Affiliations: Plasma Protein Therapeutics Association, 147 Old
Solomon's Island Road, Annapolis MD 21401, USA; Centre for Orthopaedic
Research/Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, University of
Western Australia WA, Australia. E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: The application of evidence-based medicine to the indications
addressed by plasma protein therapies is problematic. So-called Level 1
evidence in the form of randomized clinical trials using classical designs to
demonstrate efficacy is seldom possible, because the small numbers of patients
denies the appropriate level of power from being built in the trial design. In
addition, patient accrual is difficult because of understandable patient
resistance and "fatigue" at the number of trials. Efforts to address this by
regulating agencies over the past years have yielded promising policies in some
areas, which recognize the inherent problems and outline practical solutions.
The use of patient registries to accrue safety and efficacy data, while rapidly
becoming accepting an accepted component as a basis for pre-market review and
approval, is also promising as a basis for the incorporation of post-market
data, through Phase 4 surveys, of approved therapies. As such, innovative
thinking to address the problem of rare disorders may also lead to desirable
reform in all aspects of regulation, with a shift from pre- to post-market
review.