Breakthrough drugs approved with less stringent criteria
1. The FDA’s breakthrough designation is intended to expedite the development and review of new treatments for serious or life-threatening conditions. Breakthrough designation entitles sponsors to more intensive FDA guidance on an efficient and accelerated development program, as well as eligibility for other actions to expedite FDA review, such as rolling submission and priority review. To earn breakthrough designation, a treatment must show encouraging early clinical results demonstrating substantial improvement over available therapies with regard to a clinically significant endpoint, or it must fulfill an unmet need.
2. The FDA grants priority review to applications for products that may provide significant improvements in the treatment, diagnosis, or prevention of serious conditions. The FDA aims to take action on a priority review application within 6 months of receiving it, rather than the standard 10 months.
3. The FDA grants orphan designation to products intended to treat, diagnose, or prevent diseases/disorders that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US. Orphan designation provides incentives for sponsors to develop products for rare diseases. This may include tax credits toward the cost of clinical trials, prescription drug user fee waivers, and 7 years of market exclusivity if the product is approved.
4. The FDA’s fast track program is designed to expedite clinical development and submission of applications for drugs with the potential to treat serious or life-threatening conditions and address unmet medical needs. Fast track designation facilitates frequent interactions with the FDA review team, including meetings to discuss the drug’s development plan and written communications about issues such as trial design and use of biomarkers. Drugs that receive fast track designation may be eligible for accelerated approval and priority review if relevant criteria are met. Fast track drugs may also be eligible for rolling review, which allows a developer to submit individual sections of a drug’s application for review as they are ready, rather than waiting until all sections are complete.
5. The FDA’s accelerated approval program allows conditional approval of a drug that fills an unmet medical need for a serious condition. Accelerated approval is based on surrogate or intermediate endpoints that are reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit. Continued approval of drugs granted accelerated approval may be contingent upon verification of clinical benefit in confirmatory trials.