Academic perspectives on the United States food and drug administration's guidance for industry on diabetes mellitus

被引:14
|
作者
Hennekens, Charles H. [1 ]
Hebert, Patricia R. [1 ]
Schneider, Wendy R. [1 ]
O'Brien, Peter [2 ]
DeMets, David [3 ]
Borer, Jeffrey S. [4 ]
机构
[1] Florida Atlantic Univ, Boca Raton, FL 33431 USA
[2] Mayo Clin & Mayo Fdn, Mayo Med Sch, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
[3] Univ Wisconsin, Madison, WI USA
[4] Suny Downstate Med Ctr, Brooklyn, NY 11203 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Food and Drug Administration; Diabetes mellitus; MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION; ROSIGLITAZONE; TRIALS; METAANALYSES; RISK; NEED;
D O I
10.1016/j.cct.2010.06.001
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued Guidance for Industry, subtitled Diabetes Mellitus-Evaluating Cardiovascular Risk in New Antidiabetic Therapies to Treat Type 2 Diabetes. From an academic perspective, these regulatory requirements provide undue emphasis on the results of phase 2 trials not designed to test hypotheses about clinical cardiovascular events. Phase 2 trials should be considered hypothesis formulating either alone or in their meta-analyses. Thus, this FDA guidance for industry does not adequately emphasize the importance and necessity of well designed and conducted phase 3 trials of sufficient size, dose, and duration to test the hypothesis formulated from the meta-analysis of the phase 2 trials. We believe that the guiding principle about benefits and risks of drugs should be that rational decisions for individual patients and the health of the general public should be based on a sufficient totality of evidence. When that totality of evidence is incomplete, it is appropriate to remain uncertain. We believe phase 2 trials should be performed mainly for proof of concept and dose ranging. To detect reliably the most plausible small to moderate effects of drugs, the totality of evidence must include large scale randomized phase 3 trials. These individual trials must be of sufficient size, dose, and duration as well as achieve high adherence and follow-up. They must also achieve enough clinical endpoints to distinguish reliably between the null hypothesis of no effect and the most plausible alternative hypotheses of small benefit or harm. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:411 / 413
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] FEDERAL FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION IN UNITED-STATES - BORN AND BRED IN CRISES
    TAYLOR, WJR
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS, 1973, 7 (2-3) : 156 - 162
  • [42] End points and United States food and drug administration approval of oncology drugs
    Johnson, JR
    Williams, G
    Pazdur, R
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2003, 21 (07) : 1404 - 1411
  • [43] Analysis of adverse events with sclerosants reported to the United States Food and Drug Administration
    Nguyen, Christopher N.
    Nguyen, Quoc-Bao D.
    Silapunt, Sirunya
    PHLEBOLOGY, 2022, 37 (06) : 452 - 459
  • [45] Analysis of adverse events with sclerosants reported to the United States Food and Drug Administration
    Nguyen, Christopher
    Quoc-Bao Nguyen
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY, 2022, 87 (03) : AB17 - AB17
  • [46] US Food and Drug Administration Drug Approval Slow Advances in Obstetric Care in the United States
    Wing, Deborah A.
    Powers, Barbara
    Hickok, Durlin
    OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2010, 115 (04): : 825 - 833
  • [47] Adverse drug event reports at the United States Food and Drug Administration Center for Veterinary Medicine
    Hampshire, VA
    Doddy, FM
    Post, LO
    Koogler, TL
    Burgess, TM
    Batten, PO
    Hudson, R
    McAdams, DR
    Brown, MA
    JAVMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN VETERINARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2004, 225 (04): : 533 - 536
  • [48] The food and drug administration's osteoporosis guidance document: Past, present, and future
    Colman, EG
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2003, 18 (06) : 1125 - 1128
  • [49] Food and Drug Administration's perspectives on pediatric cardiac assist devices
    Chen, Eric A.
    Patel-Raman, Sonna M.
    Berman, Michael R.
    Zuckerman, Bram D.
    ASAIO JOURNAL, 2008, 54 (02) : 147 - 149
  • [50] Regulatory use of computational toxicology tools and databases at the United States Food and Drug Administration's Office of Food Additive Safety
    Arvidson, Kirk B.
    Chanderbhan, Ronald
    Muldoon-Jacobs, Kristi
    Mayer, Julie
    Ogungbesan, Adejoke
    EXPERT OPINION ON DRUG METABOLISM & TOXICOLOGY, 2010, 6 (07) : 793 - 796