Generic Drug User Fee; Public Meeting, 76738-76740 [2011-31630]
Download as PDF
76738
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 236 / Thursday, December 8, 2011 / Notices
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 5400.
In compliance with the requirements
of Section 3506 (c) (2) (A) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Administration for Children and
Families is soliciting public comments
on the specific aspects of the
information collection described above.
Copies of the proposed collection of
information can be obtained and
comments may be forwarded by writing
to the Administration for Children and
Families, Office of Planning Research
and Evaluation, 370 L’Enfant
Promenade, SW., Washington, DC
20447, Attn: ACF Reports Clearance
Officer. All Requests should be
identified by the title of the information
collection.
The Department specifically requests
comments on: (a) Whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information; (c)
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (d)
ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Consideration will be given to
comments and suggestions submitted
within 60 days of this publication.
Robert Sargis,
Reports Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2011–31493 Filed 12–7–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
President’s Committee for People With
Intellectual Disabilities Notice of
Committee Meeting via Conference
Call
President’s Committee for
People with Intellectual Disabilities
(PCPID), Administration for Children
and Families, HHS.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
Notice of Committee meeting
via conference call.
ACTION:
Wednesday, February 1, 2012,
from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. EST. This
meeting, to be held via audio conference
call, is open to the public.
DATE:
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15:59 Dec 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Details for accessing the full
Committee Conference Call, for the
public, are cited below:
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Toll Free Dial-In Number: (888) 989–
0724
Pass Code: 1939592
[Docket No. FDA–2010–N–0381]
Individuals who will need
accommodations in order to participate
in the PCPID Meeting via audio
conferencing (assistive listening
devices, materials in alternative format
such as large print or Braille) should
notify Genevieve Swift, PCPID
Executive Administrative Assistant, at
Edith.Swift@acf.hhs.gov, or by
telephone at (202) 619–0634, no later
than Wednesday, January 25, 2012.
PCPID will attempt to meet requests for
accommodations made after that date,
but cannot guarantee ability to grant
requests received after this deadline.
Agenda: Committee Members will
discuss plans for developing the PCPID
2012 Report to the President.
Additional Information: For further
information, please contact Laverdia
Taylor Roach, Senior Advisor,
President’s Committee for People with
Intellectual Disabilities, The Aerospace
Center, Second Floor West, 370 L’Enfant
Promenade SW., Washington, DC 20447.
Telephone: (202) 619–0634. Fax: (202)
205–9519. Email: LRoach@acf.hhs.gov.
PCPID
acts in an advisory capacity to the
President and the Secretary of Health
and Human Services, through the
Administration on Developmental
Disabilities, on a broad range of topics
relating to programs, services, and
supports for persons with intellectual
disabilities. The PCPID Executive Order
stipulates that the Committee shall: (1)
Provide such advice concerning
intellectual disabilities as the President
or the Secretary of Health and Human
Services may request; and (2) provide
advice to the President concerning the
following for people with intellectual
disabilities: (A) expansion of
educational opportunities; (B)
promotion of homeownership; (C)
assurance of workplace integration; (D)
improvement of transportation options;
(E) expansion of full access to
community living; and (F) increasing
access to assistive and universally
designed technologies.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: December 1, 2011.
Jamie Kendall,
Deputy Commissioner, Administration on
Developmental Disabilities.
[FR Doc. 2011–31539 Filed 12–7–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184–01–P
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Food and Drug Administration
Generic Drug User Fee; Public Meeting
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
Notice of public meeting;
request for comments.
ACTION:
The Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) is announcing a public meeting to
discuss proposed recommendations for
enactment of a Generic Drug User Fee
Act (GDUFA), which will authorize
FDA to collect fees and use them for the
process for the review of human generic
drug applications and associated Type II
Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient Drug
Master Files (DMFs) and for conducting
associated inspections for fiscal years
(FYs) 2013–2017. New legislation would
be required for FDA to establish and
collect user fees under such a program.
FDA and the regulated industry have
developed a proposal for Congressional
consideration. In the interest of
transparency, and in an effort to
voluntarily follow a process similar to
the ones set forth in the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act for FDA’s other
user fee programs, FDA is publishing
the negotiated recommendations (the
goals letter), holding a meeting at which
the public may present its views on
such recommendations, and providing
an opportunity for the public to provide
written comments on such
recommendations.
