Showing posts with label right to try. Show all posts
Showing posts with label right to try. Show all posts

Monday, November 16, 2015

Hail Mary Medicine - "The Right to Try", Drugs For Dying Patients




The Wall Street Journal, Friday, November 13, 2015, Page A11, BOOKSHELF, Opinion:


Hail Mary Medicine

Patients spend their last days pleading with reluctant drug companies and the FDA to get access to treatments that could save their lives.

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, thalidomide was used as an anti-nausea drug by tens of thousands of pregnant women in Europe and Japan, some of whose children developed severe birth defects. Although thalidomide was never approved by the FDA, millions of free tablets were given to doctors as part of company-sponsored clinical trials, and 40 American children were born gravely affected. Not surprisingly, this led to a backlash against the drug industry. In 1962, Congress passed the Kefauver-Harris Amendment, giving the FDA power to require drug makers to demonstrate not just that drugs were safe for human use, but that they effectively treat the symptoms they say they do. 
The upshot of this tragic episode is that the current FDA can be excessively risk averse, slowing drug development by demanding copious amounts of testing from producers to rule out rare problems. There’s no doubt that clinical trials have become much more complex and expensive: From just the late 1990s to mid-2000s, researchers at Tufts University estimate that the average length of a trial increased by 70%. In 2014, Tufts estimated that it costs $2.6 billion to bring a single new medicine to market, up from just over $1 billion in 2003. The drugs that do eventually reach market take longer and cost more.
In her new book, “The Right to Try,” Darcy Olsen, president of the Goldwater Institute, illustrates the terrible cost of this predicament. She focuses on the plight of terminally ill patients navigating the FDA’s dense clinical trial regulations, pleading with reluctant drug companies and trying to convince paternalistic bureaucrats to grant access to medicines that could mean the difference between life and death. Ms. Olsen does an excellent job of interweaving the technical details of drug development and clinical trial design with deeply moving stories of patients dying from cancer, Lou Gehrig’s disease and other devastating ailments. 
The FDA has a “compassionate use” policy, by which terminally ill patients may access experimental treatment. But a very wide gap persists between official policy and patient need. Ms. Olsen notes that “today, about 40 percent of cancer patients attempt to enroll in clinical trials, but only about 3 percent end up participating. That means that the vast majority don’t make the cut, whether because they fail to meet the strict criteria, or a trial is thousands of miles from their home.” Many of those who don’t get these experimental drugs are the sickest patients because they are deemed “too sick to be useful for the study.” 
ENLARGE

THE RIGHT TO TRY

By Darcy Olsen
Harper, 311 pages, $26.99
Ms. Olsen argues that terminally ill patients should be able to access such drugs—at their own risk and outside the context of FDA-required studies—if the companies are willing to provide them, and the book’s title alludes to her proposed remedy: the state-by-state campaign the Goldwater Institute is leading to pass “Right to Try” legislation. The bills would allow terminally ill patients who have “exhausted all conventional treatment options” to access an experimental treatment if their doctors believe it is “the best medical option to extend or save the patients’ life” and “the treatment has successfully completed basic safety testing and is part of the FDA’s ongoing evaluation and approval process.” Insurers, critically, would not be required to cover the treatment—a significant hurdle, largely unexplored here, since such costs could be significant. 

Opinion Journal Video

Goldwater Institute President and CEO Darcy Olsen on her new book, “The Right to Try,” and the effort to accelerate access to experimental drugs. Photo credit: Getty Images.
The think tank’s campaign has been incredibly successful, with 24 states passing Right to Try laws to date. Still, Ms. Olsen doesn’t present such laws as a panacea. She doesn’t expect experimental treatments to always—or even often—work for terminally ill patients. But she believes that some chance is better than the alternative. “If you have the Right to Die, you have the Right to Try,” Ms. Olsen writes. “And you don’t have to wait on Washington to secure it.” 
Yet therein lies the book’s main shortcoming. Washington, it turns out, has a fair bit of say here. Courts have found that the FDA’s powers to regulate drug development are extraordinarily broad. Many changes Ms. Olsen champions won’t be possible without congressional action to revamp the FDA’s drug development process and find new ways of paying for experimental drugs that would make widespread access sustainable for patients, companies and insurers. These issues, though touched on, are not grappled with in detail.
The FDA has taken some positive steps. The Breakthrough Therapy designation, for example, created by Congress in 2012, has allowed the agency to approve promising drugs for life-threatening ailments based on small, early-stage trials. But this doesn’t let the agency off the hook. Scientists are increasingly recognizing that even common diseases like cancer are made up of hundreds of distinct genetic variants. The challenge ahead will be to match many more medicines to these targeted populations—a strategy called precision medicine—while sharply reducing the time and cost needed to bring them to patients.
I would go even further than Ms. Olsen does here. By focusing only on terminally ill patients, she’s overlooked that at some point everyone will become a patient. Rapid advances in inexpensive whole-genome sequencing tests, like 23andMe, are already allowing individuals to peer into their own medical futures and, even more powerfully, those of their children. We may not be far from a world where medical problems—from Alzheimer’s to cancer—will be identified while patients are still young and healthy enough to demand dramatic reforms to how medicines are researched and tested. The right to know our own medical futures may become even more important than the right to try. 
Mr. Howard is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Curbing Newborn Deaths(MelindaGates)/Dying Need Experimental Therapies




