Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for Office of Management and Budget Review; Comment Request; Orphan Drugs; Common European Medicines Agency/Food and Drug Administration Application Form for Orphan Medicinal Product Designation (Form FDA 3671), 23468-23470 [E8-9467]
Download as PDF
23468
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 84 / Wednesday, April 30, 2008 / Notices
manufacturers of similar or related
devices can easily be identified.
The likely respondents to this
information collection are domestic and
foreign device establishments who must
register and submit a device list to FDA,
e.g., establishments engaged in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, assembly, or processing
of medical devices intended for human
use and commercial distribution.
In the Federal Register of February 5,
2008 (73 FR 6731), FDA published a 60day notice requesting public comment
on the information collection
provisions. No comments were received.
TABLE 1.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN1
No. of
Respondents
21 CFR Section
807.31(e)
1 There
Annual Frequency
per Response
200
Total Annual
Responses
1
Hours per
Response
200
Total Hours
.50
100
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
TABLE 2.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING BURDEN1
No. of
Recordkeepers
21 CFR Section
807.31(a through d)
1 There
16,200
Dated: April 23, 2008.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and
Planning.
[FR Doc. E8–9374 Filed 4–29–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
[Docket No. FDA–2008–N–0222] (formerly
Docket No. 2008N–0007)
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for Office of
Management and Budget Review;
Comment Request; Orphan Drugs;
Common European Medicines Agency/
Food and Drug Administration
Application Form for Orphan Medicinal
Product Designation (Form FDA 3671)
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Total Annual
Records
4
Hours per
Record
64,800
Total Hours
.50
32,400
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
The annual respondent reporting
burden for device establishment
registrations and listing is estimated to
be 100 hours and the annual respondent
recordkeeping burden is estimated to be
32,400 hours. The estimates cited in
tables 1 and 2 of this document are
based primarily on the annual FDA
accomplishment report, which includes
actual FDA registration and listing data
derived for fiscal year (FY) 2006. These
estimates are also based on FDA
estimates of FY 2006 data from current
systems and conversations with
industry and trade association
representatives. FDA anticipates
reviewing annually, 200 historical files.
AGENCY:
Annual Frequency
per Recordkeeping
Notice.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:09 Apr 29, 2008
Jkt 214001
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that a proposed collection of
information has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and clearance under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Fax written comments on the
collection of information by May 30,
2008.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
OMB recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
202–395–6974, or e-mailed to
baguilar@omb.eop.gov. All comments
should be identified with the OMB
control number 0910–0167. Also
include the FDA docket number found
in brackets in the heading of this
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jonna Capezzuto, Office of the Chief
Information Officer (HFA–250), Food
and Drug Administration,5600 Fishers
Lane, Rockville, MD 20857, 301–827–
4659.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
compliance with 44 U.S.C. 3507, FDA
has submitted the following proposed
collection of information to OMB for
review and clearance.
Orphan Drugs; Common European
Medicines Agency/Food and Drug
Administration Application Form for
Orphan Medicinal Product Designation
(Form FDA 3671)—(OMB Control
Number 0910–0167)—Extension
Sections 525 and 526 of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act)
(21 U.S.C. 360aa and 360dd) give FDA
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
statutory authority to do the following:
(1) Provide recommendations on
investigations required for approval of
marketing applications for orphan
drugs, (2) designate eligible drugs as
orphan drugs, (3) set forth conditions
under which a sponsor of an approved
orphan drug obtains exclusive approval,
and (4) encourage sponsors to make
orphan drugs available for treatment on
an ‘‘open protocol’’ basis before the drug
has been approved for general
marketing. The implementing
regulations for these statutory
requirements have been codified under
part 316 (21 CFR part 316) and specify
procedures that sponsors of orphan
drugs use in availing themselves of the
incentives provided for orphan drugs in
the act and sets forth procedures FDA
will use in administering the act with
regard to orphan drugs. Section 316.10
specifies the content and format of a
request for written recommendations
concerning the non-clinical laboratory
studies and clinical investigations
necessary for approval of marketing
applications. Section 316.12 provides
that, before providing such
recommendations, FDA may require
results of studies to be submitted for
review. Section 316.14 contains
provisions permitting FDA to refuse to
provide written recommendations under
certain circumstances. Within 90 days
of any refusal, a sponsor may submit
additional information specified by
FDA. Section 316.20 specifies the
content and format of an orphan drug
application which includes
requirements that an applicant
document that the disease is rare (affects
fewer than 200,000 persons in the
United States annually) or that the
sponsor of the drug has no reasonable
E:\FR\FM\30APN1.SGM
30APN1
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 84 / Wednesday, April 30, 2008 / Notices
23469
expectation of recovering costs of
research and development of the drug.
