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A “drive-by analysis of accelerated approval is intellectual malpractice,” argues Washington Editor Steve Usdin on the latest BioCentury This Week podcast. Usdin and his BioCentury colleagues explain why a paper on the expedited regulatory pathway written by researchers at the Program on Regulation, Therapeutics, and Law (PORTAL) at Brigham and Women’s Hospital misleads the public about the value of drugs granted accelerated approval. The paper also fails to grasp the pathway’s purpose, which is “to allow risk-taking when there’s evidence that a therapy is reasonably likely to benefit patients who are suffering from a serious condition,” Usdin writes in the Editor’s Commentary.
BioCentury’s editors also discuss how an FDA advisory committee’s support for a myeloma metric makes the broader case for endpoint innovation; why a group of biotechs is delisting from U.K. stock exchange AIM; and the launch of well-funded obesity play Metsera Inc. For more of BioCentury’s coverage of obesity therapeutics, see our Hot Topics page. This week’s podcast is sponsored by Jeito Capital.
View full story: https://www.biocentury.com/article/652185
0:01 - Sponsor Message: Jeito Capital
1:54 - Defending Accelerated Approval
8:44 - Endpoint Innovation
12:55 - Challenges for U.K.'s AIM
18:16 - Obesity Launch: Metsera
Reach us by sending a text
By BioCentury4.8
3131 ratings
A “drive-by analysis of accelerated approval is intellectual malpractice,” argues Washington Editor Steve Usdin on the latest BioCentury This Week podcast. Usdin and his BioCentury colleagues explain why a paper on the expedited regulatory pathway written by researchers at the Program on Regulation, Therapeutics, and Law (PORTAL) at Brigham and Women’s Hospital misleads the public about the value of drugs granted accelerated approval. The paper also fails to grasp the pathway’s purpose, which is “to allow risk-taking when there’s evidence that a therapy is reasonably likely to benefit patients who are suffering from a serious condition,” Usdin writes in the Editor’s Commentary.
BioCentury’s editors also discuss how an FDA advisory committee’s support for a myeloma metric makes the broader case for endpoint innovation; why a group of biotechs is delisting from U.K. stock exchange AIM; and the launch of well-funded obesity play Metsera Inc. For more of BioCentury’s coverage of obesity therapeutics, see our Hot Topics page. This week’s podcast is sponsored by Jeito Capital.
View full story: https://www.biocentury.com/article/652185
0:01 - Sponsor Message: Jeito Capital
1:54 - Defending Accelerated Approval
8:44 - Endpoint Innovation
12:55 - Challenges for U.K.'s AIM
18:16 - Obesity Launch: Metsera
Reach us by sending a text

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