协调
欧洲联盟
扩展访问
医学
市场准入
数据存取
临床试验
获得药品
业务
同情性使用
公共卫生
国际贸易
计算机科学
病理
数据库
生态学
物理
生物
农业
声学
作者
Tobias B. Polak,David G. J. Cucchi,Joost van Rosmalen,Carin A. Uyl‐de Groot,Jonathan J. Darrow
标识
DOI:10.3389/fphar.2022.913567
摘要
Patients with rare diseases often have limited or no options for approved treatments or participation in clinical trials. In such cases, expanded access (or "compassionate use") provides a potential means of accessing unapproved investigational medicines. It is also possible to capture and analyze clinical data from such use, but doing so is controversial. In this perspective, we offer examples of evidence derived from expanded access programs for rare diseases to illustrate its potential value to the decision-making of regulators and payers in the European Union and the United States. We discuss ethical and regulatory aspects to the use of expanded access data, with a focus on rare disease medicines. The heterogeneous approach to expanded access among countries within the European Union leaves uncertainties to what extent data can be collected and analyzed. We recommend the issuance of new guidance on data collection during expanded access, harmonization of European pathways, and an update of existing European compassionate use guidance. We hereby aim to clarify the supportive role of expanded access in evidence generation. Harmonization across Europe of expanded access regulations could reduce manufacturer burdens, improve patient access, and yield better data. These changes would better balance the need to generate quality evidence with the desire for pre-approval access to investigational medicine.
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