FDA CPI 白皮书,2006,关键路径的机会清单(全文)
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从《FDA战略行动计划》看FDA工作发展方向作者:肖恺邵蓉来源:《上海医药》2010年第03期中图分类号:R951文献标识码:A文章编号:1006-1533(2010)03-0119-03美国食品与药物管理局(FDA)成立100多年来,其卓有成效的工作成果、清廉高效的工作作风、强烈的社会责任心,得到了世人的尊敬,成为保护公众健康的全球领导者。
毫无疑问,FDA在保证美国食品、药品、化妆品、医疗器械等产品的安全和有效,保障美国公众安全、健康方面发挥了至关重要的作用,其优良的监管模式被各国纷纷效仿,几乎每一次FDA重大改革都对世界药品监管理念产生了重大影响。
FDA会定期推出《战略行动计划》(以下简称《计划》),并每隔3年对其进行调整。
FDA 通过《计划》制定未来6年(当年财政年度及未来5年)的工作,包括说明机构存在的意义,各工作项目所要完成的任务及其时间要求,机构长期的发展方向以及机构管理者的近期行动等。
在《计划》制定过程中,FDA需要对其所处的环境和组织的资源能力进行分析,并准确地认识其目前面临的机会和挑战。
1FDA的职责与任务在最新一期的《计划》中FDA首先阐述了其机构职责,具体包括:1)保护公众健康,确保人用和兽用药品、生物制品、医疗器械、食品供给、化妆品、电子射线产品的安全性和有效性;2)改善公众健康,推动药品和食品的创新,提高其安全、有效、可及性;3)帮助公众获得他们所使用的食品和药品相关的准确和科学的信息,以改善他们的健康。
但是在现今这样一个瞬息万变的时代,要完成这样的使命,FDA的领导者面临重重挑战。
第一,FDA感受到信息化时代带来的挑战。
拥有先进通讯技术和互联网资源的患者和消费者,面临着一系列复杂的健康决策,因而需要和期望更加快速地获得更多的信息,以帮助选择相关的食品和药品。
第二,随着科学技术的不断进步,大量的新技术的广泛应用,FDA需要用新的科学方法进行引导和监管,以推动和加速开发新一代更加安全、有效的产品。
2006年美国FDA新药批准态势分析
陆颖
【期刊名称】《中国医药技术经济与管理》
【年(卷),期】2007(001)001
【摘要】@@ 美国FDA药品评价与研究中心去年共批准了101个新药和生物药,比2005年增长了26%.2006年美国FDA共批准了97个NDA(新药申请)和4个BLA(生物许可申请).
【总页数】2页(P77-78)
【作者】陆颖
【作者单位】国家食品药品监督管理局信息中心
【正文语种】中文
【相关文献】
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2.2006年度美国FDA和欧洲EMEA批准的新药
3.2006年美国FDA批准的新药
4.2011-2015年美国FDA 新药批准情况分析
5.2020年美国FDA批准创新药分析
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经济学原理练习题习题参考答案第一章经济学十大原理 (3)一、名词解释 (3)二、问题 (3)第二章像经济学家一样思考 (4)一、名词解释 (4)二、问题 (5)第三章相互依存性与贸易的好处 (7)一、名词解释 (7)二、问题 (7)第四章供给与需求的市场力量 (9)一、名词解释 (9)二、问题 (10)第五章弹性及其应用 (12)一、名词解释 (12)二、问题 (12)第六章供给、需求与政府政策 (14)一、名词解释 (14)二、问题 (14)第七章消费者、生产者与市场效率 (16)一、名词解释 (16)二、问题 (16)第八章应用:赋税的代价 (17)一、名词解释 (17)二、问题 (18)第九章应用:国际贸易 (19)一、名词解释 (19)二、问题 (19)第十章外部性 (20)一、名词解释 (20)二、问题 (20)第十一章公共物品和公共资源 (21)一、名词解释 (21)二、问题 (21)第十二章生产成本 (22)一、名词解释 (22)二、问题 (22)第十三章竞争市场上的企业 (25)一、名词解释 (25)二、问题 (26)第十四章垄断 (28)一、名词解释 (28)二、问题 (28)第十五章一国收入的衡量 (29)一、名词解释 (29)二、问题 (29)第十六章生活费用的衡量 (31)一、名词解释 (31)二、问题 (31)复习要点第一章经济学十大原理 (32)一、主要内容 (32)第二章像经济学家一样思考 (32)一、主要内容 (32)第三章相互依存性与贸易的好处 (32)一、主要内容 (32)第四章供给与需求的市场力量 (33)一、主要内容 (33)第五章弹性及其应用 (33)一、主要内容 (33)第六章供给、需求与政府政策 (33)一、主要内容 (33)第七章消费者、生产者与市场效率 (33)一、主要内容 (33)第八章应用:赋税的代价 (34)一、主要内容 (34)第九章应用:国际贸易 (34)一、主要内容 (34)第十章外部性 (34)一、主要内容 (34)第十一章公共物品和公共资源 (34)一、主要内容 (34)第十二章生产成本 (35)一、主要内容 (35)第十三章竞争市场上的企业 (35)一、主要内容 (35)第十四章垄断 (35)一、主要内容 (35)第十五章一国收入的衡量 (35)一、主要内容 (35)第十六章生活费用的衡量 (35)一、主要内容 (35)第一章经济学十大原理一、名词解释[1]稀缺性:社会资源的有限性。
非关税壁垒案例范文
1.配额限制:配额限制是指规定特定产品的进口数量,超出该配额的
进口将受到限制。
例如,欧盟对中国的纺织品和服装进口设置了配额限制。
这意味着如果中国的纺织品和服装进口超过了特定数量,就将受到限制。
2.进口许可证:进口许可证要求进口商在进口商品之前获得政府机构
的许可。
这些许可证通常是为了确保进口商品符合特定的质量和安全标准。
例如,美国对化妆品的进口要求进口商必须获得食品和药物管理局(FDA)的许可证。
3.产品质量和标准要求:产品质量和标准要求是指进口商品必须符合
特定的质量标准和技术要求。
这些标准可以被用来限制特定国家的进口。
例如,日本对进口车辆设置了严格的排放标准,这使得一些外国汽车很难
进入日本市场。
4.技术壁垒:技术壁垒是指进口商品必须满足特定的技术要求。
这些
技术要求可能是出于安全原因,也可能是为了保护本国产业。
例如,中国
对进口手机设置了特定的3G技术要求,这使得一些外国手机无法进入中
国市场。
5.相关法规和要求:相关法规和要求是指进口商品必须符合特定的法
律和要求。
这些要求可能涉及到环境保护,劳工权益,知识产权等方面。
例如,欧盟对进口木材要求符合特定的森林认证标准,以保护森林资源。
这些非关税壁垒措施通常是为了保护本国产业,确保进口商品符合特
定的质量和安全标准,或者是为了保护环境和劳工权益。
然而,这些措施
也可能被滥用,成为贸易保护主义的手段。
因此,国际贸易谈判和组织努
力通过减少非关税壁垒来促进自由贸易。
附录1 会议纪要模版《软件项目管理》案例讨论第组会议纪要主持人:记录人:参加人员:讨论地点:讨论时间:附录2 章节知识综合运用案例分析报告文档模版××项目案例分析(注意:有话则长,无话则短,内容格式不是唯一的,合适的就是最好的,内容切忌面面俱到,突出重点。
案例格式根据自己编写的内容进行调整、裁减或增加,注意内容与标号要一致。
内容要么不写,要写就要写完整。
以下框架仅供参考)一、项目概况1.1项目简介1.2 项目特点(或基本数据)1.3项目承包方二、项目范围确定2.1项目目标项目主要目标:1.2. …2.2 项目描述为了使项目各相关方和项目团队成员准确理解项目内容,明确项目目标,对本项目进行描述,见表2-1。
(内容未包括以下全部)表2-1××项目描述2.3 项目重大里程碑本项目里程碑有以下个:1.2.…根据项目工期要求,编制的里程碑计划,如表2-2所示。
(可参考P91)表2-2 ××项目里程碑计划三、项目工作分解四、3.1工作分解结构在对项目工作描述后,为顺利完成这些工作,确定项目的人员的职责范围、进行项目估算等内容,编制工作分解结构图。
见图3-1为本项目工作分解结构图。
{注:表格方框中的1行字应该全部换成项目具体活动的具体名称}3.2 项目的任务描述在项目分解完成后,为了使项目团队成员更准确的理解项目所包含的各项的具体内容和要求,对本项目工作进行描述。
其具体内容见表3-1所示。
表3-1 工作(或任务)描述领导签字:日期:200 年月日3.3 项目组织形式与责任矩阵3.3.1项目组织形式本项目的组织形式为形式,其结构见下图3-2所示。
图3-2 ××组织结构图(尚需补充与完善)3.3.2项目责任分配为了使项目团队成员清晰地了解项目中每一个任务的责任承担情况,并能在相互之间关于项目任务内容进行有效地沟通,并对在项目执行过程中进行有小的监督与管理,本项目部采用责任分配矩阵对参与项目各方的责任进行表述。
篇一:商贸贸易公司商业计划书商贸贸易公司商业计划书拟定人:公司:××商贸股份公司目录1.概述。
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软件六性分析报告:分析报告软件软件工程需求分析报告软件需求分析报告实例需求分析的步骤篇一:六性分析报告编号:XXXX式开关可靠性、维修性、保障性、测试性、安全性、环境适应性分析报告拟制:审核:批准:XXXXXXXX有限公司二零一一年三月1 概述为确保产品质量符合要求,达到顾客满意,根据《XXXX式开关产品质量保证大纲》的规定,对该产品的可靠性、维修性、保障性、测试性、安全性、环境适应性进行分析。
2 可靠性分析 2.1 元器件清单本器件选用元器件如下:2.2 可靠性预计本器件所采用的元器件有7类13种共57个。
其中任一元器件失效,都将造成整个器件失效,即器件正常工作的条件是各元器件都能正常工作。
因此,本器件的可靠性模型是一个串联模型。
该器件是可修复产品,寿命服从指数分布,根据可靠性理论,其平均故障间隔时间与失效率成反比,即:MTBF= 1/?pi (1)所用元器件均是通用或固化产品,其质量水平、工作应力及环境条件都相对固定,其失效率因子等有关可靠性参数可参考《GJB/Z299C-2006电子设备可靠性预计手册》,从而采用应力分析法来预计本器件的可靠性指标。
本器件一般内置于系统机箱内,使用大环境是舰船甲板或舰船舱内,其环境代号Ns2,工作温度-40?,+70?,现计算其可靠性指标。
2.2.1 PIN二极管的工作失效率?p1本器件使用PIN二极管,其工作失效率模型为p1bEQK (2) 式中:b ——基本失效率,10/h;-6E ——环境系数;Q ——质量系数;K ——种类系数。
由表5.3.11-1查得基本失效率?b =0.212×10-6/h; 由表5.3.11-2查得环境系数?E=14; 由表5.3.11-3查得质量系数?Q=0.05; 由表5.3.11-4查得种类系数?K=0.5;本器件中使用了18只PIN二极管,故其工作失效率为:p10.212106140.050.5181.3356106/h2.2.2 片状电容器的工作失效率?p2本器件选用的片状电容器,其工作失效率模型为:p2bEQCVKch (3)b ——基本失效率,10/h;-6E ——环境系数;Q ——质量系数;CV ——电容量系数;K ——种类系数;ch ——表面贴装系数。
