Trump plan threatens Australian Drug Safety

Sydney Morning Herald | 9 March 2017

Trump plans threaten to weaken Australia’s drug safety regime

by Marcus Strom | Science Editor
Drug safety and regulation in Australia are under threat from US President Donald Trump, says leading Australian doctor John Rasko.

Professor Rasko, with two international colleagues from Japan and Canada, has penned a comment article in the journal Nature, published on Thursday, calling for the US Food and Drug Administration to continue regulation of pharmaceuticals for both efficacy and safety.

In January, Mr Trump told pharmaceutical industry executives: ‘‘We’re going to be cutting regulations at a level that nobody’s seen before.’’ Professor Rasko, who is head of cell and molecular therapies at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and affiliated with the University of Sydney, said: ‘‘The most extreme proponents of deregulation say the market should be the sole arbiter of utility: if a medicine sells well, then it must be safe and effective. ‘‘If these sorts of changes go through, I can see a world in 10 years where the snake-oil salesman is back. It will all come down to marketing.’’

Mr Trump is vetting candidates for FDA commissioner. According to The New York Times, one candidate is Jim O’Neill, a former official at the US Health and Human Services Department. At a conference on ageing in 2014, Mr O’Neill spoke in favour of ‘‘progressive approval’’ for drugs, which would see pharmaceuticals proved safe for use, but not shown to be effective for treatment. Mr O’Neill said: ‘‘We should reform the FDA so it is approving drugs after their sponsors have demonstrated safety. Then let people start using them at their own risk.’’

Professor Rasko has responded to what he regards as a global

health threat. The authors say re- laxing the FDA’s regulatory system will subject patients to drugs that might be toxic.

‘‘All nations should take note – weaker standards for entry of drugs onto the US market will harm health everywhere,’’ Professor Rasko and colleagues write.

Professor Rasko told Fairfax Media the regulator in Australia, the Therapeutics Goods Administration, is fiercely independent. However, he said the FDA had a dramatic effect on the rollout of pharmaceuticals here. ‘‘The size and scope in the US in terms of population and money available means we rely on many of their studies,’’ he said.

The TGA and FDA maintain a memorandum of understanding whereby, among other things, both regulators are committed to ex- change information concerning ‘adverse health consequences’ of drugs.

‘‘No company would spend the tens of millions of dollars required to show that their drugs are effective if they aren’t required to,’’ Professor Rasko said.

A spokesman for federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said: ‘‘The TGA is acknowledged internationally as a first-rank regulator and has robust safeguards in place to ensure the safety of the Australian public. It will continue to be the government’s first line of defence in the regulation of medicines.’’

Prof John Rasko warns of US deregulation risks

Donald Trump’s FDA plans could affect drug regulation in Australia

by Marcus Strom

Sydney Morning Herald 9th March 2017

Drug safety and regulation in Australia are under threat from US President Donald Trump, says leading Australian doctor John Rasko.

Professor Rasko, with two international colleagues from Japan and Canada, has penned a comment article in the journal Nature published on Thursday calling for the US Food and Drug Administration to continue regulation of pharmaceuticals for both efficacy and safety as President Trump talks of the need to reduce drug prices by streamlining the FDA approval process for new medicines, and bringing drug makers back to the United States.

In January, Mr Trump told pharmaceutical industry executives: “We’re going to be cutting regulations at a level that nobody’s seen before.”

Professor Rasko, who is head of cell and molecular therapies at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and affiliated with the University of Sydney, said: “The most extreme proponents of deregulation say the market should be the sole arbiter of utility: if a medicine sells well, then it must be safe and effective.”Professor John Rasko, head of cell and molecular therapies at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.

He told Fairfax Media: “If these sorts of changes go through, I can see a world in 10 years where the snake-oil salesman is back. It will all come down to marketing.”

Mr Trump is vetting candidates for FDA commissioner. According to The New York Times, one candidate is Jim O’Neill, a former official at the US Health and Human Services Department.

At a conference on ageing in 2014, Mr O’Neill spoke in favour of “progressive approval” for drugs, which would see pharmaceuticals proved safe for use, but not shown to be effective for treatment.