Section 316.26 allows an applicant to
amend the applications under certain
circumstances. Section 316.30 requires
submission of annual reports, including
progress reports on studies, a
description of the investigational plan,
and a discussion of changes that may
affect orphan status. The information
requested will provide the basis for an
FDA determination that the drug is for
a rare disease or condition and satisfies
the requirements for obtaining orphan
drug status. Secondly, the information
will describe the medical and regulatory
history of the drug. The respondents to
this collection of information are
biotechnology firms, drug companies,
and academic clinical researchers.
The information requested from
respondents represents, for the most
part, an accounting of information
already in the possession of the
applicant. It is estimated, based on
frequency of requests over the past 5
years, that 171 persons or organizations
per year will request orphan-drug
designation and none will request
formal recommendations on design of
preclinical or clinical studies.
The Common EMEA/FDA
Application Form for Orphan Medicinal
Product Designation (Form FDA 3671) is
intended to benefit sponsors who desire
to seek orphan designation of drugs
intended for rare diseases or conditions
from both the European Commission
and FDA by reducing the burden of
preparing separate applications to meet
the regulatory requirements in each
jurisdiction. It highlights the regulatory
cooperation between the United States
(US) and the European Union (EU)
mandated by the Transatlantic
Economic Council (TEC). The TEC
mandate involves the following: (1)
Removal of barriers to transatlantic
commerce; (2) rationalizing, reforming,
and, where appropriate, reducing
regulations to empower the private
sector; (3) achieving more effective,
systematic, and transparent regulatory
cooperation to reduce costs associated
with regulation to consumers and
producers; (4) removing unnecessary
differences between jurisdictional
regulations to foster economic
integration; and (5) reinforcing the
existing transatlantic dialogue structures
in regulatory cooperation, both by
intensifying our sector-by-sector US-EU
regulatory cooperation and our dialogue
between OMB and the European
Commission services on methodological
issues.
At present, when seeking orphan
designation of the same drug for the
diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of
the same rare disease or condition in the
US and in the European Community, a
sponsor must submit a designation
request to FDA (in accordance with
section 526 of the act) and a separate
designation application to EMEA (in
accordance with Regulation (EC) No.
141/2000 of December 16, 1999, and
Commission Regulation (EC) No. 847/
2000). In most cases, the two documents
are formatted differently to meet
regulatory demands, but the required
core information elements are similar,
with the exception of some unique
regulatory requirements exclusive to
each jurisdiction. Therefore, FDA and
EMEA believe that a common
application form will help reduce the
sponsor’s regulatory burden and costs to
produce and submit differentlyformatted request/application. In
addition, a common application form
may also streamline the administrative
and substantive regulatory review
processes, and aid in information
exchange between the agencies. In
accordance with the Confidentiality
Arrangements concluded on September
12, 2003, between the European
Commission, EMEA, and FDA/
Department of Health and Human
Services (DHHS),1 FDA and EMEA have
agreed in principle to adopt a template
for the common application form as
proposed in Form FDA 3671.
Any sponsor seeking orphan
designation of the same drug for the
same disease or condition from both
FDA and EMEA may use this common
application form for regulatory filing
purposes. A sponsor may also use this
common application form when seeking
designation only from FDA. This
common application form is intended to
complement, not to supersede, the
relevant regulatory frameworks
currently in effect. The sponsor must
comply with all applicable regulatory
requirements in each jurisdiction in
which it seeks designation when using
this common application form.
