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The FDA Accelerated Approval pathway, which has been pivotal in enabling early access to new oncology drugs over the past three decades, has recently come under increased scrutiny. New draft guidance published in March 2023 offers several possible solutions to improve this pathway, with the ultimate goal of improving outcomes for patients with cancer, but might also have important limitations.
Between 2016 and 2022, 83 previously approved oncology drugs were covered and reimbursed in China through a value-based pricing negotiation programme, which resulted in substantial price cuts but did not improve the correlation between drug cost and clinical benefit. Herein, we call for an improved, transparent value-based pricing model to better account for high-value innovation in oncology drugs.
Transgender patients are a marginalized group for whom current standards of oncology have yet to be optimized. In this Comment, we highlight opportunities for transgender-inclusive and transgender-specific practices across the cancer care continuum and identify evidence gaps that will need to be filled to attain optimal care for transgender populations.
Recent FDA reviews of cemiplimab and sintilimab combined with chemotherapy for patients with advanced-stage non-small-cell lung cancer reached discordant outcomes, as cemiplimab was approved and sintilimab was rejected. The applications share many serious faults, including neither serving an unmet need nor enrolling any patients from the USA. We argue that the FDA criteria should be more transparent and consistent; moreover, the historical policy of the FDA to abstain from consideration of the cost of a drug perpetuates a crisis in oncology care and should be re-examined.