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FDA aims to improve review of generic drugs

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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced that it is taking new steps to facilitate efficient review of generic drugs.

The agency has released 2 documents intended to help streamline and improve the submission and review of generic drug applications, or Abbreviated New Drug Applications (ANDAs).

The first document is a draft guidance for industry, “Good ANDA Submission Practices,” which highlights common, recurring deficiencies the FDA sees in generic drug applications that may lead to a delay in their approval.

The FDA’s goal in releasing this document is to reduce the number of review cycles for ANDAs by helping applicants avoid these deficiencies.

The second document is a Manual of Policies and Procedures (MAPP), “Good ANDA Assessment Practices,” which outlines ANDA assessment practices for FDA staff.

This document formalizes a more streamlined generic review process, including the introduction of new templates designed to make each cycle of the review process more efficient and complete.

Releasing these new documents is part of the FDA’s Drug Competition Action Plan, which has 3 main goals:

  1. To reduce actions by branded pharmaceutical companies that can delay generic drug entry into the marketplace
  2. To resolve scientific and regulatory obstacles that can make it difficult to win approval of generic versions of certain complex drugs
  3. To improve the efficiency and predictability of the FDA’s generic review process to reduce the time it takes to get a generic drug approved and lessen the number of review cycles needed for generic applications.

The new MAPP and draft guidance documents for ANDAs are intended to help the FDA meet the third goal of the Drug Competition Action Plan.

The FDA is hoping to address the second goal of the plan later this year, building upon its initiatives to accelerate review and approval of complex generics.

The agency is also planning to develop guidance documents during the first quarter of 2018 that will address 3 issues related to the first goal of the plan—potential abuses of the citizen petition process, companies that restrict access to testing samples of branded drugs, and abuses of the single, shared system REMS (risk evaluation and mitigation strategy) negotiation process.

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Photo courtesy of the CDC
Prescription drugs

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced that it is taking new steps to facilitate efficient review of generic drugs.

The agency has released 2 documents intended to help streamline and improve the submission and review of generic drug applications, or Abbreviated New Drug Applications (ANDAs).

The first document is a draft guidance for industry, “Good ANDA Submission Practices,” which highlights common, recurring deficiencies the FDA sees in generic drug applications that may lead to a delay in their approval.

The FDA’s goal in releasing this document is to reduce the number of review cycles for ANDAs by helping applicants avoid these deficiencies.

The second document is a Manual of Policies and Procedures (MAPP), “Good ANDA Assessment Practices,” which outlines ANDA assessment practices for FDA staff.

This document formalizes a more streamlined generic review process, including the introduction of new templates designed to make each cycle of the review process more efficient and complete.

Releasing these new documents is part of the FDA’s Drug Competition Action Plan, which has 3 main goals:

  1. To reduce actions by branded pharmaceutical companies that can delay generic drug entry into the marketplace
  2. To resolve scientific and regulatory obstacles that can make it difficult to win approval of generic versions of certain complex drugs
  3. To improve the efficiency and predictability of the FDA’s generic review process to reduce the time it takes to get a generic drug approved and lessen the number of review cycles needed for generic applications.

The new MAPP and draft guidance documents for ANDAs are intended to help the FDA meet the third goal of the Drug Competition Action Plan.

The FDA is hoping to address the second goal of the plan later this year, building upon its initiatives to accelerate review and approval of complex generics.

The agency is also planning to develop guidance documents during the first quarter of 2018 that will address 3 issues related to the first goal of the plan—potential abuses of the citizen petition process, companies that restrict access to testing samples of branded drugs, and abuses of the single, shared system REMS (risk evaluation and mitigation strategy) negotiation process.

Photo courtesy of the CDC
Prescription drugs

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced that it is taking new steps to facilitate efficient review of generic drugs.

The agency has released 2 documents intended to help streamline and improve the submission and review of generic drug applications, or Abbreviated New Drug Applications (ANDAs).

The first document is a draft guidance for industry, “Good ANDA Submission Practices,” which highlights common, recurring deficiencies the FDA sees in generic drug applications that may lead to a delay in their approval.

The FDA’s goal in releasing this document is to reduce the number of review cycles for ANDAs by helping applicants avoid these deficiencies.

The second document is a Manual of Policies and Procedures (MAPP), “Good ANDA Assessment Practices,” which outlines ANDA assessment practices for FDA staff.

This document formalizes a more streamlined generic review process, including the introduction of new templates designed to make each cycle of the review process more efficient and complete.

Releasing these new documents is part of the FDA’s Drug Competition Action Plan, which has 3 main goals:

  1. To reduce actions by branded pharmaceutical companies that can delay generic drug entry into the marketplace
  2. To resolve scientific and regulatory obstacles that can make it difficult to win approval of generic versions of certain complex drugs
  3. To improve the efficiency and predictability of the FDA’s generic review process to reduce the time it takes to get a generic drug approved and lessen the number of review cycles needed for generic applications.

The new MAPP and draft guidance documents for ANDAs are intended to help the FDA meet the third goal of the Drug Competition Action Plan.

The FDA is hoping to address the second goal of the plan later this year, building upon its initiatives to accelerate review and approval of complex generics.

The agency is also planning to develop guidance documents during the first quarter of 2018 that will address 3 issues related to the first goal of the plan—potential abuses of the citizen petition process, companies that restrict access to testing samples of branded drugs, and abuses of the single, shared system REMS (risk evaluation and mitigation strategy) negotiation process.

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