Leveraging Exploratory Investigational New Drug Studies to Accelerate Drug Development
- 15 June 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) in Clinical Cancer Research
- Vol. 14 (12), 3670-3674
- https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-07-4558
Abstract
In 2006, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration published its guide on exploratory investigational new drug (IND) studies with the goal of making the approach to early-stage, pilot clinical trials more flexible within the context of current regulations. The exploratory IND allows sponsors to initiate clinical trials of limited scale with reduced preclinical requirements. These studies may be important vehicles for the conduct of proof-of-principle pharmacodynamic investigations of highly potent molecules, for bioavailability studies that require only a single drug dose to be administered, and for imaging trials that permit critical dosimetry and biodistribution investigations of new molecules. These trials were done with no therapeutic intent and must be followed by traditional dose-escalation investigations that are supported by standard preclinical toxicologic and pharmacologic studies. To the extent that they allow early evaluations of essential drug characteristics that can only be obtained in humans, exploratory IND trials have the potential to limit the cost and improve the development times of new agents.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Ethics of Phase 0 Oncology TrialsClinical Cancer Research, 2008
- Oncologic Phase 0 Trials Incorporating Clinical Pharmacodynamics: from Concept to PatientClinical Cancer Research, 2008
- Patient Perspectives on Phase 0 Clinical TrialsClinical Cancer Research, 2008
- Designing Phase 0 Cancer Clinical TrialsClinical Cancer Research, 2008
- The Development of Phase I Cancer Trial Methodologies: the Use of Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic End Points Sets the Scene for Phase 0 Cancer Clinical TrialsClinical Cancer Research, 2008
- Phase 0 Trials: An Industry PerspectiveClinical Cancer Research, 2008
- Innovative Early Development Regulatory Approaches: expIND, expCTA, MicrodosingClinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 2007
- CommentaryBritish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 2006
- Can the pharmaceutical industry reduce attrition rates?Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2004