Philip Timmerman, Matthew Barfield, Jon G Bartlet, Peter Blattmann, Nils Boehm, Louis Christodoulou, Cecilie Freja Dalby Kjelgaard, Tracy Iles, Fabian Iltzsche, Marco Klinge, Leslie Henderson, Lee Monk, Robert Nelson, Yang Liu
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Navigating IVDR challenges for pharmacokinetic, anti-drug antibodies, and biomarker assays in early clinical research: a recommendation from the European Bioanalysis Forum.
The European Bioanalysis Forum has observed increasing misclassification of pharmacokinetic, anti-drug antibody, and biomarker research assays not used for patient management under the European Union's In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation, despite their non-diagnostic intent in early clinical development. This misinterpretation, fueled by ambiguous protocol language, limited cross-functional awareness, and inconsistent national implementation, is leading to unnecessary delays in clinical trials and increased and non-added value regulatory burden. Through a structured evaluation involving a focus workshop and regional roadshows, the European Bioanalysis Forum identified some manageable origins of the issue and its operational consequences. This recommendation paper outlines these observations and wants to propose a pragmatic path forward. This includes clearer regulatory guidance to exempt noncommercial, non-diagnostic assays from In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation when not developed or intended as registered diagnostics. We also highlight the importance of stakeholder education and coordinated regulatory dialogue. These steps aim to preserve the regulator's intent of patient protection while enabling timely and efficient clinical research.
BioanalysisBIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS-CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
88
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍:
Reliable data obtained from selective, sensitive and reproducible analysis of xenobiotics and biotics in biological samples is a fundamental and crucial part of every successful drug development program. The same principles can also apply to many other areas of research such as forensic science, toxicology and sports doping testing.
The bioanalytical field incorporates sophisticated techniques linking sample preparation and advanced separations with MS and NMR detection systems, automation and robotics. Standards set by regulatory bodies regarding method development and validation increasingly define the boundaries between speed and quality.
Bioanalysis is a progressive discipline for which the future holds many exciting opportunities to further reduce sample volumes, analysis cost and environmental impact, as well as to improve sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, efficiency, assay throughput, data quality, data handling and processing.
The journal Bioanalysis focuses on the techniques and methods used for the detection or quantitative study of analytes in human or animal biological samples. Bioanalysis encourages the submission of articles describing forward-looking applications, including biosensors, microfluidics, miniaturized analytical devices, and new hyphenated and multi-dimensional techniques.
Bioanalysis delivers essential information in concise, at-a-glance article formats. Key advances in the field are reported and analyzed by international experts, providing an authoritative but accessible forum for the modern bioanalyst.