Abstract

IntroductionThe fast track in drug registration by the Brazilian Health Regulatory Agency, ANVISA, began in 2017 and is intended to prioritize analysis related to drugs relevant to public health. This process is appropriate in situations where there are no therapeutic alternative available or for technologies show significant improvement in safety, efficacy, or adherence to treatment.MethodsThe Brazilian public administration has a tool for accessing information called Transparency Portal. Thus, data on the number of drugs approved by fast track between 2018 and 2021 were requested through this tool and evaluated.ResultsThe data received by the Brazilian transparency portal shows that the number of requests for fast track had an increase from one in 2018 to 32 in 2021. There is an important increase of registrations, being drugs with phase II trials and with single-arm clinical trials. With registration based on a phase II trial, these patients are in fact receiving drugs in a context similar to clinical trials, but with funding from the healthcare system. Given that phase II studies are conducted in a limited population, there has been an increase in the registration of drugs with suboptimal efficacy and safety concerns. This scenario of uncertainty leads to non-adherence to treatment and a discrepancy in real-world outcomes in comparison to the clinical trial. About 70 percent of phase II trials, show no benefit, and only 30 percent proceed to later phases. It is noteworthy that about 50 percent of the studies that move on to later phases fail to show benefits. Nowadays the number of drugs approved by the fast track has increased, many probably with phase II studies and no comparator group.ConclusionsGiven the uncertainties in the efficacy and safety of a drug registered via fast track, often based on phase II studies, implementing provisional registration with real-world evaluation of outcomes, and coupled with financing based on risk-sharing agreements, may be a sustainable alternative for health systems.

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