May 16, 2004
Joint Press Release by the U.S. Department of State and the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
HHS PROPOSES RAPID PROCESS FOR REVIEW OF FIXED DOSE COMBINATION
AND CO-PACKAGED PRODUCTS
Expedited Review Process Will Assure the President’s Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief That These Drugs Are Safe and Suitable for
Purchase
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today announced an expedited review
process to ensure that the United States is providing safe, effective
drugs to developing countries under the President’s $15
billion Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator
Randall L. Tobias said the new process will enable his office
to ensure the quality of drugs purchased by the United States
for developing countries under the President’s Emergency
Plan for AIDS relief. Under the new guidance to be proposed next
week by HHS’ Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the United
States will be able to provide life-saving drugs at lower prices
to millions of people in Africa and the Caribbean.
Secretary Thompson and Ambassador Tobias said drug patent issues
that apply in developed nations should not impede purchase of
these drugs for developing countries. The FDA guidance will apply
to new products that combine already-approved individual HIV/AIDS
therapies into a single dosage, known as fixed dose combinations
(FDC), as well as to new co-packaging of existing therapies. Drugs
that are approved by FDA under the process described in the guidance
will meet all FDA standards for drug safety, efficacy, and quality,
said Acting FDA Commissioner Lester M. Crawford.
The expedited review process, combined with the work of local
drug regulatory authorities in the affected countries, will provide
a mechanism to ensure that safety, efficacy and quality standards
are met and maintained by companies providing drugs for the President’s
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. President Bush has pledged $15
billion for this initiative to address the global HIV/AIDS pandemic
in developing nations, through prevention, care and treatment
programs that include the purchase of HIV/AIDS drugs.
“We are clearing the way to quickly deliver quality, life-saving
HIV/AIDS drugs to people who desperately need them in developing
countries,” Secretary Thompson said. “We are committed
to ensuring that President Bush’s Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief is providing medical care as effectively and efficiently
as possible. Fixed dose combination products and co-packaged products
are an important tool in improving the quality of health care
in developing nations.”
“The President has made clear that his goal is to put
effective treatment into the hands of those who need it in the
hardest-hit developing nations, and to provide these life-saving
services as widely as possible,” said Ambassador Tobias.
“At the same time, we must apply real discipline to ensure
that the products we provide in poor nations are safe and effective.
The new expedited process provides us with a solid foundation
for purchasing drugs that work. With FDA review, we will have
a gold-standard assurance that a combination product will be safe
and effective.”
The guidance will outline four scenarios for review of different
FDC and co-packaged products. Some of the scenarios could permit
approval in as little as two to six weeks after submission of
a high quality application. For companies making products where
another firm owns the U.S. patent rights, FDA could issue a tentative
approval when it finds the product meets the agency’s normal
safety and efficacy standards.
Ambassador Tobias commended Secretary Thompson for developing
the new guidance. “The Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator
would recognize this ‘tentative approval’ by FDA as
evidence of the safety and efficacy of AIDS drugs to be purchased
under the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. We
can then use these drugs in developing countries, where international
patent agreements permit them to be purchased,” he said.
“What is most important is that we must only purchase products
that have undergone scientifically rigorous safety and efficacy
review. This initiative on the part of FDA will enable just that."
Control of HIV/AIDS generally requires use of several different
drugs simultaneously. Combination products would bring together
different HIV/AIDS drugs in a single medication or co-package,
thereby facilitating patients’ compliance with often complicated
drug regimens.
To obtain approval of new products, manufacturers could cite
existing clinical data to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness
of the individual drugs in the new combined product -- and new
data to show effectiveness of the new combination could be developed
quickly. FDA pledged to work with companies in assuring that necessary
data are developed rapidly if the companies do not already have
access to such data.
Secretary Thompson urged manufacturers of brand-name and generic
drugs alike to work with FDA and submit applications. “HHS
has opened the door to rapid review of new combination products,”
he said. “This means companies will have new incentives
to develop easy-to-use products at lower prices. It also means
we will provide a sound scientific basis to Ambassador Tobias
for the very substantial purchases that the President’s
Emergency Plan will be making on behalf of millions of people
in the hardest hit nations. This is essential – to skirt
the safety and efficacy issues would be wrong and dangerous.”
Acting FDA Commissioner Crawford also announced that FDA is evaluating
whether the agency can waive or reduce user fees, normally charged
to companies making new drug applications, for products reviewed
under this rapid review process.
"FDA recognizes the public health importance of these products
and is evaluating the circumstances under which it may grant user
fee waivers for sponsors developing products under this guidance.
FDA intends to expedite the development process for these products
as much as is practicable. FDA intends to maximize the many benefits,
including the potential to limit the development of drug resistance,
while preventing serious risks such as overlapping toxicities
and the potential for inappropriate combinations to increase the
amount of virus in the body, " Dr. Crawford said.
The guidance will include a list of currently approved drugs
for which FDA believes there are existing clinical safety and
efficacy data supporting combination use. There are more than
20 unique anti-HIV medications approved in the United States.
The draft guidance will be open for a 60-day comment, but it
is effective and active immediately.