To use the common application form,
the sponsor must provide the required
information in each applicable section
as instructed in the explanatory notes.
Certain information elements are
identified in the form as required
exclusively by either FDA or EMEA
regulations, and as such they must be
included only in the application to that
jurisdiction. Where additional
explanations and/or supportive
documents are necessary, the sponsor
should sequentially append them at the
end of the common application form in
the order they appear in the form. The
sponsor must also complete the
declaration and signature page. For
FDA, the completed common
application form and required appended
documents must be submitted to the
Office of Orphan Products Development
(HF–35), Food and Drug
Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane,
Rockville, MD 20857. For EMEA, the
completed documents must be
submitted to European Medicines
Agency, 7 Westferry Circus, Canary
Wharf, London E14 4HB, United
Kingdom.
FDA estimates the reporting burden of
this common application form as
follows. Between January 2000 and May
2006, FDA and EMEA received 226
comparable orphan designation
requests/applications of the same drugs
for the same diseases or conditions, or
an average of 35 per year. With the ease
of a common application form, FDA
anticipates the number of such requests/
applications may increase over time.
Therefore, generally there is one
request/application per respondent and,
at the extreme, all respondent are USbased, FDA believes up to 40 such
respondents may use the common
application form each year. The
respondents will be primarily
pharmaceutical companies or other forprofit organizations. For applications
submitted exclusively to FDA, we do
not believe the new form will result in
any increased burden on the
respondents and therefore we estimate
no additional burden for those
respondents. FDA believes the
information required for the EMEA
submission, for the most part, is very
similar to that in the FDA submission,
which is already in the respondents’
possession. The respondents, however,
may have to search existing data sources
or gather additional needed data, such
as on the prevalence or the availability
of alternative methods of diagnosis,
prevention, and treatment of the rare
disease or condition of interest in the
European Community, to complete the
EMEA submission. FDA estimates that it
will take an additional 32 hours—16
hours of professional time and 16 hours
of support time—to compile information
required for the EMEA submission.
Hence, the estimated total annual
human resource hours, at most, would
be 1,280 hours for the EMEA
submission.
In the Federal Register of January 15,
2008 (73 FR 2504), FDA published a 60-
1 See ‘‘Confidentiality Arrangements Concluded
Between the EU (EC and EMEA) and the US FDA/
DHHS Implementation Plan for Medicinal Products
for Human Use’’ at https://www.fda.gov/oia/
arrangements0904.html.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:09 Apr 29, 2008
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\30APN1.SGM
30APN1
23470
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 84 / Wednesday, April 30, 2008 / Notices
day notice requesting public comment
on the information collection
provisions. No comments were received.
TABLE 1.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN1
21 CFR Section and FDA Form
Annual No. of
Respondents
Annual Frequency per
Response
Total Annual
Responses
Hours per Response
Total Hours
316.10, 316.12, and 316.14
5
1
5
130
650
316.20, 316.21, and 316.26
171
2.0
342
130
44,460
316.20, 316.21, and 316.26
Form FDA 3671
40
1
40
32
1,280
316.22
30
1
30
2
60
316.27
25
1
25
4
100
316.30
500
1
500
2
1,000
316.36
1
1
1
15
15
Total
47,565
1There
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
Dated: April 23, 2008.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and
Planning.
[FR Doc. E8–9467 Filed 4–29–08; 8:45 am]
DATES:
BILLING CODE 4160–01–S
REGISTRATION TO ATTEND THE PUBLIC
WORKSHOP).
The public workshop will be
held on July 21, 2008, from 7:55 a.m. to
6 p.m., and on July 22, 2008, from 8 a.m.
to 12:45 p.m. Registration is available
until 5 p.m. on June 20, 2008 (See
Food and Drug Administration
Towards an Artificial Pancreas: A Food
and Drug Administration, National
Institutes of Health, Juvenile Diabetes
Research Foundation Public Workshop
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
ACTION:
Notice of public workshop.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), in collaboration
with the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) and the Juvenile Diabetes
Research Foundation (JDRF), is holding
a public workshop focused upon the
state of the art in the research and
development of an artificial pancreas.
