Grandma May Not Use Telemedicine, and that’s OK.

A couple of reports this week show disparity in the use of telemedicine in older individuals. Adults older than 72 years of age were found to prefer in-person visits over telemedicine highlighting a hurdle in the expansion of telemedicine. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing. The data can be used to prioritize in-person visits … Read more

Getting Celebrity Testimonials to Push the Envelope for Promising Products

Celebrity endorsements and testimonials are a prominent way to market a medical product; our media and airways are filled with drug advertisements featuring famous people. But one could use celebrity testimonials to boost the prospects of an investigational product as well. ImmunityBio, Inc., a California company owned by Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, treated two celebrities with … Read more

The Coronavirus Billionaires: Are the Taxpayers Getting a Fair Deal?

The pandemic has created enormous wealth for Moderna, Novavax, and several other companies developing vaccines and treatments for the virus, much of it at the taxpayer’s expense, so it’s a fair question to ask, what the public “investors” are getting in return. Short answer, not much. Companies often use the cost and risk of developing … Read more

FDA Extends Stem Cell Enforcement Discretion, With a Heavy Heart 

This week FDA announced that it has extended its enforcement date for illegal stem cell clinics by six months due to the pandemic. At the same time, FDA released a blog targeted towards patients telling them about the dangers of the illegal stem cell therapies, and a final guidance document reiterating FDA’s policies that almost … Read more

Employees in Clinical Trials Boost or Bust the Prospects of a Company? 

Sinopharm, the Chinese government owned company announced that 30 of its employees, including some in senior management roles, were the first to receive its experimental Covid vaccine. And this would be legal even in the US. It is often assumed, incorrectly, that the regulations prohibit employee participation in company-sponsored clinical trials. On the contrary, under … Read more

FDA to Begin GMP Inspections Next Week, Sort of.

FDA announced earlier this week that the domestic GMP inspections would commence on Monday, 20 July. However, there would still be several conditions that must be met before FDA inspectors travel to a manufacturing site and FDA would allow several concessions to the site being audited such as no-unannounced visits, using PPEs during the visit … Read more

Covid Vaccine Will be The “October Surprise” One Way or the Other

With the announcement of positive results from a small clinical trial for its experimental Covid vaccine this week, Moderna set the stage for what to expect in the next 2-3 months. Moderna may be in the news more than others, but others are not behind. Oxford-Astra Zeneca announced the start of a 10,000 patient multi-national … Read more

What is the Actual Cost of Clinical Trials?

The most expensive component of the development program for any new medical product is the clinical trials, particularly the pivotal clinical trials, that could recruit hundreds if not thousands of patients per trial and take 1-2 years to complete. Most industry estimates claim that the pivotal clinical trials account for more than 70% of the … Read more

Too Many COVID Clinical Trials Creating “Traffic Jams”?

Well, not literally, but the various clinical trials being scheduled this summer to evaluate the various vaccine and therapeutic agents for COVID-19 have created a stiff competition for volunteers among the various contenders. Of the more than 130 vaccines for COVID-19 in development, about 17 vaccines are currently in human trials, of which about 6 … Read more