
By Michael Erman
NEW YORK (Reuters) -The U.S. Food and Drug Administration can approve new personalized treatments for rare and deadly genetic diseases based on data from a handful of patients, two of the agency's top officials said on Wednesday.
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary and Chief Medical and Scientific Officer Vinay Prasad said in an essay published in the New England Journal of Medicine that for certain conditions, companies could rely on appropriately designed studies with small sample sizes rather than randomized trials. They will rely on biological plausibility and clinical improvements in those early patients.
"Current regulations are onerous and unnecessarily demanding," Makary and Prasad wrote. "For patients and families, there is no time to wait."
The new "plausible-mechanism" pathway would allow the agency to grant marketing authorization after manufacturers demonstrate success with several consecutive patients.
Companies that receive these approvals will be required to collect real-world evidence to confirm efficacy continues and to look for safety issues that might arise.
The new approach will prioritize treatments for rare diseases that are fatal or cause severe childhood disability. Common diseases with unmet medical needs may also qualify.
While makers of cell and gene therapies are likely to be significant beneficiaries of the new approval process, Makary and Prasad said that other types of treatments could also receive licensure this way.
"The FDA will work as a partner and guide in ushering these therapies to market," the officials wrote.
(Reporting by Michael ErmanEditing by Bill Berkrot)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Individual Preparation Administrations to Raise Your Wellness Process - 2
Language Learning Stages: Which One Gets Your Vote? - 3
Unwinding History's Secrets: Looking for the Response to Antiquated Human advancements - 4
Birds at a college changed beak shapes during the pandemic. It might be a case of rapid evolution - 5
Bolsonaro briefly leaves Brazilian prison for medical tests after a fall from his bed
Takeda's AI-crafted psoriasis pill succeeds in late-stage studies
Pick Your Favored kind of sandwich
Mars orbiter sees 'butterfly' crater spread its wings on the Red Planet
Six Flags Opens the Tallest, Fastest and Longest Roller Coaster in the World
Palestinians tell BBC they were sexually abused in Israeli prisons
Ageless Tastefulness: An Outline of Valuable Gemstones and Adornments
Step by step instructions to Remain Spurred While Chasing after a Web-based Degree
Desired Travel Objections Worldwide: Where to Go Straightaway
The most effective method to Apply Antiquated Ways of thinking in Current Brain science Practices













