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Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki

Malaria is of continuing concern in nonimmune traveling populations. Traditionally, antimalarial drugs have been developed as agents for dual indications (treatment and prophylaxis). However, since 2000, when the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki (DH2000) was adopted, development of new m...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dow, Geoffrey S, Magill, Alan J, Ohrt, Colin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2621393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19209263
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author Dow, Geoffrey S
Magill, Alan J
Ohrt, Colin
author_facet Dow, Geoffrey S
Magill, Alan J
Ohrt, Colin
author_sort Dow, Geoffrey S
collection PubMed
description Malaria is of continuing concern in nonimmune traveling populations. Traditionally, antimalarial drugs have been developed as agents for dual indications (treatment and prophylaxis). However, since 2000, when the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki (DH2000) was adopted, development of new malaria prophylaxis drugs in this manner has ceased. As a consequence, there may not be any new drugs licensed for this indication in the foreseeable future. Major pharmaceutical companies have interpreted DH2000 to mean that the traditional development paradigm may be considered unethical because of doubt over the likelihood of benefit to endemic populations participating in clinical studies, the use of placebo, and the sustainability of post-trial access to study medications. In this article, we explore the basis of these concerns and suggest that the traditional development paradigm remains ethical under certain circumstances. We also consider alternative approaches that may be more attractive to sponsors as they either do not use placebo, or utilize populations in endemic countries who may unambiguously benefit. These approaches represent the way forward in the future, but are at present unproven in clinical practice, and face numerous regulatory, logistical and technical challenges. Consequently, in the short term, we argue that the traditional clinical development paradigm remains the most feasible approach and is ethical and consistent with the spirit of DH2000 under the appropriate circumstances.
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spelling pubmed-26213932009-02-10 Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki Dow, Geoffrey S Magill, Alan J Ohrt, Colin Ther Clin Risk Manag Review Malaria is of continuing concern in nonimmune traveling populations. Traditionally, antimalarial drugs have been developed as agents for dual indications (treatment and prophylaxis). However, since 2000, when the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki (DH2000) was adopted, development of new malaria prophylaxis drugs in this manner has ceased. As a consequence, there may not be any new drugs licensed for this indication in the foreseeable future. Major pharmaceutical companies have interpreted DH2000 to mean that the traditional development paradigm may be considered unethical because of doubt over the likelihood of benefit to endemic populations participating in clinical studies, the use of placebo, and the sustainability of post-trial access to study medications. In this article, we explore the basis of these concerns and suggest that the traditional development paradigm remains ethical under certain circumstances. We also consider alternative approaches that may be more attractive to sponsors as they either do not use placebo, or utilize populations in endemic countries who may unambiguously benefit. These approaches represent the way forward in the future, but are at present unproven in clinical practice, and face numerous regulatory, logistical and technical challenges. Consequently, in the short term, we argue that the traditional clinical development paradigm remains the most feasible approach and is ethical and consistent with the spirit of DH2000 under the appropriate circumstances. Dove Medical Press 2008-08 2008-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2621393/ /pubmed/19209263 Text en © 2008 Dove Medical Press Limited. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Review
Dow, Geoffrey S
Magill, Alan J
Ohrt, Colin
Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki
title Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki
title_full Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki
title_fullStr Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki
title_full_unstemmed Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki
title_short Clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th Amendment to the Declaration of Helsinki
title_sort clinical development of new prophylactic antimalarial drugs after the 5th amendment to the declaration of helsinki
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2621393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19209263
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