Wall Street Journal, Monday, May 19, 2014:





AFRICA NEWS

Melinda Gates Works to Curb Newborn Deaths

Inexpensive, Low-Tech Solutions Urged, Such as Breast-Feeding, 'Kangaroo Care'

May 18, 2014 7:56 p.m. ET

Challenges to the effort include cultural barriers, such as delaying breast-feeding, Ms. Gates said. Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
SEATTLE— Melinda Gates champions high-tech solutions to some of the world's most intractable health problems.
She also says that holding and feeding a newborn the proper way can make the difference between whether it lives or dies.
The co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is promoting some low-tech approaches as part of a push to improve the survival of newborns, a problem she said has been neglected. In a speech Tuesday at the World Health Assembly in Geneva, she plans to urge global health officials as well as national governments to implement practices that will make deliveries safer and keep newborns alive.
That will require competing for the attention of health ministers deluged with other pressing matters, from expanding HIV services to addressing a growing prevalence of noncommunicable diseases such as cancer and heart disease.
Many newborn deaths, Ms. Gates said in a recent interview, can be prevented by simple, inexpensive measures—such as teaching women to breast-feed, which immediately gives a baby nutrients and hydration, and guards against infection, one of the biggest killers of newborns. Or "kangaroo care"—a technique in which the infant, particularly a preterm baby, is held against the mother's skin to keep it warm and regulate the heartbeat. Or applying chlorhexidine, an antiseptic, to the stump where an umbilical cord has been cut, to prevent infection.
"You could get newborn deaths down substantially in the first couple of years," she said.
Naimot Alabi holds her baby son in 2013 in Lagos, Nigeria. All three of Ms. Alabi's other children have died and even in a country where Unicef reports one in seven perish before turning 5, the 36-year-old mother's case is out of the ordinary. Associated Press
Every year, 2.9 million infants die in their first 28 days of life, while 2.6 million die in the last three months of pregnancy or during childbirth, according to United Nations data. Newborn deaths account for 44% of all deaths in children under 5 years old—a proportion that has grown since 1990 because vaccines, malaria bed nets, and other interventions have helped keep older children alive. The number of children under 5 who died dropped 47% between 1990 and 2012, to 6.6 million.
"It's because we focused on it as a world," Ms. Gates said of the overall reduction in child mortality. "We decided to do certain things in vaccines, malaria and other areas. The piece that to me has always been interesting and that has been left out of that is looking at that first month of life."
Ms. Gates, a 49-year-old mother of three, sees her attention to newborns as an extension of her pledge to help women in the developing world obtain better access to family planning services—an effort for which she has corralled donors but also has been criticized by Roman Catholic groups that oppose using global health and development funds for contraceptives.
"For me it's a continuum of care for women and for babies," she said. "It's the women who are in charge of the health of the children. So if we can keep her healthy, and keep the newborns healthy, you keep the whole family more healthy."
A "newborn action plan" drawn up by Unicef, the World Health Organization, the Gates Foundation, and other organizations calls for training birth attendants who can teach new mothers the methods Ms. Gates describes, ensure supplies of injectable antibiotics and equipment for safer deliveries of babies, and other measures.
The goal, according to Mariam Claeson, director of the maternal, newborn and child health team at the Gates Foundation, is to cut newborn deaths to fewer than 10 per 1,000 live births by 2035. In 2012, there were 21 newborn deaths per 1,000 live births, according to the U.N.
But bringing about change is challenging, Ms. Gates acknowledges. On a visit to a clinic in Senegal, "They were doing all the right things in terms of the checklist of things to do during the birth," she said. "They had two great birth attendants."
But she also saw a woman who wouldn't breast-feed her newborn. It turned out the woman was waiting "for the person to come in from the village who's the religious leader to tell her what's her auspicious date that she can begin to breast-feed," Ms. Gates recalls. "So that's the type of cultural barrier you're often still trying to overcome."
Still, bringing down newborn deaths is "very possible and very doable," said Nosa Orobaton, head of a program that has been working at it for three years in two northern Nigerian states. Nigeria accounts for about a 10th of all newborn deaths annually, according to the U.N.
The program, partly funded by the Gates Foundation in addition to the U.S. Agency for International Development, has trained thousands of counselors to educate communities about safe birthing and newborn practices. It also has helped organize distribution of chlorhexidine gel that helps avert infections when umbilical cords are cut, particularly during home births, where most babies are born, Dr. Orobaton said. The antiseptic used to have to be ordered from Nepal and delivering it would take three months, but recently Nigerian officials arranged domestic production to make supplies cheaper and easier to deliver, he said.
"Once you have community trust, then we are well on our way to making things happen," he said. Then again, "procuring the medicines in a timely manner and getting them to those places in hard to reach areas on time are much more important in determining the success of the program than anything cultural."

