Kids v Cancer urges Congress to permanently reauthorize pediatric voucher program

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print

Kids v Cancer is urging Congress to pass the Creating Hope Reauthorization Act (S. 4010), which would permanently reauthorize the pediatric voucher program.

The pediatric priority review voucher program encourages the development of new drugs for seriously ill children, including children with cancer, by providing a voucher to pharmaceutical companies which develop such drugs. Vouchers can be used to expedite FDA approval for any other future drug, which allows those future drugs to reach markets faster.

The pediatric voucher program will sunset if Congress does not approve the act by September 30, “ending a critical incentive program for the development of drugs for kids with life threatening illnesses,” Nancy Goodman, executive director of Kids v Cancer, said in a statement.

Bob Casey (D-PA) and Susan Collins (R-ME) introduced the bill to the Senate. G.K. Butterfield and Michael McCaul introduced the Creating Hope Reauthorization Act in the House in September 2019 (H.R. 4439).

The rare pediatric priority review voucher program has resulted in 22 novel therapies for seriously ill children, and in over one billion dollars of incentives for companies to develop rare pediatric disease drugs with no cost to consumers or taxpayers, Goodman said.

“The Children’s Oncology Group is highly supportive of the impact that the Creating Hope Reauthorization Act brings to the care of children with cancer,” Doug Hawkins, chair of the Children’s Oncology Group, said in a statement. “There remains a significant need to focus effort on making better medicines more available for all children and the pediatric voucher program plays an instrumental role in this effort.”

Table of Contents

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

Leadership is changing at The Wistar Institute and the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute in the months to come—but the leaders of the two institutions say that this will have little if any effect on the clinical-research collaboration that they have spent the past 15years building (The Cancer Letter, July 12, 2019). 
March is National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month. It is a reminder of a heartbreaking trend that oncologists like me are witnessing in our clinics: Last year, for the first time, colorectal cancer became the leading cause of cancer-related death in Americans under the age of 50, according to data published earlier this year in JAMA.

Never miss an issue!

Get alerts for our award-winning coverage in your inbox.

Login