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Senate Hearing on Increasing Access to Treatments to Prolong Life – Commentary

Drugs or products approval concept. Rubber stamp with the text FDA approved over white background. 3D illustration

By Ed Hudgins

On Thursday, Oct 26, the Senate Committee on Aging will hold a hearing on “Unlocking Hope: Access to Therapies for People with Rare, Progressive, and Serious Diseases” at 8:30 a.m., followed by a 9:00 press conf. The venue is 106 Dirksen Senate Office Building.

This hearing is in support of the bipartisan Promising Pathway Act (PPA), S-1906, to reform the Food and Drug Administration.

Not, strictly speaking, a longevity bill but opens the way for the FDA to consider aging treatments.

It takes about 10-12 years and $3 billion to bring new treatments from researchers to patients. FDA’s certification regulations cause most delays. Among benefits, PPA would:

– Allow provisional approval of treatments tested as safe but still in clinical trials, allowing those suffering from serious ailments but who can’t get into those trials access to health- and life-saving meds;

– Require real world data on patient experiences with treatments to be logged in a database, allowing sponsors to secure quicker approval for beneficial treatments & alerting healthcare providers to treatments that could help patients;

– Open the door for innovative ways to test proposed treatments, cutting costs and approval time, and spurring innovative treatments.

– This is an opportunity to help replace our current “sick-care” system with a true healthcare system!

Edward Hudgins, Ph.D.(ehudgins@humanachievementalliance.org) is the founder of the Human Achievement Alliance.  An earlier version of this article appeared on LinkedIn.  Reprinted with permission

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