The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia

Klaus Rose,1,* Philip D Walson,2,* 1klausrose Consulting, Pediatric Drug Development and More, Riehen, Switzerland; 2Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Medical School, Goettingen, Germany *These authors contributed equally to this work Background: Although the diagnosis of childhood le...

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Main Authors: Rose K, Walson PD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2015-11-01
Series:Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/the-contributions-of-the-european-medicines-agency-and-its-pediatric-c-peer-reviewed-article-RMHP
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spelling doaj-0f197ecfc3514bed9b7fe4b9f4697af42020-11-25T01:08:49ZengDove Medical PressRisk Management and Healthcare Policy1179-15942015-11-012015default18520524502The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemiaRose KWalson PDKlaus Rose,1,* Philip D Walson,2,* 1klausrose Consulting, Pediatric Drug Development and More, Riehen, Switzerland; 2Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Medical School, Goettingen, Germany *These authors contributed equally to this work Background: Although the diagnosis of childhood leukemia is no longer a death sentence, too many patients still die, more with acute myeloid leukemia than with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The European Union pediatric legislation was introduced to improve pharmaceutical treatment of children, but some question whether the European Medicines Agency (EMA) approach is helping children with leukemia. Some have even suggested that the decisions of EMA pediatric committee (PDCO) are counterproductive. This study was designed to investigate the impact of PDCO-issued pediatric investigation plans (PIPs) for leukemia drugs.Methods: All PIPs listed under “oncology” were downloaded from the EMA website. Non-leukemia decisions including misclassifications, waivers (no PIP), and solid tumors were discarded. The leukemia decisions were analyzed, compared to pediatric leukemia trials in the database http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, and discussed in the light of current literature.Results: The PDCO leukemia decisions demand clinical trials in pediatric leukemia for all new adult drugs without prioritization. However, because leukemia in children is different and much rarer than in adults, these decisions have resulted in proposed studies that are scientifically and ethically questionable. They are also unnecessary, since once promising new compounds are approved for adults, more appropriate, prioritized pediatric leukemia trials are initiated worldwide without PDCO involvement.Conclusion: EMA/PDCO leukemia PIPs do little to advance the treatment of childhood leukemia. The unintended negative effects of the flawed EMA/PDCO's standardized requesting of non-prioritized testing of every new adult leukemia drug in children with relapsed or refractory disease expose these children to questionable trials, and could undermine public trust in pediatric clinical research. Institutions, investigators, and ethics committees/institutional review boards need to be skeptical of trials triggered by PDCO. New, better ways to facilitate drug development for pediatric leukemia are needed. Keywords: childhood leukemia, better medicines for children, pediatric drug development, therapeutic orphans, therapeutic hostages, ghost studies, pediatric investigation planhttps://www.dovepress.com/the-contributions-of-the-european-medicines-agency-and-its-pediatric-c-peer-reviewed-article-RMHP
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rose K
Walson PD
spellingShingle Rose K
Walson PD
The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
author_facet Rose K
Walson PD
author_sort Rose K
title The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
title_short The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
title_full The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
title_fullStr The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
title_full_unstemmed The contributions of the European Medicines Agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
title_sort contributions of the european medicines agency and its pediatric committee to the fight against childhood leukemia
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
issn 1179-1594
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Klaus Rose,1,* Philip D Walson,2,* 1klausrose Consulting, Pediatric Drug Development and More, Riehen, Switzerland; 2Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Medical School, Goettingen, Germany *These authors contributed equally to this work Background: Although the diagnosis of childhood leukemia is no longer a death sentence, too many patients still die, more with acute myeloid leukemia than with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The European Union pediatric legislation was introduced to improve pharmaceutical treatment of children, but some question whether the European Medicines Agency (EMA) approach is helping children with leukemia. Some have even suggested that the decisions of EMA pediatric committee (PDCO) are counterproductive. This study was designed to investigate the impact of PDCO-issued pediatric investigation plans (PIPs) for leukemia drugs.Methods: All PIPs listed under “oncology” were downloaded from the EMA website. Non-leukemia decisions including misclassifications, waivers (no PIP), and solid tumors were discarded. The leukemia decisions were analyzed, compared to pediatric leukemia trials in the database http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, and discussed in the light of current literature.Results: The PDCO leukemia decisions demand clinical trials in pediatric leukemia for all new adult drugs without prioritization. However, because leukemia in children is different and much rarer than in adults, these decisions have resulted in proposed studies that are scientifically and ethically questionable. They are also unnecessary, since once promising new compounds are approved for adults, more appropriate, prioritized pediatric leukemia trials are initiated worldwide without PDCO involvement.Conclusion: EMA/PDCO leukemia PIPs do little to advance the treatment of childhood leukemia. The unintended negative effects of the flawed EMA/PDCO's standardized requesting of non-prioritized testing of every new adult leukemia drug in children with relapsed or refractory disease expose these children to questionable trials, and could undermine public trust in pediatric clinical research. Institutions, investigators, and ethics committees/institutional review boards need to be skeptical of trials triggered by PDCO. New, better ways to facilitate drug development for pediatric leukemia are needed. Keywords: childhood leukemia, better medicines for children, pediatric drug development, therapeutic orphans, therapeutic hostages, ghost studies, pediatric investigation plan
url https://www.dovepress.com/the-contributions-of-the-european-medicines-agency-and-its-pediatric-c-peer-reviewed-article-RMHP
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