Date and Time: The public meeting
will be held on December 19, 2011, from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Registration to attend
the meeting must be received by
December 12, 2011. The meeting will
also be Web cast. See Section III. B. of
this document for information on how
to register for the meeting and Section
III.C. on information about how to
access the Web cast. Please submit any
comments that you plan to present at
the public meeting to the docket by the
date of the public meeting but note that
written or electronic comments must be
submitted by January 6, 2011.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
the FDA White Oak Campus, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 2, rm. 2047,
Silver Spring, MD 20993. Submit
electronic comments to https://
www.regulations.gov. Submit written
comments to the Division of Dockets
Management (HFA–305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852. All
comments should be identified with the
docket number found in brackets in the
E:\FR\FM\08DEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 236 / Thursday, December 8, 2011 / Notices
heading of this document. Transcripts of
the meeting will be available for review
at the Division of Dockets Management
and on the Internet at https://
www.fda.gov and https://
www.regulations.gov as soon as they are
prepared after the public meeting (see
Section III.C. of this document).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mari
Long, Office of Policy, Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Bldg. 32, rm. 4237, Silver Spring,
MD 20993, (301) 796–7574, FAX: 301
847–3541, mari.long@fda.hhs.gov; or
Peter C. Beckerman, Office of Policy,
Food and Drug Administration, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 32, rm.
4238, Silver Spring, MD 20993, (301)
796–4830, FAX: (301) 847–3541,
peter.beckerman@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Background
FDA is announcing its intention to
hold a public meeting to discuss
proposed recommendations for the
enactment of a GDUFA that would
authorize FDA to collect user fees
related to human generic drugs and use
them for the process of the review of
human generic drug applications and
associated submissions, to conduct
related inspections, and to engage in
other related activities for FYs 2013 to
2017. New legislation is required for
FDA to establish and collect user fees
for generic drugs. In furtherance of such
a program, FDA engaged in negotiations
with three industry trade associations
over aspects of a joint proposal for a
generic drug user fee program, including
fees and performance goals, from
February through September 2011. The
Agency held four prior public meetings
on the topic before and during this
process, posted meeting minutes after
each negotiation session as well as
posting other related materials, held a
public docket open during the
negotiation, and considered all
comments that were submitted.
FDA and industry were able to reach
agreement on a GDUFA program that, if
enacted, is expected to place FDA’s
generic drug program on a sound
financial footing and would further the
fundamental interests of safety, access,
and transparency. The GDUFA proposal
that resulted from this process is
focused on three key aims:
• Safety: To ensure that industry
participants, foreign or domestic, who
participate in the U.S. generic drug
system are held to consistent high
quality standards and are inspected
biennially, using a risk-based approach,
with foreign and domestic parity.
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15:59 Dec 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
• Access: To expedite the availability
of low-cost, high-quality generic drugs
by bringing greater predictability to the
review times for abbreviated new drug
applications, amendments and
supplements, increasing predictability,
and timeliness in the review process.
• Transparency: To enhance FDA’s
ability to protect Americans in the
complex global supply environment by
requiring the identification of facilities
involved in the manufacture of generic
drugs and associated active
pharmaceutical ingredients and
improving FDA’s communications and
feedback with industry in order to
expedite product access.
Generic drugs play a critical role in
providing more affordable,
therapeutically equivalent medicine,
and the GDUFA program is designed to
keep individual fee amounts as low as
possible to supplement appropriated
funding to ensure that consumers
continue to receive the significant
benefits offered by generic drugs.
Generic drugs provided more than $824
billion dollars in savings to the nation’s
health care system in the last decade
alone. The additional resources called
for under the agreement, an inflationadjusted $299 million annually for each
of the 5 years of the program, will
provide FDA with the ability to perform
critical program functions that could not
otherwise occur. This program is not
expected to add significantly to the cost
of generic drugs: Given that a reported
3.99 billion retail prescriptions per year
were dispensed in the United States in
2010 and assuming that 78 percent of
these prescriptions were filled by
generic drugs, it equates to less than a
dime per prescription for the average
cost of a prescription filled by a generic
drug in the United States. Moreover,
with the adoption of user fees and the
associated savings in development time,
the overall expense of bringing a
product to market may decline and
result in reduced costs.
In addition to the public health
benefits, the proposed program is
expected to provide significant value to
companies, and in particular to small
companies and first time entrants in the
generic market, who will benefit
significantly from the certainty
associated with performance review
metrics that offer the potential to
dramatically reduce the time needed to
commercialize a generic drug when
compared to pre-GDUFA review times.
