Seeking a better landscape for therapy development in neuromuscular disorders |
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Authors: | Jane Larkindale DPhil John D. Porter PhD |
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Affiliation: | 1. Duchenne Regulatory Science Consortium, Critical Path Institute, 1730 East River Road, Tucson, Arizona, USA;2. Myotonic Dystrophy Foundation, San Francisco, California, USA |
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Abstract: | Although the neuromuscular field has seen accelerated approval of a drug for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and full approval of one for spinal muscular atrophy, these experiences have shown that objective data and an adequate level of effect are essential for drug approval and reimbursement. The appropriateness and validity of biomarkers and clinically meaningful endpoints and an understanding of disease progression rates all played essential roles in the levels of evidence for these drugs. Such tools are best developed through integration of clinical data. The siloing of clinical data for rare neuromuscular diseases represents a considerable barrier to achieving better care and novel therapies for patients living with neuromuscular diseases. We discuss a data‐sharing model implemented for DMD and urge cultural changes in the ways natural history and clinical trial data are collected and shared across all neuromuscular diseases in order to benefit the primary stakeholder, the patient. Muscle Nerve 57 : 16–19, 2018 |
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Keywords: | clinical research data sharing Duchenne muscular dystrophy natural history neuromuscular disorders therapy development |
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