WORKING PAPERS

Bridging the Gap: Better, Faster, and Cheaper Clinical Trials for Health Products for Neglected Diseases - Working Paper 217

June 25, 2010

There has been tremendous progress over the last decade in the development of health products for neglecteddiseases. These include drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics for malaria and tuberculosis, which kill millions ofpeople annually, plus other diseases like chagas and dengue fever, which may less familiar, but nonethelessexact a large and often lethal toll in the world’s poorest communities.

Two substantial bottlenecks, however, threaten our capacity to bring such products to those in need. First, the research and regulatory capacity in many neglected disease-endemic settings is not adequate to support the clinical trials that need to occur there in order to complete the development of these products. Second, even with expected attrition in the pipeline, current levels of financing are insufficient to support the clinical development of these products under current cost assumptions. Addressing these related challenges requires not only increased funding for large scale clinical trials and capacity building, but also greater attention to how these trials and their regulatory pathways can be improved to reduce unnecessary costs, delays, and risks to trial subjects.

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