Compassionate use of interventions: results of a European Clinical Research Infrastructures Network (ECRIN) survey of ten European countries

Kate Whitfield(Copenhagen University Hospital), Karl‐Heinz Huemer(Copenhagen University Hospital), Diana Winter(Copenhagen University Hospital), Steffen Thirstrup(Danish Medicines Agency), Christian Libersa(Inserm), Béatrice Barraud(Inserm), Christine Kubiak(Inserm), Léa Stankovski(Inserm), Xina Grählert(University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus), G. Dreier(University Medical Center Freiburg), Sebastian Geismann(University Medical Center Freiburg), Wolfgang Kuchinke(Copenhagen University Hospital), Anke Strenge-Hesse(University of Cologne), Zsuza Temesvari(Copenhagen University Hospital), Gyorgy Blasko(Copenhagen University Hospital), Gabriella Kardos(Copenhagen University Hospital), Timothy O’Brien(Ollscoil na Gaillimhe – University of Galway), Margaret Cooney(Ollscoil na Gaillimhe – University of Galway), Siobhán Gaynor(Ollscoil na Gaillimhe – University of Galway), Arrigo Schieppati(Copenhagen University Hospital), Mariantonia Serrano(Copenhagen University Hospital), Fernando de Andrés(Copenhagen University Hospital), Nuria Sanz(Copenhagen University Hospital), Raquel Hernández(Spanish Clinical Research Network), Germán Kreis(Copenhagen University Hospital), Charlotte Asker-Hagelberg(Karolinska University Hospital), Hanna Johansson(Karolinska University Hospital), Adeeba Asghar(Copenhagen University Hospital), Jean‐Marc Husson(Copenhagen University Hospital), Jacques Demotes‐Mainard(Inserm), Christian Gluud(Copenhagen University Hospital)
Trials
November 12, 2010
Cited by 49Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: 'Compassionate use' programmes allow medicinal products that are not authorised, but are in the development process, to be made available to patients with a severe disease who have no other satisfactory treatment available to them. We sought to understand how such programmes are regulated in ten European Union countries. METHODS: The European Clinical Research Infrastructures Network (ECRIN) conducted a comprehensive survey on clinical research regulatory requirements, including questions on regulations of 'compassionate use' programmes. Ten European countries, covering approximately 70% of the EU population, were included in the survey (Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Spain, Sweden, and the UK). RESULTS: European Regulation 726/2004/EC is clear on the intentions of 'compassionate use' programmes and aimed to harmonise them in the European Union. The survey reveals that different countries have adopted different requirements and that 'compassionate use' is not interpreted in the same way across Europe. Four of the ten countries surveyed have no formal regulatory system for the programmes. We discuss the need for 'compassionate use' programmes and their regulation where protection of patients is paramount. CONCLUSIONS: 'Compassionate use' is a misleading term and should be replaced with 'expanded access'. There is a need for expanded access programmes in order to serve the interests of seriously ill patients who have no other treatment options. To protect these patients, European legislation needs to be more explicit and informative with regard to the regulatory requirements, restrictions, and responsibilities in expanded access programmes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis