The U.S. FDA announced Dec. 15 that it will take a more relaxed approach regarding the use of real-world evidence (RWE) in drug and device application reviews. Specifically, new guidance for device premarket applications will not require identifiable individual patient data collected from real-world data sources, and the agency indicated it intends to consider similarly updating guidance regarding submissions for drugs and biologics.
Breaking with its long-held, oft-recited mantra that observational studies are great for generating hypotheses but not as evidence for approval, the U.S. FDA is initiating the approval of leucovorin calcium tablets for patients with cerebral folate deficiency, a neurological condition that affects folate transfer into the brain.
The U.K. Medicines and Health Care Products Regulatory Agency posted a draft guidance on the use of real-world evidence to serve as a control arm for clinical trials.
Regulatory approval for medical products can rely on real-world data (RWD) typically only for expanded indications for use, but payers have been missing in action where this data source is concerned. The U.S. CMS has floated a guidance to facilitate the use of RWD in coverage decisions, providing a long-overdue update to Medicare clinical trial policy.
As the U.S. FDA and the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) move forward with new guidance and foundational data, they both recently issued requests for information (RFIs) to help them advance their agendas.
The U.S. FDA’s December 2023 draft guidance for the use of real-world evidence (RWE) for medical devices drew comment from across the spectrum of stakeholders, but industry is demonstrably wary of the draft on several points. The Medical Device Manufacturers Association (MDMA) offered several pointed criticisms, including that the draft seems to suggest that a fit-for-purpose study might be nearly indistinguishable from a conventional clinical trial, which MDMA said violates the least burdensome principle.
The U.S. FDA’s latest draft guidance for the use of real-world evidence (RWE) is a substantially heftier document than the 2017 final guidance that will shortly become obsolete, and buried in all those extra pages are a few key details.
With the clock ticking down on 2023, the U.S. FDA seems to be scurrying to push final guidances out the door before the new year. This week, the agency has finalized several guidances, ranging from the use of digital health technology in clinical trials to the use of real-world data (RWD) in drug development.
In an effort to standardize prescription practices across Canada, help Canadians afford their medicines and improve access to health data, the government is investing an additional $89.5 million over the next five years to establish the Canadian Drug Agency.
The U.S. FDA may be the most prominent agency in the federal government when it comes to the use of real-world data (RWD), but the National Institutes of Health is keen to immerse itself in this trove of information. The agency has made a request for public comment on how NIH centers can best leverage RWD for biomedical and behavioral research, although some ethical and practical considerations may have to be overcome.