ACT To Sustain: Adoptive Cell Therapy To Sustain Access to Non-Commercialized Genetically Modified Cell Therapies

IF 3.6 3区 医学 Q2 HEMATOLOGY
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Abstract

Genetically modified cell therapies (GMCT), particularly immune effector cells (IEC) such as chimeric receptor antigen (CAR) T cells, have shown promise in curing cancer and rare diseases after a single treatment course. Following close behind CAR T approvals are GMCT based on hematopoietic stem cells, such as products developed for hemoglobinopathies and other disorders. Academically sponsored GMCT products, often developed in academic centers without industry involvement, face challenges in sustaining access after completion of early phase studies when there is no commercial partner invested in completing registration trials for marketing applications. The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy (ASTCT) formed a task force named ACT To Sustain (Adoptive Cell Therapy to Sustain) to address the “valley of death” of academic GMCT products. This paper presents the task force's findings and considerations regarding financial sustainability of academically sponsored GMCT products in the absence of commercial development. We outline case scenarios illustrating barriers to maintaining access to promising GMCT developed by academic centers. The paper also delves into the current state of GMCT development, commercialization, and reimbursement, citing examples of abandoned products, cost estimates associated with GMCT manufacturing and real-world use of cost recovery. We propose potential solutions to address the financial, regulatory, and logistical challenges associated with sustaining access to academically sponsored GMCT products and to ensure that products with promising results do not languish in a “valley of death” due to financial or implementational barriers. The suggestions include aligning US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) designations with benefit coverage, allowing for cost recovery of certain products as a covered benefit, and engaging with regulators and policy makers to discuss alternative pathways for academic centers to provide access. We stress the importance of sustainable access to GMCT and call for collaborative efforts to develop regulatory pathways that support access to academically sponsored GMCT products.

ACT To Sustain:采用细胞疗法 维持非商业化转基因细胞疗法的可及性
转基因细胞疗法(GMCT),尤其是免疫效应细胞(IEC),如嵌合受体抗原(CAR)T细胞,已显示出在单疗程治疗后治愈癌症和罕见疾病的前景。紧随 CAR T 获批之后的是基于造血干细胞的 GMCT,如针对血红蛋白病和其他疾病开发的产品。学术赞助的 GMCT 产品通常由学术中心开发,没有业界参与,在完成早期阶段研究后,如果没有商业合作伙伴投资完成上市申请的注册试验,则在持续获取方面面临挑战。美国移植与细胞治疗学会(ASTCT)成立了一个名为 "ACT To Sustain"(支持性细胞治疗)的特别工作组,以解决学术性 GMCT 产品的 "死亡之谷 "问题。本文介绍了特别工作组的研究结果,以及在没有商业开发的情况下,学术界赞助的基因改造CT产品在财务上的可持续性的考虑因素。我们概述了一些案例,说明了学术中心开发的有前景的基因改造CT在维持使用方面存在的障碍。本文还深入探讨了 GMCT 开发、商业化和报销的现状,列举了被遗弃产品的实例、与 GMCT 生产相关的成本估算以及成本回收在现实世界中的应用。我们提出了潜在的解决方案,以解决与持续获得学术赞助的基因改造CT产品相关的财务、监管和后勤挑战,并确保具有良好效果的产品不会因财务或实施障碍而在 "死亡之谷 "徘徊。这些建议包括使美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)的指定与福利覆盖范围相一致,允许将某些产品的成本回收作为福利覆盖范围,以及与监管机构和政策制定者合作,讨论学术中心提供获取途径的其他途径。我们强调可持续获取基因改造治疗技术的重要性,并呼吁各方通力合作,开发支持获取学术赞助的基因改造治疗技术产品的监管途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
15.60%
发文量
1061
审稿时长
51 days
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