Why Reforms to the Accelerated Approval Pathway Threaten Rare Disease Drug Development - podcast episode cover

Why Reforms to the Accelerated Approval Pathway Threaten Rare Disease Drug Development

Jun 30, 202236 min
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Episode description

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Accelerated Approval pathway allows for the use of surrogate endpoints to make therapies more quickly available for unmet medical needs. About 82 percent of the drugs approved under the designation have been for orphan indications. But controversy around its use to win approval for Biogen’s Alzheimer’s disease drug Aduhelm last year set lawmakers off on an effort to reform how the pathway is used and to place new requirements on drugmakers. The healthcare consulting firm Vital Transformation recently did an analysis on the effects potential changes to the Accelerated Approval pathway could have and found that as many as two-thirds of treatments approved this way would no longer reach patients. We spoke to Duane Schulthess, CEO of Vital Transformation, about proposed reforms to the Accelerated Approval pathway, the findings of his firms’ analysis, and why these changes could have dire consequences for rare disease drug development. 

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