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A Look Back at Early Access: Activist documents from 1991 and 1997

Treatment Issues: Newsletter of Current Issues in HIV/AIDS - Volume 20, Number 1, 2 & 3, January / March 2006


June 1991: Access vs. Answers: ACT UP/New York, Treatment and Data Committee

"There is, to be sure, an incredible irony in all this. Sick gay men, abandoned by a president who refused publicly to acknowledge their disease on all but one occasion, provided the shock troops to move forward his administration's deregulatory drug control program."
­ Harold Edgar + David Rothman

"The ddI expanded access program saved my life."
­ A Person With AIDS

In the past year and a half, more than 20,000 people have received ddI through expanded access programs. Meanwhile, clinical trials of ddI have enrolled faster than trials for any other comparable antiviral therapy tested by the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG). This doesn't mean that tensions between the need to adequately characterize a new therapy and the need to provide treatment to people at high risk for severely debilitating disease and death have been resolved. Some activists continue to complain that the ddI expanded access program is overly restrictive and demand the drug's approval before clinical trials have been completed. Many doctors and regulators who have seen Bristol Myers-Squibb's NDA application have expressed doubt about the quality of the application.

This experience has initiated a debate about the importance of "Access vs. Answers," as though there were an essential conflict between allowing people for whom no approved therapy exists to access promising unproven medications and the conduct of sound scientific research on those medications. This is more a sign of the intellectual poverty of regulators, scientists and AIDS activists than an indication of any real dichotomy. The regulation of AIDS drugs, like the treatment of AIDS, must build on its experience; we must incorporate knowledge gained from the ddI experience into future attempts to resolve regulatory and trial design issues.

The need for ethical, well-designed trials that provide clear, quick answers has never been more pressing. Some have suggested that validation of new therapies takes so long as to be virtually useless. However, we cannot allow this crisis to eliminate requirements for sound efficacy evaluation. It is grossly unethical to require PWAs to make treatment decisions in an informational vacuum any longer than is absolutely necessary. While the FDA is often unresponsive and painfully slow, deregulation promises nothing more than a capitulation to life-or-death treatment decisions based on "drug of the month" anecdotes, an unacceptable solution to many of us who are fighting for our lives.

The unrecognized benefit of Expanded Access programs is that they provide the equivalent of a Phase Four post-marketing study coterminous with the randomized Phase II efficacy trials—generating invaluable insights into the patterns of use and real-world toxicities likely to be encountered when the drug is taken by its intended population, with all its diversity and heterogeneity. While the FDA might be understandably reluctant to approve a drug which has only been taken by the small number of people in a controlled Phase II trial, proof that the drug is safe in a broad swaths of the real-world HIV population would provide significantly greater confidence, thus supporting an NDA.

The key to achieving faster drug development in AIDS lies not in an exclusive focus on Expanded Access or Parallel Tracks, but rather on their integration into an enlightened program of rapid, flexible, humane and attractive clinical trials.

The activists, regulators, and statisticians have provided the tools. It is up to industry, now, to use these tools to devise not only better treatments and prophylaxes, but a cure for AIDS within this decade.

 

1997: Whatever Happened to Expanded Access?
The PWA Health Group Newsletter

In 1996, expanded access has all but disappeared. Why? AIDS hadn't changed, lots of drugs were in the pipeline, and company profits were climbing. In fact, the more money drug companies made, the smaller and shorter the programs got. In 1996, marketing replaced compassion for PWAs with no other options. Companies designed programs as public relations stunts, getting their brand name out, not the drug. How could they offer lotteries for life-saving drugs?

Like it or not, drug companies are not the same as other corporations. They are part of our health care system. They make products that can save lives. They have a responsibility to society, not just their investors. All over the world, drug prices are regulated, preserving both profit and access. But not in the US, where government officials support corporate health over public health. Expanded access is a real way for companies to honor their community role, offering hope and collecting critical safety data. Expanded access programs are not required. They cost money. In 1989, the urgency of PWAs pushed companies to be generous. AIDS in 1997 is just as urgent. Once again, we need to organize, get noisy and push for fair, early access for all of us who need this chance.

20060110
GM200102


Copyright © 2006 - Treatment Issues. Reproduced with permission. Treatment Issues is published twelve times yearly by GMHC, Inc. All rights reserved. Noncommercial reproduction is encouraged. Subscription lists are kept confidential. GMHC Treatment Issues, The Tisch Building, 119 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011  fredg@gmhc.org  http://www.gmhc.org

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