The public workshop entitled ‘‘Towards
an Artificial Pancreas: A Food and Drug
Administration, National Institutes of
Health, and Juvenile Diabetes Research
Foundation Workshop’’ will provide a
public forum for discussing the progress
and remaining challenges in the
development of closed-loop systems
designed to regulate glycemic control, as
an aid in the management of diabetes
mellitus. It is intended to provide
stakeholders with information that will
accelerate the development of an
artificial pancreas.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:09 Apr 29, 2008
Jkt 214001
The public workshop will
be held at the Lister Hill Auditorium on
the NIH Campus (https://www.nih.gov/
science/campus/) located at
9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD
20892.
Parking on the NIH campus is limited.
Attendees are encouraged to take public
transportation. There is limited parking
available at the Natcher Building. See
https://www.nih.gov/about/
directions.htm for more information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Arleen Pinkos, Center for Devices and
Radiological Health (HFZ–440), 2098
Gaither Rd., Rockville, MD 20850, 240–
276–0702, FAX 240–276–0651, e-mail:
arleen.pinkos@fda.hhs.gov.
ADDRESSES:
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
REGISTRATION TO ATTEND THE PUBLIC
WORKSHOP: Those interested in
attending the public workshop may
register online at https://
www.blsmeetings.net/
artificialpancreas08/reg.cfm. There is
no registration fee to attend the meeting;
however, all participants must submit a
registration form. Space is limited, so
please submit your registration early to
reserve a space. Registration will be
accepted through June 20, 2008;
however, onsite registration will be
permitted on a space-available basis.
Persons without Internet access may
call Akia Richardson at 301–313–0244
ext. 49, by June 20, 2008, to register for
onsite attendance.
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
If you need special accommodations
due to a disability, please contact
L’Tonya Frazier at 301–594–4453 at
least 7 days in advance.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The artificial pancreas is one of FDA’s
Critical Path Initiatives, a program
dedicated to accelerating the availability
of much needed medical products. The
Interagency Artificial Pancreas Working
Group, a group of multi-disciplined
scientists and clinicians from FDA and
NIH, was established to support this
initiative. The goals of the Artificial
Pancreas Initiative are twofold: to
provide infrastructure for narrowing the
gap between basic biomedical
knowledge and clinical application of
novel technologies, and to cross-fertilize
and partner with stakeholders in order
to identify and overcome the clinical
and scientific challenges to the
development of an artificial pancreas.
Through collaborative efforts, such as
this workshop, the group strives to
develop innovative strategies to achieve
their goals.
II. Agenda
World renowned experts will present
information on topics that are
instrumental to the development of an
artificial pancreas, and each session will
be followed by roundtable discussions.
Session topics will include:
• State of the art design of closedloop glycemic control systems
• Results of recently conducted
clinical trials
• Clinical trial design, including how
to define successes and failures of
closed-loop systems
E:\FR\FM\30APN1.SGM
30APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 84 (Wednesday, April 30, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23468-23470]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-9467]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2008-N-0222] (formerly Docket No. 2008N-0007)
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for Office
of Management and Budget Review; Comment Request; Orphan Drugs; Common
European Medicines Agency/Food and Drug Administration Application Form
for Orphan Medicinal Product Designation (Form FDA 3671)
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing that a
proposed collection of information has been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for review and clearance under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Fax written comments on the collection of information by May
30, 2008.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on the information collection are
received, OMB recommends that written comments be faxed to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer,
FAX: 202-395-6974, or e-mailed to baguilar@omb.eop.gov. All comments
should be identified with the OMB control number 0910-0167. Also
include the FDA docket number found in brackets in the heading of this
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jonna Capezzuto, Office of the Chief
Information Officer (HFA-250), Food and Drug Administration,5600
Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20857, 301-827-4659.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In compliance with 44 U.S.C. 3507, FDA has
submitted the following proposed collection of information to OMB for
review and clearance.
