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1.
S Afr Med J ; 108(12): 1027-1029, 2018 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30606284

ABSTRACT

Rapidly evolving fields such as cell and gene therapies that involve state-of-the-art technology hold out possibilities that may be ahead of what ethics, guidelines and the law have considered. This results in a regulatory lag. Furthermore, ethical and legal considerations are often debated in real time as issues pertaining to these technologies that were previously not considered begin to come to the fore. Finding the appropriate balance between facilitating potential therapeutic gains and ensuring the safety interests of recipients of the new treatments requires close attention, especially for minors. This vulnerable population frequently has off-label treatment prescribed on the basis of extrapolation of clinical trial data derived from adults, which is ethically and scientifically questionable. In this article we discuss how best to maintain ethical integrity while introducing innovative cell and gene therapies to minors. We advocate that clinical trials of promising innovative therapies should be designed so that testing in adults is followed as soon as possible by testing in minors, given the impressive gains that have recently been reported.


Subject(s)
Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy/ethics , Genetic Therapy/ethics , Biomedical Research , Child , Clinical Trials as Topic , Genetic Therapy/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , South Africa , Therapies, Investigational/ethics , Vulnerable Populations
2.
S Afr Med J ; 109(1): 20-22, 2018 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30606299

ABSTRACT

The fields of cell and gene therapy are moving rapidly towards providing innovative cures for incurable diseases. A current and highly topical example is immunotherapies involving T-cells that express chimeric antigen receptors (CAR T-cells), which have shown promise in the treatment of leukaemia and lymphoma. These new medicines are indicative of the changes we can anticipate in the practice of medicine in the near future. Despite their promise, they pose challenges for introduction into the healthcare sector in South Africa (SA), including: (i) that they are technologically demanding and their manufacture is resource intensive; (ii) that the regulatory system is underdeveloped and likely to be challenged by ethical, legal and social requirements that accompany these new therapies; and (iii) that costs are likely to be prohibitive, at least initially, and before economies of scale take effect. Investment should be made into finding novel and innovative ways to introduce these therapies into SA sooner rather than later to ensure that SA patients are not excluded from these exciting new opportunities.


Subject(s)
Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy/economics , Diffusion of Innovation , Genetic Therapy/economics , Health Care Costs , Health Services Accessibility , Leukemia/therapy , Lymphoma/therapy , Social Class , Antigens, CD19/economics , Antigens, CD19/therapeutic use , Biological Products , Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy/ethics , Genetic Therapy/ethics , Genetic Therapy/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/economics , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/ethics , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/legislation & jurisprudence , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell/therapeutic use , South Africa
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