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Food and Drug Administration FDA

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Congress - laws it passes, appropriations to FDA budget, congressional hearings ... Major criticism of FDA has been how long approval takes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Food and Drug Administration FDA


1
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
  • Authorized by Congress to inspect, test, approve
    and set safety standards for drugs, medical
    devices, chemicals, cosmetics, foods and food
    additives, electronic products that emit radiation

2
Authorizing Legislation
  • Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906
  • Federal Food, Drug, Cosmetic Act, 1938
  • FDC Act Amendment 1962
  • FDC Act Amendment 1996

3
Other Legislation/Regulations
  • 1976 - Medical Device Amendment
  • 1977 - Saccharin Study and Labeling Act
  • 1980 - Infant Formula Act
  • 1982 - Tamper Resistant Packaging Regulations
  • 1983 - Federal Anti-Tampering Act
  • 1983 - Orphan Drug Act
  • 1990 - Nutrition Labeling and Education Act
  • 1990 - Safe Medical Devices Act
  • 1992 - Mammography Quality Standards Act
  • 1996 - Food Quality Protection Act

4
Structure
  • Agency within the U.S. Public Health Service in
    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
  • Managed by a commissioner (Jane Henney)
  • appointed by President and confirmed by Senate
  • Offices in Washington, D.C. and
    Rockville,Maryland plus regional offices

5
8 Agencies In FDA
  • Office of Management Operations
  • Office of Health Affairs
  • Office of Science
  • Office of Legislative Affairs
  • Office of Planning and Evaluation
  • Office of Public Affairs
  • Office of Consumer Affairs
  • Office of Regulatory Affairs

6
FDA Resources
  • 9530 employees including 1100 investigators and
    inspectors (1999 request)
  • FY 1999 budget request of 1,350 million (18
    increase)

7
Who Influences the FDA?
  • Some Presidents influence through general
    direction, largely through regulatory reform but
    FDA has fared well.
  • Congress - laws it passes, appropriations to FDA
    budget, congressional hearings
  • Other agencies -- FTC, EPA, USDA, DEA
  • Drug manufacturers
  • Physicians and patients

8
FDA Modernization Act of 1997
  • Reauthorizes Prescription Drug User Fees
  • Modernizes and streamlines practices
  • Allows manufacturers to distribute information
    about unapproved uses of drugs and medical
    devices

9
Enforcement Publicity
  • Publishes the FDA Consumer Report
  • summarizes all seizures and criminal proceedings
  • News Conferences
  • Press Releases
  • Speeches
  • Publishes the FDA Enforcement Report
  • lists harmful products seized by the FDA

10
Warning Letters
  • Advise firms that their product(s) may violate
    FDA provisions
  • Corrective actions must occur to avoid court
    action

11
Recalls
  • Recalls a manufacturer is required to remove a
    defective product from the market
  • when products are a serious threat to consumers
  • Can be both voluntary and involuntary
  • Three levels
  • Class I
  • Class II
  • Class III

12
Seizure
  • Confiscation of a selected good(s) in violation
  • goods that contain non-approved additives
  • misbranded products
  • How does the FDA initiate seizures?
  • Files a complaint with the US District Court
  • to take possession of products that are in
    violation until the matter is settled
  • The manufacturer has 30 days to decide what
    action he/she will take
  • do nothing, ask the court for more time, fight
    the FDA in Court

13
Injunctions, Prosecutions
  • Injunctions - Civil actions filed by the FDA
    against a person/company
  • to stop a company from continuing to produce
    products that violate the FDAs guidelines
  • involves lengthy, complicated court battles that
    the FDA may not win
  • Criminal prosecution is most extreme step
  • will only prosecute after detailed and careful
    consideration

14
New Drug Development Process
  • Company does lab testing followed by animal
    studies - typically 3.5 years
  • If those turn out well, company submits an
    Investigational New Drug Application to do
    clinical trials on humans in 3 phases
  • Phase 1 - adverse reactions/side effects - 10-50
    people
  • Phase 2 - drugs activity safety - 50-100
    people
  • Phase 3 - safety efficacy - 200-1000 or more

15
New Drug Approval
  • 1990 Parallel track protocol policy for drugs for
    AIDS and HIV - begin treating patients during
    clinical trials
  • 1992 - Accelerated approval process for new drug
    therapies to teach life threatening illnesses
  • Result is significantly shorter drug approval
    time from 19 mo to 16.5 mo more drugs approved

16
New Drug Approval
  • On average takes 12 years for approval 1 in 5000
    compounds tested are approved
  • Major criticism of FDA has been how long approval
    takes
  • In 1988 FDA modified the process allows
    manufacturer to skip Phase 3 if Phase 2 goes well
    but adds Phase 4 (post-marketing trials)

17
Food Safety Regulation Agencies responsible for
regulating food supply and monitoring food safety
  • USDA - Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS)-
    meat and poultry eggs live food animals, grains
    and oilseed crops
  • FDA - Center for Food Safety and Applied
    Nutrition (CFSAN) all other food products
  • FDA and EPA - pesticides
  • Public Health Service in HHS monitors food-borne
    illnesses
  • State Departments of Agriculture, Public Health,
    Consumer Protection, etc.
  • Some states have specific laws

18
Food Safety and Inspection Service - USDA
  • Visual inspection until 1996 in meat and poultry
  • 1996 - Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point
    (HACCP)
  • 1994 - Safe Handling Instructions Rule

19
FDA - Center for Food Safety and Applied
Nutrition (CFSAN)
  • Inspects all foods except meat, poultry, eggs,
    liquor in interstate commerce and food
    processing/handling facilities
  • approval of new foods, food additives, and
    pesticides
  • 1991 - created Office of Seafood to increase
    inspection of seafoods

20
Inspections - FDA Consumer Safety Officers
  • make unannounced inspections of food processing
    facilities, food stores, and warehouses

21
Food Additives
  • 1958 - Food Additive Amendment (Delaney Clause)
  • requires that only those additives that dont
    cause cancer in man and in animals be Generally
    Recognized As Safe (GRAS list)
  • absolute zero standard for carcinogenic additives
  • additives that are toxic or allergens are not
    banned but require either warning labels or meet
    allowable threshold levels.
  • Sulfites must be declared on label if above a
    given level

22
Current Issues
  • Switching prescription drugs to OTC status
  • Effectiveness of labeling of OTC drugs
  • Medications for special populations
  • Reconsidering status of thaladomide
  • Cohesive Food Policy
  • Claims of Dietary Supplements
  • Improved Inspection Procedures
  • Irradiated Foods
  • Genetically Altered Foods
  • Biotechnology Food Labeling
  • International Marketing
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