FDA Patient-Focused Drug Development Guidances.
Anne T BergNatasha N LudwigMary WojnaroskiChere A T ChapmanRebecca HommerGabrielle ConeckerJayEtta Z HeckerJennepher Anne DownsPublished in: Neurology (2023)
Developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEE) are rare, often monogenic neurodevelopmental conditions. Most affected individuals have refractory seizures. All have multiple severe impairments which can be as life-limiting as or more limiting than the seizures themselves. Mechanism- and gene-targeted therapies for these individually rare, genetic conditions hold hope for treatment, amelioration of disease expression, and even cure. The near absence of fit-for-purpose (FFP) clinical outcome assessments (COA) to establish the benefits for nonseizure outcomes of these new therapies in clinical trials poses significant challenges to drug development. The Food and Drug Administration Patient-Focused Drug Development guidance series provides direction for how to overcome these challenges and to ensure FFP measures are available for trials. The goal is to have measures that address outcomes of importance to patients and caregivers, reliably and accurately measure the outcome in the spectrum of abilities for the target disease, and are sensitive to meaningful change over time. The guidances identify 3 primary strategies: (1) directly adopting and implementing available outcome measures; (2) creating measures de novo; and (3) a middle path of adapting or modifying existing measures. Emphasized throughout the guidances is the indispensable and extensive role of the patient or caregiver to assuring the goal of having fit measures is achieved. This review specifically considers the difficulties of adopting available COAs in severely impaired patient groups and ways to adapt or modify existing COAs to be FFP as encouraged in the guidances. Adaptations include alternative scoring, use of assessments in out-of-intended age ranges, and modifications for individuals with sensory or motor impairments. Some additional considerations that may facilitate achieving adequate clinical outcome measures, especially for rare diseases, include use of personalized endpoints, merging of existing COAs, and developing a consortium of rare DEE advocates and researchers to ensure fitness of adapted COAs across multiple rare disease groups. The FDA guidances help ensure that clinical trials targeting nonseizure outcomes, especially in severely impaired populations, will have adequately valid and sensitive outcome measures. This in turn will strengthen the ability of trials to provide informative tests of whether treatments provide meaningful therapeutic efficacy.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- case report
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- drug administration
- genome wide
- palliative care
- adipose tissue
- body composition
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- copy number
- poor prognosis
- peritoneal dialysis
- metabolic syndrome
- gene expression
- type diabetes
- climate change
- open label
- phase ii
- dna methylation
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- quality improvement
- cancer therapy
- fluorescent probe
- quantum dots
- study protocol
- congenital heart disease
- weight loss
- genome wide identification