Orphan Drugs; Common European Medicines Agency/Food and Drug
Administration Application Form for Orphan Medicinal Product
Designation (Form FDA 3671)--(OMB Control Number 0910-0167)--Extension
Sections 525 and 526 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(the act) (21 U.S.C. 360aa and 360dd) give FDA statutory authority to
do the following: (1) Provide recommendations on investigations
required for approval of marketing applications for orphan drugs, (2)
designate eligible drugs as orphan drugs, (3) set forth conditions
under which a sponsor of an approved orphan drug obtains exclusive
approval, and (4) encourage sponsors to make orphan drugs available for
treatment on an ``open protocol'' basis before the drug has been
approved for general marketing. The implementing regulations for these
statutory requirements have been codified under part 316 (21 CFR part
316) and specify procedures that sponsors of orphan drugs use in
availing themselves of the incentives provided for orphan drugs in the
act and sets forth procedures FDA will use in administering the act
with regard to orphan drugs. Section 316.10 specifies the content and
format of a request for written recommendations concerning the non-
clinical laboratory studies and clinical investigations necessary for
approval of marketing applications. Section 316.12 provides that,
before providing such recommendations, FDA may require results of
studies to be submitted for review. Section 316.14 contains provisions
permitting FDA to refuse to provide written recommendations under
certain circumstances. Within 90 days of any refusal, a sponsor may
submit additional information specified by FDA. Section 316.20
specifies the content and format of an orphan drug application which
includes requirements that an applicant document that the disease is
rare (affects fewer than 200,000 persons in the United States annually)
or that the sponsor of the drug has no reasonable
[[Page 23469]]
expectation of recovering costs of research and development of the
drug. Section 316.26 allows an applicant to amend the applications
under certain circumstances. Section 316.30 requires submission of
annual reports, including progress reports on studies, a description of
the investigational plan, and a discussion of changes that may affect
orphan status. The information requested will provide the basis for an
FDA determination that the drug is for a rare disease or condition and
satisfies the requirements for obtaining orphan drug status. Secondly,
the information will describe the medical and regulatory history of the
drug. The respondents to this collection of information are
biotechnology firms, drug companies, and academic clinical researchers.
The information requested from respondents represents, for the most
part, an accounting of information already in the possession of the
applicant. It is estimated, based on frequency of requests over the
past 5 years, that 171 persons or organizations per year will request
orphan-drug designation and none will request formal recommendations on
design of preclinical or clinical studies.
The Common EMEA/FDA Application Form for Orphan Medicinal Product
Designation (Form FDA 3671) is intended to benefit sponsors who desire
to seek orphan designation of drugs intended for rare diseases or
conditions from both the European Commission and FDA by reducing the
burden of preparing separate applications to meet the regulatory
requirements in each jurisdiction. It highlights the regulatory
cooperation between the United States (US) and the European Union (EU)
mandated by the Transatlantic Economic Council (TEC). The TEC mandate
involves the following: (1) Removal of barriers to transatlantic
commerce; (2) rationalizing, reforming, and, where appropriate,
reducing regulations to empower the private sector; (3) achieving more
effective, systematic, and transparent regulatory cooperation to reduce
costs associated with regulation to consumers and producers; (4)
removing unnecessary differences between jurisdictional regulations to
foster economic integration; and (5) reinforcing the existing
transatlantic dialogue structures in regulatory cooperation, both by
intensifying our sector-by-sector US-EU regulatory cooperation and our
dialogue between OMB and the European Commission services on
methodological issues.