篇一:矿业公司商业计划书矿业公司商业计划书目录一、执行摘要 ................................................................. .................................................................... .. (2)二、公司介绍 ................................................................. .................................................................... .. (4)2.1 公司简介 ................................................................. .................................................................... .. 42.2 业务/产品 ................................................................. (4)2.3 公司战略 ................................................................. .................................................................... .. 52.4 股权结构 ................................................................. .................................................................... .. 6三、市场分析 ................................................................. .................................................................... .. (6)3.1 市场概述:大规模,高增长 ................................................................. .. (6)3.2 锌金属:中国是世界第一大锌生产国 ................................................................. .. (7)3.3 铅金属:中国是世界第二大铅生产国 ................................................................. .. (8)3.4 黄金:需求稳步增长 ................................................................. .. (8)四、经营模式 ................................................................. .................................................................... (10)4.1 矿业经营模式 ................................................................. (10)4.2 生物质发电经营模式 ................................................................. (12)五、管理体系 ................................................................. .................................................................... (14)5.1 治理结构 ................................................................. ....................................................................145.2 组织结构 ................................................................. ....................................................................155.3 管理团队 ................................................................. ....................................................................165.4 监督/激励机制 ................................................................. .. (16)六、竞争分析 ................................................................. .................................................................... (18)6.1 竞争格局 ................................................................. ....................................................................186.2 竞争优势 ................................................................. ....................................................................18七、财务计划 ................................................................. .................................................................... (27)7.1 投资计划 ................................................................. ....................................................................277.2 融资计划 ................................................................. ....................................................................27八、财务预测 ................................................................. .................................................................... (29)8.1 销售预测 ................................................................. ....................................................................298.2 预测财务报表 ................................................................. (31)九、风险及对策 ................................................................. . (36)9.1 风险说明 ................................................................. ....................................................................369.2 风险规避 ................................................................. .................................... 错误!未定义书签。
学校产教融合实训基地项目可行性研究报告中咨国联|出品目录第一章总论 (9)1.1项目概要 (9)1.1.1项目名称 (9)1.1.2项目建设单位 (9)1.1.3项目建设性质 (9)1.1.4项目建设地点 (9)1.1.5项目负责人 (9)1.1.6项目投资规模 (10)1.1.7项目建设规模 (10)1.1.8项目资金来源 (12)1.1.9项目建设期限 (12)1.2项目建设单位介绍 (12)1.3编制依据 (12)1.4编制原则 (13)1.5研究范围 (14)1.6主要经济技术指标 (14)1.7综合评价 (16)第二章项目背景及必要性可行性分析 (18)2.1项目提出背景 (18)2.2本次建设项目发起缘由 (20)2.3项目建设必要性分析 (20)2.3.1促进我国学校产教融合实训基地产业快速发展的需要 (21)2.3.2加快当地高新技术产业发展的重要举措 (21)2.3.3满足我国的工业发展需求的需要 (22)2.3.4符合现行产业政策及清洁生产要求 (22)2.3.5提升企业竞争力水平,有助于企业长远战略发展的需要 (22)2.3.6增加就业带动相关产业链发展的需要 (23)2.3.7促进项目建设地经济发展进程的的需要 (23)2.4项目可行性分析 (24)2.4.1政策可行性 (24)2.4.2市场可行性 (24)2.4.3技术可行性 (24)2.4.4管理可行性 (25)2.4.5财务可行性 (25)2.5学校产教融合实训基地项目发展概况 (25)2.5.1已进行的调查研究项目及其成果 (26)2.5.2试验试制工作情况 (26)2.5.3厂址初勘和初步测量工作情况 (26)2.5.4学校产教融合实训基地项目建议书的编制、提出及审批过程 (27)2.6分析结论 (27)第三章行业市场分析 (28)3.1市场调查 (28)3.1.1拟建项目产出物用途调查 (28)3.1.2产品现有生产能力调查 (28)3.1.3产品产量及销售量调查 (29)3.1.4替代产品调查 (29)3.1.5产品价格调查 (29)3.1.6国外市场调查 (30)3.2市场预测 (30)3.2.1国内市场需求预测 (30)3.2.2产品出口或进口替代分析 (31)3.2.3价格预测 (31)3.3市场推销战略 (31)3.3.1推销方式 (32)3.3.2推销措施 (32)3.3.3促销价格制度 (32)3.3.4产品销售费用预测 (32)3.4产品方案和建设规模 (33)3.4.1产品方案 (33)3.4.2建设规模 (33)3.5产品销售收入预测 (34)3.6市场分析结论 (34)第四章项目建设条件 (35)4.1地理位置选择 (35)4.2区域投资环境 (36)4.2.1区域概况 (36)4.2.2地形地貌条件 (36)4.2.3气候条件 (36)4.2.4交通区位条件 (37)4.2.5经济发展条件 (38)第五章总体建设方案 (40)5.1总图布置原则 (40)5.2土建方案 (40)5.2.1总体规划方案 (40)5.2.2土建工程方案 (41)5.3主要建设内容 (42)5.4工程管线布置方案 (43)5.4.2供电 (45)5.5道路设计 (47)5.6总图运输方案 (47)5.7土地利用情况 (47)5.7.1项目用地规划选址 (47)5.7.2用地规模及用地类型 (47)第六章产品方案 (50)6.1产品方案 (50)6.2产品性能优势 (50)6.3产品执行标准 (50)6.4产品生产规模确定 (50)6.5产品工艺流程 (51)6.5.1产品工艺方案选择 (51)6.5.2产品工艺流程 (51)6.6主要生产车间布置方案 (58)6.7总平面布置和运输 (58)6.7.1总平面布置原则 (58)6.7.2厂内外运输方案 (58)6.8仓储方案 (59)第七章原料供应及设备选型 (60)7.1主要原材料供应 (60)7.2主要设备选型 (60)7.2.1设备选型原则 (61)7.2.2主要设备明细 (61)第八章节约能源方案 (64)8.1本项目遵循的合理用能标准及节能设计规范 (64)8.2建设项目能源消耗种类和数量分析 (64)8.2.1能源消耗种类 (64)8.2.2能源消耗数量分析 (65)8.3项目所在地能源供应状况分析 (65)8.4主要能耗指标及分析 (65)8.4.1项目能耗分析 (65)8.4.2国家能耗指标 (66)8.5节能措施和节能效果分析 (66)8.5.1工业节能 (66)8.5.2电能计量及节能措施 (67)8.5.3节水措施 (67)8.5.4建筑节能 (68)8.6结论 (69)第九章环境保护与消防措施 (70)9.1设计依据及原则 (70)9.1.1环境保护设计依据 (70)9.1.2设计原则 (70)9.2建设地环境条件 (70)9.3 项目建设和生产对环境的影响 (71)9.3.1 项目建设对环境的影响 (71)9.3.2 项目生产过程产生的污染物 (72)9.4 环境保护措施方案 (73)9.4.1 项目建设期环保措施 (73)9.4.2 项目运营期环保措施 (74)9.4.3环境管理与监测机构 (75)9.5绿化方案 (76)9.6消防措施 (76)9.6.1设计依据 (76)9.6.2防范措施 (76)9.6.3消防管理 (78)9.6.4消防设施及措施 (78)9.6.5消防措施的预期效果 (79)第十章劳动安全卫生 (80)10.1 编制依据 (80)10.2概况 (80)10.3 劳动安全 (80)10.3.1工程消防 (80)10.3.2防火防爆设计 (81)10.3.3电气安全与接地 (81)10.3.4设备防雷及接零保护 (81)10.3.5抗震设防措施 (82)10.4劳动卫生 (82)10.4.1工业卫生设施 (82)10.4.2防暑降温及冬季采暖 (83)10.4.3个人卫生 (83)10.4.4照明 (83)10.4.5噪声 (83)10.4.6防烫伤 (83)10.4.7个人防护 (83)10.4.8安全教育 (84)第十一章企业组织机构与劳动定员 (85)11.1组织机构 (85)11.2激励和约束机制 (85)11.3人力资源管理 (86)11.4劳动定员 (86)11.5福利待遇 (87)第十二章项目实施规划 (88)12.1建设工期的规划 (88)12.2 建设工期 (88)12.3实施进度安排 (88)第十三章投资估算与资金筹措 (90)13.1投资估算依据 (90)13.2建设投资估算 (90)13.3流动资金估算 (92)13.4资金筹措 (92)13.5项目投资总额 (93)13.6资金使用和管理 (98)第十四章财务及经济评价 (99)14.1总成本费用估算 (99)14.1.1基本数据的确立 (99)14.1.2产品成本 (100)14.1.3平均产品利润与销售税金 (101)14.2财务评价 (101)14.2.1项目投资回收期 (101)14.2.2项目投资利润率 (102)14.2.3不确定性分析 (102)14.3综合效益评价结论 (105)第十五章风险分析及规避 (107)15.1项目风险因素 (107)15.1.1不可抗力因素风险 (107)15.1.2技术风险 (107)15.1.3市场风险 (107)15.1.4资金管理风险 (108)15.2风险规避对策 (108)15.2.1不可抗力因素风险规避对策 (108)15.2.2技术风险规避对策 (108)15.2.3市场风险规避对策 (108)15.2.4资金管理风险规避对策 (109)第十六章招标方案 (110)16.1招标管理 (110)16.2招标依据 (110)16.3招标范围 (110)16.4招标方式 (111)16.5招标程序 (111)16.6评标程序 (112)16.7发放中标通知书 (112)16.8招投标书面情况报告备案 (112)16.9合同备案 (112)第十七章结论与建议 (113)17.1结论 (113)17.2建议 (113)附表 (114)附表1 销售收入预测表 (114)附表2 总成本表 (115)附表3 外购原材料表 (116)附表4 外购燃料及动力费表 (117)附表5 工资及福利表 (118)附表6 利润与利润分配表 (119)附表7 固定资产折旧费用表 (120)附表8 无形资产及递延资产摊销表 (121)附表9 流动资金估算表 (122)附表10 资产负债表 (123)附表11 资本金现金流量表 (124)附表12 财务计划现金流量表 (125)附表13 项目投资现金量表 (127)附表14 借款偿还计划表 (129)附表 (131)附表1 销售收入预测表 (131)附表2 总成本费用估算表 (132)附表3 外购原材料表 (133)附表4 外购燃料及动力费表 (134)附表5 工资及福利表 (135)附表6 利润与利润分配表 (136)附表7 固定资产折旧费用表 (137)附表8 无形资产及递延资产摊销表 (138)附表9 流动资金估算表 (139)附表10 资产负债表 (140)附表11 资本金现金流量表 (141)附表12 财务计划现金流量表 (142)附表13 项目投资现金量表 (144)附表14借款偿还计划表 (146)第一章总论总论作为可行性研究报告的首章,要综合叙述研究报告中各章节的主要问题和研究结论,并对项目的可行与否提出最终建议,为可行性研究的审批提供方便。
OPP讲稿一.自我介绍(最高兴趣时间点在15分钟左右)二.《管道的故事》这本书在经济领域里面非常有影响力,主要是分析传统行业和安利的区别,现在已经被编译成一段影片,接下来我们就一起欣赏这段影片。
通过这段影片我们了解到我们以前所从事的行业都是属于提水的行业,干就有不干就没有,包括做生意也是这样,只不过桶大一些,赚的钱多一些而已,不干还是没有。
如果真的有这样的行业,通过你三到五年的努力建立一个管道,当你不工作的时候依然有源源不断的收入,你愿意从事这样的行业吗?接下来我们就一起来了解真正的安利事业。
※首先我们来了解安利公司的发展历史。
安利公司创立于1959年,这是安利公司的两位创办人,一位叫狄维士另一位叫温安洛。
他们在年轻的时候合作成立了安利公司,当时他们没有任何条件,所以在一个废弃的加油站开始创业,只生产一种产品叫 LOC 。
通过四十几年的奋斗安利公司已经成长为一家世界知名的日用品生产企业。
在1995年全美亿万富豪的排名中,狄维士排名第九位,温安洛排名第十二位,目前安利公司的总资产超过380亿美元。
而且两位老人还多次担任美国总统的经济顾问,还担任过很多的重要职位。
现在已经退休了,由他们的儿子来继续掌管安利公司。
他的儿子叫狄克﹒狄维士,现任世界直销协会的主席,他的儿子叫史蒂夫﹒温安洛,现任全美商会的主席,美国商会是世界上最大的商业组织,拥有300多万家会员,代表着美国商界。
※安利公司总部,位于美国密执安州亚达城,整个工厂的占地面积超过44万平方米,现在安利在全球的生产、储运和办公设施面积达到95万平方米,相当于235个足球场。
※安利公司的产品畅销世界90多个国家和地区。
※ 1959年的销售额是50万美元,然后不断的研发新产品,不断开拓新的市场,销售额也是不断的增长,现在每年的营业额都超过70亿美金,而且还在稳步增长。
※安利公司经营了40多年,从来不向银行贷款,没有负债历史。
安利公司有很高的现金储备,还贷款给其他很多公司,其中包括美国通用(GM)汽车公司。
产品包业务计划书密级:内部资料XXXX产品包业务计划书版本号:V1.0编写:日期:审核:日期:批准:日期:目录1.综述(1-2页) (5)1.1.产品概要 (5)1.2.市场机遇 (5)1.3.产品策略一致性 (5)2.市场分析与市场策略(4-6页) (5)2.1.市场概观 (5)2.2.目标市场 (6)2.3.市场策略 (6)2.3.1.产品策略 (6)2.3.2.销售策略 (6)2.3.3.价格策略 (7)2.3.4.竞争策略 (7)2.3.5.产品发布、公关与宣传策略 (7)2.3.6.产品生命周期与服务策略 (7)2.3.7.产品组合销售策略 (7)3.竞争分析(3-4页) (7)3.1.市场竞争概况 (7)4.产品概述(5-7页) (8)4.1.目前我司已开发或市场销售版本情况 (8)4.2.产品需求/特性及其优先级定义 (8)4.3.产品需求分析 (8)4.4.独特的公司内部需求 (8)4.5.技术需求和对策 (8)5.生产和供货计划(1-2页) (9)5.1.产品的制造策略 (9)5.2.集成供应链的概述 (9)5.3.生产测试概述 (9)5.4.关键产品成本跟踪流程(物料比例、制造成本) (9)5.5.产品需要的新的制造技术与流程说明 (10)6.市场计划(1-2页) (10)6.1.销售人员计划 (10)6.2.生命周期内目标销售收入(份额、覆盖率、增长率) (10)6.3.按销售渠道的行销与营销计划:详细的销售生命周期 (10)6.4.为支持各个渠道的销售计划,每个渠道的营销与行销所需要的资源: (10)6.5.制订初步的行业及市场准入需求和计划 (11)7.用户服务策略(1-2页) (11)8.项目进度及资源(2-3页) (11)8.1.项目进度概要 (11)8.2.到下一阶段决策评审的计划 (11)8.3.建议的PDT组织结构及成员 (12)8.4.人员总体需求 (12)8.5.预算/分配(可选) (12)9.风险评估和风险管理(1页) (12)10.财务概述(2-3页) (12)10.1.产品投入 (13)10.1.1.开发期研发投入估算 (13)10.1.2.前期市场投入 (13)10.1.3.总投入计算 (13)10.2.产品销售收入预测 (13)10.3.产品生产制造成本预计 (13)10.3.1.量产点产品设计材料成本预计 (13)10.3.2.产品生命周期内生产制造成本预计 (14)10.4.期间费用 (14)10.4.1.期间费用预算方案一: (14)10.4.2.期间费用预算方案二: (14)10.5.收益分析 (14)10.6.敏感性分析 (15)10.6.1.盈亏平衡点 (15)10.6.2.敏感性分析 (15)11.建议(1页) (15)11.1.选择方案及建议 (15)11.2.项目变化范围 (16)1.综述(1-2页)综述包含了业务计划的主旨:市场机遇、产品概念和产品盈利情况。
融资计划书融资计划书范本日子如同白驹过隙,我们又将接触新的知识,学习新的技能,积累新的经验,请一起努力,写一份计划吧。
我们该怎么拟定计划呢?以下是店铺帮大家整理的融资计划书范本,仅供参考,希望能够帮助到大家。
融资计划书范本1******能源科技有限公司本项目总投资5000万元人民币,其中建设资金4000万元,流动资金1000万元。
项目计划最终实现年产1万套太空能热泵设备,最终年产值达4320万元人民币,年总成本为1512万元,年利润为2808万元,年上缴利税545万元,年净利润为2263万元。
投资利润率为45.26%,投资利税率为10.9%。
项目建设期为2年(已建设1年),经营期为长期。
项目动态投资回收期(含建设期1年)2.87年,静态投资回收期(含建设期1年)为2.21年。
达产后第一年还款600万元,第二年还款800万元,第三年还款600万元。
本项目经济效益可观,保证三年内还清全部投资。
*****新能源科技有限公司20xx年6月28日融资计划书范本2第一部分摘要一. 公司概况描述二. 公司的宗旨和目标三. 公司目前股权结构四. 已投入的资金及用途五. 公司目前主要产品或服务介绍六. 市场概况和营销策略七. 主要业务部门及业绩简介八. 核心经营团队九. 公司优势说明十. 目前公司为实现目标的增资需求:原因、数量、方式、用途、偿还十一. 融资方案(资金筹措及投资方式及退出方案)十二. 财务分析1. 财务历史数据2. 财务预计3. 资产负债情况第二部分综述第一章公司介绍一.公司的宗旨二.公司简介资料三.各部门职能和经营目标四.公司管理1. 董事会2. 经营团队3. 外部支持第二章技术与产品一.技术描述及技术持有二.电动模型产品状况1. 主要产品目录2. 电动模型产品特性3. 正在开发/待开发产品简介4. 研发计划及时间表5. 知识产权策略6. 无形资产三.电动模型产品生产1.资源及原材料供应2.现有生产条件和生产能力3.扩建设施、要求及成本,扩建后生产能力4.原有主要设备及需添置设备5.电动模型产品标准、质检和生产成本控制6.包装与储运第三章电动模型市场分析一.市场规模、市场结构与划分二.目标市场的设定三.电动模型产品消费群体、消费方式、消费习惯及影响电动模型市场的主要因素分析四.目前公司电动模型产品市场状况,电动模型产品所处市场发展阶段(空白/新开发/高成长/成熟/饱和)电动模型产品排名及品牌状况五.市场趋势预测和市场机会六.行业政策第四章竞争分析一.有无行业垄断二.从市场细分看竞争者市场份额三.主要竞争对手情况:公司实力、电动模型产品情况四.潜在竞争对手情况和电动模型市场变化分析五.公司电动模型产品竞争优势第五章市场营销一.概述电动模型营销计划二.电动模型销售政策的制定三.电动模型销售渠道、方式、行销环节和售后服务四.主要业务关系状况五.电动模型销售队伍情况及销售福利分配政策六.促销和市场渗透1. 主要促销方式2. 广告/公关策略、媒体评估七.电动模型产品价格方案1. 电动模型定价依据和价格结构2. 影响电动模型价格变化的因素和对策八. 电动模型销售资料统计和销售纪录方式,销售周期的计算。
