Information about confirmatory studies required for new drugs conditionally approved by Health Canada: A cross-sectional study

Original research
by
Lexchin, Joel

Release Date

2022

Geography

Canada

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

Health Canada conditionally approves new drugs using its Notice of Compliance with conditions (NOC/c) policy. Under this policy Qualifying Notices (QNs) list confirmatory studies that need to be conducted to confirm the drug’s efficacy. This study examines the depth of information about methodology and patient demographics in the confirmatory studies. It also compares the outcomes (surrogate or clinical) used to approve the drugs with the outcomes proposed in the confirmatory studies.

Findings/Key points

QNs contain little information about the methodology or patient demographics of confirmatory studies. Confirmatory studies with surrogate outcomes were used almost one-third of the time to validate efficacy in drugs initially approved using surrogate outcomes. Health Canada needs to develop a template about what information regarding confirmatory studies should be contained in a QN and rethink its use of confirmatory studies using surrogate outcomes.

Design/methods

A list of drugs approved under the NOC/c policy and their QNs were sourced from two previous publications as well as Health Canada’s NOC/c website. Patient demographics and study methodology in the confirmatory studies listed in the QNs was recorded and counted. The primary outcome used to approve new drugs was recorded from Health Canada’s Summary Basis of Decision website and compared to the type of outcome for studies mentioned in the QNs.

Keywords

Policy/Regulatory