Undercutting Accelerated Approval Could Doom Biden's "Cancer Moonshot"


By Kenneth E. Thorpe


Thirty years ago, AIDS patients faced increasing symptoms and the risk of death while awaiting life-saving drugs that had shown enormous promise in clinical trials -- but that were hung up in the FDA's traditional approval process. In response, Congress sanctioned a new FDA "accelerated approval" pathway that gave patients earlier access to medicines. Lives were spared and our healthcare system finally had solutions to manage a disease that was ravaging our nation.

That same accelerated approval pathway has saved countless lives over the past three decades. Cancer treatments have been developed and delivered to patients more readily. Rare diseases once considered untreatable now have new standards of care that were previously completely unthinkable.

Despite this, the pathway is back in the news -- and for all the wrong reasons. Congress recently passed legislation that changed the accelerated approval pathway in significant ways. The latest reforms could substantially weaken the pathway and its potential to bring future treatments down the pike. It's puzzling that some elected officials are championing the Cancer Moonshot while at the same time undermining the pathway that's facilitated earlier access to breakthrough cancer drugs.

Accelerated approval is reserved for treatments that address serious or life-threatening conditions for which there are currently no adequate therapies.

Under traditional FDA approval, new drugs don't get a green light until tests demonstrate they produce a clinical benefit in patients -- for example, better cancer survival rates. Under the accelerated approval pathway, however, medications are conditionally approved if they can demonstrate success at a "surrogate endpoint" -- that is, a predetermined and measurable step that predicts a future clinical benefit. For example, if tests show a new cancer drug shrinks tumors, there's good reason to think it will extend lives.

Crucially, if further required testing determines the medication has failed to deliver on its initial promise, its accelerated approval can be revoked. But in the overwhelming majority of cases -- some 76.5% of accelerated approvals between 1992 and 2016 -- confirmatory testing has led to what’s called conversion to traditional approval.

Compromising the accelerated approval pathway would lead to fewer new treatments, period.

Emerging biotech companies are responsible for about 80% of all experimental medicines in the drug-development pipeline. Yet these firms often lack the funds to see a drug all the way from creation to confirmatory testing. With accelerated approval, they can begin selling their medication sooner, thereby enabling them to financially sustain the final rounds of testing themselves.

Unfortunately, that might not be a workable business model much longer. The FDA's top oncology regulator said he intends to begin withholding accelerated approval of new cancer drugs until confirmatory trials are already underway. As a result, two companies have already seen promising cancer treatments delayed because of this new policy.

Further concerns lie in the inconsistencies around access to drugs approved under the accelerated approval pathway. The Centers for Medicaid & Medicare Services (CMS), for example, has disclosed plans to pay less for accelerated approval drugs that haven't completed confirmatory studies.

Equally worrying, CMS has issued a "national coverage determination," that will prevent most Medicare beneficiaries from accessing an entire class of groundbreaking new Alzheimer's treatments simply because they received accelerated approval.

All told, these misguided coverage restrictions will only delay access to FDA-approved treatments that could change the course of some of the nation's most costly chronic conditions.

Kenneth E. Thorpe is a professor of health policy at Emory University and chairman of the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease.



More Resources


05/18/2024
Will the Biden-Trump Debates Matter?
It was the political equivalent of a new Taylor Swift album dropping in the night: At 8 a.m. on May 15, with no advance warning, President Biden challenged former president Donald Trump to a debate.

more info


05/18/2024
Panic Time? Biden Unlikely To Turn It Around
Joe Biden is probably going to lose this election. Many of us realize that already, I suspect, but grief is a process.

more info


05/18/2024
'Zuckbucks' Group Trains Election Offices
A 'Zuckbucks' group hosted a webinar advising election offices on how to take advantage of Biden's federal election interference.

more info


05/18/2024
A Battle Between Appearance and Reality
Trump is an expert at selling an appearance and Biden can't sell reality

more info


05/18/2024
Biden Is Losing, So He Has No Choice But To Debate
And so President Biden has agreed to debate Donald Trump. Not only is this decision perilous (though necessary), but the conditions agreed upon for the first debate are foolish and reflect an inexcusable misunderstanding of both candidates.

more info


05/18/2024
A Worm in the Apple of RFK Jr.'s New Camelot
With a week in which Robert F. Kennedy Jr. declared that a doctor had found a dead worm in his brain, which he then topped off with an abortion flip-flop, he is neither endearing himself with voters or his running mate.

more info


05/18/2024
Democrats' Problem With Working Class Voters
Friday on the RealClearPolitics radio show, Tom Bevan, Carl Cannon, and RCP White House correspondent Phil Wegmann discuss the Democratic Party's problem with working-class voters and the latest squabbling in Congress, plus controversies involving Kansas City Chiefs Kicker Harrison Butker and professional golfer Scottie Scheffler.

