2013年12月25日 星期三

Promising new drugs seen in technologies of genetics

By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.迷你倉com.cn Had there be enough medications and treatment when he was young, 42yearold Guan Taowould nothavehaddeformedlegs because of hemophilia, an inherited blood disorder. The Beijing resident later foundedtheHemophiliaHome ofChina, a nongovernmental organization to support patients who need clotting factors to prevent severe blood loss and nearconstant complications. Nowadays, though foreign companies have been using generelated technologies to produce medications for hemophilia since the 1990s, Chinese companies are only capable of extracting clotting factors from blood, and under current Chinese policies, it takes years for foreign drugs to launch in Chinese market, Guan says. "The new type of clotting factors is safer than old ones, and the price is not a lot more, if one has health insurance," Guan says. "I'm in no better position than healthauthorities injudgingwhether a foreign new drug should be approved in China, or when it should be approved. But from a patient's perspective, I hope to get safer and better drugs." Guanandhis fellowhemophiliacs are not alone. Clotting factors fall in the category of largemolecule biologics. Compared with old smallmolecule medicines, the relatively new class of medications are safer and more efficient in treating diabetes, cancers and immunity diseases. But most biologic drugs in China experience a fiveyear lag from the first internationalnewdrug application approval, although it is theoretically possible to shorten this to less than 1.5 years, according to a 2013 report by the R&Dcentered Pharmaceutical Association Committee, a nonprofit organization under the China Association of Enterprises with Foreign Investment. To protect patients, strict policies regarding testing and evaluation of such medicines are necessary, but those policies can also be bmini storagerriers for patients seeking the latest therapies, according to Joe Zhou, CEO of Genor BioPharma, a domestic biopharmaceutical company in Shanghai. Besides, biologics are vastlymore complex, and while smallmolecule drugs can have identical generics, that's not quite the case between original biologics and "biosimilar" versions. In the United States and the EuropeanUnion, the health authorities have set guidelines to define biosimilar versions and establish clear regulatory pathways to guarantee the similarity and efficacy of biosimilars comparedwith the original biologics. But in China, there is no regulatory pathway so far for biosimilars, Zhou says, so they are treated as newdrugs awaiting approval,which is timeconsuming, Zhou notes. An anonymous manager with a foreign pharmacy company says that will dampen enthusiasm on research and development for new biologics, cause confusion among patients and doctors, and even bring about drugsafety issues. The good news is the authorities are to refine related policies, according to Zhou, who is also a government adviser. "An appropriate balance is needed to simplify the approval progress, and to ensure the good quality, safety and high similarity of biosimilars," Zhou says. The government has designated the biologic industry as one of the seven strategic emerging industries in its 12th FiveYear Plan (201115), and the therapeutic biologics sector is the priority. While attending the third annual BIO Convention held recently in Beijing, Bian Zhenjia, viceminister of the China Food andDrugAdministration, says the Chinese government is making great efforts to encourage innovative drug development, as well as to ensure drug safety. "We will improve the regulatory policy system, and narrow the difference between Chinese regulatory standards and advanced international standards," Bian says. 儲存

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