Abstract
All major pharmaceutical companies are currently
investing significantly in the development of medicines
with a nanotechnology component. Such
research promises therapeutic drugs with greater
efficacy and a wider range of clinical indications.
Nanomedicines are just beginning to enter drug
regulatory processes, but within a few decades
could comprise a dominant group within the class
of innovative pharmaceuticals. The current thinking
of government safety and cost-effectiveness
regulators appears to be that these products give
rise to few if any nano-specific issues. This article
challenges that proposition and seeks to explore
what features of nanomedicines may create
unique or heightened policy challenges for government
systems of cost-effectiveness regulation.
The Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
(PBS) is a key exemplar of the latter type of
regulation in that it links expert scientific evaluation
of cost-effectiveness with the pricing of PBSlisted
drugs. In the current global financial crisis
such systems are likely to become increasingly
attractive and how they handle the demands
made upon them by nanomedicines (including by
application of a variation of the precautionary
principle) is likely to be of considerable interest to
policy makers worldwide.
Cited by
11 articles.
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