Mr O’Neill said: “We should reform FDA so it is approving drugs after their sponsors have demonstrated safety. Then let people start using them at their own risk.”

Professor Robyn Ward from the University of Queensland is chairman of the Commonwealth Medical Services Advisory Committee. Photo: Louie Douvis

Professor Rasko has responded to what he regards as a global health threat. The authors say relaxing the FDA’s regulatory system will subject patients to drugs that might be toxic.

“All nations should take note – weaker standards for entry of drugs onto the US market will harm health everywhere,” Professor Rasko and colleagues write

Professor Rasko told Fairfax Media that the regulator in Australia, the Therapeutic Goods Administration, is fiercely independent. However, he said the FDA had a dramatic effect on the rollout of pharmaceuticals here.

“The size and scope in the US in terms of population and money available means we rely on many of their studies,” he said.

The TGA and FDA maintain a memorandum of understanding whereby, among other things, both regulators are committed to exchange information concerning “adverse health consequences” of drugs.

Professor Rasko said the removal of US-based studies would have an economic and health impact.

“No company would spend the tens of millions of dollars required to show that their drugs are effective if they aren’t required to,” he said.

These arguments are largely supported by Professor Robyn Ward, deputy vice-chancellor of the University of Queensland. Professor Ward is also chairman of the Commonwealth Medical Services Advisory Committee and a member of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee.

“The world relies on the collaboration of many countries for drug regulation,” Professor Ward said. “Removing a country as large as the US would slow down progress and scientific advance.”

Professor Terry Campbell, who is is head of the department of medicine at St Vincent’s Hospital, said he was “inclined to agree with” the authors of the Nature article but noted “there is still a strong public health lobby in the US”.

“Trials will still happen. Big cancer drugs won’t be bought if they aren’t proven effective.”

Professor Campbell, who sat on the PBAC for 16 years to February this year, also said that even if the FDA changed its regulatory stance, “I can see no way that the Europeans would allow marketing without proving efficacy”.

However, he said: “Any shift in this direction from the FDA would make life a lot more difficult.”

Professor Ward warned that FDA deregulation could squeeze out the smaller medical companies.

“Smaller companies offering innovative solutions could have less traction because they have smaller marketing budgets than the big pharmaceutical companies,” she said.

“It will be a race to the bottom. Market forces would drive prices up based on popularity, not efficacy.”

Professor Rasko in Nature argued that “unregulated markets are hopeless at sifting out futile drugs”. “Witness the multibillion-dollar industries in homeopathy and other pseudo-medicines,” the authors say.

Professor Rasko said: “Rigorous clinical studies are still the best way to learn whether a drug works and regulation is essential to ensure that these studies are conducted.”

A spokesman for federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said: “The TGA is acknowledged internationally as a first-rank regulator and has robust safeguards in place to ensure the safety of the Australian public.

“It will continue to be the government’s first line of defence in the regulation of medicines.”

The Nature article was jointly written by Douglas Sipp from the Riken Centre for Developmental Biology in Japan, Christopher McCabe, a health economist at the University of Alberta in Canada, and Professor Rasko.

Read the article at Sydney Morning Herald smh.com.au

Phil Gould becomes CTF Ambassador

Cure The Future are pleased to announce that NRL Legend and Penrith Panthers boss Phillip Gould AM has agreed to become an Ambassador.

Phil already has an association with the charity, having spoken at a number of events including the recent ‘Bringing the Family Together’ dinner at Glass Restaurant in September.

He is an Ambassador for a number of other charities including White Ribbon Foundation, White Balloon Day and Australian Gynaecological Cancer Foundation.

Award-winners BBQ

Cure The Future and Centenary Institute recently celebrated the presentation of two awards with a Barbecue for the staff and families.

The Excellence awards were presented by Professor John Rasko AO and Cure The Future Chairperson Diane Langmack OAM – to Linda Pallot for her work at RPA Hospital and to Dr Ulf Schmitz  for his work at the Centenary Institute.

Cure the Future is committed to the institute in recognising the fantastic work by the staff in finding a cure for our future generations and this is a way of showing our appreciation.

