Methods and findings in experimental and clinical pharmacology
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The screening and evaluation procedures for the development of anticancer agents indicated that the entire process is a rather difficult task. This is particularly true in choosing screening models and criteria for activity. If the criteria were set too low, then some clinically false-positive results may be faced; and if the criteria were set too high, some agents could be missed which might be effective against certain types of human cancer. ⋯ The time required for evaluation and development from the first discovery of activity to final FDA approval for fifty-two therapeutic drugs are tabled. The average interval is 8.8 years, but in the 1950s the average was only 2.8 years, in the 1960s, 6.5 years; in the 1970s, 13.9 years; and in the 1980s, 16.0 years. This reflects the increasing stricter requirements for an antineoplastic drug to be officially recognize