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Priority review

Priority review is a program of the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expedite the review process for drugs that are expected to have a particularly great impact on the treatment of a disease. The priority review voucher program is a program that grants a voucher for priority review to a drug developer as an incentive to develop treatments for disease indications with limited profitability.

Priority review vouchers are currently earned by pharmaceutical companies for the development and approval of drugs treating neglected tropical diseases, rare pediatric diseases, and "medical countermeasures" for terrorism. The voucher can be used for future drugs that could have wider indications for use, but the company is required to pay a fee (approximately $2.8 million) to use the voucher.

When seeking approval for a drug, manufacturers can apply to the FDA for priority review. This is granted when a drug is intended to treat a serious condition and would "provide a significant improvement in safety or effectiveness" over currently available treatments.[1] A priority review voucher can be used when a drug does not fit these requirements, but the company wishes to expedite the review process.[2]

In 2007, Title XI of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007 created the priority review voucher program for neglected tropical diseases. This was extended in 2012 by the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act to include rare pediatric diseases. The act built upon the tropical disease system and made amendments including a shorter notification to the FDA before exercising a voucher, a designation system so that early in the drug development cycle sponsors may use the possibility of earning a voucher in their valuation of their company, a requirement of a marketing plan and reporting of marketing, and indefinite transferability of the voucher. In 2016, medical countermeasures were added to the program.[citation needed]

Priority review

Prior to approval, each drug marketed in the United States must go through a detailed FDA review process. In 1992, under the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA), FDA agreed to specific goals for improving the drug review time and created a two-tiered system of review times – standard review and priority review.

A priority review designation is given to drugs that offer major advances in treatment, or provide a treatment where no adequate therapy exists. The 2002 amendments to PDUFA set a goal that a standard review of a new drug application be accomplished within a ten-month time frame. The FDA goal for completing a priority review is six months. Priority review status can apply both to drugs that are used to treat serious diseases and to drugs for less serious illnesses.

The distinction between priority and standard review times is that additional FDA attention and resources will be directed to drugs that have the potential to provide significant advances in treatment. Such advances can be demonstrated by, for example: evidence of increased effectiveness in treatment, prevention, or diagnosis of disease; elimination or substantial reduction of a treatment-limiting drug reaction; documented enhancement of patient willingness or ability to take the drug according to the required schedule and dose; or evidence of safety and effectiveness in a new subpopulation, such as children.

A request for Priority Review must be made by the drug company. It does not affect the length of the clinical trial period. FDA determines within 45 days of the drug company's request whether a priority or standard review designation will be assigned. Designation of a drug as "priority" does not alter the scientific/medical standard for approval or the quality of evidence necessary. Safety requirements for a priority review are equal to that of a standard review.

The amendment can be found on page 150 of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007.[3]

Priority review voucher program

The statute authorizes the FDA to award a priority review voucher to the sponsor (manufacturer) of a newly approved drug or biologic that targets a neglected tropical disease or a rare pediatric disease. The provision applies to New Drug Applications (NDAs), Biological License Applications (BLAs) and 505(b)(2) applications. The voucher, which is transferable and can be sold, entitles the bearer to a priority review for another product.

Under current Prescription Drug User Fee Act targets, the FDA aims to complete and act upon reviews of priority drugs within six months instead of the standard ten-month review period. Actual FDA review timelines, however, can be longer than the target PDUFA review periods, particularly for new products that haven't previously been approved for any indications. Economists at Duke University, who published on this concept in 2006, estimated that priority review can cut the FDA review process from an average of 18 months down to six months, shortening by as much as a full year the time it takes for the company's drug to reach the market.[4]

An intangible benefit of the voucher is the value created for a company if the faster review provides them "first mover advantage," allowing the voucher holder's product to be introduced ahead of a similar, competing product. By taking advantage of existing market forces, patients in the developing world can have faster access to lifesaving products that may not otherwise be developed. And sponsors of neglected disease drugs can be rewarded for their innovations[5]

Sponsors must inform the FDA of their intention to use a priority review voucher 90 days before submission. Before the Adding Ebola to the FDA Priority Review Voucher Program Act in 2014, this requirement was 365 days, which was a hindrance to the process of speedy review, as companies do not typically determine when drugs will be submitted until the results of safety studies are available.[2]

Companies may also sell vouchers to other drug companies. Thus far, priority review vouchers have sold for $50–350 million.

Cost

Companies that use the voucher will be required to pay a supplemental priority review user fee to ensure that the FDA can recoup the costs incurred by the agency for the faster review, in addition to the fee for standard review of drugs. The additional user fee also aims to ensure that the new program will not slow the progress of other products awaiting FDA review. The cost has decreased dramatically from over $5 million in 2012.[6] For the fiscal year 2018, this fee is $2.8 million.[7]

Uses of the priority review program

As of 2017, fourteen priority review vouchers have been awarded, four for tropical diseases, and ten for rare pediatric diseases. The first priority review voucher was awarded in 2009 to Novartis for its approval of Coartem. The next voucher was not awarded until 2012.[2][8]

