Our drug development process has produced many life-saving medications, but patients experiencing rare diseases and similar conditions often are left with limited options for treatment. For an approved treatment to be developed, research on a new candidate or existing drug must validate safety and efficacy based on contemporary research expectations. Randomized clinical trials are conducted for this purpose, but they are also costly, laborious, and time-consuming. For this reason, The 21st Century Cures Act mandates that the US Food and Drug Administration look for alternative methods for approving drugs, in particular exploring the uses of real-world data and evidence. Expanded access (“compassionate use”) is a pathway for the clinical tre...
By 2014, the worldwide annual spend on medicines is expected to exceed one trillion dollars, represe...
The drug development process—regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)—is complex, le...
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Li...
“Compassionate Use,” also known as expanded access, is a method by which patients with a life-threat...
When patients are told that standard medical treatment options have been exhausted, their treating p...
Historically, patient activism has played a great part in shaping the drug approval process. Today, ...
PurposeThe Food and Drug Administration Expanded Access (EA) program and “Right‐to‐Try” legislation ...
Despite several innovative medicines gaining worldwide approval in recent years, there are still the...
Despite several innovative medicines gaining worldwide approval in recent years, there are still the...
In spite of a growing literature on pharmaceuticalization, little is known about the pharmaceutical ...
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is responsible for protecting public health by ensuring th...
Every year, novel therapeutic agents enter the United States healthcare marketplace following regula...
When seriously ill patients have exhausted all treatment options available as part of usual care, th...
Patients with rare diseases often have limited or no options for approved treatments or participatio...
Scathing critiques of the Food and Drug Administration\u27s (“FDA”) performance by the Government Ac...
By 2014, the worldwide annual spend on medicines is expected to exceed one trillion dollars, represe...
The drug development process—regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)—is complex, le...
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Li...
“Compassionate Use,” also known as expanded access, is a method by which patients with a life-threat...
When patients are told that standard medical treatment options have been exhausted, their treating p...
Historically, patient activism has played a great part in shaping the drug approval process. Today, ...
PurposeThe Food and Drug Administration Expanded Access (EA) program and “Right‐to‐Try” legislation ...
Despite several innovative medicines gaining worldwide approval in recent years, there are still the...
Despite several innovative medicines gaining worldwide approval in recent years, there are still the...
In spite of a growing literature on pharmaceuticalization, little is known about the pharmaceutical ...
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is responsible for protecting public health by ensuring th...
Every year, novel therapeutic agents enter the United States healthcare marketplace following regula...
When seriously ill patients have exhausted all treatment options available as part of usual care, th...
Patients with rare diseases often have limited or no options for approved treatments or participatio...
Scathing critiques of the Food and Drug Administration\u27s (“FDA”) performance by the Government Ac...
By 2014, the worldwide annual spend on medicines is expected to exceed one trillion dollars, represe...
The drug development process—regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)—is complex, le...
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Li...