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The Food and Drug Administration issued its first-ever guidance on the development of human gene therapy for hemophilia.
The draft document provides a glimpse at the agency’s current thinking on clinical trial design and preclinical considerations in developing gene therapies. Specifically, it provides information to help companies set surrogate endpoints when seeking accelerated approval for hemophilia gene therapy products.
The hemophilia guidance is one of three disease-specific guidance documents. The other two clinical areas are retinal disorders and rare diseases.
FDA officials also issued updates to three more technical documents that deal with manufacturing of gene therapies.
The overall framework is similar to what FDA officials issued in 2017 for regenerative medicine. In a statement, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, said the agency was responding to an increasing number of gene therapy approvals and anticipated development.
“Once just a theory, gene therapies are now a therapeutic reality for some patients,” Dr. Gottlieb said. “These platforms may have the potential to treat and cure some of our most intractable and vexing diseases. The policy framework we construct for how these products should be developed, reviewed by regulators, and reimbursed, will help set the stage for the continued advancement of this new market.”
The Food and Drug Administration issued its first-ever guidance on the development of human gene therapy for hemophilia.
The draft document provides a glimpse at the agency’s current thinking on clinical trial design and preclinical considerations in developing gene therapies. Specifically, it provides information to help companies set surrogate endpoints when seeking accelerated approval for hemophilia gene therapy products.
The hemophilia guidance is one of three disease-specific guidance documents. The other two clinical areas are retinal disorders and rare diseases.
FDA officials also issued updates to three more technical documents that deal with manufacturing of gene therapies.
The overall framework is similar to what FDA officials issued in 2017 for regenerative medicine. In a statement, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, said the agency was responding to an increasing number of gene therapy approvals and anticipated development.
“Once just a theory, gene therapies are now a therapeutic reality for some patients,” Dr. Gottlieb said. “These platforms may have the potential to treat and cure some of our most intractable and vexing diseases. The policy framework we construct for how these products should be developed, reviewed by regulators, and reimbursed, will help set the stage for the continued advancement of this new market.”
The Food and Drug Administration issued its first-ever guidance on the development of human gene therapy for hemophilia.
The draft document provides a glimpse at the agency’s current thinking on clinical trial design and preclinical considerations in developing gene therapies. Specifically, it provides information to help companies set surrogate endpoints when seeking accelerated approval for hemophilia gene therapy products.
The hemophilia guidance is one of three disease-specific guidance documents. The other two clinical areas are retinal disorders and rare diseases.
FDA officials also issued updates to three more technical documents that deal with manufacturing of gene therapies.
The overall framework is similar to what FDA officials issued in 2017 for regenerative medicine. In a statement, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, said the agency was responding to an increasing number of gene therapy approvals and anticipated development.
“Once just a theory, gene therapies are now a therapeutic reality for some patients,” Dr. Gottlieb said. “These platforms may have the potential to treat and cure some of our most intractable and vexing diseases. The policy framework we construct for how these products should be developed, reviewed by regulators, and reimbursed, will help set the stage for the continued advancement of this new market.”