Vouchers have been awarded for the following:
Program Drug Indication Company Year
Tropical disease Coartem Malaria Novartis
Tropical disease Sirturo Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis Janssen Pharmaceutica
Rare pediatric disease Vimizim Morquio syndrome BioMarin Pharmaceutical
Tropical disease Impavido Leishmaniasis Knight Therapeutics
Rare pediatric Unituxin Neuroblastoma United Therapeutics
Rare pediatric Cholbam Zellweger syndrome Asklepion Pharmaceuticals
Rare pediatric Xuriden Orotic aciduria Wellstat Therapeutics
Rare pediatric Strensiq Hypophosphatasia Alexion Pharmaceuticals
Rare pediatric Kanuma Lysosomal acid lipase deficiency Alexion
Tropical disease Vaxchora Cholera prevention PaxVax
Rare pediatric Exondys 51 Duchenne muscular dystrophy Sarepta Therapeutics
Rare pediatric Spinraza Spinal muscular atrophy Ionis Pharmaceuticals
Rare pediatric Emflaza Duchenne muscular dystrophy Marathon Pharmaceuticals
Rare pediatric Brineura Batten disease BioMarin Pharmaceutical
Tropical disease benznidazole Chagas disease ChemoResearch
Rare pediatric Kymriah B-ALL Novartis
Rare pediatric Mepsevii Mucopolysaccharidosis type VII Ultragenyx
Rare pediatric Luxturna RPE65-mutated retinal dystrophy Spark Therapeutics
Rare pediatric[9] Crysvita X-linked hypophosphatemia Ultragenyx 2020
Tropical disease Moxidectin Onchocerciasis Medicines Development for Global Health
Rare pediatric Epidiolex Lennox-Gastaut syndrome GW Pharmaceuticals
Material threat countermeasure Tpoxx Smallpox SIGA Technologies
Tropical disease Krintafel Malaria GlaxoSmithKline
Rare pediatric Revcovi Adenosine deaminase-SCID Leadiant Biosciences
Rare pediatric Gamifant Haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis Novimmune
Tropical disease Egaten Fascioliasis Novartis
Rare pediatric Symdeko F508del cystic fibrosis Vertex Pharmaceuticals
Tropical disease[10] Dengvaxia Dengue Sanofi
Rare pediatric[11] Zolgensma Spinal muscular atrophy AveXis
Tropical disease[12] Pretomanid Tuberculosis TB Alliance
Material threat countermeasure[13] Jynneos Smallpox Bavarian Nordic
Rare pediatric[14] Trikafta Cystic fibrosis Vertex Pharmaceuticals
Tropical disease[15] Ervebo Ebola Merck & Co.
Capmatinib[16] MET exon 14 skipping mutated non-small cell lung cancer Novartis
KTE-X19[16] Mantle cell lymphoma Kite Pharma
Selpercatinib[16] RET fusion-positive non-small cell lung cancer Eli Lilly
elantamab mafodotin[16] Multiple myeloma GlaxoSmithKline
Cedazuridine and decitabine[16] Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia Astex Pharmaceuticals
Rare pediatric[17] Vyondys 53 Duchenne muscular dystrophy Sarepta Therapeutics 2020
Rare pediatric[18] Oxlumo Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 Alnylam Pharmaceuticals 2020
Rare pediatric[19] Rethymic Congenital athymia Enzyvant Therapeutics 2021

Extensions

Extension to rare pediatric diseases

In 2012, President Obama signed into law the FDA Safety and Innovation Act which includes Section 908, the "Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher Incentive Program".[20] Section 529 extends the voucher program to rare pediatric diseases, but only on a trial basis. After the third voucher is awarded, the Comptroller General of the United States is to conduct a study on the effectiveness of the pediatric priority review voucher program.[citation needed]

The pediatric voucher program includes changes to the voucher program. First, the pediatric treatment developer can ask the FDA in advance for an indication of whether the disease qualifies as a rare, pediatric disease.[citation needed]

The awardee must market the drug within 365 days of approval, or the voucher may be revoked. Within five years of approval, the manufacturer must submit a report containing information on the estimated population in the United States suffering from the rare pediatric disease, the estimated demand in the United States for such rare pediatric disease product, and the actual amount of such rare pediatric disease product distributed in the United States.[21]

The Advancing Hope Act of 2016 reauthorized the program until December 31, 2016 and instructed the GAO to compile a report on the effectiveness of the program.[22]

Extension to ebola virus

In December 2014, the Senate approved a bill that would add the Ebola virus to the Priority Review Voucher List.[23] The bill, S. 2917—Adding Ebola to the FDA Priority Review Voucher Program Act, was introduced by Senator Tom Harkin on November 12, 2014. President Obama signed it on December 16, and it became Public Law 113-233.[24] Forty-five Senators cosponsored the bill (26 Democrats and 19 Republicans).[25] This act also eliminated the differences between tropical disease and pediatric disease vouchers, but allowing both to be sold an unlimited number of times and be used after a 90-day notification period to the FDA.