Because FDA remains interested in
hearing from nonaffiliated companies in
addition to patient and consumer
stakeholders, the Agency is holding this
final public meeting prior to providing
recommendations to Congress. The
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76739
meeting will provide an explanation of
the negotiated joint recommendations
and provide an opportunity for
additional stakeholder reaction and
input.
II. The Proposed GDUFA Program
A. Recommendations
Key attributes of the proposed
GDUFA Program, as negotiated, are
memorialized in a goals letter that FDA
has posted on its generic drug user fee
Web page, which is accessible at
https://www.fda.gov/ForIndustry/
UserFees/GenericDrugUserFees/
default.htm.
B. Summary of the Program
If enacted as negotiated, the program
would provide FDA with additional
funding for all aspects of the generic
drug program in the amount of $299
million per year, adjusted for inflation,
for 5 years. With those additional user
fee funds, FDA would agree to
undertake a series of immediate
program enhancements and
performance goals. A nonexclusive list
of major end goals for the program
includes:
1. Application metrics that increase to
an eventual year 5 goal of FDA
reviewing and acting on 90 percent of
complete electronic abbreviated new
drug applications (ANDAs) within 10
months after the date of submission;
2. Backlog metrics of FDA reviewing
and acting on 90 percent of all ANDAs,
ANDA amendments, and ANDA prior
approval supplements pending on
October 1, 2012, by the end of FY 2017;
and
3. Current good manufacturing
practice (CGMP) inspection metrics
under which FDA will conduct riskadjusted biennial CGMP inspections of
generic active pharmaceutical
ingredient (API) and generic finished
dosage form (FDF) manufacturers with
the goal of achieving parity of
inspection frequency between foreign
and domestic firms in FY 2017.
Many additional, and interim,
performance metrics and efficiency
enhancements are set forth in the
negotiated documents.
Under the program, fees would derive
from two primary sources: Generic drugrelated submissions and generic drugrelated facilities. Submission fees would
include fees for ANDAs and prior
approval supplements, as well as for
DMFs (for first reference only, as DMFs
may be referenced multiple times by
different sponsors). Facility fees would
include fees for facilities that
manufacture APIs for generic drugs as
well and facilities that manufacture
E:\FR\FM\08DEN1.SGM
08DEN1
76740
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 236 / Thursday, December 8, 2011 / Notices
generic FDFs. In the first year of the
program, there would also be a fee
assessed for applications that are
pending on October 1, 2012, the socalled ‘‘backlog’’.
As under the prescription drug user
fee act (PDUFA), individual fee amounts
would be set annually, with the total
annual revenue provided by the user fee
specified in statute. Of the total generic
drug user fee revenue, 80 percent would
be provided by the FDF manufacturers
and 20 percent by API manufacturers.
Additionally, 70 percent of the overall
GDUFA revenue would be generated by
facility fees and 30 percent would be
generated by submission fees; though in
the first year those splits will be slightly
different because of the one-time
backlog fee.
While it is not possible to provide
actual individual fee amounts until such
fees are set by a Federal Register notice,
it is expected that individual GDUFA
fees will be orders of magnitude less
than PDUFA fees, a factor due to the
larger fee paying base in GDUFA. In
negotiating the program, FDA was
cognizant that generic drugs are a
tremendous public health success story,
responsible for saving $824 billion over
the last decade. Consequently, the
Agency worked to achieve a program
that would not appreciably add to the
cost of generic drugs, change the
structure of the industry, or advantage
any particular industry sector,
regardless of size or location.
The program, as negotiated, is aimed
at putting FDA’s generic drugs program
on a firm financial footing and
providing additive resources necessary
to assure timely access to safe, highquality, affordable generic drugs.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
III. What information should you know
about the meeting?
A. When and where will the meeting
occur? What format will FDA use?
Through this notice, we are
announcing a public meeting to update
stakeholders and hear stakeholder views
on the negotiated proposal for a generic
drug user fee program. We will conduct
the meeting on December 19, 2011, from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the FDA White Oak
Campus, 10903 New Hampshire Ave.,
Bldg. 2, rm. 2047, Silver Spring, MD
20993. In general, the meeting format
will include a presentation by FDA and
presentations by stakeholders and
members of the public who have
registered in advance to present at the
meeting. The amount of time available
for presentations will be determined by
the number of people who register to
make a presentation. We will also
provide an opportunity for
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15:59 Dec 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
organizations and individuals to submit
written comments to the docket after the
meeting. FDA policy issues are beyond
the scope of this initiative. Accordingly,
the presentations should focus on
process and funding issues, and
reactions to the GDUFA
recommendations, and not focus on
policy.
