Transcript template
The ICH E5 Guidance:
A Regulatory Perspective on its
Evolution and Implementation
Robert T. O’Neill, Ph.D.
Director, Office of Biostatistics
CDER, FDA
For presentation at the
2nd Kitasato -Harvard Symposium, October 22-23, 2001
Outline of talk
The evolution of the E5 Guidance from the
perspective of a working group member
Key aspects of the final E5 Guidance
The intent of bridging studies and gaining
experience with foreign clinical trials done in
compliance with ICH Guidances
Some specific issues of study design and study
objectives for bridging
Concluding remarks with regard to
implementation of E5 and experience
The evolution of the E5 Guidance
from the perspective of a working
group member
Topic proposed to the ICH Steering Committee in
1992 by Japan
Signed off in February, 1998 after many years of
effort regarding what should be its purpose,
focus, content, and guidance
I was one of two FDA expert working group
members in the six party working group
(regulator and industry reps from the US, Europe,
Japan)
Evolution of Concepts
Objectives: What is the guideline about ?
Amount of detail and flexibility in advice (decision
trees, early emphasis was on Phase 1)
Operational definition of ethnicity ( term region used
in general sense)
Later emphasis placed on ‘evidence’ needed in each
region to conclude efficacy and safety
Two situations : Retrospective - what other data, given
a completed application; Prospective - Planning multiregional drug development strategies
Evolution of concepts (cont.)
Similarity of issues to E4 (dose-response) and to E7 (special
populations, Geriatrics)
Acceptance of data - Generalizability /extrapolation of phase 3
efficacy/safety results
Algorithms to clearly show paths to follow for acceptance of
foreign data
Triage the amount of information needed according to
profile of the drug, the intended population, clinical
experiences with drug (why E5 is not too prescriptive)
When is additional information needed: Bridging data
Key Features of E5
Operational definition of ethnic factors
Clinical Data Package Fulfilling
Regulatory Requirements in New Region
Extrapolation of Foreign Clinical Data to
New Region (role of ethnic factors)
Bridging Studies
Global Development Strategies
Ethnic Factor Definition
intrinsic factors: characteristics associated with the
drug recipient (ADME studies)
race, age, gender, organ dysfunction, genetic
polymorphism
extrinsic factors: characteristics associated with the
environment and culture in which one lives
(clinical outcomes)
clinical trial conduct, diet, tobacco and alcohol
use, compliance with prescribed medications
Assessing a medicine’s
sensitivity to ethnic factors
(part of the screening process)
Properties of a compound making it more
likely to be sensitive:
Metabolism by enzymes known to
show genetic polymorphism
High likelihood of use in a setting of
multiple co-medications
Assessment of the Clinical Data
Package (CDP) for acceptability
Question 1: Meets regulatory requirements - yes/no
Question 2: Extrapolation of foreign data
appropriate - yes/no
Question 3: Further clinical study (ies) needed for
acceptability by the new region - yes/no
Question 4: Acceptability in the new region - yes/no
Meets regulatory requirements
Issues of evidence
Confirmatory evidence; two or more studies
showing treatment effects
Interpreting results of foreign clinical trials which
provide that evidence (may be one study, or all studies,
or part of a study)
Which study designs provide evidence
Active control / non-inferiority designs
Placebo or active control / show a difference
designs
The sources of data for an
application (implementation)
All clinical studies for efficacy performed
in foreign region
One study in the United States, one or
more foreign clinical studies
Multi-center/ multi-region clinical trials
form the basis for efficacy
Considerations for evaluating
clinical efficacy between regions
Study design differences
Magnitude of treatment effect sizes
Effect size variability; subgroup differences
Impact of intrinsic factors - determined when ?
Impact of Extrinsic factors
trial conduct and monitoring
usage of concomitant medications
protocol adherence
Bridging Studies
When
Why
What type
E5 is purposely vague on how to do this
or what their design should be
Study design and study objectives
(need examples and experience)
What type of bridging study would be helpful for
extrapolation PK/PD
Another clinical trial of the primary clinical
endpoint
equivalence/non-inferiority: treatment
effect acceptably close - margin or delta
dose response study
superiority design - estimate treatment
effect size for comparison
Issues of Statistical Design
and Study Analysis/Inference
E5 did not attempt to deal with statistical
design or analysis issues.
Nor did it deal with statistical
formulations of concepts such as
similarity, extrapolation, generalizability
The systematic study of associations and
responses that may differ according to
ethnic categorization has many design and
analysis aspects.
The Spirit and Intent of E5
Not intended to request bridging studies every time
Intended to permit the requesting of one ‘confirmatory’
phase 3 clinical trial (bridge study) in the region (not
specifically defined, nor meant as ‘country’) if needed or
necessary to extrapolate.
Recognized that there would be a period of time where
experience with foreign clinical studies would be
accumulated and evaluated - not to be confused with
always asking for a new confirmatory trial in local region.
E5 allows for a new study in the
new region - why is that needed ?
When all the clinical data is derived from a
foreign region and extrapolation is an issue
When the experience with clinical trials in
that region is minimal
When there is concern with ability to confirm
a finding from a study(ies)
A confirmatory clinical trial is the bridging
study
Reasons for concern
We observe regional differences in observed
treatment effects within the same study (not
always clear what is responsible, chance ?)
Differences in results of separate independent
studies , each done in different regions
What (bridging data) can explain the differences ?
information gained prior to the studies
information gained after studies completed
Some FDA experience
Some licensure applications have contained clinical
trials that appeared to demonstrate efficacy, where all
the trials were performed outside the US, but where
several other clinical trials requested to be done in
the US did not confirm a treatment effect - no
identifiable reason - an issue of ‘evidence’
Type of study design done in the US
show a difference (a treatment effect)
non-inferiority active control (indirect inference
for efficacy)
Multi-regional multi-center trials
Concluding Remarks
Most experience with foreign trials from Europe (West &
East), New Zealand, Canada, Latin America - even here the
possible heterogeneity of treatment effects is being evaluated
(Merit - metoprolol in CHF)
Little experience with Asian trials included as primary
evidence in NDA applications
Quality of the trial and its results are the determining factor,
not necessarily where it was conducted
Bridging concept is used in pediatrics - request phase 3 trials
in some cases
Is it time to collect our experience on the types of studies
being conducted ?