March 2006Table of ContentsI NTRODUCTION (1)T OPIC 1:B ETTER E VALUATION T OOLS (1)Biomarker Qualification and Standards (1)1. Biomarker Qualification (1)2. Standards for Microarray and Proteomics-Based Identification of Biomarkers (1)Qualifying Disease- and Disorder-Specific Biomarkers (2)Asthma (2)3. Role of Beta Adrenergic Receptor Polymorphisms in Asthma Treatments (2)Pregnancy (2)4. Measures of Effectiveness of Fertility Treatments (2)5. Markers of Effectiveness of Treatment for Pre-term Labor (2)Cardiovascular Biomarkers (2)6. Surrogate Outcomes for Cardiovascular Drug Eluting Stents (2)7. Circulating Biomarkers in Cardiovascular Diseases (2)Infectious Diseases (2)8. Proving the Efficacy of Preventive Vaccines (2)9. Markers of Disease Progression in Hepatitis C (3)10. Testing New Therapies for HIV Infection (3)Cancer (3)11. Markers of Disease Progression in Prostate Cancer (3)12. Drug Targets as Critical Path Tools: Cancer Therapies (3)Neuropsychiatric Diseases (3)13. Diagnostic Markers for Neuropsychiatric Conditions (3)Presbyopia (4)14. Clinically Relevant Measures for Efficacy of Accommodating Intraocular Lenses (4)Autoimmune and Inflammatory Diseases (4)15. Markers of Disease Activity in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, and RelatedDiseases (4)Safety Biomarkers (4)16. Predicting Adverse Reactions to Vaccines (4)17. Early Indicators of Effects of Immune Responses on the Safety of Cell and Tissue Products (4)18. Predicting Cardiac Toxicity (4)19. Gene Therapy (4)20. Modernizing Predictive Toxicology (4)Advancing the Use of New Imaging Techniques (5)21. Performance Standards for Imaging Displays (5)22. Using Medical Imaging as a Product Development Tool (5)23. Imaging Biomarkers in Cardiovascular Disease (5)24. Imaging Biomarkers in Arthritis (5)26. Imaging in Cancer (5)27. Imaging in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (6)28. Noninvasive Therapeutic Monitoring (6)29. Imaging Implanted Devices (6)Improving Predictions of Human Response from Disease Models (6)30. Improving Extrapolation from Animal Data to Human Experience (6)31. Better Model of Wound Repair (6)32. Better Animal Disease and Tissue Injury Models (6)33. Better Disease Models for Predicting Biological Product Toxicity (7)T OPIC 2:S TREAMLINING C LINICAL T RIALS (8)Advancing Innovative Trial Designs (8)34. Design of Active Controlled Trials (8)35. Enrichment Designs (8)36. Use of Prior Experience or Accumulated Information in Trial Design (8)37. Development of Best Practices for Handling Missing Data (9)38. Development of Trial Protocols for Specific Therapeutic Areas (9)39. Analysis of Multiple Endpoints (9)Improving Measurement of Patient Responses (10)40. Measuring Disease-Related Symptoms (10)41. Measuring Patient-Centered Endpoints (10)42. New Trial Design in Oncology (10)43. Improving Efficacy Endpoints for Infectious Diseases (10)Streamlining the Clinical Trial Process (10)44. Development of Data Standards (10)45. Consensus on Standards for Case Report Forms (11)T OPIC 3:H ARNESSING B IOINFORMATICS (12)46. Identification and Qualification of Safety Biomarkers (12)47. Virtual Control Groups in Clinical Trials (12)48. Adverse Event Data Mining (12)49. Multiple Complex Therapies (12)50. Modeling Device Performance (12)51. Clinical Trial Simulation (12)52. Failure Analysis (13)53. Natural History Databases for Rare Diseases (13)T OPIC 4:M OVING M ANUFACTURING I NTO THE 21ST C ENTURY (14)Manufacturing Biologics (14)54. Improving Manufacture of Influenza and Other Vaccines (14)55. Characterizing Cell Therapies (14)56. Novel Approaches to Characterizing and Standardizing Biological Products (14)57. Detecting Contamination in Biological Products (14)58. Enabling Manufacturing Changes for Well-characterized Proteins (14)59. Tissue Engineering (15)60. Vaccine Potency (15)Manufacturing Devices (15)61. Device Interaction with Blood Flow (15)Manufacturing Drugs (15)63. Identifying Safety Effects of Excipients (15)64. Manufacturing Novel Dosage Forms (15)65. Developing Standards for Spectroscopic Instruments (15)Nanotechnology (16)66. Characterizing and Qualifying Nanotechnologies (16)T OPIC 5:D EVELOPING P RODUCTS TO A DDRESS U RGENT P UBLIC H EALTH N EEDS (17)Rapid Pathogen Identification (17)67. Improving Anti-Microbial Product Testing (17)68. Screening Donated Blood and Tissue (17)Better Predictive Disease Models (17)69. Animal Models to Test Bioterrorism Countermeasures (17)70. New Small Animal Models for Vaccine Testing (17)71. New Tissue Models (17)T OPIC 6:S PECIFIC A T-R ISK P OPULATIONS —P EDIATRICS (18)72. Better Extrapolation Methods and Best Practices in Pediatric Trial Design (18)73. Drug Metabolism and Therapeutic Response (18)74. Diagnosing Depression Subtypes (18)75. Animal Models for Maternal Vaccines (18)76. New Therapies for Juvenile Diabetes (18)I NTRODUCTIONThis report is divided into two parts. The first part of the report (the Critical Path Report and Opportunities List) discusses what has been learned about the opportunities and challenges along the Critical Path from stakeholders and FDA scientists since the publication in March 2004 of the FDA Critical Path Report. The second part of the report (the Opportunities List) presents specific opportunities that, if implemented, can help speed the development and approval of medical products. Both documents are available individually on the FDA's Web site(/oc/initiatives/criticalpath/).T OPIC 1:B ETTER E VALUATION T OOLS Developing New Biomarkers and Disease Models to Improve ClinicalTrials and Medical TherapyBiomarker Qualification and Standards1. Biomarker Qualification. The process and criteria for qualifying biomarkers for use in product development should be mapped. Clarity on the conceptual framework and evidentiary standards for qualifying a biomarker for various purposes would establish the path for developing predictive biomarkers. Stakeholders, including industry, researchers, and patient groups would have a clear idea of what needs to be done to adopt a new biomarker for regulatory use. Such a framework could stimulate biomarker development and, consequently, shorten the time necessary to develop a successful marketing application.Identifying the framework and evidence needed to qualify biomarkers for different purposes would put an emphasis on correlative and predictive science to accompany the current emphasis on biomarker discovery. Consensus on the following types of questions is needed to put such a framework in place: •How can biomarker evidence help demonstrate that a candidate product is not too toxic to testin humans?