Title: 1996 IOM Report on Contraceptive Research
1 1996 IOM Report on Contraceptive
Research
Development A Summary
- Allan Rosenfield
- New Frontiers in Contraceptive Research
- Institute of Medicine
- July 15, 2003
2Funding Support
- Rockefeller Foundation
- Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
- NICHD
- USAID
- CONRAD
3Study Questions
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Is there a need for new contraceptives and, if
so, is there a market? - If the field of contraceptive RD has lost
energy, are there new prospects in the sciences
that could reenergize it? - Given such prospects, would they be sufficient to
accomplish the revitalization? - Is there potential for public private
partnerships?
4Study Objectives
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- To identify new leads for the next generation of
contraceptives - To consider ways to attract private sector
involvement, including pharmaceutical industry
and biotechnology companies
5Study organized around 2 major activities
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Workshop on prospects of the science underlying
the development of new contraceptives - December
1994 - Workshop on the opportunities, challenges , and
strategies for private-sector participation in
contraceptive research and development - May 1995
6Framework for Committees Deliberations
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Woman-Centered Agenda
- Spermicides/Microbicides
- Menses inducers and monthly methods
- Male contraceptives
7Global Indicators of Need Market Demand
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Unintended pregnancy (40-60)
- Abortion 40-50 M (approx. 20 M unsafe)
- Unmet need 120 200 M women
- Growing numbers of adolescent women
- Contraceptive side effects, failure
discontinuation - Sterilization
8Contraceptive Developments 1960-1996
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Major breakthroughs, 1960 OCs and IUDs
- Succeeding years method improvements
- Better IUDs
- Better OCs
- Newer ways to deliver hormonal methods for women
- Anti-progestins only significant new breakthrough
- Possible new approaches if newer molecular and
cellular basic science tools applied
9Obstacles to Contraceptive Research
- Economic
- Regulatory
- Liability
- Political - Ideological
10Major Recommendations
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- New contraceptives are needed and there is a
market if developed - A womens centered agenda should be focus
11Major Recommendations Research
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Work with genes whose products are truly specific
vs. central mechanism of action - Methods acting as chemical or physical barriers
to conception and STD/HIV transmission - Menses-inducers and once-a-month methods targeted
at different points in menstrual cycle - Methods for males to expand their contraceptive
choices and responsibility
12Major Recommendations Financial
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- RD on anti- and post-implantation methods as a
priority for funders (smaller firms and nonprofit
organizations) who are not constrained by
controversy - Continued public sector support for innovative
basic research in reproductive biology and
applied research to bring best leads to fruition
13Major Recommendations Financial
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Support for Consortium for Industrial
Collaboration in Contraceptive Research (CICCR),
whose purpose is to catalyze funding for
feasibility studies and matching industry support
potentially high-payoff mechanism for sponsor
investment - Expand coverage by public- and private-sector
third party payers for contraceptive services - Multilateral support for an extension of Global
Contraceptive Commodity Program to create
incentives for developing new contraceptives
14Major Recommendations Legal/Regulatory
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Enact Government Standards Defense allowing
defendant manufacturers to assert the honest open
compliance with FDA requirements, which would
provide some liability shelter - Immediate FDA attention to generation of clear
guidelines for manufacturers for development of
vaginal microbicides and spermicides
15Major Recommendations Information, Education,
Communication
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Significant effort toward balanced, accurate,
intelligible packaging to - Correct current lack of appropriate product
information for providers and consumers - Catalyze dialogue across sectors and interest
groups
16Impact of the Report
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Microbicide Research
- More than 90 million committed to research
- Population Council, CICCR, new IPM
- Donors Gates, Rockefeller, World Bank, DFID
- Male Contraception Research
- Public private partnership
- Focus on post-testicular methods
- Renewed interest in hormonal methods
17Impact of the Report (cont.)
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Monthly methods
- Mifepristone studies in China
- Emergency contaception
- Luteal contraception
- Post-implantation abortifacient
- Multiple studies of mifepristone, misoprostol and
methotrexate - Renewed interest of pharmaceutical industry,
although much still needed
18The Challenge to the New Committee
IOM Study on Contraceptive RD
- Continue efforts to involve basic molecular
science in the field - Identify new leads, particularly those without
systemic side effects. - Expand funding support from private foundations,
government and industry