Enhancing the incorporation of the patient’s voice in drug development and evaluation

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Abstract

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has multiple mechanisms for its regulators and staff to interact with patients – but none quite like its novel Patient-Focused Drug Development (PFDD) initiative. FDA established the PFDD initiative to more systematically obtain the patient perspective on specific diseases and their currently available treatments. Since the initiative’s inception in 2012, FDA has held 24 PFDD meetings, covering a range of disease areas and hearing directly from thousands of patients and caregivers. FDA’s PFDD meetings have also provided key stakeholders, including patient advocates, researchers, drug developers, healthcare providers, and other government officials, an opportunity to hear the patient’s voice. The lessons learned include but are not limited to specific experiences that matter most to patients, patient perspectives on meaningful treatment benefits and how patients want to be engaged in the drug development process. FDA recognizes that FDA-led PFDD meetings alone cannot address the gaps in information on the patient perspective. Further enhancing the incorporation of the patient’s voice in drug development and evaluation continues to be a priority for FDA.

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Chalasani, M., Vaidya, P., & Mullin, T. (2018, April 2). Enhancing the incorporation of the patient’s voice in drug development and evaluation. Research Involvement and Engagement. BioMed Central Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0093-3

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