The Food and Drug Administration's approval in June of a drug purporting to slow the progression of Alzheimer's disease was widely celebrated, but it also touched off alarms. There were worries in the scientific community about the drug's mixed results in studies — the FDA's own expert advisory panel was nearly unanimous in opposing its approval. And the annual $56,000 price tag of the infusion drug, Aduhelm, was decried for potentially adding costs in the tens of billions of dollars to Medicare and Medicaid.
But lost in this discussion is the underlying problem with using the FDA's "accelerated" pathway to approve drugs for conditions such as Alzheimer's, a slow, degenerative disease. Though patients will start taking it, if the past is any guide, the world may have to wait many years to find out whether Aduhelm is actually effective — and may never know for sure.
The accelerated approval process, begun in 1992, is an outgrowth of the HIV/AIDS crisis. The process was designed to approve for sale — temporarily — drugs that studies had shown might be promising but that had not yet met the agency's gold standard of "safe and effective," in situations where the drug offered potential benefit and where there was no other option.
Unfortunately, the process has too often amounted to a commercial end run around the agency.
The FDA explained its controversial decision to greenlight the Biogen pharmaceutical company's latest product: Families are desperate, and there is no other Alzheimer's treatment. Also, importantly, when drugs receive this type of fast-track approval, manufacturers are required to do further controlled studies "to verify the drug's clinical benefit." If those studies fail "to verify clinical benefit, the FDA may" — may — withdraw them.
But those subsequent studies have often taken years to complete, if they are finished at all. That's in part because of the FDA's notoriously lax follow-up and in part because drugmakers tend to drag their feet. When the drug is in use and profits are good, why would a manufacturer want to find out that a lucrative blockbuster is a failure?
Historically, so far, most of the new drugs that have received accelerated approval treat serious malignancies.
And follow-up studies are far easier to complete when the disease is cancer, not a neurodegenerative disease such as Alzheimer's. In cancer, "no benefit" means tumor progression and death. The mental decline of Alzheimer's often takes years and is much harder to measure. So years, possibly decades, later, Aduhelm studies might not yield a clear answer, even if Biogen manages to enroll a significant number of patients in follow-up trials.