Frontiers in Medicine (Jun 2024)

Balancing ethical norms and duties for the introduction of new medicines through conditional marketing authorization: a research agenda

  • Mariia V. Maksimova,
  • Ghislaine J. M. W. van Thiel,
  • Yke Tromp,
  • Rosan Lechner,
  • Johannes J. M. van Delden,
  • Lourens T. Bloem

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2024.1408553
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

The European Medicines Agency’s conditional marketing authorization (CMA) aims to expedite patient access to medicines for unmet medical needs by shifting a part of the drug development process post-authorization. We highlight ethical issues surrounding CMA, comprising (i) the complexity of defining unmet medical need; (ii) poor understanding of CMA and its impact on informed consent; (iii) hope versus unrealistic optimism; (iv) implications of prolonged post-authorization studies and potential patient harm; (v) rights and duties of patients surrounding participation in post-authorization studies; (vi) access to previously authorized CMA medicines; and (vii) the “benefit slippage” phenomenon, defined as the gradual shift of strict criteria to less strict criteria. We propose a comprehensive research agenda to address these ethical issues, and stress the need for multi-stakeholder engagement to ensure patient-centered use of CMA.

Keywords