Performing clinical drug trials in children with a rare disease
Victoria Hedley, Rebecca Leary, Anando Sen, Anna Irvin, Emma Heslop,, Volker Straub

TL;DR
This paper discusses the unique challenges and regulatory frameworks involved in conducting clinical drug trials for children with rare diseases, highlighting current issues and potential solutions.
Contribution
It provides an overview of the challenges in pediatric rare disease trials and evaluates existing and future strategies to improve research and development.
Findings
Regulatory frameworks have increased pediatric drug development.
Challenges include small patient populations and trial recruitment issues.
Innovative methodologies are needed for effective trial planning.
Abstract
Over the past 50 years, the advancements in medical and health research have radically changed the epidemiology of health conditions in neonates, children, and adolescents; and clinical research has on the whole, moved forward. However, large sections of the pediatric community remain vulnerable and underserved, by clinical research. One reason for this is the fact that most pediatric diseases are also rare diseases (i.e., they fit the EU definition of a rare condition, by affecting no more than 5 in 10,000 individuals), and indeed the majority of conditions under this umbrella heading are in fact much rarer, affecting fewer than 1 in 100,000. Rare pediatric diseases incur particular challenges, both in terms of actually conducting clinical trials but also planning trials (and indeed, stimulating the preclinical research and knowledge generation necessary to embark on clinical trials in…
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