DIA: Driving Insights to Action
Science:Life Sciences
Cell and gene therapy are raising new ethical questions in clinical research and practice. “It will probably be the case that breast cancer, which now affects both wealthy people and poor people, will increasingly be a disease of poor people because wealthy people were able to get rid of the mutation from their families,” suggests Robert Klitzman, Professor of Psychiatry at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and Director of the University’s Bioethics Masters and Certificate Programs. “Is this the kind of world we want, where wealthy people can afford to have better genes?”
Analyzing Innovation’s Progress in Gottlieb Era
Comparing Generic Safety Profile with Branded Cousin
Defining Unmet Need Critical to Determining Value
Triple-A RWE: Adequate Data, Appropriate Designs, Actionable Evidence
US REMS Requirements for NDAs and BLAs
Epoietin Biosimilars: Qualitative Study of Patients' Views
Disparities Between FDA/EMA Review Processes
DIA Japan's Focus in Fall 2018
FDA Leadership on Future Biologics and EMA/FDA Cooperation
Global Perspectives on Patient Engagement
DIA Board Chair Discusses DIA Now and Digital Tomorrow
Integrating Genetic Medicine into Clinical Care
Regulatory Landscape of Drug-Device Combination Products
Value-Based Assessment & Contracting: What Needs to Be Done?
Block Chain, AI, Internet of Things: Future of PharmaTech?
“My Voice Needed to Be Heard”
IMEDS Collaboration Builds Upon Sentinel Surveillance
Crafting Sound Medical Affairs Professionals
Statistical Strategies for Using Sources of Safety Data
Regulatory & Ethical Considerations in a Pediatric Trial
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