Advice to the New FDA Commissioner

prescription-drug-shortageWriting in The Hill, Mercatus Senior Research Scholar Robert Graboyes discussed ways to boost the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s productivity.  He and coauthor Jordan Reimschisel discussed seven things the FDA could do to speed approval of drugs and medical devices.

His recommendations:

1) Shift from regulation to certification. This process would involve educating patients and providers about risk. Or as he phrased it, “commend and cajole in place of command and control.”

2) Dial back the risk-aversion. The FDA’s risk-aversion has gotten out of control. The agency worries more about preventing hypothetical worst-case scenarios, when it should be focused on promoting best-case solutions.

To that end the FDA should:

3) Return to a safety-only posture. The FDA should leave efficacy to the market to sort out. Currently the FDA requires objective endpoints to be stated ahead of time. Even if a drug is found to be beneficial on several clinical metrics, it will still not gain approval if it failed at its stated endpoints. Drugmakers may not know the best metrics to measure until conducting the clinical trials.

4) Grant approval in stages. An alternative to the yes/no votes that are currently made, the FDA could grant approval in stages. For example, Graboyes explains “patients with time-critical illnesses could gain access before a drug was approved for general usage, for example, through right-to-try rules expediting access to terminally-ill patients. Data from these users could inform later stages of the process.”

5) Introduce foreign reciprocity. If a drug or device is approved in Europe or certain other advanced countries, firms should have an avenue to have that approval recognized in the United States.

6) Restructure. In the European Union private organizations approve drugs with mutual reciprocity, with safe faster results. According to Graboyes this is not unlike how Underwriters Laboratories works in providing independent assessments of safety.

Finally:

7) Become more predictable. Despite advances in information technology, the number of years it takes to approve a drug has about doubled every decade. Physician care using drug therapy and devices is cheaper than most hospital care, nursing home care and many other labor intensive form of care. Yet it’s becoming harder to get drugs approved. One by-product of this is more patients treated in expensive environments like hospitals. Another is drugs that are so hard to get approved that each is its own monopoly that costs patients anywhere form hundreds per month to tens of thousands per month.

The entire article is worth a read here.

 

Comments (4)

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  1. Devon Herrick says:

    There are some great ideas. I especially like the idea of granting approval in stages. That would get the drug out faster, while providing valuable feedback.

  2. Z Woof says:

    My beautiful daughter’s MS Rx was $30,000 a year in 2009 and now it’s #100,000 a year.

    It’s crazy that young poor hardworking American families are paying sky-high Social Security & Medicare taxes so multi-millionaires can set on their boats in Tampa Bay scarfing down free drugs in Medicare. No wonder the young couples have quit giving birth to our future taxpayers.

    Medicare and Social Security discriminate against Black males who have the shortest lifespan between the races and genders. Black males suffer paying high payroll tax their whole lives and then die at 64-years-old before they collect one RED penny and NOTHING goes to their children. Nebraska war hero Senator Bob Kerry (N-NE) said it best with, “All of the money is going to old white women.” It’s clear, Medicare and Social Security are racist.

    REFORM is required. I suggest more choices, options and FREEDOM including tax-free Personal Savings Accounts (PSA) for the saving of Social Security. Then when a man dies at 64-years-old, like my brother Randy, his lifetime of wealth would go to his children, like my nephew Jeff.

    The tax-free PSA and the tax-free HSA will target wealth to all of America’s Little Bitty people.

  3. Allan says:

    Devon, as I have said before I would release important drugs earlier and use green, yellow and red tags to indicate the stage they are in. Green would be like every other drug and red means caution because the drug hasn’t been investigated to the extent necessary. Yellow would be middle of the way.

    I would also make the drug companies declare the tests that will be used for FDA approval in advance so they can’t just dump studies mid way if the numbers aren’t lining up. I would also have me-too drugs use not only the placebo drug, but also the gold standard so we could do side by side comparisons.

    Finally I would not permit pharmacies or any other distributers of drugs to provide the data of which doctors are prescribing which drugs.

  4. Mark Leo says:

    thanks for sharing