Welcome to our new website

Welcome to the new Cure The Future website.

As well as being Fully-Responsive – so it will work on your SmartPhone or Tablet, we have some brand new content and some great features to help make it even easier to help Cure The Future. It is also linked to our Facebook page and Twitter, so you can see the latest news about what’s going on in our Social Media.

The improved ‘About Us‘ section has some information about Cure The Future, the People behind it – and helps explain the Cell and Gene Therapy we support. It also provides some insights into some of the 4000 Diseases we expect it to help cure.

Our ‘Research‘ area shows you where the funds we have raised over the years have been spent – on Laboratory Equipment, Fellowships for Research Scientists, as well as some of the projects we have funded. It also has our ‘Wishlist‘ – so you can see the items still needed by the labs to help them find a cure for cancers & other inherited diseases.

Most importantly, we have expanded our ‘Donations‘ section to focus on 3 areas of Giving – ourselves, our family and our work.

The introduction of the Cure The Future ‘Family’ reminds us that the work we do is all about the future good health of coming generations of our Families – and the need to find a cure for inherited disease.

So there are some new ways families can help us Cure The Future – ‘In Memory‘ provides a way to create a special page ‘In Memory’ of a loved one you have lost – where friends and family can visit to post a memory and make a donation to Cure The Future in their honour.

Our new ‘Celebrate‘ page is an opportunity for your family and friends to celebrate a special family occasion, like a Wedding or a Birth – with a donation to help find a cure for the inherited diseases which run in families everywhere.

Giving Time‘ is our new donation option for those who prefer to give up their time to support us – and some of the ways you can do that.

And our great A-Z of Fundraising presents lots of fun new ways you can help Cure The Future, by raising funds with your family and friends, at work or in your local community.

In the coming weeks we will be introducing a new payment system through PayPal and hope to be adding some pages In Memory and Celebration.

We hope to see you visiting our website again – and encouraging those around you to do the same.

Thank you for visiting.

Cure The Future Family

In Memory of Bryce Courtenay

Bryce Courteney

Bryce Courtenay AM

14th August 1933 – 22nd November 2012

Bryce Courtenay wrote 21 books in 23 years and at the time of his death he was Australia’s biggest selling writer.

Bryce believed that good writing included ‘a bellyful of laughs and a bucketful of tears’, and in some ways that phrase reflected the story of his own life.

Born in South Africa to Maude Greer he only found out the name of his father when he was a teenager having also endured time in an orphanage. This experience provided much of the material for his first novel ‘The Power of One’ published in 1989 and which went on to become an international best seller. He managed to move on from this difficult start in life by winning a scholarship to the ‘posh’ King Edward V11 School in Johannesburg.

During the tensions of the apartheid regime in he felt compelled to leave South Africa and ended up in London where he met his first wife Benita Solomon. Arriving in Australia in the 1950s they went on to have three children, Brett, Adam and Damon.  Bryce quickly embraced his new country and made a hugely successful career in advertising, winning countless industry awards. 

Tragically in 1991 his son Damon, who was born with the blood condition haemophilia, died of medically acquired aids which later became the subject of a moving book titled ‘April Fool’s Day’.

For the rest of his life Bryce continued on with what he called his ‘second career’ as a full time writer. He was especially interested in the impact of war on Australia’s national psyche, and many novels brought Australian history to life. To this day millions of readers around the world continue to enjoy his extraordinary literary legacy.

Bryce was known as much for his philanthropy and generosity of spirit as he was for his writing.  From the outset he found Professor John Rasko’s vision for gene cell medical research to be both visionary and an inspiration. He always felt privileged to be one of the first patron’s of ‘Cure the Future’ and delighted in listening to John’s news of the latest developments in his ongoing research.

Bryce’s second wife, Christine Gee, AM (a pioneer in adventure travel) shares Bryce’s passion for philanthropy, and continues to be a very proud supporter of ‘Cure the Future’.

This mosaic image of Bryce has been created using photos from the Cure The Future family album.

It is in loving memory – and to help remind us that we are all connected.

Bryce Courtney Mosaic