•How can biomarkers be used to select dose ranges for initial human testing?•How can biomarkers be used most effectively to evaluate dose response in later trials? •What biomarker evidence is appropriate to guide selection of patients for clinical testing? •What types and levels of evidence are needed to accept a biomarker as a surrogate endpoint forproduct efficacy?Similarly, a framework for co-development of a drug and its partner diagnostic could promote biomarker development and facilitate integration of personalized medicine into clinical practice.2. Standards for Microarray and Proteomics-Based Identification of Biomarkers. Microarray and proteomic technologies hold vast potential to identify biomarkers. However, a gap exists between technologies in use today and the technological level required for their application during product development and regulatory decision making. This gap results from the limited availability of accepted standards for demonstrating comparability of results, for data normalization and analysis, for validation of array results, or for biological interpretation of significant gene expression changes or mutations. Reference RNA samples that could be used to standardize biomarker results would improve the use of microarray technologies during product development, as would standards for RNA and DNA extraction methodologies and for RNA conversion and labeling. Standards for human tissue RNA and external RNA controls (sometimes referred to as spikes) are under development, but standards for the other steps associated with the analysis and interpretation of hybridization data still need to be addressed.Qualifying Disease- and Disorder-Specific BiomarkersAsthma3. Role of Beta Adrenergic Receptor Polymorphisms in Asthma Treatments. In clinical trials of beta agonists in asthma patients, polymorphisms of the beta adrenergic receptor seem to predict short-term patient deterioration, but information on long-term consequences has not been developed. Studies to evaluate whether receptor status predicts long-term outcomes could help target treatment in this disorder (possibly to avoid serious side effects) and help sponsors develop and test new therapies.Pregnancy4. Measures of Effectiveness of Fertility Treatments. Although number of pregnancies and newborns can serve as rough measures of effectiveness, no reliable markers exist for ovulation induction (e.g., hormone levels, ultrasound determination of follicular development) or other potential predictors of successful pregnancy that could allow early assessment of therapy during product testing and early adjustment of therapy during treatment. Such markers could improve fertility treatment outcomes and reduce toxicity.5. Markers of Effectiveness of Treatment for Pre-term Labor. Delay of delivery is the standard measure of the effectiveness of treatments for pre-term labor. But what duration of delay time improves fetal and maternal outcomes? Valid biomarkers would decrease the time needed to study potential therapies, reduce unnecessary risk to study subjects, and help physicians determine the best treatment duration for their patients.Cardiovascular Biomarkers6. Surrogate Outcomes for Cardiovascular Drug Eluting Stents. A statistical model for qualifying late loss in lumen diameter as a surrogate measure for cardiovascular drug eluting stent trials could facilitate the development of these products and enrich the understanding of their long-term effects.7. Circulating Biomarkers in Cardiovascular Diseases. A large number of candidate biomarkers for cardiovascular diseases have been identified, but have not been proven useful for product development and regulatory purposes. For example, markers that identify patients at high risk for a cardiovascular event could rapidly improve trial efficiency for interventions intended to prevent such events. Trials could use biomarkers to stratify patient populations by risk status or to limit the study to high-risk patients. New markers that reflect tissue damage or acute inflammation (e.g., troponin sub-types, inflammatory cytokines) could help assess response to novel treatments more efficiently and aid in identifying products most likely to be successful in larger scale clinical trials.Today, sponsors cannot reliably measure the effects of products intended to reduce inflammation in atherosclerosis without subjecting the patient to invasive procedures. This makes trial enrollment more difficult, increases patient risk and trial costs, and makes study of marketed products very difficult. Developing and qualifying a biomarker for these atherosclerotic inflammatory processes or other aspects of cardiovascular disease would improve innovation in a field affecting millions of Americans. Such markers could also be used in clinical practice to evaluate patient risk and to assist physicians and patients in developing treatment strategies.Infectious Diseases8. Proving the Efficacy of Preventive Vaccines. Proving the efficacy of preventive vaccines can be particularly costly, because of the need to study the disease-preventing effects of candidate vaccines in large numbers of subjects for long periods of time. If surrogate markers of protection, such as measurements of the immune