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The use of emerging safety biomarkers in nonclinical and clinical safety assessment - The current and future state: An IQ DruSafe industry survey

Authors :
J. Eric McDuffie
William J. Reagan
Joanna Harding
James D. Smith
Dominique Brees
Tanja S. Zabka
Magali Guffroy
Deidre A. Dalmas
Jean-Charles Gautier
Lila Ramaiah
Alison Wolfreys
John E. Burkhardt
A. Eric Schultze
Warren E. Glaab
Source :
Regulatory toxicology and pharmacology : RTP. 120
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies rarely disclose their use of translational emerging safety biomarkers (ESBs) during drug development, and the impact of ESB use on the speed of drug development remains unclear. A cross-industry survey of 20 companies of varying size was conducted to understand current trends in ESB use and future use prospects. The objectives were to: (1) determine current ESB use in nonclinical and clinical drug development and impact on asset advancement; (2) identify opportunities, gaps, and challenges to greater ESB implementation; and (3) benchmark perspectives on regulatory acceptance. Although ESBs were employed in only 5–50% of studies/programs, most companies used ESBs to some extent, with larger companies demonstrating greater nonclinical use. Inclusion of ESBs in investigational new drug applications (INDs) was similar across all companies; however, differences in clinical trial usage could vary among the prevailing health authority (HA). Broader implementation of ESBs requires resource support, cross-industry partnerships, and collaboration with HAs. This includes generating sufficient foundational data, demonstrating nonclinical to clinical translatability and practical utility, and clearly written criteria by HAs to enable qualification. If achieved, ESBs will play a critical role in the development of next-generation, translationally-tailored standard laboratory tests for drug development.

Details

ISSN :
10960295
Volume :
120
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Regulatory toxicology and pharmacology : RTP
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....43b5cd09e29bfbf7127c37f6846504a0