Accelerated Drug Development/Review
Accelerated development/review (Federal Register, April 15, 1992) is a highly specialized mechanism for speeding the development of drugs that promise significant benefit over existing therapy for serious or life-threatening illnesses for which no therapy exists. This process incorporates several novel elements aimed at making sure that rapid development and review is balanced by safeguards to protect both the patients and the integrity of the regulatory process.
Accelerated development/review can be used under two special circumstances:
- when approval is based on evidence of the product's effect on a "surrogate endpoint," and
- when the FDA determines that safe use of a product depends on restricting its distribution or use.
A surrogate endpoint is a laboratory finding or physical sign that may not be a direct measurement of how a patient feels, functions, or survives, but is still considered likely to predict therapeutic benefit for the patient.
The fundamental element of this process is that the manufacturers must continue testing after approval to demonstrate that the drug indeed provides therapeutic benefit to the patient. If not, the FDA can withdraw the product from the market more easily than usual.
Featured Products
Online training - supply chain risk - optimize clinical trial supply - risk management - supply simulation tool
Regulatory requirements - biomarkers development and implementation - drug development programs - PET Drugs - FDA guidelines
Drug safety training - factors to be considered - drug development - risk management - intellectual property - pharmacovigilance