PRA Health Sciences ready to navigate RACE Act requirements for pediatric oncology
June 18 2020 - 8:05AM
Between 2007-2017, 78 novel adult cancer agents were approved by
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,1 but none of those drugs
were researched to determine effectiveness for pediatric cancers.
That is about to change on August 18 when the RACE
Act – The Research to Accelerate Cures and Equity for Children Act
– goes into effect. Passed in 2017, the RACE Act amends the
existing PREA – Pediatric Research Equity Act – and eliminates the
exemption from PREA requirements for cancer drugs that have orphan
status. The new law requires pediatric evaluation of new drugs and
biologics intended for the treatment of adult cancers and directed
at a molecular target substantially relevant to the growth or
progression of pediatric cancer.
Clinical research companies and their pediatric
research specialists, including PRA Health Sciences, will be called
on to support pharmaceutical and biotech companies as they sponsor
the required research for pediatric oncology indications.
“We are now 60 days away from the RACE Act going
into effect, which has created a scramble to develop pediatric
study plans for oncology studies,” said Dr. Mark Sorrentino, VP,
The Center for Pediatric Clinical Development at PRA Health
Sciences. “Here at PRA,we have been preparing for the RACE Act
since it was passed in 2017, so we are able to quickly and
effectively support our clients and sponsors looking to conduct
this research. We have brought together a highly credentialed team
internally to serve as hands-on consultants in the development and
execution of pediatric research plans.”
PRA’s Center for Pediatric Clinical Development and
the team working on the RACE Act implementation include Dr.
Sorrentino as well as Dr. Martine Dehlinger-Kremer, VP, Scientific
Affairs, Pediatric Subject Matter Expert; Dr. Jacqui Whiteway,
Senior Pediatric Strategy Liaison; Jo Dewhurst, LLB Dip; and Missy
Hansen, MSN, APRN, CNP-Pediatrics, Pediatric Strategy Liaison.
Together, with the addition of dozens of other PRA researchers and
pediatric specialists, this designated team of experts is ready to
utilize their collective experience in pediatric clinical
development to support RACE Act-focused initiatives.
“Parents and pediatric oncologists need to have
confidence that the therapies and treatments they are giving to
their children are safe and effective for fighting cancer in
pediatric patients,” Dr. Dehlinger-Kremer said. “The RACE Act is
pushing all of us – drug developers, researchers, and medical care
teams – to find the best treatments possible for children and their
families, and to develop treatments that are specifically tailored
to children.”
- White Paper: Parents as Gatekeepers for Children with
Cancer
- Insight: The RACE Act is coming this August. Here’s what you
need to know.
- Video: Learn more about the RACE Act from PRA's experts.
With the RACE Act going into effect, the law has
caught up with the critical need for drug developers to focus on
pediatric oncology.
- Since 1980, only four oncology drugs were first approved for
use in children2
- Only 4 percent of funding spent on cancer research is directed
toward childhood cancer3
- Cancer drugs approved by the FDA take a median of 6.5 years to
go from first clinical trial in adults to the first trial in
children4
- While considered a rare condition, 46 children are diagnosed
with cancer each day5 and those patients, their families, and their
medical teams need more treatments suitable for pediatric
indications
“From a research perspective, there is so much more
we can do to improve kids’ lives,” Dr. Sorrentino said. “PRA has
conducted more than 130 pediatric studies in the last five years,
and our promise, to the kids and their families, is to work quickly
and safely, specifically with them in mind, to develop treatment
options that will be effective for our smallest patients. It’s
going to take a collective team effort between drug developers and
researchers – we are ready for that challenge.”
For more information on the RACE Act, visit
https://prahs.com/centers/the-center-for-pediatric-clinical-development/race-act.
If you’d like to speak with one of PRA’s pediatric oncology
experts, please reach out to us at
https://prahs.com/contact/capabilities.
About PRA Health
Sciences
PRA Health Sciences is one of the world’s leading
global contract research organizations by revenue, providing
outsourced clinical development and data solution services to the
biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries. PRA’s global clinical
development platform includes more than 75 offices across North
America, Europe, Asia, Latin America, South Africa, Australia and
the Middle East and more than 17,500 employees worldwide. Since
2000, PRA has participated in approximately 4,000 clinical trials
worldwide. In addition, PRA has participated in the pivotal or
supportive trials that led to U.S. Food and Drug Administration or
international regulatory approval of more than 95 drugs. To learn
more about PRA, please visit www.prahs.com.
INVESTOR INQUIRIES: InvestorRelations@prahs.com
MEDIA INQUIRIES: Laurie Hurst, Director,
Communications and Public Relationshurstlaurie@prahs.com | +1 (919)
786-8435
References
- Hwang T.J., et al. Pediatric trials for cancer therapies with
targets potentially relevant to pediatric cancers. Journal National
Cancer Institute (2020) 112(3): djz207.
- Coalition Against Childhood Cancer. Childhood Cancer Fact
Library (2017).
https://cac2.org/childhood-cancer-fact-library-2017/#:~:text=Since%201980%2C%20only%20four%20drugs,use%20in%20high%2Drisk%20neuroblastoma.
- https://nationalpcf.org/facts-about-childhood-cancer/
- Dylan V. Neel, David S. Shulman, Steven G. DuBois. Timing
of first-in-child trials of FDA-approved oncology
drugs. European Journal of Cancer, 2019; 112: 49
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2019.02.011.
- www.childrenscause.org
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