pharmafileOctober 10, 2017
Tag: china , Clinical trials , New Drug Approval
China has announced that it will accelarate access to medicines for patients by incorporating data from clinical trials conducted overseas into its process for new drug approval, meaning there will be less delays for international manufacturers and patients alike to actually use the medicines they want in the world’s second-largest pharmaceutical market.
China to speed up new drug approval by incorporating data from clinical trials conducted overseas.
China’s process for authorising new drugs is known to be problematic compared to other developed markets, approving around 100 new drugs in the past five years – around two-thirds less than comparable nations. With a population of 1.4 billion, the country has also been grappling with high medical costs for its citizens.
This divide between China and other nations was a driving factor in the draft proposals outlining the plan: "Overall, China’s support for scientific innovation with drugs and medical devices is lacking, and the quality of products on the market still falls short of top international levels. We must speed up the examination and approval of urgently needed drugs and medical devices," the documents read.
The proposals, announced by the State Council, come just days before the 19th Congress of the Communist Party this week. In practice, they will mean that drug makers will no longer need to conduct additional trials in the country after receiving approvals elsewhere, potentially cutting years from the time it takes a drug to reach market.
"We want to make our drug industry large-scale and strong, make it more competitive, and shift our long-term reliance on imports of new drugs," commented Wu Zhen, Deputy Head of the China Food and Drug Administration. "Some drugs have been used overseas for six to seven years before making it to market in China."
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