Cremers Serge, Aronson Jeffrey K
Departments of Pathology & Cell Biology and Medicine, and Irving Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY, 10027, USA.
Centre for Evidence Based Medicine, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, Radcliffe Infirmary, Woodstock Road, Oxford,, OX2 6GG, UK.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2017 Aug;83(8):1607-1613. doi: 10.1111/bcp.13331. Epub 2017 Jun 27.
Estimates of the frequencies of rare disorders vary from country to country; the global average defined prevalence is 40 per 100 000 (0.04%). Some occur in only one or a few patients. However, collectively rare disorders are fairly common, affecting 6-8% of the US population, or about 30 million people, and a similar number in the European Union. Most of them affect children and most are genetically determined. Diagnosis can be difficult, partly because of variable presentations and partly because few clinicians have experience of individual rare disorders, although they may be assisted by searching databases. Relatively few rare disorders have specific pharmacological treatments (so-called orphan drugs), partly because of difficulties in designing trials large enough to determine benefits and harms alike. Incentives have been introduced to encourage the development of orphan drugs, including tax credits and research aids, simplification of marketing authorization procedures and exemption from fees, and extended market exclusivity. Consequently, the number of applications for orphan drugs has grown, as have the costs of using them, so much so that treatments may not be cost-effective. It has therefore been suggested that not-for-profit organizations that are socially motivated to reduce those costs should be tasked with producing them. A growing role for patient organizations, improved clinical and translational infrastructures, and developments in genetics have also contributed to successful drug development. The translational discipline of clinical pharmacology is an essential component in drug development, including orphan drugs. Clinical pharmacologists, skilled in basic pharmacology and its links to clinical medicine, can be involved at all stages. They can contribute to the delineation of genetic factors that determine clinical outcomes of pharmacological interventions, develop biomarkers, design and perform clinical trials, assist regulatory decision making, and conduct postmarketing surveillance and pharmacoepidemiological and pharmacoeconomic assessments.
罕见疾病的发病率估计因国家而异;全球平均定义患病率为每10万人中有40例(0.04%)。有些疾病仅发生在一名或少数几名患者身上。然而,总体而言,罕见疾病相当常见,影响着6% - 8%的美国人口,即约3000万人,欧盟的情况也类似。其中大多数影响儿童,且大多由基因决定。诊断可能很困难,部分原因是临床表现多样,部分原因是很少有临床医生有处理个别罕见疾病的经验,尽管他们可以通过搜索数据库获得帮助。相对而言,只有少数罕见疾病有特定的药物治疗方法(所谓的孤儿药),部分原因是设计足够大的试验来确定利弊都很困难。为鼓励孤儿药的研发,已出台了一些激励措施,包括税收抵免和研究资助、简化上市许可程序和免除费用,以及延长市场独占期。因此,孤儿药的申请数量增加了,使用成本也增加了,以至于治疗可能不具有成本效益。因此,有人建议,那些出于社会动机希望降低这些成本的非营利组织应负责生产孤儿药。患者组织作用的不断增强、临床和转化基础设施的改善以及遗传学的发展也有助于孤儿药的成功研发。临床药理学这一转化学科是药物研发(包括孤儿药研发)的重要组成部分。临床药理学家精通基础药理学及其与临床医学的联系,可参与各个阶段的工作。他们有助于确定决定药物干预临床结果的遗传因素,开发生物标志物,设计和开展临床试验,协助监管决策,并进行上市后监测以及药物流行病学和药物经济学评估。