skip banner navigation
National Cancer Institute
NCI Home Cancer Topics Clinical Trials Cancer Statistics Research & Funding News About NCI
Understanding the Approval Process for New Cancer Treatments
    Updated: 01/06/2004




Understanding the Approval Process for New Cancer






FDA's Role






Clinical Trials






Special Needs






Q&A: Off-Label Drugs






History



Page Options
Print This Page  Print This Page
Print This Document  Print This Document
View Entire Document  View Entire Document
E-Mail This Document  E-Mail This Document
Quick Links
Dictionary

Funding Opportunities

NCI Publications

NCI Calendar

Español
NCI Highlights
Chemo Extends Life in Advanced Prostate Cancer

Temozolomide Plus Radiation Helps Brain Cancer

Confirmed: Raloxifene Drops Risk of Breast Cancer

Bortezomib Delays Progression of Multiple Myeloma

Annual Report to the Nation

Past Highlights
Need Help?
Related Pages
Newly Approved Cancer Treatments
Information from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) about recently approved cancer treatments.

Protecting Participants in Clinical Trials
A collection of material about the ways in which clinical trials participants are protected before and during the conduct of a study.
Understanding the Approval Process for New Cancer Treatments

Every year, medical researchers develop new cancer treatments or new uses for treatments already on the market. These treatments are most often drugs, chemically produced substances used to treat or prevent disease. But they may also be biologics, treatments that are made from living organisms such as vaccines or recombinant proteins.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services charged with making sure that drugs and biologics are safe and effective before they go on the market. The FDA maintains a list of drugs and biologics approved for use with cancer.

FDA regulators face two main challenges during the approval process. First, they must make sure the treatment is safe and effective. For this, regulators rely on the results of clinical trials - research studies that test how well medical treatments or other interventions work in people. (For more information about trials, see What Is a Clinical Trial?)

The second challenge is to make promising treatments available as quickly as possible to the people most in need of them. Ordinarily this occurs through clinical trials. The FDA may also allow access to an unapproved investigational treatment outside of a clinical trial, if no approved therapy for the disease exists.

This guide will acquaint you with the main parts of the FDA approval process and point you to other resources for learning more about it.

Back to TopBack to Top

Next Section >

skip footer navigation

A Service of the National Cancer Institute
Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health FirstGov.gov