University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California, USA.
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2022 Jun;111(6):1307-1314. doi: 10.1002/cpt.2583. Epub 2022 Apr 18.
Prescription drugs and medical devices are increasingly coming to market through expedited US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) pathways that require only limited evidence of safety and efficacy, such as nonrandomized, unblinded trial data in small numbers of patients, or the use of surrogate end points. Reliance on more limited evidence means that there is often greater uncertainty about risks and benefits. Using a modified Delphi process, we sought to identify promising policy approaches that address physician-patient decision-making needs about the use of such drugs and medical devices. We convened 13 national leaders from academia, government, nonprofits, payors, and industry who had expertise in medical product regulation, payor policymaking, bioethics, physician practice, patient advocacy, public health expertise/advocacy, clinical trials, the pharmaceutical and device industry, institutional review board oversight, and real-world evidence. Through multiple rounds of voting and meetings focused on evaluating the feasibility and impact of various interventions, the 13 participants reached the broadest consensus on 4 interventions: strengthening FDA post-approval study requirements to ensure postmarket evidence is generated in a timely manner, better informing patients about the risks and benefits and level of evidence supporting therapies via simplified and patient-centered product information "boxes" modeled on nutrition labels, limiting prices for drugs and medical devices approved based on surrogate end point data until confirmatory clinical evidence is generated, and improving health professional education about FDA regulation to better support clinician use of drugs and devices as well as communication with patients.
处方药和医疗器械越来越多地通过美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)的加速审批途径进入市场,这些途径只需要有限的安全性和疗效证据,例如在少数患者中进行非随机、非盲法试验数据,或使用替代终点。依赖更有限的证据意味着风险和收益往往存在更大的不确定性。我们采用改良 Delphi 法,旨在确定有前途的政策方法,以满足医生和患者在使用此类药物和医疗器械方面的决策需求。我们召集了来自学术界、政府、非营利组织、支付方和行业的 13 名国家领导人,他们在医疗产品监管、支付方政策制定、生物伦理、医生实践、患者权益倡导、公共卫生专业知识/倡导、临床试验、制药和医疗器械行业、机构审查委员会监督以及真实世界证据方面拥有专业知识。通过多轮投票和会议,重点评估各种干预措施的可行性和影响,13 名参与者就 4 项干预措施达成了最广泛的共识:加强 FDA 上市后研究要求,以确保及时生成上市后证据;通过简化和以患者为中心的产品信息“框”,更好地告知患者有关治疗风险和收益以及支持疗法的证据水平,这些信息框类似于营养标签;限制基于替代终点数据批准的药物和医疗器械的价格,直到产生确认性临床证据;以及改善卫生专业人员对 FDA 监管的教育,以更好地支持临床医生使用药物和设备以及与患者沟通。