The World Health Organization's Essential Medicines List: An Endorsement of Incremental Innovation and Follow-On Research

A. Wertheimer, Thomas M. Santella, Nicole M. Chaney
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACTSixteen years ago, Lasagna et al. conducted a study designed to determine the impact of “me-too” drugs and follow-on research on the quality and quantity of drug therapies. Using the World Health Organization's (WHO) Essential Medicines List (EML) as a template for the most important medicines used around the world, they found that in 1987, about 50% of the drugs advocated by WHO were not innovator drugs but the result of follow-on research. Irrespective of these results, critics have continued to decry molecularly modified drugs and follow-on research as a mere profit tool of the pharmaceutical industry. As the debate is yet unresolved, the Center for Pharmaceutical Health Services Research (CPHSR) at Temple University felt it was time to reevaluate the current EML to find out whether or not molecular modifications have continued to improve drug therapy. Using the same methodology as the Lasagna study, an analysis of the 2003 EML showed that 81% of the drugs on the list were “me-too” products. Fu...
世界卫生组织的基本药物清单:支持渐进式创新和后续研究
【摘要】16年前,Lasagna等人进行了一项研究,旨在确定“模仿”药物的影响,并对药物治疗的质量和数量进行了后续研究。他们将世界卫生组织(世卫组织)基本药物清单(EML)作为世界各地使用的最重要药物的模板,发现在1987年,世卫组织倡导的药物中约有50%不是创新药物,而是后续研究的结果。不管这些结果如何,批评家们继续谴责分子修饰药物和后续研究仅仅是制药业的盈利工具。由于争论尚未解决,天普大学药物健康服务研究中心(CPHSR)认为是时候重新评估当前的EML,以找出分子修饰是否继续改善药物治疗。使用与千层面研究相同的方法,对2003年EML的分析表明,清单上81%的药物是“仿制”产品。傅……
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