On a technical level, S. 2917 added "Filoviruses" to the priority review list. The Ebola virus is a type of Filovirus. According to the Congressional Budget Office, enactment of the law does not have an effect on the federal budget.[26]

Extension for medical countermeasures

The Senate's Medical Countermeasure Innovation Act of 2016 proposed adding a new category of drugs to the priority review voucher program. In 2016, it was confirmed that the approval of drugs for medical countermeasures would be eligible to earn a priority review voucher. Medical countermeasures are drugs to "prevent or treat harm from a biological, chemical, radiological or nuclear agent identified as a material threat".[27]

Proposed adoption by European Medicines Agency

Writing in The Lancet, David Ridley and Alfonso Calles Sánchez proposed extending the voucher to the European Union. The proposed EU voucher would provide priority regulatory review through the European Medicines Agency, as well as accelerated pricing and reimbursement decisions by EU member states.[28]

Secondary market

Because Priority Review Vouchers (PRVs) may be sold, a secondary market for the vouchers has emerged, and their value has increased, although the market for the vouchers is limited.[29] Companies use the sale of PRVs to recoup expenses undertaken for drug research and development.[29] A 2015 Wall Street Journal article raised concerns about the sale of these vouchers, given that they "require the FDA to shorten its decision deadline to six months from the standard 10 months—potentially giving companies an extra four months' worth of sales," but also noted that a voucher is not a guarantee of FDA approval for a drug.[30]

In 2014, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi purchased a PRV that BioMarin had won for a recent rare disease drug approval for $67.5 million; the voucher cut four months off the regulatory review time for alirocumab and was part of their strategy to beat Amgen to market with the first approval of a PCSK9 inhibitor.[30][31][32] In 2015, Retrophin sold a PRV to Sanofi for around $245 million, and later the same year, United Therapeutics Corp. sold a PRV for a drug for a rare pediatric disease to AbbVie Inc. for $350 million.[33] In 2016–2018, the value of a voucher ranged from $125 million to $200 million, down from its peak in 2015.[34]

Diseases targeted

The eligible tropical diseases include the following:[3][35]

Pediatric rare diseases are any disease that primarily affects people under the age of 18 and affects 200,000 or fewer people in the United States. Medical countermeasures are drugs to be used "in the event of a public health emergency stemming from a terrorist attack with a biological, chemical, or radiological/nuclear material, a naturally occurring emerging disease, or a natural disaster."[citation needed]

Limitations

Critics have claimed a number of issues with the priority review program. First, the priority review voucher might be too small or too large to encourage drug development. It may be too small because tropical diseases with incredible burdens can be presumed to merit more resources. This is likely not the case for pediatric rare diseases, some drugs are developed for pediatric use through expansion of adult drug research for similar conditions. The priority review voucher might be too large, if it rewards research which would have been done anyway, or research with low value.[citation needed]

The priority review voucher may tax FDA resources. To mitigate this, use of the priority review voucher includes an extra fee paid by manufacturers to the FDA and requires that voucher bearers provide FDA with 90 days' notice before using a voucher.[citation needed]

Critics of the FDA allege that priority review might not be safe. Priority review should not, however, be confused with accelerated approval or fast track designation. Priority review does not omit safety or efficacy studies or require approval within a given time frame. It sets a target of 6 rather than 10 months for FDA review. Nevertheless, a study in 2008 claimed that new molecular entities approved in the two months before the first review deadlines showed a higher rate of postmarketing safety problems than drugs approved at other times.[36] Nardinelli and colleagues (2008) of the FDA, however, wrote that they were not able to replicate the findings and that the findings might be driven by HIV-AIDS therapies.[37] Following the Nardinelli piece, Carpenter acknowledged several errors in their data set and demonstrated errors in the FDA's and Nardinelli's data; Carpenter and colleagues report that the original associations between last-minute approvals and safety problems hold.[37]

There have also been complaints that the priority review voucher encourages innovation, but does not pay for access to existing therapies. Funding from governments or foundations might be needed to purchase treatments for poor people. Aidan Hollis of the University of Calgary has commented that the proposal does not address "the access problem, but helps to increase incentives through creating distortions in markets in developed countries". This is entirely a separate issue from the promotion of research intended by the priority review program.[citation needed]

News and reaction

According to Bill Gates,[38]

"Some of the highest-leverage work that government can do is to set policy and disburse funds in ways that create market incentives for business activity that improves the lives of the poor. Under a law signed by President Bush last year, any drug company that develops a new treatment for a neglected disease like malaria or TB can get priority review from the Food and Drug Administration for another product they've made. If you develop a new drug for malaria, your profitable cholesterol-lowering drug could go on the market a year earlier. This priority review could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars."

