Abstract
Abstract
Objective
To analyze the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, trials, unmet needs, benefit, and pricing of ultra-rare (<6600 affected US citizens), rare (6600-200 000 citizens), and common (>200 000 citizens) orphan cancer drug indications and non-orphan cancer drug indications.
Design
Cross sectional analysis.
Setting
Data from Drugs@FDA, FDA labels, Global Burden of Disease study, and Medicare and Medicaid.
Population
170 FDA approved drugs across 455 cancer indications between 2000 and 2022.
Main outcome measures
Comparison of non-orphan and ultra-rare, rare, and common orphan indications regarding regulatory approval, trials, epidemiology, and price. Hazard ratios for overall survival and progression-free survival were meta-analyzed.
Results
161 non-orphan and 294 orphan cancer drug indications were identified, of which 25 were approved for ultra-rare diseases, 205 for rare diseases, and 64 for common diseases. Drugs for ultra-rare orphan indications were more frequently first in class (76%
v
48%
v
38%
v
42%; P<0.001), monotherapies (88%
v
69%
v
72%
v
55%; P=0.001), for hematologic cancers (76%
v
66%
v
0%
v
0%; P<0.001), and supported by smaller trials (median 85
v
199
v
286
v
521 patients; P<0.001), of single arm (84%
v
44%
v
28%
v
21%; P<0.001) phase 1/2 design (88%
v
45%
v
45%
v
27%; P<0.001) compared with rare and common orphan indications and non-orphan indications. Drugs for common orphan indications were more often biomarker directed (69%
v
26%
v
12%; P<0.001), first line (77%
v
39%
v
20%; P<0.001), small molecules (80%
v
62%
v
48%; P<0.001) benefiting from quicker time to first FDA approval (median 5.7
v
7.1
v
8.9 years; P=0.02) than those for rare and ultra-rare orphan indications. Drugs for ultra-rare, rare, and common orphan indications offered a significantly greater progression-free survival benefit (hazard ratio 0.53
v
0.51
v
0.49
v
0.64; P<0.001), but not overall survival benefit (0.50
v
0.73
v
0.71
v
0.74; P=0.06), than non-orphans. In single arm trials, tumor response rates were greater for drugs for ultra-rare orphan indications than for rare or common orphan indications and non-orphan indications (objective response rate 57%
v
48%
v
55%
v
33%; P<0.001). Disease incidence/prevalence, five year survival, and the number of available treatments were lower, whereas disability adjusted life years per patient were higher, for ultra-rare orphan indications compared with rare or common indications and non-orphan indications. For 147 on-patent drugs with available data in 2023, monthly prices were higher for ultra-rare orphan indications than for rare or common orphan indications and non-orphan indications ($70 128 (£55 971; €63 370)
v
$33 313
v
$16 484
v
$14 508; P<0.001). For 48 on-patent drugs with available longitudinal data from 2005 to 2023, prices increased by 94% for drugs for orphan indications and 50% for drugs for non-orphan indications on average.
Conclusions
The Orphan Drug Act of 1983 incentivizes development of drugs not only for rare diseases but also for ultra-rare diseases and subsets of common diseases. These orphan indications fill significant unmet needs, yet their approval is based on small, non-robust trials that could overestimate efficacy outcomes. A distinct ultra-orphan designation with greater financial incentives could encourage and expedite drug development for ultra-rare diseases.
Cited by
21 articles.
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