Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Clinical Pharmacology, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Medicines Evaluation Board, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
BMJ Open. 2024 Nov 9;14(11):e084483. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-084483.
The collection of comprehensive data from post-authorisation trials for conditionally authorised anticancer medicines is frequently delayed. This raises questions about the feasibility of post-authorisation randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that aim to address remaining uncertainties. Therefore, this study explored factors that facilitate or impede the feasibility of post-authorisation RCTs from the perspective of stakeholders directly involved in the design, medical-ethical approval, and conduct of these RCTs.
We conducted four qualitative focus groups (FGs).
FG discussions focused on the oncology setting in European context.
Twenty-eight European patients, physicians, medical ethicists and pharmaceutical industry representatives participated in the FGs.
Respondents were informed about the topic and the purpose of the FGs before and at the start of FG discussions. An FG script was used to guide the discussion, which was informed by 14 semi-structured interviews with various stakeholders.
We identified factors with the potential to impact feasibility related to trial design, trial conduct, factors external to a trial and post-authorisation interaction with regulators. Factors that may be particularly relevant for the post-authorisation setting include the choice of relevant endpoints and the inclusion of a fair comparator (trial design), strategies to increase patients' and physicians' willingness to participate (trial conduct), and external factors relating to a medicine's commercial availability, the presence of competing medicines and trials and the perceptions about clinical equipoise. Post-authorisation interaction with regulators about how to obtain comprehensive data was deemed necessary in cases where a post-authorisation RCT seems infeasible.
Based on the identified factors, our findings suggest that patient recruitment and retention could be assessed more in-depth during regulatory feasibility assessments at the time of granting conditional marketing authorisation and that sponsors and regulators should better inform patients and physicians about the remaining uncertainties for conditionally authorised medicines and the necessity for post-authorisation RCTs. By enhancing the evaluation of trial feasibility, timely completion of post-authorisation RCTs may be facilitated to resolve the remaining uncertainties within a reasonable timeframe.
有条件批准的抗癌药物上市后试验的综合数据收集经常延迟。这就引发了对旨在解决剩余不确定性的上市后随机对照试验(RCT)可行性的质疑。因此,本研究从直接参与这些 RCT 设计、医学伦理审批和实施的利益相关者的角度,探讨了影响上市后 RCT 可行性的因素。
我们进行了四项定性焦点小组(FG)讨论。
FG 讨论侧重于欧洲背景下的肿瘤学领域。
28 名欧洲患者、医生、医学伦理学家和制药行业代表参加了 FG。
在 FG 讨论之前和开始时,告知受访者有关主题和 FG 的目的。使用 FG 脚本指导讨论,该脚本受与各种利益相关者进行的 14 次半结构化访谈的启发。
我们确定了与试验设计、试验实施、试验外部因素以及与监管机构的上市后互动相关的潜在影响可行性的因素。对于上市后环境,可能特别相关的因素包括选择相关终点和纳入公平对照(试验设计)、增加患者和医生参与意愿的策略(试验实施)以及与药物商业可用性、竞争药物和试验相关的外部因素以及对临床平衡的看法。在上市后 RCT 似乎不可行的情况下,认为有必要与监管机构就如何获得全面数据进行上市后互动。
基于确定的因素,我们的研究结果表明,在有条件获得营销授权时,可以在监管可行性评估期间更深入地评估患者招募和保留情况,并且赞助商和监管机构应该更好地告知患者和医生有条件批准的药物的剩余不确定性以及进行上市后 RCT 的必要性。通过增强对试验可行性的评估,可能会更及时地完成上市后 RCT,以便在合理的时间内解决剩余的不确定性。