Title: OTC Drugs
1OTC Drugs
- Class of OTC drugs created by Durham-Humphrey
Amendment to FDCA. - OTC drugs are reviewed by therapeutic class, not
individually - 100,000-500,000 individual products
- Only about 200 active ingredients
2NonPrescription Drug Labeling
- 1. Product Name
- 2. Name, address of manuf, packer or distributor
- 3. Net contents
- 4. Established name of all active ingredients
and quantity of certain other ingredients, active
or not i.e..., alcohol, dyes - 5. Name of any habit forming drug
3Non-Prescription Drug Labeling
- 6. Consumer cautions/warnings may cause
drowsiness - 7. Adequate directions for use shake well,
time(s) to administer
4(No Transcript)
5Rx to OTC Switch
- Authorized by Durham-Humphrey
- Manufacturer or FDA can initiate
- Insurance company can initiate (e.g. Prilosec)
- OTC Drug Review Process primary mechanism by
which drugs are switched - There is a committee at FDA which advises on Rx
to OTC switches - Rx examples switched to OTC Benadryl, Actifed,
Hydrocortisone, Drixoral, Dimetapp, Monistat,
Ibuprofen, Zantac, Tagamet, Pepcid, Aleve,
Claratin, Prilosec...
6Prescriptive Authority
- Durham Humphrey states that legend drugs may be
prescribed by a practitioner licensed by law to
administer such drug - Determined by state practice acts (MD, DO, NP,
PA, DVM, NP, OD)
7Unapproved Use of Prescription Drugs
- Called off-label, unlabeled, or unapproved
use - Legal for prescriber to use a drug for any
indication (ethical in every case?) - Promotion of unlabeled uses by manufacturer is
restricted - See NYT article 1/11/06
- Drug Makers Scrutinized Over Grants
8Prescription Drug Labeling
- Labeled for the health professional, not general
public-and contains - 1. Name, address of manufacturer, packager or
distributor - 2. Established name of drug product
- 3. Ingredient information-quantity and proportion
of active ingredients - 4. Quantity in terms of weight or measure (mg)
9Rx Drug Labeling
- 5. Net quantity in the container (no. of
tabs/caps, mL) - 6. Rx legend (Rx Only)
- Route of Adm, if not oral
- Lot number
- 9. Container requirements to dispense (tight,
light resistant - USP Stdandsrds) - 10. Expiration date
10Package Insert
- FDCA regulates what must be placed in package
insert - And in what order
- Can not be promotional
- Often negotiation between FDA and Manufacturer
- Provides legal cover for manufacturer
11National Drug Code
- 11 digits (XXXXX-XXXX-XX)
- 12345 manufacturer
- 6789 drug/strength
- 10 package size.
- Unique to specific product and dose
12Investigational New Drug (IND) Application
- Prescription drugs must be approved by FDA prior
to marketing - Must be proven safe and effective (?)
- Usually only effective vs. placebo and not vs.
similar drugs - IND is first step in process and leads to the New
Drug Application (NDA)
13Investigational New Drug (IND) Application
- There are three IND types
- Investigator IND
- Emergency Use IND
- Treatment IND
- IND application must contain
- Animal Pharmacology and Toxicology Studies
- Manufacturing Information
- Clinical Protocols and Investigator Information
14The New Drug Application (NDA)
- A complete application could contain 100-200,000
pages. - Submitted electronically
- Complete evaluation of efficacy and safety
15Goals of the NDA
- Provide enough information to permit FDA to make
the following key decisions - Whether the drug is safe and effective in its
proposed use(s), and whether the benefits of the
drug outweigh the risks. - Whether the drug's proposed labeling (package
insert) is appropriate, and what it should
contain. - Whether the methods used in manufacturing the
drug and the controls used to maintain the drug's
quality are adequate to preserve the drug's
identity, strength, quality, and purity.
16Abbreviated or Supplemental NDA
- Abbreviated NDA
- Generic drug
- New combination of approved drugs
- Proportion of ingredients in combination is
changed - Supplemental NDA
- New intended use of the drug (labeling change)
- Dose, method or duration of administration is
changed - Change in manufacturing process or location
17Clinical Trials in Humans
- 3 phases
- Phase I - small number of patients (healthy
males) - Phase II - tested on patients with the disease
- Phase III - safety and efficacy on hundreds or
thousands of patients - Must have informed consent from patient before
testing proceeds
18FDA New Drug Rating Classification System
- Rates new drugs by chemical type and therapeutic
potential - Rating determines how rapidly drug will get
through NDA process - Standard review vs. Priority review
19Post Marketing Surveillance
- FDA MedWatch Drug Quality Reporting System
- Anything that deals with product quality - label,
bad pills - USP Drug Quality Reporting System (DQRS)
- Product quality, an adverse reaction-any type of
problem - These are sent by USP to FDA
- Phase IV clinical trials
- voluntary vs. mandatory
20Drug Price Competition and Patent Term
Restoration Act
- Streamlined the approval process for generic
drugs - Generic manufacturer now needs to establish that
their product is bioequivalent to the reference
drug - See FDA Orange Book
21Drugs Intended to Treat Serious Diseases (AIDS,
Avian Flu...)