At present, when seeking orphan designation of the same drug for
the diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of the same rare disease or
condition in the US and in the European Community, a sponsor must
submit a designation request to FDA (in accordance with section 526 of
the act) and a separate designation application to EMEA (in accordance
with Regulation (EC) No. 141/2000 of December 16, 1999, and Commission
Regulation (EC) No. 847/2000). In most cases, the two documents are
formatted differently to meet regulatory demands, but the required core
information elements are similar, with the exception of some unique
regulatory requirements exclusive to each jurisdiction. Therefore, FDA
and EMEA believe that a common application form will help reduce the
sponsor's regulatory burden and costs to produce and submit
differently-formatted request/application. In addition, a common
application form may also streamline the administrative and substantive
regulatory review processes, and aid in information exchange between
the agencies. In accordance with the Confidentiality Arrangements
concluded on September 12, 2003, between the European Commission, EMEA,
and FDA/Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS),\1\ FDA and EMEA
have agreed in principle to adopt a template for the common application
form as proposed in Form FDA 3671.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See ``Confidentiality Arrangements Concluded Between the EU
(EC and EMEA) and the US FDA/DHHS Implementation Plan for Medicinal
Products for Human Use'' at https://www.fda.gov/oia/
arrangements0904.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Any sponsor seeking orphan designation of the same drug for the
same disease or condition from both FDA and EMEA may use this common
application form for regulatory filing purposes. A sponsor may also use
this common application form when seeking designation only from FDA.
This common application form is intended to complement, not to
supersede, the relevant regulatory frameworks currently in effect. The
sponsor must comply with all applicable regulatory requirements in each
jurisdiction in which it seeks designation when using this common
application form.
To use the common application form, the sponsor must provide the
required information in each applicable section as instructed in the
explanatory notes. Certain information elements are identified in the
form as required exclusively by either FDA or EMEA regulations, and as
such they must be included only in the application to that
jurisdiction. Where additional explanations and/or supportive documents
are necessary, the sponsor should sequentially append them at the end
of the common application form in the order they appear in the form.
The sponsor must also complete the declaration and signature page. For
FDA, the completed common application form and required appended
documents must be submitted to the Office of Orphan Products
Development (HF-35), Food and Drug Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane,
Rockville, MD 20857. For EMEA, the completed documents must be
submitted to European Medicines Agency, 7 Westferry Circus, Canary
Wharf, London E14 4HB, United Kingdom.
FDA estimates the reporting burden of this common application form
as follows. Between January 2000 and May 2006, FDA and EMEA received
226 comparable orphan designation requests/applications of the same
drugs for the same diseases or conditions, or an average of 35 per
year. With the ease of a common application form, FDA anticipates the
number of such requests/applications may increase over time. Therefore,
generally there is one request/application per respondent and, at the
extreme, all respondent are US-based, FDA believes up to 40 such
respondents may use the common application form each year. The
respondents will be primarily pharmaceutical companies or other for-
profit organizations. For applications submitted exclusively to FDA, we
do not believe the new form will result in any increased burden on the
respondents and therefore we estimate no additional burden for those
respondents. FDA believes the information required for the EMEA
submission, for the most part, is very similar to that in the FDA
submission, which is already in the respondents' possession. The
respondents, however, may have to search existing data sources or
gather additional needed data, such as on the prevalence or the
availability of alternative methods of diagnosis, prevention, and
treatment of the rare disease or condition of interest in the European
Community, to complete the EMEA submission. FDA estimates that it will
take an additional 32 hours--16 hours of professional time and 16 hours
of support time--to compile information required for the EMEA
submission. Hence, the estimated total annual human resource hours, at
most, would be 1,280 hours for the EMEA submission.
In the Federal Register of January 15, 2008 (73 FR 2504), FDA
published a 60-
[[Page 23470]]
day notice requesting public comment on the information collection
provisions. No comments were received.
Table 1.--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden\1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual No. of Annual Frequency per Total Annual Hours per
21 CFR Section and FDA Form Respondents Response Responses Response Total Hours
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.10, 316.12, and 316.14 5 1 5 130 650
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.20, 316.21, and 316.26 171 2.0 342 130 44,460
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.20, 316.21, and 316.26 40 1 40 32 1,280
Form FDA 3671
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.22 30 1 30 2 60
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.27 25 1 25 4 100
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.30 500 1 500 2 1,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
316.36 1 1 1 15 15
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total 47,565
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
Dated: April 23, 2008.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and Planning.
[FR Doc. E8-9467 Filed 4-29-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-S