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Published in: Drugs & Aging 6/2022

13-06-2022 | Current Opinion

Aspiring to Reasonableness in Accelerated Approval: Anticipating and Avoiding the Next Aducanumab

Authors: Emily A. Largent, Andrew Peterson, Jason Karlawish, Holly Fernandez Lynch

Published in: Drugs & Aging | Issue 6/2022

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Abstract

The US Food and Drug Administration’s decisions about drug approval—though guided by science, as well as relevant statutes, regulations, and guidance documents—reflect normative judgments about how the agency should exercise its discretion. This is particularly true in the context of the “accelerated approval” pathway, where the agency must balance speeding to market drugs for patients with unmet needs before they have been proven to work and ensuring confidence about the benefits and risks of those drugs. A key challenge in evaluating normative judgments such as these is that reasonable people can disagree, rendering it difficult to proclaim with certainty that a particular decision is right or wrong. Therefore, we propose that it is preferable to ask whether a decision is reasonable. A decision is reasonable when it transparently, comprehensively, and fairly balances the interests of affected parties, within the parameters of the decision maker’s legal authority. If a decision achieves these three qualities, it can be viewed as legitimate and worthy of trust and confidence, regardless of whether one agrees with the particular outcome. We recommend that the Food and Drug Administration adopt procedural protections to promote reasonableness in four domains affecting accelerated approval decisions: pathway gatekeeping, endpoint selection, stakeholder engagement, and deliberation. This should aid the agency in minimizing controversies, such as that surrounding the 2021 approval of aducanumab (Aduhelm; Biogen).
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Metadata
Title
Aspiring to Reasonableness in Accelerated Approval: Anticipating and Avoiding the Next Aducanumab
Authors
Emily A. Largent
Andrew Peterson
Jason Karlawish
Holly Fernandez Lynch
Publication date
13-06-2022
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Drugs & Aging / Issue 6/2022
Print ISSN: 1170-229X
Electronic ISSN: 1179-1969
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40266-022-00949-8

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