response to vaccines, could be correlated with protection from disease, vaccines against influenza, SARS, West Nile Virus,smallpox, hepatitis C, and parasitic infections could be developed more quickly and more cost effectively.9. Markers of Disease Progression in Hepatitis C. Is Hepatitis C viral load in blood an accurate predictor of the pathologic changes and progression of liver disease in patients with Hepatitis C disease? How best can immune responses to the virus infection be distinguished from protective immunity due to vaccination for Hepatitis C? Progress toward more effective treatments and preventive vaccines for this disease could be enhanced with the development of a composite endpoint that includes serologic, virologic, and biochemical components.10. Testing New Therapies for HIV Infection. Numerous therapeutic agents have been identified that may reconstitute immune function in patients with acquired immunodeficiencies; a serious barrier to their clinical development is the absence of well-understood markers of general immune competence that could predict clinical benefit. Preliminary evidence exists that host immune responses to immunization may serve as a valuable marker for evaluating immune-based therapy in HIV disease. A well-designed study testing the ability of a set of recall antigens and neoantigens to generate antibody responses and class I and class II MHC restricted T cell responses could identify markers that predict general immune competence in this population. Responses could be correlated with HIV viral load, a surrogate marker for clinical benefit in patients with HIV infection.Cancer11. Markers of Disease Progression in Prostate Cancer. There are no reliable biomarkers for disease progression in aggressive prostate cancer that have demonstrated utility in product development. Although prostate specific antigen (PSA) is used for a variety of purposes (e.g., determining when further diagnostic testing is indicated, assessing response to therapy), there is no consensus on how best to use PSA in cancer therapeutic trials. Uses of PSA that should be further investigated include identifying high-risk populations, providing an early marker of drug activity and dose range, and use of PSA as a marker of disease progression.Other markers may also prove more predictive of clinical outcomes in some patients (e.g., alpha-methylacyl CoA racemase expression as a predictor of disease progression in local disease). A gap analysis to rigorously identify what is proven and unproven about PSA and other potential indicators would be an important first step to improving prostate cancer biomarkers.12. Drug Targets as Critical Path Tools: Cancer Therapies. Many molecules are being explored as targets for cancer therapy. For example, sponsors are increasingly focused on activity profiles of groups of such molecules associated with aberrant signaling in the proliferation and survival pathways recognized to be disturbed in many types of cancers, such as the SRC pathway and the P13K/Akt pathway. Similarly, cell surface antigens are being explored as targets. Diagnostic tests evaluating the status of therapeutic targets may prove to be useful markers to predict responsiveness to therapy. Availability of markers assessing the status of therapeutic targets would make development of targeted cancer therapies more effective and efficient.Neuropsychiatric Diseases13. Diagnostic Markers for Neuropsychiatric Conditions. Today, diagnosis of psychiatric disorders is based on symptom presentation. For example, there are no diagnostic tests to distinguish an initial presentation of depression from the onset of bipolar disorder or other conditions, or to differentiate various subsets of the autism currently joined under the rubric of pervasive developmental disorders. Identification of such markers would improve clinical trials by making it possible for sponsors to enroll only those patients with the target condition. Similarly, any successful treatments could better target a patient’s disease in clinical practice. If specific aspects of mental disorders could be better quantitated, sponsors could test therapies targeted to a particular patient’s constellation of symptoms. For example, now that the MATRICS test battery for assessing cognitive impairment in schizophrenia has been developed, we expect to see applications for drugs targeted to improving the cognitive component of this disease. Such targeting would both improve the efficiency of trials and serve to better individualize therapeutic approaches.Presbyopia14. Clinically Relevant Measures for Efficacy of Accommodating Intraocular Lenses. Presbyopia correction is currently limited to static devices (e.g., bifocal and reading glasses). The ophthalmic community is currently investigating methods to correct presbyopia by restoring active visual accommodation. However, current measurements of accommodation are subjective and unreliable. Identification of objective measures appropriate for clinical trials would improve sponsors’ ability to evaluate the effectiveness of devices for the correction of presbyopia and allow reduced subject testing time.Autoimmune and Inflammatory Diseases 15. Markers of Disease Activity in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, and Related Diseases. Development of new therapies for these diseases has been hampered in recent years by a lack of reliable markers of disease activity that can be used to predict clinical benefit. Development of predictive biomarkers and accepted clinical outcome measures would help in the evaluation