It is no use to blame the looking glass if your face is awry. -- Nikolai Gogol
The survey found that FDA regulatory challenges were most frequently cited as having a significant effect on investment trends.
Blame the FDA? It’s a convenient excuse when sponsors aren’t transparent (I hesitate to say “honest”) about their interactions and communications with the agency.
For example, upon receipt of a Complete Response Letter, many companies issue public statements to the effect of, “We were shocked! The FDA never said there were any problems. We were most definitely expecting product approval.”
Some companies will blame the FDA with excuses like, “The FDA won’t allow us to discuss the letter” or “The FDA will be upset if we release the letter.” Hogwash.
And when you read the CR, all of a sudden it seems there is often blame to be shared. But, since CRs (and all FDA-sponsor communications) are commercial confidential, sponsors rarely (if ever) offer them with the media or, for that matter (and germane to the NVCA survey), the investment community. Why is that?
Might it be that sponsors make mistakes and that there is (de minimus) blame to be shared? Might it be that companies sometimes try to game the system (accelerated approval issues come to mind) – and fail? Blaming the FDA when corporate strategy flounders is convenient when the agency cannot release (in its own defense) any information.
Might Complete Response Letters be made public? Consider this statement by FDA Commissioner Hamburg when asked whether FDA is discussing unilateral disclosure of information about drug development programs even if a sponsor objects, “It’s a discussion that we’re having, and I think it’s a partnership working with industry. We need to move in directions that make sense, that will have value added, and where everyone understands the expectations and the opportunities.”
Here it is straight from the Bob Temple:
“If I were a reporter, I would say, ‘if you don’t show me the letter I don’t even want to talk to you.’ That’s what I would say.”
Wisdom of Temple or Temple of Wisdom, no matter how you slice it, it equals the FDA’s strong support for transparency.
Blame the FDA? Perhaps. But the fault, dear Brutus …
Take your life in your own hand and what happens? A terrible thing: No one to blame. -- Erica Jong
The NVCA also noted that, after FDA issues, the most potent challenge to investors are reimbursement issues.
And that’s another story.