For years, the FDA has allowed progression-free survival to serve as both a primary and surrogate endpoint to support speedy new cancer drug approvals. But with new classes of oncology drugs coming to the forefront, the agency appears to be increasingly calling for more robust overall survival data that can prove treatments help patients live longer.
The apparent movement by the FDA, particularly when the OS data aren’t mature, hasn’t arrived in the form of draft guidance, but via a conference and side comments from FDA’s top oncology expert. This push for more OS data, on top of PFS data, was raised by Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan last week during the company’s quarterly earnings call, when he called it “new territory” for the agency.
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