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Shoham Das's avatar

Thanks for writing this and wholeheartedly agree on the transparency making the industry more effective across the board. The result is better designed drugs and trials for patients. FDA feedback should not be part of a competitive advantage of a drug company. Regulatory uncertainty and ambiguity is something we should be fighting against not for. Also people really underestimate just how much data and insights lie in ct.gov for designing trials.

Brian Vannoy's avatar

Really thoughtful piece.

One phrase I keep reacting to is “increasing competition.” I understand the policy argument, but emotionally it can sound like this is about one company losing advantage to another.

The more direct frame, to me, is that failed submissions contain hard-won learning. When that learning stays private, other teams repeat avoidable mistakes, trials take longer, capital burns down, and patients wait.

This is especially painful for smaller biotechs, where one regulatory misread can be the difference between getting another shot and running out of funding.

So yes, protect truly proprietary information. But FDA’s reasoning should not function like private case law available only to companies that have already paid the tuition.

And we may not need to wait for the government to solve all of this. Sponsors, advisors, and operators could start donating redacted FDA correspondence themselves, in the same spirit as CTD Commons. Let companies redact what they need to protect, but share enough of the regulatory reasoning that others can learn.

The goal is not “competitors win.” The goal is fewer repeated failures, better prepared submissions, and more drugs reaching real people faster.

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