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The Accelerating Pace of Medical Development and Challenges in Evaluating Benefit and Risk Alasdair Breckenridge Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) European Medicines Agency (EMEA)
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The Accelerating Pace of Medical Development and Challenges in Evaluating Benefit and Risk Alasdair Breckenridge Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) European Medicines Agency (EMEA) International Conference on Harmonisation (ICH)
Unacceptable Risk Acceptable Benefits (relative value)
Responsibilities of the Medicines’ Regulator To protect the public health by allowing only medicines which have a satisfactory risk-benefit profile to be marketed and remain so To provide information to prescribers and patients so that these products can be used safely and effectively Not to put unnecessary regulatory hurdles in the way of innovative products
Measures of Drug Efficacy • Peak expiratory flow rate • Standard BP measurement • Joint size and temperature • Rating scales for dementia • Rating scales for depression
Biomarker A biochemical or physiological change that is :- • Quantifiable • Related to an actual or potential health impairment • May be used for measuring the progress of disease or the effects of treatment
Biomarkers • Collagen telopeptide fragments • PET imaging for tumours • Inflammation - Acute protein CRP - Cytokine IL6 - Metalloproteases
Improvement of Risk-benefit Profile Define accurately the population of patients who will respond to a medicine.
Causes of Variation in Drug Response • Genetic • Environmental
Pharmacogenetics andClinical therapeutics • Genes confer disease susceptibility • Diseases can be genetically heterogeneous • Efficacy, adverse drug reactions and • drug interactions are often • genotype-dependent
Genetic Polymorphisms Pharmacokinetic Pharmacodynamic Receptors Absorption Ion Channels Distribution Metabolism Enzymes Excretion Immune system
Pharmacogenetics • Drug will be approved for patients with defined genotype • Trials will be smaller and shorter • Market for drug may be smaller • Genotype testing before drug administration • Standardization of genotype test • Greater post marketing safety surveillance
Dialogue Between Regulators and Sponsors • Briefing Meetings • Safe Harbours • Regulatory Exemption
New drugs come from molecular, biochemical and physiological research, much of which stems from academic institutions. As it quits the quiet waters of academia, a concept with a market potential is exposed to the entrepreneurs of the biotechnology sector, the credulous greed of the equity market, the well groomed executives of the pharmaceutical industry and the paper maze of the drug regulator before it lands in the broad handshake of the marketing manager- all before it crosses the horizon of the sceptical and budget- driven clinician who might want to use the product. Gale E and Clark A (2000)