A NSW partnership has been established with GW Pharmaceuticals to conduct the world's first clinical trials using medicinal cannabis products for children with severe epilepsy. The trials will test cannabidivarin (CBDV) in a phase 2 trial and cannabidiol (CBD) in a phase 4 trial and compassionate access scheme. Researchers at Sydney Children's Hospitals Network will lead the trials to evaluate CBDV and CBD as treatments for drug-resistant epilepsy and determine their safety and effectiveness. The goal is to understand which children may benefit from cannabis-derived medicines and identify any side effects.
HPV vaccine policies: How innovative partnerships led to policy relevant HPV vaccine research
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Bringing together European leading experts via presentations, workshops and case studies the Summit was a must attend event! We explored:
Current diagnostic testing in GP surgeries and Pharmacies
How Diagnostics can be funded and funding barriers
Advances in Prenatal Molecular Diagnostics
Diagnostic Regulations
Point of care testing
Advanced Diagnostics for infectious diseases
Adapting and evaluating Innovation
Education on testing and accuracy
Patient and Clinical pathways
Key health areas examined in the Summit included:
Sexual Health
Diabetes
Cancer
Antibiotic Resistance
Sepsis
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While companies no more possesses deep and extensive product pipeline, this is the perfect time to innovate! Innovate not only in terms of product (although that is the core), but also
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Webinar Series on COVID-19 vaccine: Jointly organized by Malaysian Society of Infection Control and Infectious Diseases (MyICID) & Institute for Clinical Research (ICR), NIH
Speaker: Dr. Norzaihan binti Hassan, Family Medicine Consultant working in Klinik Kesihatan Bandar Kota Bharu, Ministry of Health Malaysia.
An overview of knowledge and use of PrEP among gay men in Australia.
This presentation was given by Dean Murphy, AFAO HIV Education Officer, at the AFAO National HIV Forum, 17 October 2014.
The 2019 Diagnostic Summit brought together diagnostic developers in academia and industry as well as end-users in the pharmaceutical and healthcare sector to gain a comprehensive picture of diagnostics in prenatal, oncology, infectious disease, point-of-care, and liquid biopsy.
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Current diagnostic testing in GP surgeries and Pharmacies
How Diagnostics can be funded and funding barriers
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Diagnostic Regulations
Point of care testing
Advanced Diagnostics for infectious diseases
Adapting and evaluating Innovation
Education on testing and accuracy
Patient and Clinical pathways
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Sexual Health
Diabetes
Cancer
Antibiotic Resistance
Sepsis
Obesity
Urinary Infections
While companies no more possesses deep and extensive product pipeline, this is the perfect time to innovate! Innovate not only in terms of product (although that is the core), but also
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Clinical evidence for medicinal cannabis reportRoby Zomer
A Report Developed by the University of Sydney
Community Placement Program in Partnership with
MGC Pharmaceuticals, In recent years, medicinal cannabis has gone from being a niche and obscure area of medical scientific research into “one of the fastest moving frontiers in pharmacology”.
The potential value of cannabis as medicine has been demonstrated in relation to a number of serious conditions and symptoms including cancer, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, chronic pain, muscle spasticity and nausea. The clinical evidence regarding medicinal cannabis has received less attention
than it merits, and scientists, clinicians, patients and carers seeking access to this evidence have found it difficult to separate good research from the wealth of anecdotal and less rigorously obtained experimental results. This report aims to summarise the strongest available scientific research on the use of cannabis as a
medicine for the treatment of epilepsy, cancer and multiple sclerosis; the symptoms of these conditions; and the side-effects of their current treatment.
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Trends is defined as the dynamic changes going on in the pediatrics community to achieve and uplift the already existing facilities .
The new development can be in the form of newer drugs , new diagnostic technique or treatment plan .
When designing pediatric research, one size does not fit all. Simply adapting the adult clinical study protocol into its child-sized version will not be enough to gain IRB approval.
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1. INFORMATION FOR MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS
www.health.nsw.gov.au
MEDICINAL CANNABIS
CLINICAL TRIALS
FOR CHILDREN WITH
SEVERE EPILEPSY
A world first partnership
A NSW partnership has now been established
with GW Pharmaceuticals to hold the world’s
first medicinal cannabis trial for children with
severe drug-resistant epilepsy using a new
cannabis-derived drug, CBDV (cannabidivarin).
GW Pharmaceuticals has a number of
pharmaceutical products in the development
pipeline, including the cannabidiol (CBD)
product, Epidiolex® and products containing
cannabidivarin (CBDV).
The partnership delivers four key outcomes for
NSW:
■ a world first phase 2 clinical trial for a novel
product, cannabidivarin (CBDV)
■ a compassionate access scheme for
Epidiolex®
■ a phase 4 clinical trial of Epidiolex® (based on
success of phase 3 studies)
■ provision for NSW to host future clinical trials
of GW products.
Substances for the trials
Both the GW Pharmaceuticals nominated
CBDV product and Epidiolex® will be used in
the trials. The products will be pharmaceutical
grade and made in a GMP accredited facility.
They have had extensive testing in animal
models of epilepsy. These products are not
crude cannabis products; they are refined to
have known pharmacokinetic and
pharmacodynamic properties.
