Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 I recently attended a seminar about global regulatory compliance and thought that this may be useful at some point. The Orphan drug legisltation is designed to encourage pharmaceutical companies to research rare diseases. I am not sure if PSC would meet these criteria or if it is now more common than this. Does anyone know what the current estimate is for the number of people in the US with PSC? http://www.orphan- europe.com/fe/orphan/jsp/orphan_druglegislations.html The Orphan drug legislations US: Orphan Drug Act 1983 Japan: Orphan Drug Legislation 1993 Australia: Orphan Drug Program 1998 EU: Orphan Drug Legislation 2000 Criteria for Orphan Designation (prevalence) US: less than 200,000 patients/year corresponding to 7.5/10,000 inhabitants Japan: less than 50,000 patients/year corresponding to 4.0/10,000 inhabitants Australia: less than 2,000 patients/year corresponding to 1.1/10,000 inhabitants EU: less than 5.0/10,000 inhabitants corresponding to 185,000 patients/year Prevalence: less than 5 per 10,000 inhabitants Economic or epidemiological criteria 10 years market exclusivity for the therapeutic indication Creation of a Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products Access to centralised procedure for licensing Protocol assistance http://rarediseases.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm? zi=1/XJ & sdn=rarediseases & cdn=health & tm=50 & gps=138_1352_800_558 & f=10 & su =p284.21.140.ip_p284.2.420.ip_ & tt=2 & bt=0 & bts=0 & zu=http% 3A//www.fda.gov/orphan/faq/index.htm How much money is available for grants? The current annual budget for funding grants is approximately $13 million. Clinical trials are awarded grants from $200,000 (Phase 1) and $350,000 (Phase 2 and 3) per year in total costs for up to 3 years. The annual Request for Application (RFA), published in the Federal Register will provide more up-to-date information on dollar limits. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- How are awards made? The number of grant awards varies each year depending on the availability of funds. On-going studies are funded first with the remainder of funds going to new studies. In recent years, OOPD has funded approximately 12-15 new awards annually. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Who may apply? Academic institutions and other responsible organizations: public, private, non-profit, or for-profit. Small businesses are encouraged to apply. Kind Regards, Nichole Rowland (wife of PSC & UC 08/2004) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 Hi Nichole; From: Bambha K, Kim WR, Talwalkar J, Torgerson H, Benson JT, Therneau TM, Loftus EV Jr, Yawn BP, Dickson ER, Melton LJ 3rd 2003 Incidence, clinical spectrum, and outcomes of primary sclerosing cholangitis in a United States community. Gastroenterology 125: 1364-1369. " The prevalence of PSC in 2000 was 20.9 per 100,000 men (95% CI, 9.5 to 32.4) and only 6.3 per 100,000 women (95% CI, 0.1 to 12.5). " If there are 150 million men in the U.S. and IF this assessment of Olmsted county, MN, applies to the entire U.S., then there would be 20.9 x 1500 = 31,350 men with PSC. Similarly if there are 150 million women in the U.S. and IF this assessment of Olmsted county, MN, applies to the entire U.S., then there would be 6.3 x 1500 = 9,450 women with PSC. This gives a total of 40,800 persons affected in the U.S. However, Arne has noted that the population in Olmsted county, MN, may be mainly of Scandinavian origin/ancestry, and if this group has a higher prevalence of PSC than other nationalities, then it may be an overestimate. Certainly, one could say that there is likely to be no more than 41,000 patients in the U.S., and so it would qualify as an orphan disease. Best regards, Dave (father of (21); PSC 07/03; UC 08/03) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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