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  • The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry
  • Developing medicines
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  • How do we monitor and regulate medicines?

How do we monitor and regulate medicines?

Clinical trials are essential for testing whether a medicine is safe and effective, but really its only the first step. They need to be monitored and regulated for their whole lifetime.

Steve Hoare shows us how pharmaceutical companies continue to make sure a medicine is safe, and how they use real world data to advance research and discovery.

Clinical trials are very important for finding out if a medicine works and it is safe. Every medicine used in the NHS has to be tested before it can be used.

Clinical trials start with health volunteers and this will be the first time the medicine will be used in people. The next step is then to involve patients with the disease to see if the medicine works: does it delay the disease or cure the disease, and it is safe?

Before anyone gets involved with clinical trials they’ll sit down with the team and work out exactly what’s going to happen, any of the risks and whether a clinical trial is the right thing for them.

As we get more information the trials grow, with more patients in more hospitals not just in the UK but around the world. Trials can take anywhere from weeks to years depending on the type of disease and the type of medicine that we’re studying.

This information is share with the regulator who works out whether to grant a license or not.

New data and technology mean we can do research in new ways, looking into treatments that previously seemed impossible.

The NHS is very active in research with 700,000 people taking part in research for things like cancer, heart disease and diabetes.

Clinical trials are key for how we develop medicines of the future, but we can’t do it without patients and we’re hugely grateful for everyone that makes them happen.

How do we regulate medicines?

Clinical trials are really just the beginning of a medicines journey: they must be monitored and regulated for the rest of their lifetime.

A medicine’s license is the green light for it to be given to patients and it covers everything from what it should be used for, who it should be given to and what dose is appropriate.

The next step is to past strict tests to make sure its cost effective for the NHS.

Once a medicine is made available, the pharmaceutical company has a duty to monitor it and make sure it performs safely for as long as it’s on the market.

This process if called pharmacovigilance and it helps inform regulators about previously unknown side effects – it can also help collected real world data that can be fed back to improve future research.

More data means a better understanding of what a medicine can do – often meaning we can explore using it to treat other conditions or used in other sets of patients.

It may also be fed back to unlock basic science and help progress new treatments for future generations.

 

Building a thriving environment for medicine discovery

  • How are medicines and vaccines discovered?
  • What are clinical trials and how do they work?
  • How do we monitor and regulate medicines?
    • Sustainability
    • Drug safety (pharmacovigilance)
  • What technologies and new treatments are on the horizon?
  • Who do we need to make the medicines of the future?

ABPI

The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry is a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales 
(registered number 09826787) and its registered office is at 7th Floor Southside,105 Victoria Street, London, SW1E 6QT.
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Prescription Medicines Code of Practice Authority (PMCPA)

The Prescription Medicines Code of Practice Authority (PMCPA) was established by The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry to operate the ABPI Code of Practice for the Pharmaceutical Industry independently of the ABPI. The PMCPA is a division of ABPI which is a company registered in England and Wales (registered number 09826787) with its registered office at 7th Floor, Southside, 105 Victoria Street, London SW1E 6QT.

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