B. How do you register for the meeting
or submit comments?
If you wish to attend and/or present
at the meeting, please register by email
to GDUFA_Meeting4@fda.hhs.gov by
December 12, 2011. Your email should
contain complete contact information
for each attendee, including name, title,
affiliation, address, email address, and
telephone number. Registration is free
and will be on a first-come, first-served
basis. Early registration is recommended
because seating is limited. FDA may
limit the number of participants from
each organization, as well as the total
number of participants, based on space
limitations. Registrants will receive
confirmation once they have been
accepted. Onsite registration on the day
of the meeting will be based on space
availability. We will try to accommodate
all persons who wish to make a
presentation. The time allotted for
presentations may depend on the
number of persons who wish to speak,
and if the entire meeting time is not
needed for presentations, FDA reserves
the right to terminate the meeting early.
If you need special accommodations
because of disability, please contact
Mari Long or Peter Beckerman (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT) at least 7
days before the meeting.
In addition, any person may submit
written or electronic comments to the
Division of Dockets Management (see
ADDRESSES). Submit a single copy of
electronic comments or two paper
copies of any mailed comments, except
that individuals may submit one paper
copy. Comments are to be identified
with the docket number found in
brackets in the heading of this
document. Received comments may be
seen in the Division of Dockets
Management between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. To ensure
consideration, all comments must be
received by January 6, 2012. Submission
of comments prior to the meeting is
strongly encouraged.
C. Will the meeting be Web cast?
For those unable to attend in person,
FDA will Web cast and provide a
telephone audio link to the meeting. To
join the Web meeting, please go to
https://collaboration.fda.gov/gdufa/. For
audio, please call 301–796–2700 and
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
enter participant code 121947. If you
have never attended a Connect Pro
meeting before, you may wish to test
your connection by going to: https://
collaboration.fda.gov/common/help/en/
support/meeting_test.htm.
D. Will meeting transcripts be available?
Please be advised that as soon as a
transcript is available it will be
accessible at https://www.regulations.gov
and https://www.fda.gov. It may be
viewed at the Division of Dockets
Management (see ADDRESSES). A
transcript will also be made available in
either hard copy or on CD–ROM, after
submission of a Freedom of Information
request. Written requests are to be sent
to the Division of Freedom of
Information (ELEM)-1029, Food and
Drug Administration, 12420 Parklawn
Dr., Element Bldg., Rockville, MD
20857.
Dated: December 5, 2011.
Leslie Kux,
Acting Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2011–31630 Filed 12–6–11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Health Resources and Services
Administration
Secretary’s Advisory Committee on
Heritable Disorders in Newborns and
Children; Notice of Meeting
In accordance with section 10(a)(2) of
the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(Pub. L. 92–463, codified at 5 U.S.C.
app. 2), notice is hereby given of the
following meeting:
Name: Secretary’s Advisory Committee on
Heritable Disorders in Newborns and
Children.
Dates and Times: January 26, 2012, 8:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. January 27, 2012, 8:30 a.m. to
3:30 p.m.
Place: Park Hyatt Hotel, 1201 24th Street
NW., Washington, DC 20037.
Status: The meeting will be open to the
public, but attendance will be limited by the
space available. Participants are asked to
register for the meeting by going to the
registration Web site at https://
altarum.cvent.com/event/sachdncjan2012.
The registration deadline is Monday, January
23, 2012. Individuals who need special
assistance, such as sign language
interpretation or other reasonable
accommodations, should indicate their needs
on the registration Web site. The deadline for
special accommodation requests is Tuesday,
January 24, 2012. If there are technical
problems gaining access to the Web site,
please contact Maureen Ball, Meetings
Coordinator, at conferences@altarum.org.
Purpose: The Secretary’s Advisory
Committee on Heritable Disorders in
E:\FR\FM\08DEN1.SGM
08DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 236 (Thursday, December 8, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76738-76740]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-31630]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2010-N-0381]
Generic Drug User Fee; Public Meeting
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing a public
meeting to discuss proposed recommendations for enactment of a Generic
Drug User Fee Act (GDUFA), which will authorize FDA to collect fees and
use them for the process for the review of human generic drug
applications and associated Type II Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient
Drug Master Files (DMFs) and for conducting associated inspections for
fiscal years (FYs) 2013-2017. New legislation would be required for FDA
to establish and collect user fees under such a program. FDA and the
regulated industry have developed a proposal for Congressional
consideration. In the interest of transparency, and in an effort to
voluntarily follow a process similar to the ones set forth in the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act for FDA's other user fee programs,
FDA is publishing the negotiated recommendations (the goals letter),
holding a meeting at which the public may present its views on such
recommendations, and providing an opportunity for the public to provide
written comments on such recommendations.
