Predictive Medicine Means "Ten Years of Bad News"
This article was originally published in RPM Report
Executive Summary
FDA expects pharmacogenomics to help turn around drug development. But one researcher says the first decade of applying the tenchonology will focus almost exclusively on limiting markets.
You may also be interested in...
Where Have All the New Drugs Gone
The drug approval drought keeps getting worse. FDA says it approved 20 new products during the year, one of the lowest totals in two decades. In fact, focusing on genuinely innovative medicines, the total was even worse. The good news is that 2006 should be a much better year. But focusing on 2006 misses the point: it's the long-term trend that matters. The hope for a turnaround relies on some leaps of faith. Industry is gambling that advances in drug development science will pay off-even though the first efforts to reap the fruits of the genomics revolution are one reason for the current drought.
Partisan Politics Returns To US FDA Congressional Oversight
The US FDA has stood out as an agency that tends to draw broad bipartisan support amid a generally rancorous and divided Congress. A House hearing, however, may be a sign that those days are over.
Medicare Reaffirms Faith In Formulary Review Process Ahead Of Part D Changes
Dramatic transformation in the US Medicare Part D benefit design does not require any changes to CMS’ overall approach to reviewing formulary submissions from private drug plan sponsors, the agency says in its final guidance implementing the design changes for 2025.