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Primary biliary cholangitis drug evaluation and regulatory approval: Where do we go from here?

  • David E.J. Jones
  • , Ulrich Beuers
  • , Alan Bonder
  • , Marco Carbone
  • , Emma Culver
  • , Jessica Dyson
  • , Robert G. Gish
  • , Bettina E. Hansen
  • , Gideon Hirschfield
  • , Rebecca Jones
  • , Kris Kowdley
  • , Andreas E. Kremer
  • , Keith Lindor
  • , Marlyn Mayo
  • , George Mells
  • , James Neuberger
  • , Martin Prince
  • , Mark Swain
  • , Atsushi Tanaka
  • , Douglas Thorburn
  • Michael Trauner, Palak Trivedi, Martin Weltman, Andrew Yeoman, Cynthia Levy
  • Newcastle University
  • Amsterdam University Medical Center
  • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
  • University of Milan - Bicocca
  • ASST Grande Ospedale Niguarda
  • John Radcliffe Hospital
  • University of Oxford
  • Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
  • Hepatitis B Foundation
  • Stanford University
  • Erasmus University Rotterdam
  • University of Toronto
  • Toronto General Hospital Research Institute
  • Toronto General Hospital
  • Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
  • Washington State University Spokane
  • Velocity Clinical Research
  • University of Zurich
  • Arizona State University
  • University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
  • Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
  • University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
  • Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust
  • University of Calgary
  • Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust
  • Medical University of Vienna
  • University of Birmingham
  • Nepean Hospital
  • Aneurin Bevan Health Board
  • University of Miami

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) is a chronic cholestatic liver disease. The management landscape was transformed 20 years ago with the advent of ursodeoxycholic acid. Up to 40% of patients do not, however, respond adequately to ursodeoxycholic acid and therefore still remain at risk of disease progression to cirrhosis. The introduction of obeticholic acid as a second-line therapy for patients failing ursodeoxycholic acid has improved outcomes for patients with PBC. There remains, however, a need for better treatment for patients at higher risk. The greatest threat facing our efforts to improve treatment in PBC is, paradoxically, the regulatory approval model providing conditional marketing authorization for new drugs based on biochemical markers on the condition that long-term, randomized placebo-controlled outcome trials are performed to confirm efficacy. As demonstrated by the COBALT confirmatory study with obeticholic acid, it is difficult to retain patients in the required follow-on confirmatory placebo-controlled PBC outcome trials when a licensed drug is commercially available. New PBC therapies in development, such as the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonists, face even greater challenges in demonstrating outcome benefit through randomized placebo-controlled studies once following conditional marketing authorization, as there will be even more treatment options available. A recently published EMA Reflection Paper provides some guidance on the regulatory pathway to full approval but fails to recognize the importance of real-world data in providing evidence of outcome benefit in rare diseases. Here we explore the impact of the EMA reflection paper on PBC therapy and offer pragmatic solutions for generating evidence of long-term outcomes through real-world data collection.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1291-1300
Number of pages10
JournalHepatology
Volume80
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2024

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