— Bill Gates at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2008.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Expedited Programs for Serious Conditions––Drugs and Biologics" (PDF). Food and Drug Administration. April 10, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c "Regulatory Explainer: Everything You Need to Know About FDA's Priority Review Vouchers | RAPS".
  3. ^ a b "H.R. 3580" (PDF). Food and Drug Administration.
  4. ^ Ridley DB, Grabowski HG, Moe JL (2006). "Developing drugs for developing countries". Health Aff (Millwood). 25 (2): 313–24. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.25.2.313. PMID 16522573.
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 10, 2008. Retrieved March 21, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "Priority Review Voucher Fees to Decline in FY 2017".
  7. ^ "Fee for Using a Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher in Fiscal Year 2017". September 30, 2016.
  8. ^ "Issuance of Priority Review Voucher; Rare Pediatric Disease Product". Federal Register. December 13, 2018. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  9. ^ "FDA approves first therapy for rare inherited form of rickets, x-linked hypophosphatemia". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. March 24, 2020. Retrieved October 8, 2021.
  10. ^ "First FDA-approved vaccine for the prevention of dengue disease in endemic regions". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). May 1, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
  11. ^ "FDA approves innovative gene therapy to treat pediatric patients with spinal muscular atrophy, a rare disease and leading genetic cause of infant mortality". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). May 24, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
  12. ^ "FDA approves new drug for treatment-resistant forms of tuberculosis that affects the lungs". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). August 14, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
  13. ^ "FDA approves first live, non-replicating vaccine to prevent smallpox and monkeypox". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). September 24, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
  14. ^ "FDA approves new breakthrough therapy for cystic fibrosis". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). October 21, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
  15. ^ "First FDA-approved vaccine for the prevention of Ebola virus disease, marking a critical milestone in public health preparedness and response". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). December 19, 2019. from the original on December 20, 2019. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  16. ^ a b c d e "FDA Speeds Up Examination of 5 Drugs with Priority Review". BioSpace. Retrieved November 6, 2020.
  17. ^ "FDA grants accelerated approval to first targeted treatment for rare Duchenne muscular dystrophy mutation". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. March 24, 2020. Retrieved October 8, 2021.
  18. ^ "FDA Approves First Drug to Treat Rare Metabolic Disorder". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (Press release). November 23, 2020. Retrieved October 8, 2021.
  19. ^ "FDA Approves Innovative Treatment for Pediatric Patients with Congenital Athymia". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). October 8, 2021. Retrieved October 8, 2021.
  20. ^ "Section 529 Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher Incentive Program, Public Law 112-144" (PDF). Public Law. July 9, 2012. Retrieved November 19, 2015.
  21. ^ https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-112publ144/html/PLAW-112publ144.htm[bare URL]
  22. ^ Casey, Robert (September 30, 2016). "Text - S.1878 - 114th Congress (2015-2016): Advancing Hope Act of 2016".
  23. ^ Daw, Daniel (December 5, 2014). "Senators praise passage of faster Ebola review by FDA". BioPrepWatch. Chicago, Illinois. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  24. ^ "Summary: S.2917 — 113th Congress (2013-2014)". Congress.gov. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Library of Congress. December 16, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  25. ^ "Cosponsors: S.2917 — 113th Congress (2013-2014)". Congress.gov. U.S. Library of Congress. December 16, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  26. ^ "S. 2917, Adding Ebola to the FDA Priority Review Voucher Program Act; Cost Estimate". Congressional Budget Office. November 25, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  27. ^ "Senators Propose New Exclusivity Voucher, Priority Review Voucher Programs".
  28. ^ Ridley DB, Sánchez AC (September 2010). "Introduction of European priority review vouchers to encourage development of new medicines for neglected diseases". Lancet. 376 (9744): 922–7. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60669-1. PMID 20833303. S2CID 34391520.
  29. ^ a b Andrew S. Robertson (May 2016). "Preserving an Incentive for Global Health R&D: The Priority Review Voucher Secondary Market". American Journal of Law & Medicine. 42 (2–3): 524–542. doi:10.1177/0098858816658278. PMID 29086641. S2CID 3985989.
  30. ^ a b Loftus, Peter (November 1, 2015). "Drug Makers Buy Pricey Vouchers to Speed Products to Market". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 19, 2015.
  31. ^ John Carroll (July 30, 2014), "Sanofi, Regeneron pay $67M for a shortcut in the blockbuster PCSK9 race with Amgen", FierceBiotech
  32. ^ Ron Winslow; Joseph Walker (July 30, 2014), "Drug Firms Buy $67.5 Million Voucher to Speed FDA Review", Wall Street Journal
  33. ^ Chelsey Dulaney, United Therapeutics Sells Priority-Review Voucher to AbbVie for $350 Million, Wall Street Journal (August 19, 2015).
  34. ^ Conor Hale, Jazz grabs Spark's priority review voucher for $110M, Fierce Biotech (April 30, 2018).
  35. ^ "Tropical Disease Priority Review Voucher Program". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). August 23, 2018. from the original on December 20, 2019. Retrieved December 19, 2019.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  36. ^ Carpenter D, Zucker EJ, Avorn J (March 2008). "Drug-review deadlines and safety problems". N. Engl. J. Med. 358 (13): 1354–61. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa0706341. PMID 18367738.
  37. ^ a b Nardinelli C, Lanthier M, Temple R (July 2008). "Drug-review deadlines and safety problems". N. Engl. J. Med. 359 (1): 95–6, author reply 96–8. doi:10.1056/NEJMc086158. PMID 18596282. S2CID 205041656.
  38. ^ "Bill Gates - Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation". Microsoft.