of needed new therapies for these diseases.Safety Biomarkers16. Predicting Adverse Reactions to Vaccines. Work to identify biomarkers that predict the development of adverse reactions to vaccines, such as autoimmune disease following therapeutic cancer vaccines, could speed the development of these therapies. Similarly, identification of biomarkers that predict the risk of developing enhanced disease following use of certain vaccines, such as SARS, could make such therapies more attractive to product developers.17. Early Indicators of Effects of Immune Responses on the Safety of Cell and Tissue Products. The potential for these products to prevent or treat diseases is exciting and vast. With this potential benefit comes the risk of an immune response that reduces product efficacy and/or stimulates autoimmune disease. Years of product development can be wasted if a product triggers a detrimental immune response when finally tested in animals or humans. Better and earlier predictors of this undesirable immunogenicity would help unlock the potential of cellular and tissue products, by helping sponsors invest in product candidates least likely to trigger an unwelcome human immune response.18. Predicting Cardiac Toxicity. New tools for early identification of cardiac toxicity would improve product development for a wide array of conditions. Research investments that could produce tangible benefits quickly include creation of an ECG library from clinical trials that could be used for identifying potential early predictors of cardiac risk. 19. Gene Therapy. Several gene therapy products have been successfully used in early human testing to treat severe diseases, including life-threatening inherited immune deficiencies. However, the future of these products is at risk due to the demonstrated potential for carcinogenesis. Biomarkers to predict the general risk or patient-specific risk for cancer and work to reduce these risks could improve product performance in long-term safety studies of these therapies.20. Modernizing Predictive Toxicology. Identifying preclinical biomarkers that predict human liver or kidney toxicity would speed innovation for many different types of therapeutics.Activities to develop genomic biomarkers for the mechanistic interpretation of toxicological observations—complementary to but independent of these classic toxicological observations—could begin to create the data foundation for qualification of new safety biomarkers. Collaborations among sponsors to share what is known about existing safety assays could be a first step toward the goal of safer medical products.Advancing the Use of New Imaging Techniques21. Performance Standards for Imaging Displays. The ability to use imaging results as biomarkers would be enhanced by development of standards and performance assessment methods for displays used by newer imaging devices. Compared with older imaging technologies, the displays used by today’s digital imaging technologies are complex; in some cases, they are miniaturized to facilitate remote and portable viewing. Common criteria that can assess the performance of multi-dimensional display devices for the presentation of dynamic volumetric image sets with color coding would enhance the understanding of and confidence in imaging results.22. Using Medical Imaging as a Product Development Tool.A key hurdle to using imaging as a biomarker in clinical trials is lack of standard protocols for using imaging technologies, ranging from patient positioning to instrument calibration to the settings used for particular images. As a result, sponsors and others cannot compare imaging results across trials, sometimes not even within a trial. This also means it is difficult or impossible to compile data needed to demonstrate that a particular technique correlates with clinical course sufficiently for use as a biomarker. Standard, publicly available, protocols for use of imaging in clinical trials would enable the development of biomarkers for a wide array of conditions.23. Imaging Biomarkers in Cardiovascular Disease. To advance efficient development of new therapies, new imaging techniques are needed to measure progression and treatment of cardiovascular disease. Examples include the potential use of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), MRI, or multi-slice CT in the assessment of atherosclerosis progression and volumetric measures of cardiac function in trials of congestive heart failure. Development of these techniques for measuring progression will require a complete analysis of the current state of knowledge of the imaging modality, standardization of the technical aspects of the measurement, and performing the trials necessary to evaluate the degree of correlation with clinical responses. 