Why are Policymakers Undermining One of the FDA's Most Successful Programs?


By Rachel King


Alzheimer's patients received great news this year when the FDA granted accelerated approval to lecanemab, a new treatment for the fatal dementia.

The FDA's accelerated approval program expedites the release of new drugs to treat serious conditions. Over the years, these have included another Alzheimer's drug, aducanumab, as well as treatments for HIV/AIDS, leukemia, and a host of rare diseases.

Unfortunately, several recent federal policy changes have added uncertainty to the accelerated approval program. Without more consistency from the FDA and Medicare, progress toward treating many deadly illnesses could grind to a halt.

The FDA's accelerated approval pathway, just like the agency's traditional approval pathway, requires companies to demonstrate that the drug is safe and that there is abundant evidence of its effectiveness.

The pathways differ in just one notable regard. In the traditional pathway, companies must demonstrate directly that a drug delivers a clinical benefit. In the accelerated pathway, companies can instead demonstrate that the drug has an effect on a "surrogate endpoint" -- a measurable outcome reasonably believed to predict a clinical benefit, even if that benefit will take more time to demonstrate directly.

Gaining earlier access to new treatments can make the difference between life and death for patients, who often have no other treatment options.

In addition to saving lives, the accelerated approval pathway also has a major impact across the whole ecosystem of drug development.

Many innovative treatments begin at small biotech start-ups. These companies rely on venture investment to finance their work. Because the accelerated approval pathway offers an opportunity to get a new treatment to patients sooner, investors are often drawn to companies that are pursuing these approvals.

This arrangement has worked extraordinarily well since the accelerated approval program began. Of those that received accelerated approvals between 1992 and 2016, more than 76% went on to earn traditional FDA approval after their release.

It's troubling that federal agencies have introduced so much unpredictability into a program that has been such a success for patients worldwide.

The FDA seems to be shifting the goalposts, now indicating that more and more companies will be required to launch post-approval confirmatory trials before receiving accelerated approval. This is particularly troubling for smaller companies.

Meanwhile, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has added more ambiguity to the accelerated approval process by severely restricting seniors' access to newly-approved Alzheimer's drugs. Last year, CMS made an unprecedented decision that will prevent the vast majority of Medicare beneficiaries from accessing an entire class of FDA-approved Alzheimer's treatments. Under CMS's new rule, the drugs will only be available to seniors who can enroll in restrictive clinical trials or pay for the treatments out-of-pocket.

In February, CMS officials muddied the waters even more by announcing a Medicare pilot program that would test paying less for medicines granted accelerated approval.

In short, even if a drug secures accelerated approval, it's no longer clear that the government will cover it.

This puts drug developers in an impossible position. Investing billions of dollars in a state-of-the-art medicine is a risky endeavor under the best of circumstances. To have any chance of success, companies need consistent FDA standards and patients need predictable coverage policies.

Federal officials have failed to provide either -- threatening not just a few companies, but the wider search for new treatments and cures that patients desperately need.

Rachel King is the interim CEO of the Biotechnology Innovation Organization. The co-founder and former CEO of GlycoMimetics, she also serves on the board of Novavax. This piece originally ran in the International Business Times.



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

The Latest Anti-Drug Industry Media Firestorm: Unscientific, Dishonest, and Dangerous


Have drug companies been lying about their development costs to justify high prices?

President Trump Plans To Make Drugs Affordable Again


During his State of the Union address, President Trump pledged to drive down drug prices.

The Gun Community IS Doing Something About Violence


The tragic mass murder at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida has once again stoked the firey debate about gun control in the U.S. And once again many are calling for more gun laws and more restrictions on gun ownership. More extreme voices are even calling for the repeal of the Second Amendment.

Constitutional Democracy Doesn't Debase, It Dignifies


It didn't take long after Mitt Romney announced his U.S. Senate bid for new digs at his personality to surface. As one critique goes, Romney is mismatched to America because it doesn't dole out titles of nobility for excellent character like some Old World aristocracy.

