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Are FDA Approvals Actually Quite Speedy?

Discussion in 'Pharmacy' started by Ghada Ali youssef, Apr 22, 2017.

  1. Ghada Ali youssef

    Ghada Ali youssef Golden Member

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    The US Food and Drug Administration reviews and approves new medicines in a shorter timeframe than its peer agency in Europe, research shows.

    The FDA has faced pressure from the public, politicians, and industry to accelerate review and approval of new medicines. The FDA’s review process is currently under consideration and reexamination as part of negotiations to reauthorize the law that directs funds to the agency—the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA)—due for reauthorization by October 2017.

    To inform this debate, Joseph Ross, associate professor of medicine and public health at Yale University, and coauthors compared review times for new drugs approved by the FDA and the European Medicines Agency between 2011 and 2015. They classified drugs according to therapeutic areas and “orphan” drugs, which are for rare diseases.

    The researchers found that the FDA approved more new drugs than EMA—170 versus 144—in the study period. The median review time for FDA-approved drugs was quicker, 306 days compared to 383 days for EMA-approved drugs. Therapeutic medicines, particularly for cancer and blood diseases, gained approval more quickly from the FDA than the EMA.

    “The report provides data that demonstrates the FDA is moving faster than the European peer agency,” says Ross.

    The current analysis is an update to a prior paper led by Ross that found the FDA approved new medicines more quickly than the EMA and the drug approval agency in Canada. “The gap we had identified, where the FDA was two-to-three months faster, now it’s about three-to-four months faster,” he notes.

    The data confirm that despite perceptions, the FDA completes regulatory reviews more quickly than similar agencies. “This is more information that should inform upcoming debates,” Ross says. “The FDA is already making decisions quickly and increasing its regulatory speed shouldn’t be our number-one priority.”

    Coauthors from Brigham and Women’s Hospital and New York University School of Medicine contributed to the article in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    There was no funding for this project. Ross receives research funding through Yale University from Medtronic, Inc. and the FDA to study issues in post-market surveillance, and from the FDA to establish the Yale-Mayo Clinic Center for Excellence in Regulatory Science and Innovation.

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