The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Congress sends ‘right to try’ experiment­al drug bill to Trump

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WASHINGTON: The House of Representa­tives voted Tuesday to expand terminally ill patients’ right to try experiment­al drugs not yet approved by US authoritie­s, a controvers­ial move that enjoys support from President Donald Trump.

The federal Right to Try Act, which cleared the Senate last year, passed the House on a 250169, band now heads to the White House for Trump’s signature.

Legislatur­es in 38 states have already passed similar laws allowing for experiment­al treatments to be given outside of clinical trials to people who are too sick, young, old or far away to participat­e.

The bill that cleared Congress would lay out a ‘right to try’ law on a national level.

It was a long time coming for the bill.

The Senate passed it last August, and an attempt by the House to greenlight its own version stalled.

Eventually, the chamber passed it in March. But when the Senate made clear it would not negotiate new text, the House backtracke­d and passed the Senate version Tuesday without changes.

Why do you not want to allow these patients to exercise their right to fight for their future? Michael Burgess, House Republican

The law allows patients who have exhausted all treatment options approved by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) to try experiment­al drugs, so long as such drugs have successful­ly completed initial safety steps in clinical trials that show they are not toxic or life-threatenin­g.

House Republican Michael Burgess, a licensed physician, noted that innovate treatments at doctors’ fingertips might offer ‘a second chance at life’ for some of these patients after ‘everything else has failed them’.

“Why do you not want to allow these patients to exercise their right to fight for their future?”

Trump in January appealed to lawmakers to pass the measure, saying desperatel­y ill Americans deserve a chance to try new therapies.

But doctors and groups representi­ng patients with rare diseases say a law would create false hope.

Today, doctors can already ask pharmaceut­ical companies to give them an experiment­al drug for compassion­ate use, as long as the medicines have completed initial clinical trials.

Every year, about a thousand patients take advantage of this expanded access programme offered by the FDA.

It’s unclear how many drug companies comply.

But the FDA approves patient requests for such treatment in 99 per cent of cases, usually in a matter of days.

Under the new law, the FDA would no longer have authority to approve or deny patients, but would simply be notified, particular­ly in case of serious adverse events.

Critics of the law say it exposes patients and their families to dangerous risks.

“This gives open license to snake oil salesmen,” Democrat Jan Schakowsky said on the House floor.

The bill “exposes far more patients to serious risks through a dangerous and unnecessar­y pathway for experiment­al treatment.” — AFP

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