Monday, December 3, 2007

Stage Set for a New World of Drug Development in the Year 2015

Stage Set for a New World of Drug Development in the Year 2015

Research and Markets has announced the addition of A New Paradigm for Clinical Development: The Clinical Trial in 2015 to their offering.

(PRWEB) November 7, 2005

Research and Markets (http://www. researchandmarkets. com/reports/c27043 (http://www. researchandmarkets. com/reports/c27043)) has announced the addition of A New Paradigm for Clinical Development: The Clinical Trial in 2015 to their offering.

A New Paradigm for Clinical Development: The Clinical Trial in 2015 outlines an innovative and imaginative strategy for reinventing clinical development, and demonstrates why a complete overhaul of the clinical trials process is feasible from a conceptual, technical and logistical point of view.

The current clinical evaluation process is fraught with inefficiencies, resulting in numerous compound failures and exploding development costs. Until recently, the industry has reacted to the clinical evaluation problem essentially by "streamlining" the existing processes and by introducing information technology in a cautious and evolutionary fashion. While the FDA's Critical Path Initiative of 2004 showed that the agency is willing to take the lead in working with representatives from industry and academia towards a remedy, this report suggests that a more radical solution is needed.

A New Paradigm for Clinical Development: The Clinical Trial in 2015 proposes a bidirectional approach to accelerate the clinical process and make it more effective. These two avenues, which can be summarized as revamping trial design and as truly pervasive modelling and monitoring driven by information technology, are fundamentally different from each other but need to be implemented in a closely linked fashion. Though radical in effect, none of these changes would involve concepts or technologies that are unknown today.

According to the strategy laid out in the report, the following changes are required:

Phase I will assume a new role as a brief confirmatory testing stage for the model for drug-human interactions that the sponsor has proposed.

Phases II and III will merge into a single advanced-stage human testing phase involving fewer patients than today, relying on relatively small patient populations that are highly homogenous with respect to key criteria of pharmacological response.

Systematic post-marketing studies and a significantly improved and extended post-marketing surveillance system that goes far beyond adverse event reporting will be integrated into a post-marketing monitoring phase that documents real-life use of the newly licensed drug.

These new processes will be made possible through holistic mathematical models such as the virtual patient, extensive biomarker monitoring, and pervasive computing. With a full implementation of all envisaged changes by the year 2015, the stage would be set for a new world of drug development:

The pre-approval clinical trial phase might be shortened to about three years and 40-50 percent of all candidate compounds that enter this stage could complete it, with the majority of the failures occurring in the early human validation phase.

The crucial function of the advanced-stage human testing phase will be to determine whether efficacy is sufficiently superior over the established standard of therapy to warrant the cost of launch and the mandated post-marketing monitoring.

Developers recoup development costs earlier and enjoy a longer life cycle under patent protection, but also benefit from more and closer attention to real-life use of the newly licensed drug.

Companies Mentioned:

Clinphone Group Compugen Entelos, Inc. eTrials Worldwide, Inc. Gene Network Sciences IBM Healthcare and Life Sciences Lifetree Technology LLC

For more information visit http://www. researchandmarkets. com/reports/c27043 (http://www. researchandmarkets. com/reports/c27043)

Laura Wood

Senior Manager

Research and Markets

Press@researchandmarkets. com

Fax: +353 1 4100 980

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