External links

  • Priority review voucher page published by one of the Duke authors of the voucher
  • "FDA to aid tropical disease research" at the Financial Times in 2008
  • Optional Rewards for New Drugs for Developing Countries, a critique from the WHO's Commission on Intellectual Property Rights, Innovation and Public Health (CIPIH)
  • SEC. 524. (21 USC §360n) Text of the amendment
  • Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Vouchers from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), 2019

priority, review, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Priority review news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Priority review is a program of the United States Food and Drug Administration FDA to expedite the review process for drugs that are expected to have a particularly great impact on the treatment of a disease The priority review voucher program is a program that grants a voucher for priority review to a drug developer as an incentive to develop treatments for disease indications with limited profitability Priority review vouchers are currently earned by pharmaceutical companies for the development and approval of drugs treating neglected tropical diseases rare pediatric diseases and medical countermeasures for terrorism The voucher can be used for future drugs that could have wider indications for use but the company is required to pay a fee approximately 2 8 million to use the voucher When seeking approval for a drug manufacturers can apply to the FDA for priority review This is granted when a drug is intended to treat a serious condition and would provide a significant improvement in safety or effectiveness over currently available treatments 1 A priority review voucher can be used when a drug does not fit these requirements but the company wishes to expedite the review process 2 In 2007 Title XI of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007 created the priority review voucher program for neglected tropical diseases This was extended in 2012 by the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act to include rare pediatric diseases The act built upon the tropical disease system and made amendments including a shorter notification to the FDA before exercising a voucher a designation system so that early in the drug development cycle sponsors may use the possibility of earning a voucher in their valuation of their company a requirement of a marketing plan and reporting of marketing and indefinite transferability of the voucher In 2016 medical countermeasures were added to the program citation needed Contents 1 Priority review 2 Priority review voucher program 2 1 Cost 2 2 Uses of the priority review program 3 Extensions 3 1 Extension to rare pediatric diseases 3 2 Extension to ebola virus 3 3 Extension for medical countermeasures 3 4 Proposed adoption by European Medicines Agency 4 Secondary market 5 Diseases targeted 6 Limitations 7 News and reaction 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPriority review EditPrior to approval each drug marketed in the United States must go through a detailed FDA review process In 1992 under the Prescription Drug User Fee Act PDUFA FDA agreed to specific goals for improving the drug review time and created a two tiered system of review times standard review and priority review A priority review designation is given to drugs that offer major advances in treatment or provide a treatment where no adequate therapy exists The 2002 amendments to PDUFA set a goal that a standard review of a new drug application be accomplished within a ten month time frame The FDA goal for completing a priority review is six months Priority review status can apply both to drugs that are used to treat serious diseases and to drugs for less serious illnesses The distinction between priority and standard review times is that additional FDA attention and resources will be directed to drugs that have the potential to provide significant advances in treatment Such advances can be demonstrated by for example evidence of increased effectiveness in treatment prevention or diagnosis of disease elimination or substantial reduction of a treatment limiting drug reaction documented enhancement of patient willingness or ability to take the drug according to the required schedule and dose or evidence of safety and effectiveness in a new subpopulation such as children A request for Priority Review must be made by the drug company It does not affect the length of the clinical trial period FDA determines within 45 days of the drug company s request whether a priority or standard review designation will be assigned Designation of a drug as priority does not alter the scientific medical standard for approval or the quality of evidence necessary Safety requirements for a priority review are equal to that of a standard review The amendment can be found on page 150 of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007 3 Priority review voucher program EditThe statute authorizes the FDA to award a priority review voucher to the sponsor manufacturer of a newly approved drug or biologic that targets a neglected tropical disease or a rare pediatric disease The provision applies to New Drug Applications NDAs Biological License Applications BLAs and 505 b 2 applications The voucher which is transferable and can be sold entitles the bearer to a priority review for another product Under current Prescription Drug User Fee Act targets the FDA aims to complete and act upon reviews of priority drugs within six months instead of the standard ten month review period Actual FDA review timelines however can be longer than the target PDUFA review periods particularly for new products that haven t previously been approved for any indications Economists at Duke University who published on this concept in 2006 estimated that priority review can cut the FDA review process from an average of 18 months down to six months shortening by as much as a full year the time it takes for the company s drug to reach the market 4 An intangible benefit of the voucher is the value created for a company if the faster review provides them first mover advantage allowing the voucher holder s product to be introduced ahead of a similar competing product By taking advantage of existing market forces patients in the developing world can have faster access to lifesaving products that