
Clinical Trial Diversity Continues to Face Challenges
After years of FDA issuing guidance documents and launching programs to encourage sponsors to seek broader representation in clinical trials, policy makers have added a “stick” to the process.
Policymakers and biopharma companies acknowledge the importance of assessing drugs and medical products on a wide range of ethnic and racial populations to fully understand medical effects on patients. This has bolstered support for studies to enroll patients in proportion to the prevalence and burden of the disease in relevant subgroups, but achieving such equitable patient representation in clinical trials has been difficult and uneven, at best.
After years of FDA issuing guidance documents and launching programs to encourage sponsors to seek broader representation in clinical trials, policy makers have added a “stick” to the process: research sponsors now will be required to tackle this issue by submitting Diversity Action Plans (DAPs) to the agency when proposing and seeking approval of Phase III and pivotal studies. This provision was included in the
Among a host of FDORA provisions, including those designed to modernize FDA’s accelerated approval program, bolster FDA inspections, and expand oversight of cosmetics, the legislation also requires DAPs that set specific enrollment goals for clinical trials of most drugs and certain medical devices under development. FDA has a year to issue guidance on the program, and there may be some waivers and exceptions, as for bioequivalence studies. But diversity plans will be required for most clinical development programs. FDA will hold a public workshop on the program, issue additional guidances on specific topics, and submit annual reports to Congress once the program gets going.
Uneven efforts
The need to mandate DAPs is supported by studies and analyses showing inadequate patient representation in many clinical trials. A
The results are mixed in this
Similarly, an
The report also described practices developed at certain cancer centers that helped advance diverse enrollment in research. These include assigning community ambassadors to increase awareness of clinical trials in a local area, better training and increased workforce diversity at centers to better explain clinical trial opportunities, and financial and logistical support to overcome barriers to patient participation in research programs.
FDA issued
In discussions on this and earlier FDA proposals on this topic, sponsors have queried the agency on specifics for applying diversity goals to global development programs and for assessing “adequate enrollment” of underrepresented populations. Another issue is whether diversity goals should apply to each individual study or to an overall development program. And sponsors particularly want to know more about how FDA will deal with research programs that fail to meet set goals for patient enrollment.
Many of these issues are addressed in a
About the author
Jill Wechsler is Washington editor for BioPharm International.
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