Date and Time: The public meeting will be held on December 19,
2011, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Registration to attend the meeting must be
received by December 12, 2011. The meeting will also be Web cast. See
Section III. B. of this document for information on how to register for
the meeting and Section III.C. on information about how to access the
Web cast. Please submit any comments that you plan to present at the
public meeting to the docket by the date of the public meeting but note
that written or electronic comments must be submitted by January 6,
2011.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at the FDA White Oak Campus, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 2, rm. 2047, Silver Spring, MD 20993. Submit
electronic comments to https://www.regulations.gov. Submit written
comments to the Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852. All
comments should be identified with the docket number found in brackets
in the
[[Page 76739]]
heading of this document. Transcripts of the meeting will be available
for review at the Division of Dockets Management and on the Internet at
https://www.fda.gov and https://www.regulations.gov as soon as they are
prepared after the public meeting (see Section III.C. of this
document).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mari Long, Office of Policy, Food and
Drug Administration, 10903 New Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 32, rm. 4237,
Silver Spring, MD 20993, (301) 796-7574, FAX: 301 847-3541,
mari.long@fda.hhs.gov; or Peter C. Beckerman, Office of Policy, Food
and Drug Administration, 10903 New Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 32, rm. 4238,
Silver Spring, MD 20993, (301) 796-4830, FAX: (301) 847-3541,
peter.beckerman@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
FDA is announcing its intention to hold a public meeting to discuss
proposed recommendations for the enactment of a GDUFA that would
authorize FDA to collect user fees related to human generic drugs and
use them for the process of the review of human generic drug
applications and associated submissions, to conduct related
inspections, and to engage in other related activities for FYs 2013 to
2017. New legislation is required for FDA to establish and collect user
fees for generic drugs. In furtherance of such a program, FDA engaged
in negotiations with three industry trade associations over aspects of
a joint proposal for a generic drug user fee program, including fees
and performance goals, from February through September 2011. The Agency
held four prior public meetings on the topic before and during this
process, posted meeting minutes after each negotiation session as well
as posting other related materials, held a public docket open during
the negotiation, and considered all comments that were submitted.
FDA and industry were able to reach agreement on a GDUFA program
that, if enacted, is expected to place FDA's generic drug program on a
sound financial footing and would further the fundamental interests of
safety, access, and transparency. The GDUFA proposal that resulted from
this process is focused on three key aims:
Safety: To ensure that industry participants, foreign or
domestic, who participate in the U.S. generic drug system are held to
consistent high quality standards and are inspected biennially, using a
risk-based approach, with foreign and domestic parity.
Access: To expedite the availability of low-cost, high-
quality generic drugs by bringing greater predictability to the review
times for abbreviated new drug applications, amendments and
supplements, increasing predictability, and timeliness in the review
process.
Transparency: To enhance FDA's ability to protect
Americans in the complex global supply environment by requiring the
identification of facilities involved in the manufacture of generic
drugs and associated active pharmaceutical ingredients and improving
FDA's communications and feedback with industry in order to expedite
product access.
Generic drugs play a critical role in providing more affordable,
therapeutically equivalent medicine, and the GDUFA program is designed
to keep individual fee amounts as low as possible to supplement
appropriated funding to ensure that consumers continue to receive the
significant benefits offered by generic drugs. Generic drugs provided
more than $824 billion dollars in savings to the nation's health care
system in the last decade alone. The additional resources called for
under the agreement, an inflation-adjusted $299 million annually for
each of the 5 years of the program, will provide FDA with the ability
to perform critical program functions that could not otherwise occur.
This program is not expected to add significantly to the cost of
generic drugs: Given that a reported 3.99 billion retail prescriptions
per year were dispensed in the United States in 2010 and assuming that
78 percent of these prescriptions were filled by generic drugs, it
equates to less than a dime per prescription for the average cost of a
prescription filled by a generic drug in the United States. Moreover,
with the adoption of user fees and the associated savings in
development time, the overall expense of bringing a product to market
may decline and result in reduced costs.
