Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Division of Medical Oncology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
JAMA Netw Open. 2022 Jun 1;5(6):e2216183. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.16183.
Ensuring patients have access to safe and efficacious medicines in a timely manner is an essential goal for regulatory agencies, one which has particular importance in oncology because of the substantial unmet need for new therapies. The 2 largest regulatory agencies, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA), have pivotal global roles, and their recommendations and approvals are frequently followed by other national regulators.
To compare market authorization dates for new oncology therapies approved in the US and Europe over the past decade and to examine and contrast the regulatory activities of the FDA and EMA in the approval of new cancer medicines.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study reviewed the FDA and EMA regulatory databases to identify new oncology therapies approved in both the US and Europe from 2010 to 2019, and characterization of the timings of regulatory activities. Statistical analysis was performed from January to April 2022.
Regulatory approval date, review time, submission of market authorization application, accelerated approval or conditional marketing authorization status and proportion of approvals prior to peer-reviewed publication of pivotal trial results.
In total, 89 new concomitant oncology therapies were approved in the US and Europe from 2010 to 2019. The FDA approved 85 oncology therapies (95%) before European authorization and 4 therapies (5%) after. The median (IQR) delay in market authorization for new oncology therapies in Europe was 241 (150-370) days compared with the US. The median (IQR) review time was 200 (155-277) days for the FDA and 426 (358-480) days for the EMA. Sixty-four new licensing applications (72%) were submitted to the FDA first, compared with 21 (23%) to the EMA. Thirty-five oncology therapies (39%) were approved by the FDA prior to pivotal study publication, whereas only 8 (9%) by the EMA.
In this cross-sectional study, new oncology therapies were approved earlier in the US than Europe. The FDA received licensing applications sooner and had shorter review times. However, more therapies were approved prior to licensing study publication, leaving uncertainty for practitioners regarding clinical utility and safety of newly approved therapies.
及时为患者提供安全有效的药物是监管机构的重要目标,由于对新疗法的巨大需求尚未得到满足,这在肿瘤学领域尤为重要。美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)和欧洲药品管理局(EMA)这两个最大的监管机构在全球发挥着关键作用,其建议和批准通常会被其他国家监管机构效仿。
比较过去十年在美国和欧洲批准的新肿瘤学疗法的市场授权日期,并研究和对比 FDA 和 EMA 在批准新癌症药物方面的监管活动。
设计、地点和参与者:这项横断面研究回顾了 FDA 和 EMA 的监管数据库,以确定 2010 年至 2019 年在美国和欧洲批准的新肿瘤学疗法,并对监管活动的时间进行了描述。统计分析于 2022 年 1 月至 4 月进行。
监管批准日期、审查时间、市场授权申请提交、加速批准或有条件营销授权状态以及在关键试验结果同行评审发表之前获得批准的比例。
在 2010 年至 2019 年期间,共有 89 种新的联合肿瘤学疗法在美国和欧洲获得批准。FDA 在欧洲批准之前批准了 85 种肿瘤学疗法(95%),在欧洲批准之后批准了 4 种(5%)。新的肿瘤学疗法在欧洲的市场授权延迟中位数(IQR)为 241(150-370)天,而在美国则为 200(155-277)天。FDA 的审查时间中位数(IQR)为 200(155-277)天,而 EMA 的审查时间中位数(IQR)为 426(358-480)天。64 项新的许可申请(72%)首先提交给 FDA,而只有 21 项(23%)提交给 EMA。35 种肿瘤学疗法(39%)在关键研究发表之前由 FDA 批准,而 EMA 只有 8 种(9%)。
在这项横断面研究中,新的肿瘤学疗法在美国的批准时间早于欧洲。FDA 更早收到许可申请,审查时间更短。然而,更多的疗法在获得许可研究发表之前获得批准,这使得从业者对新批准疗法的临床效用和安全性存在不确定性。