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首页> 外文期刊>PLoS Medicine >The use of validated and nonvalidated surrogate endpoints in two European Medicines Agency expedited approval pathways: A cross-sectional study of products authorised 2011–2018
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The use of validated and nonvalidated surrogate endpoints in two European Medicines Agency expedited approval pathways: A cross-sectional study of products authorised 2011–2018

机译:在两个欧洲药品管理局的加速批准途径中使用经过验证的和未经验证的替代终点:对2011-2018年授权产品的横断面研究

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Background In situations of unmet medical need or in the interests of public health, expedited approval pathways, including conditional marketing authorisation (CMA) and accelerated assessment (AA), speed up European Medicines Agency (EMA) marketing authorisation recommendations for medicinal products. CMAs are based on incomplete benefit-risk assessment data and authorisation remains conditional until regulator-imposed confirmatory postmarketing measures are fulfilled. For products undergoing AA, complete safety and efficacy data should be available, and postauthorisation measures may include only standard requirements of risk management and pharmacovigilance plans. In the pivotal trials supporting products assessed by expedited pathways, surrogate endpoints reduce drug development time compared with waiting for the intended clinical outcomes. Whether surrogate endpoints supporting products authorised through CMA and AA pathways reliably predict clinical benefits of therapy has not been studied systematically. Our objectives were to determine the extent to which surrogate endpoints are used and to assess whether their validity had been confirmed according to published hierarchies. Methods and findings We used European Public Assessment Reports (EPARs) to identify the primary endpoints in the pivotal trials supporting products authorised through CMA or AA pathways during January 1, 2011 to December 31, 2018. We excluded products that were vaccines, topical, reversal, or bleeding prophylactic agents or withdrawn within the study time frame. Where pivotal trials reported surrogate endpoints, we conducted PubMed searches for evidence of validity for predicting clinical outcomes. We used 2 published hierarchies to assess validity level. Surrogates with randomised controlled trials supporting the surrogate-clinical outcome relationship were rated as ‘validated’. Fifty-one products met the inclusion criteria; 26 underwent CMAs, and 25 underwent AAs. Overall, 26 products were for oncology indications, 10 for infections, 8 for genetic disorders, and 7 for other systems disorders. Five products (10%), all AAs, were authorised based on pivotal trials reporting clinical outcomes, and 46 (90%) were authorised based on surrogate endpoints. No studies were identified that validated the surrogate endpoints. Among a total of 49 products with surrogate endpoints reported, most were rated according to the published hierarchies as being ‘reasonably likely’ (n = 30; 61%) or of having ‘biological plausibility’ (n = 46; 94%) to predict clinical outcomes. EPARs did not consistently explain the nature of the pivotal trial endpoints supporting authorisations, whether surrogate endpoints were validated or not, or describe the endpoints to be reported in the confirmatory postmarketing studies. Our study has limitations: we may have overlooked relevant validation studies; the findings apply to 2 expedited pathways and may not be generalisable to products authorised through the standard assessment pathway. Conclusions The pivotal trial evidence supporting marketing authorisations for products granted CMA or AA was based dominantly on nonvalidated surrogate endpoints. EPARs and summary product characteristic documents, including patient information leaflets, need to state consistently the nature and limitations of endpoints in pivotal trials supporting expedited authorisations so that prescribers and patients appreciate shortcomings in the evidence about actual clinical benefit. For products supported by nonvalidated surrogate endpoints, postauthorisation measures to confirm clinical benefit need to be imposed by the regulator on the marketing authorisation holders.
机译:背景技术在医疗需求未得到满足或出于公共卫生利益的情况下,加快批准途径,包括有条件的市场许可(CMA)和加速评估(AA),可以加快欧洲药品管理局(EMA)对药品的市场许可建议。 CMA基于不完整的收益风险评估数据,并且授权仍然是有条件的,直到满足监管机构提出的确认性上市后措施为止。对于经过AA认证的产品,应提供完整的安全性和有效性数据,并且授权后的措施可能仅包括风险管理和药物警戒计划的标准要求。在支持通过快速途径评估产品的关键试验中,与等待预期的临床结果相比,替代终点减少了药物开发时间。尚未通过系统研究研究支持通过CMA和AA途径授权的产品的替代终点能否可靠地预测治疗的临床益处。我们的目标是确定代理端点的使用范围,并评估是否已根据发布的层次结构确认了其有效性。方法和发现我们使用欧洲公共评估报告(EPAR)来确定支持2011年1月1日至2018年12月31日通过CMA或AA途径授权的产品的关键试验的主要终点。我们不包括疫苗,局部用药,逆转用药等产品,或预防剂出血或在研究时间内撤回。在关键性试验报告了替代终点的地方,我们进行了PubMed搜索,以寻找可用于预测临床结果的有效性证据。我们使用2个已发布的层次结构来评估有效性级别。具有支持替代物-临床结局关系的随机对照试验的替代物被评为“有效”。符合入选标准的产品有五十一种; 26例进行了CMA,25例进行了AA。总体而言,有26种产品用于肿瘤适应症,10种用于感染,8种用于遗传疾病,7种用于其他系统疾病。根据报告临床结果的关键试验,批准了五种产品(10%)(所有AA),而根据替代终点批准了46种(90%)的产品。没有发现可以验证替代终点的研究。在报告的总共49个具有替代终点的产品中,大多数根据已发布的等级被评定为“合理可能”(n = 30; 61%)或具有“生物似然性”(n = 46; 94%)以预测临床结果。 EPAR并不能始终如一地解释支持授权的关键试验终点的性质,无论替代终点是否经过验证,还是描述了待验证的上市后研究中要报告的终点。我们的研究有局限性:我们可能忽略了相关的验证研究;该发现适用于2条快速途径,可能不适用于通过标准评估途径授权的产品。结论支持授予CMA或AA产品营销许可的关键试验证据主要基于未验证的替代终点。 EPAR和摘要产品特征文档(包括患者信息传单)需要在支持加急授权的关键试验中始终说明端点的性质和局限性,以便开药者和患者能够体会到有关实际临床获益的证据的不足。对于由未经验证的替代端点支持的产品,监管机构需要对营销授权持有人施加授权后措施以确认临床利益。

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