Individualized Therapeutics Development for Rare Diseases: The Current Ethical Landscape and Policy Responses.

drug regulation ethics health policy investigational oligonucleotide precision medicine rare diseases therapies

Journal

Nucleic acid therapeutics
ISSN: 2159-3345
Titre abrégé: Nucleic Acid Ther
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101562758

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 2022
Historique:
pubmed: 20 11 2021
medline: 27 4 2022
entrez: 19 11 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The first individualized therapy was administered in the United States just 2 years ago, when milasen, a therapeutic adapted from a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved antisense oligonucleotide technology, was developed for a young girl with an extremely rare genetic mutation associated with Batten disease. Since then there has been an explosion of enthusiasm in developing customized treatments for extremely rare genetic conditions. These interventions raise some of the ethics concerns characteristic of novel therapeutics while simultaneously challenging existing legal, regulatory, and ethical understandings. Their individualized aspect blurs to the point of erasing the historically distinct line separating research from treatment, leading regulators and ethics oversight bodies to reevaluate existing policies. As experimental therapeutics, they raise the potential for both compromised informed consent and conflicts of interest, and their considerable expense provokes serious justice concerns. This article examines these challenges, urges multidisciplinary stakeholder engagement to address them in a transparent and practicable manner, and recommends initial policy responses.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34797685
doi: 10.1089/nat.2021.0035
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

111-117

Auteurs

Alison Bateman-House (A)

Division of Medical Ethics, Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.

Lisa Kearns (L)

Division of Medical Ethics, Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH