Abstract

BackgroundThe Orphan Drug Act (1983) established several incentives to encourage the development of orphan drugs (ODs) to treat rare diseases and conditions. This study analyzed the characteristics of OD designations, approvals, sponsors, and evaluated the effective patent and market exclusivity life of orphan new molecular entities (NMEs) approved in the US between 1983 and 2007.MethodsPrimary data sources were the FDA Orange Book, the FDA Office of Orphan Drugs Development, and the US Patent and Trademark Office. Data included all orphan designations and approvals listed by the FDA and all NMEs approved by the FDA during the study period.ResultsThe FDA listed 1,793 orphan designations and 322 approvals between 1983 and 2007. Cancer was the main group of diseases targeted for orphan approvals. Eighty-three companies concentrated 67.7% of the total orphan NMEs approvals. The average time from orphan designation to FDA approval was 4.0 ± 3.3 years (mean ± standard deviation). The average maximum effective patent and market exclusivity life was 11.7 ± 5.0 years for orphan NME. OD market exclusivity increased the average maximum effective patent and market exclusivity life of ODs by 0.8 years.ConclusionPublic programs, federal regulations, and policies support orphan drugs R&D. Grants, research design support, FDA fee waivers, tax incentives, and orphan drug market exclusivity are the main incentives for orphan drug R&D. Although the 7-year orphan drug market exclusivity provision had a positive yet relatively modest overall effect on effective patent and market exclusivity life, economic incentives and public support mechanisms provide a platform for continued orphan drug development for a highly specialized market.

Highlights

  • The Orphan Drug Act (1983) established several incentives to encourage the development of orphan drugs (ODs) to treat rare diseases and conditions

  • The primary data sources used in this study were: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) "Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations (i.e. Orange Book-OB) versions from 1983 to 2007, the electronic version of the OB, the FDA OOPD List of Orphan Designations and Approvals, documents and data from the FDA's website, and information about patents abstracted from the U.S Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) website

  • There was a single sponsor for 88.6% of the products and 77.9% of the diseases and conditions targeted by the orphan designations

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Summary

Introduction

The Orphan Drug Act (1983) established several incentives to encourage the development of orphan drugs (ODs) to treat rare diseases and conditions. On January 4, 1983, the Orphan Drug Act (ODA) went into effect to encourage the development and marketing of drugs (orphan drugs) to treat rare diseases and conditions. In 1983, the ODA charged the FDA with the role of reviewing and approving requests for orphan product designation, overseeing the seven year exclusive marketing for orphan products, coordinating research study design assistance for sponsors of orphan drugs, encouraging sponsors to conduct open protocols, and awarding grants for development of orphan drugs. These functions are performed by the FDA Office of Orphan Products Development (OOPD).

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