may not otherwise be developed And sponsors of neglected disease drugs can be rewarded for their innovations 5 Sponsors must inform the FDA of their intention to use a priority review voucher 90 days before submission Before the Adding Ebola to the FDA Priority Review Voucher Program Act in 2014 this requirement was 365 days which was a hindrance to the process of speedy review as companies do not typically determine when drugs will be submitted until the results of safety studies are available 2 Companies may also sell vouchers to other drug companies Thus far priority review vouchers have sold for 50 350 million Cost Edit Companies that use the voucher will be required to pay a supplemental priority review user fee to ensure that the FDA can recoup the costs incurred by the agency for the faster review in addition to the fee for standard review of drugs The additional user fee also aims to ensure that the new program will not slow the progress of other products awaiting FDA review The cost has decreased dramatically from over 5 million in 2012 6 For the fiscal year 2018 this fee is 2 8 million 7 Uses of the priority review program Edit As of 2017 fourteen priority review vouchers have been awarded four for tropical diseases and ten for rare pediatric diseases The first priority review voucher was awarded in 2009 to Novartis for its approval of Coartem The next voucher was not awarded until 2012 2 8 Vouchers have been awarded for the following Program Drug Indication Company YearTropical disease Coartem Malaria NovartisTropical disease Sirturo Multi drug resistant tuberculosis Janssen PharmaceuticaRare pediatric disease Vimizim Morquio syndrome BioMarin PharmaceuticalTropical disease Impavido Leishmaniasis Knight TherapeuticsRare pediatric Unituxin Neuroblastoma United TherapeuticsRare pediatric Cholbam Zellweger syndrome Asklepion PharmaceuticalsRare pediatric Xuriden Orotic aciduria Wellstat TherapeuticsRare pediatric Strensiq Hypophosphatasia Alexion PharmaceuticalsRare pediatric Kanuma Lysosomal acid lipase deficiency AlexionTropical disease Vaxchora Cholera prevention PaxVaxRare pediatric Exondys 51 Duchenne muscular dystrophy Sarepta TherapeuticsRare pediatric Spinraza Spinal muscular atrophy Ionis PharmaceuticalsRare pediatric Emflaza Duchenne muscular dystrophy Marathon PharmaceuticalsRare pediatric Brineura Batten disease BioMarin PharmaceuticalTropical disease benznidazole Chagas disease ChemoResearchRare pediatric Kymriah B ALL NovartisRare pediatric Mepsevii Mucopolysaccharidosis type VII UltragenyxRare pediatric Luxturna RPE65 mutated retinal dystrophy Spark TherapeuticsRare pediatric 9 Crysvita X linked hypophosphatemia Ultragenyx 2020Tropical disease Moxidectin Onchocerciasis Medicines Development for Global HealthRare pediatric Epidiolex Lennox Gastaut syndrome GW PharmaceuticalsMaterial threat countermeasure Tpoxx Smallpox SIGA TechnologiesTropical disease Krintafel Malaria GlaxoSmithKlineRare pediatric Revcovi Adenosine deaminase SCID Leadiant BiosciencesRare pediatric Gamifant Haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis NovimmuneTropical disease Egaten Fascioliasis NovartisRare pediatric Symdeko F508del cystic fibrosis Vertex PharmaceuticalsTropical disease 10 Dengvaxia Dengue SanofiRare pediatric 11 Zolgensma Spinal muscular atrophy AveXisTropical disease 12 Pretomanid Tuberculosis TB AllianceMaterial threat countermeasure 13 Jynneos Smallpox Bavarian NordicRare pediatric 14 Trikafta Cystic fibrosis Vertex PharmaceuticalsTropical disease 15 Ervebo Ebola Merck amp Co Capmatinib 16 MET exon 14 skipping mutated non small cell lung cancer NovartisKTE X19 16 Mantle cell lymphoma Kite PharmaSelpercatinib 16 RET fusion positive non small cell lung cancer Eli Lillyelantamab mafodotin 16 Multiple myeloma GlaxoSmithKlineCedazuridine and decitabine 16 Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia Astex PharmaceuticalsRare pediatric 17 Vyondys 53 Duchenne muscular dystrophy Sarepta Therapeutics 2020Rare pediatric 18 Oxlumo Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 Alnylam Pharmaceuticals 2020Rare pediatric 19 Rethymic Congenital athymia Enzyvant Therapeutics 2021Extensions EditExtension to rare pediatric diseases Edit In 2012 President Obama signed into law the FDA Safety and Innovation Act which includes Section 908 the Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher Incentive Program 20 Section 529 extends the voucher program to rare pediatric diseases but only on a trial basis After the third voucher is awarded the Comptroller General of the United States is to conduct a study on the effectiveness of the pediatric priority review voucher program citation needed The pediatric voucher program includes changes to the voucher program First the pediatric treatment developer can ask the FDA in advance for an indication of whether the disease qualifies as a rare pediatric disease citation needed The awardee must market the drug within 365 days of approval or the voucher may be revoked Within five years of approval the manufacturer must submit a report containing information on the estimated population in the United States suffering from the rare pediatric disease the estimated demand in the United States for such rare pediatric disease product and the actual amount of such rare pediatric disease product distributed in the United States 21 The Advancing Hope Act of 2016 reauthorized the program until December 31 2016 and instructed the GAO to compile a report on the effectiveness of the program 22 Extension to ebola virus Edit In December 2014 the Senate approved a bill that would add the Ebola virus to the Priority Review Voucher List 23 The bill S 2917 Adding Ebola to the FDA Priority Review Voucher Program Act was introduced by Senator Tom Harkin on November 12 2014 President Obama signed it on December 16 and it became Public Law 113 233 24 Forty five Senators cosponsored the bill 26 Democrats and 19 Republicans 25 This act also eliminated the differences between tropical disease and pediatric disease vouchers but allowing both to be sold an unlimited number of times and be used after a 90 day notification period to the FDA On a technical level S 2917 added Filoviruses to the priority review list The Ebola virus is a type of Filovirus According to the Congressional Budget Office enactment of the law does not have an effect on the federal budget 26 Extension for medical