24. Imaging Biomarkers in Arthritis. Targeted research could identify how to apply MRI technologies to measure the effects of potential therapies on cartilage and joint soft tissue for rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. In this regard, MRI has demonstrated promise for detecting soft tissue inflammation and cartilage erosion in rheumatoid arthritis. If established as a reproducible biomarker, use of MRI could help determine the potential of a new therapeutic product, identify dose ranges, and stratify patients by risk while serving as an early response measure.25. Imaging Biomarkers in Neurocognitive Diseases. Currently, therapeutic trials in chronic neurologic disorders, such as Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease, rely on symptomatic endpoints that may require observation over many years to evaluate progression. Functional imaging, such as FDG-PET as a measure of glucose metabolism, may provide a biomarker to assess earlier, more subtle, changes in the progression of these diseases. Studies would be needed to determine how these markers correlate with symptomatic progression. Focused efforts to apply new imaging techniques as diagnostic and response measures in neurocognitive disorders and depression could also produce new ways to monitor treatment of these conditions. For example, quantitative MRI measurements as well as amyloid content assessments by PET scan may be useful imaging techniques to demonstrate the effect of potential Alzheimer’s therapies. Imaging markers that provide information on early disease states could make prevention trials more feasible. These approaches have not yet been proven clinically meaningful, however, and, in many cases, there is no consensus on the most promising approach.26. Imaging in Cancer. Cutting edge imaging techniques hold vast potential for tumor staging and assessing response to therapy. The list of promising biomarkers in need of qualification is long. For example, it is possible that one additional, well-designed study could qualify FDG-PET as an additional response measure in non-Hodgkins lymphoma, thus creating a new tool that improves both product testing and treatment decisions. Similar opportunities exist for other tumor types.27. Imaging in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. High-resolution chest computed tomography may be a useful assessment of disease progression in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease where emphysema is a prominent component, especially the disease associated with alpha 1 anti-trypsin deficiency. Although data to date suggest that high-resolution CT (HRCT) can offer reliable assessment of underlying lung structure in fewer patients and for shorter periods of time than would be needed to show a difference in lung function testing or in mortality, it remains unclear if changes in HRCT meaningfully predict change for the patient. It also is unclear what level of change in the HRCT parameters could be considered significant in terms of disease modification. The ability to use HRCT demonstration of disease modification as an endpoint in clinical trials could pave the way for new product indications that are now infeasible due to the rarity of alpha 1 anti-trypsin deficiency and the trial size and duration needed to show an effect using traditional endpoints. New trials, perhaps with innovative designs, are needed to evaluate the use of imaging techniques in rare conditions.28. Noninvasive Therapeutic Monitoring. Today, the distribution of a drug in the human body is typically evaluated by measuring its concentration in the blood, which may not accurately reflect distribution to the target tissue (e.g., an infected bone, a tumor, or a malfunctioning organ). Noninvasive means of monitoring drug concentration, for example, using molecular tags that can be located through imaging techniques, could dramatically improve product development by enabling sponsors to correlate response with drug availability at the target site and to evaluate the relationship between organ toxicity and drug distribution to that organ. 29. Imaging Implanted Devices.Practice guidelines should be developed that outline the nature and frequency of imaging needed to follow the on-going safety and efficacy of an implanted device, when to suspect a problem, and what confirmatory tests are recommended. Such guidelines could not only improve patient safety but could also produce pooled data to inform premarketing development and testing of the next generation of implanted devices. (Practice guidelines are developed by professional associations on specific topics to help healthcare professionals make treatment decisions.)Improving Predictions of Human Response from Disease Models30. Improving Extrapolation from Animal Data to Human Experience. We urgently need new methods to bridge from animal data to predicted human experience, for both product efficacy and for product safety. The need is particularly acute for situations in which it is unethical to conduct human tests (e.g., therapies against bioterror agents). Establishing reliable correlations between animal pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic data and human outcomes would dramatically improve the safety of human testing and treatment and the ability of sponsors to invest in only those candidate products most likely to be effective in humans. Conversely, re-examination of existing data could identify features of preclinical studies that were not predictive of human response. We especially need more predictive preclinical models for therapies that use innovative delivery mechanisms (e.g., image guided interventional therapies, or local delivery of therapy via percutaneous catheter) and for combination therapies.31. Better Model of Wound Repair. The lack of a reliable animal model for human wound healing is a significant hurdle to developing new wound repair products.32. Better Animal Disease and Tissue Injury Models. Better animal disease or tissue injury models could provide more accurate predictions of the toxicity of drugs, devices, and biological products that are used in ill or injured patients. Use of such models could also enhance our understanding of the potential toxic effects of compounds associated with many types of medical devices (some devices may expose patients to sterilants, disinfectants, plasticizers, and metals).。