Latest from Neena Brizmohun
The Health Research Authority says its new toolkit explains the differences and similarities in the research approval and set-up processes across the four UK nations so that researchers and sponsors are clear on what they need to do if they want to conduct a study in more than one of the countries.
The government’s decision for the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee to hold an extra meeting in 2025 has been welcomed by Medicines Australia, which says that Australians already wait on average 466 days from the time a medicine is approved to when it is subsidized.
Companies submitting individual case safety reports in Pakistan will soon have to use a new e-Reporting system that is expected to simplify and streamline the submissions process.
Australia’s industry group has updated its code of conduct with a number of new provisions, including one that clarifies its stance on members using its complaints system to disrupt another company's business.
Up to 40,000 people could be set to access Outlook Therapeutics’ Lytenava in England, according to health technology assessment institute NICE, which found the drug for wet age-related macular degeneration had similar health benefits to aflibercept and ranibizumab, and similar costs to aflibercept.
Medicines Australia has expressed skepticism over the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee’s claim that in March 2025 it will only be able to assess 32 submissions from companies that want to get their drugs subsidized under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.