Clinical research activity up significantly in 2008

Clinical research activity up significantly in 2008

According to a report in FierceBiotech, surprising news came out of the recently completed 45th Annual Meeting of the Drug Information Association (DIA). Despite cutbacks in the international biopharma industry, clinical trial activity was up in 2008. Overall, 795 new clinical trials were launched in 2008, compared with 662 that were initiated in 2007. There were 5,700 active INDs in 2008, which represents a greater than 20 percent increase over the 4,744 INDs active by the end of 2007—a substantial increase.
Trial activity was also assessed by the number of new FDA form 1572s, which all clinical investigators on FDA-approved trials sign as a promise that he will abide by the federal guidelines set forth in the Code of Federal Regulations for the use of drugs in an investigational setting. The FDA registered 23,827 new 1572s from clinical investigators in 2008, up 5.8 percent from the previous year. However, the number of new 1572s from China-based clinical investigators fell 30 percent due to the long approval process, but Indian-based 1572s rose 14 percent. South Korean investigators submitted 74 percent more 1572s while submissions from Taiwan rose 21 percent. Clinical trial activity is also up in Eastern Europe where the FDA saw significant increases from Russian investigators (20 percent), as well as Romanian (44 percent), Polish (17 percent) and Bulgarian (57 percent) clinical researchers.
It will be interesting to see the data for 2009.
DIA is a professional association of more than 18,000 members worldwide who are involved in the discovery, development, regulation, surveillance, or marketing of pharmaceutical products. The DIA annual meeting is the biopharmaceutical industry’s largest, longest running, international event. 

Steve Clark, Ph.D., a former professor and medical researcher at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, is a free-lance writer and consultant on biotechnology issues. His blog BioScience Biz can be read at http://stevensclark.typepad.com/bioscience_biz
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