| |
|
Specializing in all aspects of male, female, & pediatric urology care
South Clinical Campus
Albany Medical Center
23 Hackett Blvd.
Albany, NY 12208
(518) 262-3341
Offices throughout the Albany, NY area
Elise De, MD Carl Diaz-Parker, RPA-C Hugh Fisher, MD, FACS Karla Giramonti, FNP Jean Hollowell, MD Ronald Kaufman, MD, FACS Barry Kogan, MD Badar Mian, MD Donald Rivard, MD Mark White, MD
|
|

|
 |
|
Urology Research Department - Drug Development Overview
It takes approximately 12 years and costs a company approximately 359 million dollars to get one new medicine from the laboratory to the pharmacy shelf. Approximately 1 in every 5000 new drugs is ever approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
The clinical trial process in the U.S. evaluates a drug candidate's safety and effectiveness.
Preclinical Testing:
- Laboratory and animal studies to show biological activity of the compound against the targeted disease
- Safety
- Approximately 3 and ½ years
Investigational new drug application (IND):
- Filed with the FDA to test the drug in people
- The IND becomes effective if the FDA does not disapprove it in 30 days
- Shows results of the previous experiments
- How, where and by whom the clinical trials will be conducted
- Chemical structure of the compound and how it works
- Toxicities found during the animal testing
- How the compound is manufactured
- Must be reviewed by the Institutional Review Board (IRB)
Phase I Clinical Trials:
- Approximately 1 year
- 20-80 normal healthy individuals
- Safety profile including safe dose range
- Determines how the drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, excreted and the duration of the action
- Patients usually kept in-house for the duration of the study
Phase II Clinical Trials:
- Approximately 2 years
- Controlled studies 100-300 volunteer patients with the disease being studied
- Efficacy of the drug
Phase III Clinical Trials:
- Approximately 3 years
- 1000-3000 patients in clinics and hospitals with the disease being studied
- Safety
- Efficacy
- Adverse effects
New Drug Application (NDA):
- Following the completion of all three phases of the clinical trials
- Filed with the FDA to demonstrate safety and efficacy
- Must contain all of the scientific data the company has gathered
- Approximately 100,000 pages or more
- By law the FDA has 6 months to review the NDA
- Average review time usually exceeds this by many months
Approval:
- Once approved the drug becomes available for MD’s to prescribe
- The company must continue to submit periodic reports to the FDA including adverse reactions and quality control reports
- Some times additional studies are required (Phase IV) to evaluate long term effects
Top of Page
|
|
|
Research Home | Contact Us | Driving Directions
Current Research Studies | Participate in a Study | Urology Home
|
|
|