CBDV is a molecule in the cannabis plant that
has shown promising results as an anti-
convulsant, and for which GW Pharmaceuticals
already has phase 1 clinical trial results in adults.
CBDV does not produce the psychoactive
effects associated with herbal cannabis
containing high levels of 9-THC. CBDV has
been shown to have a good safety profile in
healthy adult volunteers and a Phase 2 study
regarding its effectiveness in adult focal
epilepsy is currently in development overseas.
This will be the first trial in the world of CBDV
as an anti-epileptic in children.
Epidiolex® is a product developed by GW,
which contains the non-psychoactive
cannabinoid, CBD (cannabidiol). Epidiolex®
is taken in the form of an oral liquid and is
currently in Phase 3 trials internationally.
Epidiolex® has shown positive results in a
compassionate use scheme in the United
States. Epidiolex® contains CBD. This drug is
being investigated overseas for the treatment
of various rare childhood epilepsy syndromes,
including Dravet syndrome and Lennox-Gastaut
Syndrome.
Leading the trials
NSW researchers at the Sydney Children’s
Hospitals Network, Dr John Lawson and Dr
Deepak Gill, will lead the development and
conduct of these trials using cannabis-derived
products that are manufactured and supplied
by GW.
Design of the clinical trials
Researchers will work with paediatric epilepsy
research specialists from across Australia and
cannabinoid therapeutics specialists from the
Lambert Initiative, University of Sydney, to
design the trials.
Each trial will have a specific number of
participants. This number will be carefully
calculated to ensure the study can achieve the
most accurate scientific result in the shortest
possible time. All trials will be conducted in
accordance with good practice for clinical trials
and be subject to regulatory approval including
MEDICAL PRACTITIONER ADVICE
The NSW Government has committed $3.5 million to explore the use of
cannabis products in providing relief for children with severe drug-resistant
epilepsy.
2. review and approval by an appropriate Human
Research Ethics Committee.
Researchers are expected to finalise the design
of the first of the trials over the coming months
and advertise for participants in 2016.
Research to date
A number of trials of the cannabinoid medicine,
cannabidiol, in children have shown promising
results in certain sub-groups of children with
epilepsy. Other cannabinoids, such as
cannabidivarin, have shown promise in animal
models of epilepsy and have shown few side
effects in healthy human volunteers.
Cannabidiol can interact with other epilepsy
medicines causing levels of those medicines in the
blood to rise. This means that children should be
carefully monitored for side effects and to ensure
that their drug levels remain therapeutic, and do
not enter the toxic or harmful range. There will
also be monitoring for possible side effects.
Cannabis-derived medicines and other products
from cannabis used to date do not work for all
children with epilepsy. Some children do not
tolerate the medicines and need to discontinue
the treatment. Some children have a reduction in
seizures; a smaller number may become seizure
free. However, many children do not respond at
all to cannabis-based oils or currently available
cannabinoid pharmaceutical products. These
trials will help clinicians understand who is most
likely to benefit from using these medicines and
what side effects they need to be watching out
for if these medicines become used more often.
Participating in the trials
Trials are expected to commence in 2016
following ethics approval. At that stage
researchers will advertise for interested
participants and publish information on:
■ who can participate in the trial (eligibility
criteria)
■ reasons why some children would not be able
to participate (exclusion criteria)
■ how researchers will measure the outcomes
(eg: by tests or seizure diaries).
Families and carers of children with severe
drug-resistant epilepsy have been encouraged
to discuss their child’s particular condition with
you as well as discussing whether the child might be
suitable for participation in a trial. Medical
practitioners should continue to optimise current
treatments and consider the condition of their
patients against any published trial eligibility criteria.
Usual referral patterns for complex epilepsy
services should continue. Change in referral
patterns will not necessarily advance eligibility of
patients for any individual trial. Additional
information on management of paediatric
epilepsy in NSW is available from the NSW
Paediatric Epilepsy Network website at
http://www.pennsw.com.au/
Your patient may be eligible for participation in
other clinical trials and opportunities should be
discussed with the child’s family. General
information on what clinical trials are underway
or planned can be found at:
https://www.australianclinicaltrials.gov.au/
This is a NSW based trial. Residents from other
states and territories in Australia will need to
await further information on potential study
hospital sites and local involvement. Medical
practitioners should assess whether children
may be able to participate. Further information
will be available as the trials program is
developed. NSW will continue to collaborate
with other states and territories regarding their
residents’ participation in any trials.
Compassionate access scheme
for Epidiolex®
From 2016 the new partnership with GW
Pharmaceuticals allows compassionate access
for a small number of children to Epidiolex®. This
scheme would be for a small number of children
who are not able to participate in a clinical trial
due to the unrelenting nature of their epilepsy
which has not responded to proven treatments.
Details on this scheme will be publicised as soon
as available.
More information
For more information:
■ call the Cannabis Trials Help Line on
1800 217 257
■ write to Cannabis Trials, NSW Ministry of
Health, Locked Mail Bag 961, North Sydney,
NSW 2059
■ email the NSW Ministry of Health on
cannabistrial@doh.health.nsw.gov.au
www.health.nsw.gov.au
INFORMATION FOR MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS