Litcius/Paper detail

Update on ICH E14/S7B Cardiac Safety Regulations: The Expanded Role of Preclinical Assays and the “Double‐Negative” Scenario

Robert M. Lester

2021Clinical Pharmacology in Drug Development40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

For nearly 2 decades, regulators have adopted a harmonized approach to drug development, which has succeeded in bringing new pharmaceuticals to market without significant cardiac liability. Ushered in by technological advancements and better understanding of cellular electrophysiology, the initial paradigm detailed in the 2005 International Conference for Harmonization E14 and S7B documents has undergone evolutionary changes designed to streamline drug development and improve regulatory decision-making and product labeling. The intent of this review is to summarize the new US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Question and Answer update from August 2020 and key messaging from a subsequent FDA webinar describing best practices for preclinical and clinical data integration into a QT risk prediction model.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHarmonizationFood and drug administrationLiabilityDrug developmentRisk analysis (engineering)Drug approvalSafety pharmacologyBest practiceKey (lock)PharmacologyDrugEngineering ethicsComputer securityBusinessAccountingComputer scienceLawAcousticsPhysicsPolitical scienceEngineeringCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmiasReceptor Mechanisms and SignalingComputational Drug Discovery Methods
Update on ICH E14/S7B Cardiac Safety Regulations: The Expanded Role of Preclinical Assays and the “Double‐Negative” Scenario | Litcius