FDA, NIH Increase Oversight of Gene Therapy Trials

Publication
Article
Oncology NEWS InternationalOncology NEWS International Vol 9 No 5
Volume 9
Issue 5

ROCKVILLE, Md-Stung by the failure of several researchers to fully comply with federal gene therapy rules and reporting procedures, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have taken a series of steps to tighten the control and monitoring of such trials.

ROCKVILLE, Md—Stung by the failure of several researchers to fully comply with federal gene therapy rules and reporting procedures, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have taken a series of steps to tighten the control and monitoring of such trials.

Most recently, the FDA announced that gene therapy researchers must submit their clinical trial monitoring plans to the agency. FDA said it will review the plans and seek changes to improve a program’s quality where needed. FDA will also conduct inspections of clinical trials to assess whether researchers are following the monitoring plans and whether monitoring has been adequate to identify and correct critical problems.

FDA and NIH will also sponsor symposia about four times a year at which gene therapy researchers will publicly discuss medical and scientific data germane to their specialties and issues important to the success and safety of clinical trials of gene therapy agents.

Recent Videos
Ongoing studies seek to evaluate immunotherapy in earlier lines of therapy for patients with early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma.
Strict inclusion criteria may disproportionately exclude racial minority populations from participating in breast cancer trials.
A paucity of prospective, well-vetted data to guide therapy in patients with rare lymphomas may result in a reliance on expert consensus guidelines.
1 expert in this video
1 expert in this video
1 expert in this video
Testing a patient’s genetics may influence decisions such as using longer courses of radiotherapy, says Rachit Kumar, MD.
Related Content