Product logins

Find logins to all Clarivate products below.


Getting to Market Quicker: U.S. Physician and Payer Perceptions of Breakthrough Designation for Malignant Melanoma, Breast Cancer, NSCLC, Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, and Multiple Myeloma | Physician & Payer Forum | US | 2014

Breakthrough therapy designation was introduced by the FDA in 2012 to expedite the drug development process for promising novel therapies for serious or life-threatening conditions. In 2013, of 28 breakthrough therapy designations publicly announced, 12 were for oncology indications, and the first breakthrough therapy designations to gain regulatory approval (obinutuzumab [Roche/Genentech’s Gazyva] and ibrutinib [Janssen Biotech/Pharmacyclics’ Imbruvica]) were for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). These designations have been awarded for both hematological and solid tumor types, including multiple myeloma, non-small-cell lung cancer, malignant melanoma, and breast cancer. Breakthrough therapy designation therefore appears set to become an important accolade in oncology drug development and, as such, has received close attention from drug developers. Because the breakthrough therapy designation program is aimed at quickening drug review times, therapies may achieve earlier regulatory approval compared with standard review, a key advantage in increasingly competitive and fragmented oncology markets.

The breakthrough therapy designation program potentially impacts drug developers planning for novel therapies; if an agent gains regulatory approval more quickly, considerations such as appropriate clinical trial design to secure favorable market access and optimal positioning in the treatment algorithm will need to be considered at an earlier stage of drug development.

Related Market Assessment Reports

Report
Asthma – Current Treatment – Treatment Algorithms: Claims Data Analysis – Pediatric Asthma (US)
Pediatric asthma is treated using two types of pharmacotherapies: rescue therapy for acute symptoms via bronchodilation (e.g., a SABA such as Teva’s ProAir HFA) and maintenance therapy to prevent…
Report
Acute Coronary Syndrome – Unmet Need – Unmet Need – Acute Coronary Syndrome: Secondary Prevention, on Top of Statin Treatment (US/EU)
This report covers the 12-month post-hospital management of secondary prevention in ACS patients. Reducing cardiovascular (CV) residual risk and achieving guideline-recommended LDL-C targets…
Report
Beta Thalassemia – Landscape & Forecast – Niche & Rare Disease Landscape & Forecast (US/EU5)
Beta thalassemia (BT) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by the reduced production of hemoglobin. BT minor is caused by a mutation in one hemoglobin beta (HBB) gene, and transfusion-dependent…
Report
Multiple Sclerosis – Unmet Need – Unmet Need – Multiple Sclerosis: Nonrelapsing Secondary-Progressive Multiple Sclerosis (US/EU)
No treatments are approved for nonrelapsing secondary-progressive multiple sclerosis (nrSP-MS), an MS disease course in which physical disability accumulates in the absence of superimposed relapses…
Report
Osteoarthritic Pain – Current Treatment – Treatment Algorithms: Claims Data Analysis – Osteoarthritic Pain (US)
Osteoarthritic (OA) pain affects more than 30 million people in the United States, and the aging population and rising obesity rates are expected to drive further increases. Current treatments,…