Schulich School of Law and Dalhousie Medicine Professor Matthew Herder, Director of the Health Law Institute

Matthew Herder (LLB’03, LLM’06), director of the Health Law Institute at Dalhousie, is an advocate for transparency in medical research. While Canada is now sharing clinical study reports online as does the E.U., lawyers and independent researchers are urging the U.S. to follow suit.

This past March, Canada’s department of health changed the way it handles the huge amount of data that companies submit when seeking approval for a new drug, biological treatment, or medical device — or a new use for an existing one. For the first time, Health Canada is making large chunks of this information publicly available after it approves or rejects applications.

pharmaceuticals, pills and prescriptionsWithin 120 days of a decision, Health Canada will post clinical study reports on a new government online portal, starting with drugs that contain novel active ingredients and adding devices and other drugs over a four-year phase-in period. These company-generated documents, often running more than 1,000 pages, summarize the methods, goals, and results of clinical trials, which test the safety and efficacy of promising medical interventions. The reports play an important role in helping regulators make their decisions, along with other information, such as raw data about individual patients in clinical trials.

So far, Health Canada has posted reports for four newly approved drugs — one to treat plaque psoriasis in adults, two to treat two different types of skin cancer, and the fourth for advanced hormone-related breast cancer — and is preparing to release reports for another 13 drugs and three medical devices approved or rejected since March.

Read more in “Canada Opens the Door to Public Scrutiny of Clinical Drug Trials” on undark.org. 

Photo: Rachael Kelly