- NDA process criticized over the years as being
too slow to approve breakthrough drugs - FDA modified its process
- FDA Modernization Act of 1997
- codified fast-track approval of break through
drugs
22Voluntary Reporting Programs-Previously Discussed
- Drug Quality Reporting System (USP)
- MedWatch (FDA)
- MedMaRx (USP/ISMP)
- Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS)
(FDA)
23Drug Advertising
- FDA regulates Rx Advertising
- FTC regulates OTC Ads
- Lanham Trademark Act allows private parties a
cause of action against false ads - Also regulated by State Pharmacy Practice Acts
24Rx Ads to Professionals
- Drug misbranded unless manuf includes in all ads
- drug name
- formula
- brief summary
- look at examples in pharmacy medical journals
- must have fair balance
25Direct to Consumer Advertising
- No Federal regulations specifically on this
subject - two categories of these ads
- non product specific - no drug names usually
discusses a medical condition and states see
your doctor! - product specific - i.e.., Cialis, Levitra,
Detrol, Neulasta - Recent FDA hearing on DTC advertising
26OTC Ads by Manufacturer
- Regulated by FTC
- FTC cant regulate ads before they are run
- FTC reviews Ads being run for accuracy and claims
- OTC ads must be reasonable
27 OTC Review
- Kefauver-Harris Amendments applied to OTC and Rx
Drugs - OTC products reviewed on a class basis
- Were OTC products effective as marketed?
- Antihistamines as daytime sedative Sominex...
28OTC Review Resulted in Three Categories
- 1. Ingredients safe, effective, not misbranded
- 2. Ingredients not ...and are misbranded
- 3. Insufficient data to permit classification
29Third Class of Drugs
- Historic Issue
- Drugs sold only by a pharmacist
- ie.,those that just came off Rx status
- Common in many other countries
- Only in Florida so far
- Proposal for EC
30Prescriptive Authority
- Granted by the State
- RPhs can prescribe Formulary items in some states
(but not in Oregon) - Practitioners - MD, DO, DDS, DVM, PA, NP,
ND, OD - Restrictions on prescribing
31Patient Package Inserts
- FDA required PPIs for estrogen-containing
products in early 1970s - Now common with many drugs
- See example on FDA web site
32Approved Drugs for Unlabeled Indications
- MD, DO (Doctor of Osteopathy) Practitioners may
prescribe any drug for any indication - Others must stay within their scope of practice
33Pharmacy Compounding
- Controversial Area
- RPh may compound pursuant to a Rx
- Or in anticipation of an Rx
- Is regulated by State law and is not considered
manufacturing
34Pharmacy Compounding
- Is manufacturing if product is sold to another
pharmacy - It is manufacturing if pharmacy repackages OTC
products for sale to other health providers - Pharmacy cant compound an existing Rx product
- Can not compound non-approved drug
35FDA Orange Book
- Publishes FDA Classification of drugs therapeutic
equivalence - AA-no bioequivalence problems
- AT-topical -no problems
- AB-drugs meeting necessary bioequivalence
requirements - BC-Extended release with problems
36FDA Ratings-CON'T
- BT-Topical with problems
- BX-insufficient data
- B-No determination will be made until other
questions answered - See FDA web-site
37Federal Alcohol Tax
- Federal government does not tax alcohol when used
by - Gvt for scientific/mechanical purposes
- Schools/colleges for scientific/ mechanical
purposes - Labs for research
- hospitals etc for patient care
- pathology labs for patient care
38Poison Prevention Packaging Act
- Intended to prevent child poisonings
- Established child resistant safety cap
- Established that household substances must be
child proof - Hazardous substances, economic poisons
(insecticides), food, drug or cosmetic or
household fuel in a portable container
39Poison Prevention Packaging Act
- Enforcement by Consumer Product Safety Commission
- Exempts some drugs from safety cap
- If either MD or patient requests ez open caps
- Some OTCs used by elderly or handicapped
- Hospital drugs i.e..., unit dose and some other
Rx items i.e..., OCs, nitroglycerin...
40OBRA 90
- Background Requires RPh to review patients
medication therapy--counseling - Rebates from drug manuf to state Medicaid
- DUR-Retrospective and Prospective
- Mandated Patient Counseling, RPh document
counseling activities, enforcement of RPh
activities by state board of pharmacy - Applies only to Medicare/Medicaid patients
- Most states broadened to apply to all patients
- Will discuss under State laws
41Reimportation of Rx Drugs
- Personal use exemption for limited quantities
- Internet purchases from outside US technically
illegal - Common practice
- Drugs sold from outside of US are not FDA
approved (even if made in same factory as
FDA-approved version)