countermeasures Edit The Senate s Medical Countermeasure Innovation Act of 2016 proposed adding a new category of drugs to the priority review voucher program In 2016 it was confirmed that the approval of drugs for medical countermeasures would be eligible to earn a priority review voucher Medical countermeasures are drugs to prevent or treat harm from a biological chemical radiological or nuclear agent identified as a material threat 27 Proposed adoption by European Medicines Agency Edit Writing in The Lancet David Ridley and Alfonso Calles Sanchez proposed extending the voucher to the European Union The proposed EU voucher would provide priority regulatory review through the European Medicines Agency as well as accelerated pricing and reimbursement decisions by EU member states 28 Secondary market EditBecause Priority Review Vouchers PRVs may be sold a secondary market for the vouchers has emerged and their value has increased although the market for the vouchers is limited 29 Companies use the sale of PRVs to recoup expenses undertaken for drug research and development 29 A 2015 Wall Street Journal article raised concerns about the sale of these vouchers given that they require the FDA to shorten its decision deadline to six months from the standard 10 months potentially giving companies an extra four months worth of sales but also noted that a voucher is not a guarantee of FDA approval for a drug 30 In 2014 Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi purchased a PRV that BioMarin had won for a recent rare disease drug approval for 67 5 million the voucher cut four months off the regulatory review time for alirocumab and was part of their strategy to beat Amgen to market with the first approval of a PCSK9 inhibitor 30 31 32 In 2015 Retrophin sold a PRV to Sanofi for around 245 million and later the same year United Therapeutics Corp sold a PRV for a drug for a rare pediatric disease to AbbVie Inc for 350 million 33 In 2016 2018 the value of a voucher ranged from 125 million to 200 million down from its peak in 2015 34 Diseases targeted EditThe eligible tropical diseases include the following 3 35 Blinding trachoma Buruli ulcer Chagas disease added in 2015 Cholera Chikungunya virus disease added in 2018 final order Cryptococcal meningitis added in 2018 final order Dengue dengue haemorrhagic fever Dracunculiasis guinea worm disease Fascioliasis Filovirus diseases including Ebola virus disease added in 2014 by Pub L 113 233 amended by Pub L 114 146 Human African trypanosomiasis Lassa fever added in 2018 final order Leishmaniasis Leprosy Lymphatic filariasis Malaria Neurocysticercosis added in 2015 Onchocerciasis Rabies added in 2018 final order Schistosomiasis Soil transmitted helminthiasis Tuberculosis Yaws Zika virus disease added in 2016 by Pub L 114 146 Any other infectious disease for which there is no significant market in developed nations and that disproportionately affects poor and marginalized populations designated by order of the Secretary Pediatric rare diseases are any disease that primarily affects people under the age of 18 and affects 200 000 or fewer people in the United States Medical countermeasures are drugs to be used in the event of a public health emergency stemming from a terrorist attack with a biological chemical or radiological nuclear material a naturally occurring emerging disease or a natural disaster citation needed Limitations EditCritics have claimed a number of issues with the priority review program First the priority review voucher might be too small or too large to encourage drug development It may be too small because tropical diseases with incredible burdens can be presumed to merit more resources This is likely not the case for pediatric rare diseases some drugs are developed for pediatric use through expansion of adult drug research for similar conditions The priority review voucher might be too large if it rewards research which would have been done anyway or research with low value citation needed The priority review voucher may tax FDA resources To mitigate this use of the priority review voucher includes an extra fee paid by manufacturers to the FDA and requires that voucher bearers provide FDA with 90 days notice before using a voucher citation needed Critics of the FDA allege that priority review might not be safe Priority review should not however be confused with accelerated approval or fast track designation Priority review does not omit safety or efficacy studies or require approval within a given time frame It sets a target of 6 rather than 10 months for FDA review Nevertheless a study in 2008 claimed that new molecular entities approved in the two months before the first review deadlines showed a higher rate of postmarketing safety problems than drugs approved at other times 36 Nardinelli and colleagues 2008 of the FDA however wrote that they were not able to replicate the findings and that the findings might be driven by HIV AIDS therapies 37 Following the Nardinelli piece Carpenter acknowledged several errors in their data set and demonstrated errors in the FDA s and Nardinelli s data Carpenter and colleagues report that the original associations between last minute approvals and safety problems hold 37 There have also been complaints that the priority review voucher encourages innovation but does not pay for access to existing therapies Funding from governments or foundations might be needed to purchase treatments for poor people Aidan Hollis of the University of Calgary has commented that the proposal does not address the access problem but helps to increase incentives through creating distortions in markets in developed countries This is entirely a separate issue from the promotion of research intended by the priority review program citation needed News and reaction EditAccording to Bill Gates 38 Some of the highest leverage work that government can do is to set policy and disburse funds in ways that create market incentives for business activity that improves the lives of the poor Under a law signed by President Bush last year any drug company that develops a new treatment for a neglected disease like malaria or TB can get priority review from the Food and Drug Administration for another product they ve made If you develop a new drug for malaria your profitable cholesterol lowering drug could go on the market a year earlier This priority review