What Switzerland Has to Do With Your Paycheck


President Trump recently traveled to the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland to deliver a message: America is once again open for business.

If You Like Waiting Four Hours for an Ambulance, Then You'll Love Single-Payer


"Hello, 9-1-1? I think I'm having a heart attack." "We'll send an ambulance right away. It'll be there in, uh, four hours."

The Passing of Two Great Americans


Last Saturday was a poignant day for me. Not only was much-loved First Lady Barbara Bush laid to rest, but I received word of the passing of a dear friend, Gerald Hath (always Gerry to me). The parallels between the Haths and the Bushes were striking.

Are Americans Crazy?


Has America simply gone crazy? We never want to think that we are a bit crazy or that people we love are experiencing craziness but it is reality. America has an overwhelming problem with craziness or I should say mental health issues.

President Trump Could Accidentally Help Protect the Environment


No one would mistake President Trump for an environmentalist. Yet his immigration policies could inadvertently safeguard the environment.

Trump's Drug Pricing Speech Mostly Hit the Right Notes


President Trump recently delivered a major speech from the White House Rose Garden on prescription drug prices. He announced several policies aimed at reducing the overall cost of pharmaceuticals and limiting patients' out-of-pocket expenses.

Don't Nuke Consumers' Wallets By Bailing Out Uncompetitive Power Plants


In mid-April, New Jersey lawmakers passed a bill that could raise residents' electric bills by $300 million each year. Legislators want to use the funds to bail out two nuclear power plants owned by Public Services Enterprise Group, the state's largest utility company.

On the Road to Idiocracy


Forget about the threat of socialism or even communism; the real threat comes from those who want to foist Idiocracy down our throats. Merriam-Webster defines Idiocracy as "a form of government in which a country or territory is run by fools." And, the madness of anti-government protests that have swept the country since the election of President Donald Trump indicate that the fools are hell bent on taking over.

Putin To The White House - Reason Enough


The buzz of a possible visit by Russian President, Vladimir Putin has died down. Different reasons have been cited from safety to timing to other things going on right now for President Trump and Putin.

New Anti-Fracking Study Combines Old News and Flawed Science


Two environmentalist groups just released a scathing report which concluded that "fracking" -- a technique for extracting oil and natural gas from underground shale rock formations -- poses an unacceptable threat to human health.

Objections to Offshore Drilling Don't Hold Water


Coastal-state politicos are scrambling to block a federal plan to expand offshore oil and natural gas drilling. In June, governors from five East Coast states condemned the initiative. In July, congressmen tried, and failed, to insert an anti-drilling amendment into a spending bill.

Stop Nuclear Cronyism


In June, President Trump directed Energy Secretary Rick Perry to bail out struggling nuclear and coal power plants. Such federal action would come on top of state bailouts, such as New Jersey's just-approved $300 million annual lifeline to keep three nuclear plants running.

Trump's Trade War Jeopardizes American Energy Jobs


This summer, China and the United States launched the opening salvos in a trade war that has been brewing for months. America imposed a 25 percent tariff on $34 billion of Chinese goods. In response, China slapped tariffs on U.S. products and agricultural goods such as soybeans and pork. President Trump escalated things by announcing another $200 billion in tariffs on Chinese goods.

VA Must Not Neglect Catastrophically Disabled Veterans


Imagine losing both your legs while serving your country only to be told the Department of Veterans Affairs can't provide you the wheelchair you need. The VA's not sure when one will become available. So they tell you to stay in bed.

Throwing the First Pitch


In The Presidents and the Pastime: The History of Baseball and the White House former presidential speech writer, veteran journalist, and college professor Curt Smith provides a lively, informative account of our nation's chief executives and America's quintessential sport.

The "FAIR" Act Doesn't Treat Consumers Or Workers Fairly


The House of Representatives just passed a bill that would make it harder and more expensive for Americans to resolve conflicts with their employers.