more info


05/18/2024
Speaker Johnson Is 'Tired of Making History'


more info


05/18/2024
Senate Democrats Have No Margin for Error in November


more info


05/18/2024
Inflation Isn't a Bug in the System, It's a Feature
May brings more bad economic news for hard-pressed American households.

more info


05/18/2024
Why an Uncertain World Needs To Take On More Risk


more info


05/18/2024
A Dangerous Road
Higher education institutions may come to regret considering Israel Divestment proposals for their endowments.

more info


05/18/2024
Why Many Jews Are Conflicted About Israel's War


more info


05/18/2024
Why I'm Skipping My 50th Reunion at Yale
I graduated from Yale University in 1974. As a first-generation American, the child of Holocaust survivors, and among the first women admitted to this incredible school, it is hard to adequately express how grateful I was for this opportunity. I have enjoyed returning to campus frequently over the years, including watching two of my own children graduate from Yale.

more info


05/18/2024
U.S. Diplomacy Remains the Key to Mideast Stability
U.S. diplomacy remains the key to regional stability.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Get Ready for an American Energy Comeback


Judging from the headlines, America's energy sector could collapse at any moment. Scattered amidst coronavirus coverage are reports of plummeting energy stocks and commodities traders paying people to take barrels of oil off their hands.

Trump Administration Should Reject Foreign Prescription Drug Price Controls


In responding to the coronavirus pandemic, President Trump has rightly focused on the tremendous innovative capacity of American businesses -- first by waiving regulations that impose unnecessary burdens, next by providing incentives to get tough jobs such as vaccine development done as quickly as possible.

Clearing the Air on the EPA's Coronavirus Response


The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) agency recently issued a memo waiving certain compliance requirements for energy firms in light of the COVID-19 outbreak. A group of House Democrats falsely claimed the EPA's memo gives oil and gas companies an "open license to pollute." To address lawmakers' concerns, the EPA has tapped an internal watchdog to review the policy. But no matter how hard they look, the investigators won't find anything close to what Democrats have suggested.

If Trump is Not Reelected, America Will Be Hurting


Most every American has an opinion about the upcoming election. However, there are several realities we must face.

For Workers' Sake, Keep the Pressure on America's Trading Partners


In his marathon testimony before Congress earlier this summer, United States Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer detailed the trade-policy achievements of President Trump's first term. It's a list that should make the administration proud.

Superbugs will Kill Millions — Unless Congress Acts


We're in the midst of the worst health crisis of the 21st century -- and it's not COVID.

Why Do We Take to the Streets?


We Americans are quick to take our disagreements to the streets. In 2020, we have claimed many causes to do so. Millions came out to protest police violence and “resist” fascism. Others “rallied” against COVID-19 lockdowns and voter fraud. We may amass crowds to evoke sympathy or provoke debate. But demonstrations aggravate and intimidate, often drawing counter protesters if not ending in violence. And even when gatherings generate debate, we are tempted to settle them by who had the larger crowd size rather than the merits of the case.

Biden Administration Must Commit to a National Pandemic Preparedness Strategy


COVID-19 has killed more than 350,000 Americans. And with case counts and hospitalizations soaring, many more deaths are sadly in store.

The FDA Can Help Patients With Rare Diseases


When I was just 18 years old, I was diagnosed with hypoparathyroidism, a rare disease that causes seizures, extreme fatigue and other life-altering complications.

A Simple Fix for Biden to Help to Make Drugs More Affordable


Americans have problems affording many drugs at pharmacies and doctors' offices. About half of those who are sick have trouble paying for their medications, according to a recent poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

America is Ready For a Resurrection


The followers of Jesus believed in his resurrection because they saw him alive after he was dead. They had a powerful testimony of firsthand evidence seen with their own eyes.

Small Changes to 340B Can Make a Big Difference for Struggling Patients


The Covid-19 pandemic has made the issue of healthcare access more urgent than ever. Yet, at a time of deep divisions in Washington, chances for major reform are slim.

The Need for Reconciliation is a Sign of a Bad Bill


"Budget Reconciliation" may be the most popular phrase on Capitol Hill right now. This special legislative process allows certain bills to be passed in the Senate with a simple majority so long as they impact the budget.

America was Prepared to Fight Covid-19 Thanks to Intellectual Property Rights


When Covid-19 came ashore, glaring gaps in the government's pandemic preparedness became painfully obvious. Everything from inadequate stockpiles of personal protective equipment to confusing and uncoordinated guidance regarding closures hampered our early response.

Democrats Chose the Worst Time to Revive Medicare for All


Medicare for All just won't die. More than 100 House Democrats have signed onto new legislation that would outlaw all private insurance and put all Americans on a federally-run insurance plan within two years.