Office of Clinical Pharmacology, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland, USA.
University of North Carolina Eshelman School of Pharmacy, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2021 Oct;110(4):997-1003. doi: 10.1002/cpt.2306. Epub 2021 Jun 14.
The Orphan Drug Act (ODA) of 1983 was enacted to provide financial incentives to drug sponsors to develop therapies for rare diseases. Although this act increased the number of orphan products approved, there are still a limited number of products available for the pediatric population because orphan drug products are exempt from the Pediatric Research Equity Act. The objectives of this study were (i) to evaluate the pediatric orphan drug studies submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the period of 2007-2018 and (ii) to examine whether orphan drug products were fully labeled with a pediatric indication in infants and neonates. Out of the 468 indications evaluated, 171 (37%) were FDA-labeled for use in the pediatric population. Labeling for the 12 to < 18 years age group was most common (98%). Fifty-two percent of FDA-labeled pediatric indications included the newborn to < 2 years of age group. In this newborn to < 2 years age group, the indication was labeled without pivotal clinical trials in 43% of the programs. Of the 60 new indications not labeled down to birth, 50% were found to have an age of onset and diagnosis that occurs earlier than the age approved for use of the product for that indication. In summary, although the ODA has been successful in improving pediatric access to medications for rare diseases, our analysis identified the incomplete labeling for pediatric patients under 2 years of age. Strategies to include the birth to < 2 years old group of pediatric patients in orphan drug development programs should be explored.
1983 年颁布的《孤儿药法案》(ODA)旨在为药物赞助商提供经济激励,以开发治疗罕见疾病的疗法。尽管该法案增加了批准的孤儿产品数量,但由于孤儿药物产品不受《儿科研究公平法案》的约束,儿科患者可获得的产品仍然有限。本研究的目的是:(i)评估 2007 年至 2018 年期间向美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)提交的儿科孤儿药物研究;(ii)检查孤儿药物产品是否在婴儿和新生儿中完全标记有儿科适应证。在评估的 468 个适应证中,有 171 个(37%)经 FDA 批准用于儿科人群。12 至<18 岁年龄组的适应证最常见(98%)。52%的经 FDA 批准的儿科适应证包括新生儿至<2 岁年龄组。在这个新生儿至<2 岁年龄组中,43%的方案的适应证未经过关键性临床试验就进行了标记。在 60 个未标记至出生的新适应证中,有 50%的适应证的发病年龄和诊断年龄早于该适应证批准的产品使用年龄。总之,尽管 ODA 在改善罕见病儿童获得药物方面取得了成功,但我们的分析发现,对于 2 岁以下的儿科患者,适应证的标记并不完整。应探讨在孤儿药物开发计划中纳入 2 岁以下儿科患者的策略。