Workshop: Day 2 Organs, Tissues and Cells. Melissa A. Greenwald, MD Blood Products Advisory Committee 26 July 2010 Gaithersburg, MD. The EID Workshop—Day Two. Attendees Overview Presentations 2 panel discussions Review of major discussion points.
E N D
FDA EID Workshop: Day 2 Organs, Tissues and Cells Melissa A. Greenwald, MD Blood Products Advisory Committee 26 July 2010 Gaithersburg, MD
The EID Workshop—Day Two • Attendees • Overview • Presentations • 2 panel discussions • Review of major discussion points
Transplantation Community Stakeholders Present • “Conventional” Tissues • Cell Therapy Products • Ocular Tissues • Reproductive Tissues • Organs • Transplant Infectious Disease • Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/UNOS • Disease Transmission Advisory Committee • Blood Products
Why did we have the meeting? • There are always “new” diseases that are potentially transplant-transmissible • Trypanosoma cruzi • West Nile Virus • Dengue Not feasible to screen and test for everything • Need for a coordinated process to prioritize and scientifically evaluate pathogens of concern • Public dialogue with major stakeholders to develop a path forward
Science to Inform Policy • FDA is responsible for determining screening and testing policy for donors of human cells, tissues and cellular and tissue-based products (HCT/Ps) • FDA does not regulate Solid Organ Transplantation (SOT) or organ donor screening and testing policy; however • Shared donors • Regulate infectious disease tests • Application of scientific information obtained may be different between cells/tissues and SOT, but we have need for the same basic information, and ultimately the same goal—recipient safety
Overview • The ultimate goal is patient safety. Views of the best approach to safety vary based on factors such as urgency for transplantation (life-saving transplants), transmission (infectious risk), cost (deployment of molecular testing), and research agenda (funding agencies). These viewpoints must coalesce into a coherent program. • Significant resources need to be deployed to develop a research agenda that will address gaps in donor screening paradigms and to assess the risks inherent to transplantation.
Overview • The incidence of transmission associated with allografts is thought to be low, historically • There are few data that directly assess the risk of transmission of potential pathogens by tissues or organs • Policy decisions must be made using the best available information in the effort to improve transplantation outcomes • If specific data are unavailable, resultant donor screening and testing policies tend to be conservative—erring on the side of caution
Overview • The cell, ocular, tissue and organ communities are charged with evaluating the infectious disease risks of transplantation • Collaboration will be key in advancing transplantation infectious disease transmission research
Session One • Focused on surveillance approaches for assessing infectious disease transmission in cell, tissue, and organ recipients • Surveillance for infectious disease transmission is important in assessing safety of cell, tissue and organ products • Limitations to surveillance • Under-reporting is common • Current systems could be improved notably in communication of data between stakeholders, public health authorities, regulatory authorities, physicians • Surveillance alone is unable to detect all ID transmission – current testing might be expanded
Key Points: Session One • To enhance surveillance efforts, need to address • donor identifiers • standardized nomenclature and definitions • tracking • denominator data • communication
Key Points: Session One • Important to improve surveillance of • Transplant recipients • Emerging diseases (both common and unusual) • Need to strike the right balance between safety and availability
Session Two • Reviewed infectious disease transmission events to date for clues to use in identifying future pathogens of concern • Discussed information needed to formally evaluate infectious disease transmission risks • Panel discussion explored gaps in data that are needed to best assess infectious transmission risk
Key Points: Session Two • Infectious disease transmissions via organs, cells and tissues occur, but are incompletely assessed • Risk assessment modeling can be a useful tool to identify data gaps and estimate transmission risks, but such risk estimates are only as good as the scientific theory and data going into the model
Key Points: Session Two • Key research needs: • Seroprevalence data (estimates vs. measured) • Denominator data • Transmissibility data • Validate donor history questioning and use of standardized questionnaire • Donor testing • Sterilization and pathogen reduction • New approaches to transmission studies
Session Three • Focused on research issues • Relevant research currently performed • Challenges in performing research • Overall research gaps • Funding • Research and surveillance needs are cross cutting among the cell, tissue and organ communities, collaboration will be a key to successful implementation
Key Points: Session Three • Donor derived infectious disease transmissions are infrequent events and are difficult to measure • Transmission rates may be variable across donors (ethnicity, geography), and between organ, cells, and various tissues • Need protocols and collaboration to collect donor and recipient data (e.g., donor information, results of donor screening and testing, processing methods, surveillance)
Key Points: Session Three • Tissue handling and processing affect transmissibility, but are difficult to quantify because processing methods are inconsistent, proprietary, and there is scant published information • Need for commitment to open communication and cooperative data collection
Thank You! Questions?