Scott Gottlieb and Mark McClellan Co-Author
Efficiently launching medical products to combat the current and
future outbreaks of COVID-19 requires supporting the Food and Drug
Administration’s (FDA) work with manufacturers that have high potential
to develop and deliver needed diagnostics, therapeutics, and
prophylactics, stated former FDA Commissioners Scott Gottlieb, MD and
Mark McClellan, MD, PhD, in a working paper issued today by the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy.
The co-authors call for FDA to establish two task forces: one focused
rapid development of point of care (POC) diagnostics; the second
focused on rapid development of effective therapeutics and prophylaxis.
In addition, the commissioners urge the White House to accelerate steps
on a nationwide COVID-19 surveillance partnership to support these
efforts and help target further interventions.
”We need these drugs and testing tools to help patients now. We also
need them for the long term,” said Drs. Gottlieb and McClellan. “With
the isolation and other steps we are taking now, it’s possible that the
epidemic spread of coronavirus will wane in the coming weeks and months.
But it’s also possible that there will be additional waves of viral
spread with the risk of another epidemic in the future.”
To current and future needs, the co-authors contend that the FDA can
support large scale access to different drugs that have shown they may
be effective against the coronavirus in a framework can collect good
information to determine which medicines are working best for patients,
and ultimately merit full FDA approval. “At the same time, we can
advance treatments that can help protect people from becoming infected
with coronavirus in the first place,” said the co-authors.
The white paper details how the FDA could structure the recommended
task forces as well as the goal of each entity. The paper also defines
how establishing a public-private partnership can help to ensure more
comprehensive national surveillance COVID-19 to prevent the current and
possible future waves of infections.
Dr. Gottlieb is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute and was Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration from
2017-19. Dr. McClellan, who directs the Duke-Margolis Center for Health
Policy, was Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration from
2002-04.
Read the paper:
https://healthpolicy.duke.edu/sites/default/files/atoms/files/covid-19_tx_working_paper.pdf
https://healthpolicy.duke.edu/news/advancing-treatments-save-lives-and-reduce-risk-covid-19
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