could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars Bill Gates at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2008 See also EditFDA Fast Track Development Program Breakthrough therapyReferences Edit Expedited Programs for Serious Conditions Drugs and Biologics PDF Food and Drug Administration April 10 2019 a b c Regulatory Explainer Everything You Need to Know About FDA s Priority Review Vouchers RAPS a b H R 3580 PDF Food and Drug Administration Ridley DB Grabowski HG Moe JL 2006 Developing drugs for developing countries Health Aff Millwood 25 2 313 24 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 25 2 313 PMID 16522573 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2008 Retrieved March 21 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Priority Review Voucher Fees to Decline in FY 2017 Fee for Using a Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher in Fiscal Year 2017 September 30 2016 Issuance of Priority Review Voucher Rare Pediatric Disease Product Federal Register December 13 2018 Retrieved March 28 2019 FDA approves first therapy for rare inherited form of rickets x linked hypophosphatemia U S Food and Drug Administration March 24 2020 Retrieved October 8 2021 First FDA approved vaccine for the prevention of dengue disease in endemic regions U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release May 1 2019 Retrieved November 17 2019 FDA approves innovative gene therapy to treat pediatric patients with spinal muscular atrophy a rare disease and leading genetic cause of infant mortality U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release May 24 2019 Retrieved November 17 2019 FDA approves new drug for treatment resistant forms of tuberculosis that affects the lungs U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release August 14 2019 Retrieved November 17 2019 FDA approves first live non replicating vaccine to prevent smallpox and monkeypox U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release September 24 2019 Retrieved November 17 2019 FDA approves new breakthrough therapy for cystic fibrosis U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release October 21 2019 Retrieved November 17 2019 First FDA approved vaccine for the prevention of Ebola virus disease marking a critical milestone in public health preparedness and response U S Food and Drug Administration FDA December 19 2019 Archived from the original on December 20 2019 Retrieved December 19 2019 a b c d e FDA Speeds Up Examination of 5 Drugs with Priority Review BioSpace Retrieved November 6 2020 FDA grants accelerated approval to first targeted treatment for rare Duchenne muscular dystrophy mutation U S Food and Drug Administration March 24 2020 Retrieved October 8 2021 FDA Approves First Drug to Treat Rare Metabolic Disorder U S Food and Drug Administration Press release November 23 2020 Retrieved October 8 2021 FDA Approves Innovative Treatment for Pediatric Patients with Congenital Athymia U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release October 8 2021 Retrieved October 8 2021 Section 529 Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher Incentive Program Public Law 112 144 PDF Public Law July 9 2012 Retrieved November 19 2015 https www gpo gov fdsys pkg PLAW 112publ144 html PLAW 112publ144 htm bare URL Casey Robert September 30 2016 Text S 1878 114th Congress 2015 2016 Advancing Hope Act of 2016 Daw Daniel December 5 2014 Senators praise passage of faster Ebola review by FDA BioPrepWatch Chicago Illinois Retrieved March 23 2015 Summary S 2917 113th Congress 2013 2014 Congress gov Washington D C U S Library of Congress December 16 2014 Retrieved March 23 2015 Cosponsors S 2917 113th Congress 2013 2014 Congress gov U S Library of Congress December 16 2014 Retrieved March 23 2015 S 2917 Adding Ebola to the FDA Priority Review Voucher Program Act Cost Estimate Congressional Budget Office November 25 2014 Retrieved March 23 2015 Senators Propose New Exclusivity Voucher Priority Review Voucher Programs Ridley DB Sanchez AC September 2010 Introduction of European priority review vouchers to encourage development of new medicines for neglected diseases Lancet 376 9744 922 7 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 10 60669 1 PMID 20833303 S2CID 34391520 a b Andrew S Robertson May 2016 Preserving an Incentive for Global Health R amp D The Priority Review Voucher Secondary Market American Journal of Law amp Medicine 42 2 3 524 542 doi 10 1177 0098858816658278 PMID 29086641 S2CID 3985989 a b Loftus Peter November 1 2015 Drug Makers Buy Pricey Vouchers to Speed Products to Market Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 19 2015 John Carroll July 30 2014 Sanofi Regeneron pay 67M for a shortcut in the blockbuster PCSK9 race with Amgen FierceBiotech Ron Winslow Joseph Walker July 30 2014 Drug Firms Buy 67 5 Million Voucher to Speed FDA Review Wall Street Journal Chelsey Dulaney United Therapeutics Sells Priority Review Voucher to AbbVie for 350 Million Wall Street Journal August 19 2015 Conor Hale Jazz grabs Spark s priority review voucher for 110M Fierce Biotech April 30 2018 Tropical Disease Priority Review Voucher Program U S Food and Drug Administration FDA August 23 2018 Archived from the original on December 20 2019 Retrieved December 19 2019 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Carpenter D Zucker EJ Avorn J March 2008 Drug review deadlines and safety problems N Engl J Med 358 13 1354 61 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa0706341 PMID 18367738 a b Nardinelli C Lanthier M Temple R July 2008 Drug review deadlines and safety problems N Engl J Med 359 1 95 6 author reply 96 8 doi 10 1056 NEJMc086158 PMID 18596282 S2CID 205041656 Bill Gates Bill amp Melinda Gates Foundation Microsoft External links EditPriority review voucher page published by one of the Duke authors of the voucher FDA to aid tropical disease research at the Financial Times in 2008 Optional Rewards for New Drugs for Developing Countries a critique from the WHO s Commission on Intellectual Property Rights Innovation and Public Health CIPIH SEC 524 21 USC 360n Text of the amendment Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Vouchers from the U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Priority review amp oldid 1166727567, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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