miércoles, 17 de julio de 2024

FDA Rare Disease Innovation Hub to Enhance and Advance Outcomes for Patients

https://www.fda.gov/news-events/fda-voices/fda-rare-disease-innovation-hub-enhance-and-advance-outcomes-patients?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery FDA Rare Disease Innovation Hub to Enhance and Advance Outcomes for Patients An estimated 10,000+ rare diseases affect more than 30 million people – approximately one out of every 10 people – in the U.S., and about half of these people are children. Many rare conditions are life threatening, and most do not have approved treatments. Fundamental to the mission of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is to engage patients and caregivers – to understand their unique perspectives and experiences and keep these front of mind as we review medical products for rare disease patients. The Rare Disease Innovation Hub Recent rapid advances in the identification of promising drug targets and development of gene therapies offer momentum and potential to meet the needs of patients with rare diseases. In 2023, over half of all the novel drugs and biologics approved by the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) and the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) were to prevent, diagnose or treat a rare disease or condition. While there have been important advances in treatments for rare diseases, more needs to be done. Many rare diseases lack treatment options and therefore many patients have high unmet medical needs. This requires new approaches to expedite development and approval of safe and effective drugs and biologics. We see huge potential in establishing a new model, within the FDA, to leverage cross-agency expertise and greatly enhance our intercenter connectivity to spur the development of treatments for rare diseases. To that end, we plan to establish a Rare Disease Innovation Hub (the Hub). The Hub will work across rare diseases but will especially focus on products intended for smaller populations or for diseases where the natural history is variable and not fully understood, as we recognize that development of therapies for these conditions can be particularly challenging. The Hub would have three primary functions: Serve as a single point of connection and engagement with the rare disease community, including patient and caregiver groups, trade organizations, and scientific/academic organizations, for matters that intersect CDER and CBER. The Hub will help the larger rare disease community navigate important intersections across the FDA that affect patients with rare diseases, such as medical devices, including diagnostic tests, and combination products. Enhance intercenter collaboration to address common scientific, clinical and policy issues related to rare disease product development, including relevant cross-disciplinary approaches related to product review, and promote consistency across offices and Centers. Advance regulatory science with dedicated workstreams for consideration of novel endpoints, biomarker development and assays, innovative trial design, real world evidence, and statistical methods.

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