Write to Betsy McKay at betsy.mckay@wsj.com



POLITICS AND POLICY

States Open to Drug Options

Expanding Experimental Therapies to the Dying Gains Traction Among Lawmakers

May 18, 2014 10:22 p.m. ET

Mikaela Knapp, of California, died in April at 25 after she failed to qualify for clinical trials because her kidney cancer had spread to her brain. The Knapp Family/We Got This
A push to widen access to experimental drugs for people with terminal illness is gaining traction among lawmakers in several states, highlighting a growing clamor from patients for promising therapies that haven't been approved for sale.
The so-called right-to-try bills, the first of which was signed into law in Colorado on Saturday by Gov. John W. Hickenlooper, may not make a big difference in practice because they generally don't require companies to provide access to the unapproved drugs outside of clinical trials.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration already grants requests for early access to experimental drugs when companies are willing to provide them, but can't force companies to do so. The FDA approves the "vast majority" of these types of requests, a spokesman said.
Right-to-try supporters hope the movement will sway companies to expand access, and lead to broader changes in a drug-approval process they say takes too long, often several years.
Providing early access to experimental drugs poses a dilemma for companies and federal regulators who don't want to jeopardize patient safety or the integrity of clinical trials needed to get new drugs on the market.
Colorado's right-to-try act would allow people with terminal illnesses who have exhausted other treatment options to take experimental drugs that have cleared early-stage safety trials in humans, as long as the drugs' manufacturer agrees to provide them. Access wouldn't require FDA approval, as it does now.
The Colorado bill received unanimous support from state lawmakers. "If a person has been diagnosed with something terminal, and they don't have any hope, and there is something out there they want to try that might work for them, I am supportive of people being able to do that," said state Sen. Irene Aguilar, a Denver Democrat and physician who co-sponsored the bill.
The Colorado Medical Society didn't take a position on the legislation, saying it hadn't developed a policy on the issue and that the measure was likely to pass without its support. John L. Bender, the group's president, said in a statement Sunday that the law was "unlikely to cause harm, and potentially may help patients on a case-by-case basis."
Arizona residents will vote on a right-to-try referendum this fall, while similar bills have been passed by legislatures in Missouri and Louisiana, but haven't been signed by the governors.
The Goldwater Institute, a Phoenix-based conservative nonprofit advocacy group that designed the proposed state laws, plans to push the measures in legislatures nationwide, said President Darcy Olsen.
The legislation comes on the heels of some high-profile patient campaigns for early access, amplified through social media and online petitions.
At the same time, medical advances have raised hopes for new treatments. For instance, companies including Merck MRK +0.72% & Co., Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.BMY +0.23% and Roche Holding AG ROG.VX -0.45% are developing so-called cancer immunotherapies, which work by unleashing the body's immune system to fight tumors. The drugs, which some companies provide for free, have shown promise in early clinical trials to significantly shrink tumors and extend survival in certain cases.
Keith Knapp of Folsom, Calif., started an online petition earlier this year asking for Merck's immunotherapy MK-3475 for his wife, Mikaela, who was diagnosed with kidney cancer last fall. The petition on change.org got more than 476,000 signatures.
Ms. Knapp didn't qualify for clinical trials of immunotherapies because she had a rare subtype of kidney cancer and it had spread to her brain, said Mr. Knapp. She was unable to receive MK-3475 through an early-access program started by Merck in March because it is only for patients with advanced melanoma, a form of skin cancer. She died in April at the age of 25.
Mr. Knapp said he favors right-to-try laws. "The current way we have this set up, it just doesn't work," he said. The proliferation of online petitions for early access is "a symptom there is some underlying flaw in our current system."
A Merck spokesman said he couldn't discuss specific patient requests, but said the company's first priority is to conduct clinical trials of new drugs. He said Merck allows early access outside of clinical trials when the benefits are likely to outweigh risks. Merck has applied for FDA approval of MK-3475 for melanoma and expects a decision by late October, he added.
A spokeswoman for Roche's Genentech unit said the company has received many requests for access to its experimental cancer immunotherapy, but doesn't have a compassionate-use program in place. The company will continue to evaluate a potential program, she said.
Bristol-Myers is in the process of starting an expanded-access program to allow certain patients with advanced melanoma to take its immunotherapy, nivolumab, a spokeswoman said.
Drug makers and the FDA have expressed concerns about the state proposals. The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, a trade group, said efforts to provide access to experimental medicines that bypass FDA oversight aren't in the best interest of public health.
"Successful completion of the clinical trial process is necessary to demonstrate that an investigational medicine is safe and effective, which is required to obtain FDA approval, so that companies may make the medicine available to a broader patient population when clinically appropriate," said Sascha Haverfield, vice president of scientific and regulatory affairs at PhRMA.
The FDA spokesman said the agency is concerned about "efforts that would be inconsistent with its congressionally mandated authority and agency mission to protect the public from therapies that aren't safe and effective." The FDA said it works with companies to provide access to experimental drugs by helping patients enroll in clinical trials or through expanded access, but it is up to companies to provide them.
Write to Peter Loftus at peter.loftus@wsj.com