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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Critical Path.

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Presentation on theme: "U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Critical Path."— Presentation transcript:

1 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Critical Path Initiatives Patricia Keegan, M.D. Center for Drug Evaluation and Research FDA

2 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Pitfalls in Drug Development  Drug Development: changing landscape  Critical Path Initiatives  FDA analysis of drug development programs

3 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Approach to Review of Drug Development Programs  The way FDA reviews drugs is being affected by changes in the pharmaceutical industry and advances in biology  New paradigms needed as the landscape changes

4 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Approach to Drug Development Review: Changing Landscape 20th century  Empiric discovery  Nonspecific target  MTD; efficacy endpoints  Oncology patients will tolerate significant toxicity  Patient receives information from doctor/pharmacist 21st century Designer drugs Molecular targets OBD; ? safety endpoints Trials with primary endpoints of prevention, equivalency, or QOL Direct-to-consumer advertising

5 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Approach to Drug Development Review: Changing Landscape 20th century  Safety profile determined prior to approval  Safety profile = tally of toxicity by body system  Label = telephone directory  FDA is responsible for ensuring safety of product  Adverse Events  U.S. vs foreign data 21st century  Safety monitoring is a continuum  Mechanism, PK/PD, pharmacogenetics, subgroups  Better communication Risk management  Ensuring the safety of a product is a shared responsibility  Medication Errors  International Harmonization

6 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Approach to Drug Development: Clinical Review  Determine whether the study may proceed or should be placed on hold (a legal obligation for FDA)  Provide guidance on drug development early and throughout development (a “critical path” approach that is a goal but not a requirement for FDA)

7 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Critical Path Initiatives  Undertaken to address fall-off in new drug approvals  FDA’s analysis of problem: failure of science of drug development to keep up with science of drug discovery  Recognizes concurrent evaluation of safety, efficacy, and manufacture of new drugs

8 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Figure 2: 10-Year Trends in Major Drug and Biological Product Submissions to FDA The figure shows the number of submissions of new molecular entities (NMEs)—drugs with a novel chemical structure—and the number of biologics license application (BLA) submissions to FDA over a 10-year period. Similar trends have been observed at regulatory agencies worldwide.

9 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Figure 4: The Critical Path for Medical Product Development Figure 4 shows an idealized "critical path" that encompasses the drug, biological product, and medical device development processes. At the far left, ideas coming out of basic scientific research enter into an evaluation process (prototype design or discovery). In drug development the "discovery" process seeks to select or create a molecule with specific desired biological activities. Medical device development is generally much more iterative, so that prototypes often build on existing technologies. The critical path begins when candidate products are selected for development. They then undergo a series of successively more rigorous evaluation steps as they move from left to right along the path. A low percentage of candidates entering preclinical development survive to the market application stage.

10 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Figure 6: Working in Three Dimensions on the Critical Path Figure 6 is a highly generalized description of activities that must be successfully completed at different points and in different dimensions along the critical path. Many of these activities are highly complex—whole industries are devoted to supporting them. Not all the described activities are performed for every product, and many activities have been omitted for the sake of simplicity.

11 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Pre-IND Considerations  Does the manufacturing process or materials raise concerns about product safety (impurities, infectious agents, lack of stability)?

12 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan  What is known about the product and the purported mechanism of action?  Is there evidence in the laboratory and animal studies that the product has the predicted action? If not, why not?  Does the [purported] mechanism or pathway through which drug acts raise concerns about impact on normal organs/tissues? Pre-IND Considerations

13 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Initial IND Submission  Do preclinical data (or foreign experience in humans) support the safety of: starting dose schedule route of administration duration of exposure proposed rate of dose escalation  Does the protocol appropriately monitor for toxicities (given concerns based on chemical structure, toxicologic data or prior human experience)?  Are there formulation issues, e.g., same formulation studied in animals, toxic impurities?

14 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Phase 2 and 3 Studies  Have phase 1 studies identified an optimal dose (safety and activity) or should more dose exploration studies be done?  Are risks acceptable for population to be studied, based on non-clinical and early clinical experience?

15 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Phase 2 and 3 Studies  Does patient selection makes sense in the context of purported mechanism of action?  Is the population easily identified or is co- development of biomarker kit needed?

16 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Phase 2 and 3  Do available activity data support efficacy assumptions underlying Phase 3 (registration) trials?  Are trials designed to collect efficacy data; sources of bias minimized?  Is the plan for analysis clear and appropriate?

17 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Phase 2 and 3 Trials  Is product manufacturing sufficiently far along to support registration trials?  Are additional non-clinical studies (repro-tox or carcinogenicity) or pharmacokinetic studies (drug-drug interactions, immunogenicity, special populations) needed?

18 Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Patricia Keegan Approach to Clinical Review  Development program needs to be clear  End-of-Phase 2 meetings critical to review development to date, identify gaps, discuss future plans  Special protocol assessments permit detailed look at critical protocols within development program


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