In addition to the public health benefits, the proposed program is
expected to provide significant value to companies, and in particular
to small companies and first time entrants in the generic market, who
will benefit significantly from the certainty associated with
performance review metrics that offer the potential to dramatically
reduce the time needed to commercialize a generic drug when compared to
pre-GDUFA review times.
Because FDA remains interested in hearing from nonaffiliated
companies in addition to patient and consumer stakeholders, the Agency
is holding this final public meeting prior to providing recommendations
to Congress. The meeting will provide an explanation of the negotiated
joint recommendations and provide an opportunity for additional
stakeholder reaction and input.
II. The Proposed GDUFA Program
A. Recommendations
Key attributes of the proposed GDUFA Program, as negotiated, are
memorialized in a goals letter that FDA has posted on its generic drug
user fee Web page, which is accessible at https://www.fda.gov/ForIndustry/UserFees/GenericDrugUserFees/default.htm.
B. Summary of the Program
If enacted as negotiated, the program would provide FDA with
additional funding for all aspects of the generic drug program in the
amount of $299 million per year, adjusted for inflation, for 5 years.
With those additional user fee funds, FDA would agree to undertake a
series of immediate program enhancements and performance goals. A
nonexclusive list of major end goals for the program includes:
1. Application metrics that increase to an eventual year 5 goal of
FDA reviewing and acting on 90 percent of complete electronic
abbreviated new drug applications (ANDAs) within 10 months after the
date of submission;
2. Backlog metrics of FDA reviewing and acting on 90 percent of all
ANDAs, ANDA amendments, and ANDA prior approval supplements pending on
October 1, 2012, by the end of FY 2017; and
3. Current good manufacturing practice (CGMP) inspection metrics
under which FDA will conduct risk-adjusted biennial CGMP inspections of
generic active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) and generic finished
dosage form (FDF) manufacturers with the goal of achieving parity of
inspection frequency between foreign and domestic firms in FY 2017.
Many additional, and interim, performance metrics and efficiency
enhancements are set forth in the negotiated documents.
Under the program, fees would derive from two primary sources:
Generic drug-related submissions and generic drug-related facilities.
Submission fees would include fees for ANDAs and prior approval
supplements, as well as for DMFs (for first reference only, as DMFs may
be referenced multiple times by different sponsors). Facility fees
would include fees for facilities that manufacture APIs for generic
drugs as well and facilities that manufacture
[[Page 76740]]
generic FDFs. In the first year of the program, there would also be a
fee assessed for applications that are pending on October 1, 2012, the
so-called ``backlog''.
As under the prescription drug user fee act (PDUFA), individual fee
amounts would be set annually, with the total annual revenue provided
by the user fee specified in statute. Of the total generic drug user
fee revenue, 80 percent would be provided by the FDF manufacturers and
20 percent by API manufacturers. Additionally, 70 percent of the
overall GDUFA revenue would be generated by facility fees and 30
percent would be generated by submission fees; though in the first year
those splits will be slightly different because of the one-time backlog
fee.
While it is not possible to provide actual individual fee amounts
until such fees are set by a Federal Register notice, it is expected
that individual GDUFA fees will be orders of magnitude less than PDUFA
fees, a factor due to the larger fee paying base in GDUFA. In
negotiating the program, FDA was cognizant that generic drugs are a
tremendous public health success story, responsible for saving $824
billion over the last decade. Consequently, the Agency worked to
achieve a program that would not appreciably add to the cost of generic
drugs, change the structure of the industry, or advantage any
particular industry sector, regardless of size or location.
The program, as negotiated, is aimed at putting FDA's generic drugs
program on a firm financial footing and providing additive resources
necessary to assure timely access to safe, high-quality, affordable
generic drugs.
III. What information should you know about the meeting?
A. When and where will the meeting occur? What format will FDA use?
Through this notice, we are announcing a public meeting to update
stakeholders and hear stakeholder views on the negotiated proposal for
a generic drug user fee program. We will conduct the meeting on
December 19, 2011, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the FDA White Oak Campus,
10903 New Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 2, rm. 2047, Silver Spring, MD 20993.
In general, the meeting format will include a presentation by FDA and
presentations by stakeholders and members of the public who have
registered in advance to present at the meeting. The amount of time
available for presentations will be determined by the number of people
who register to make a presentation. We will also provide an
opportunity for organizations and individuals to submit written
comments to the docket after the meeting. FDA policy issues are beyond
the scope of this initiative. Accordingly, the presentations should
focus on process and funding issues, and reactions to the GDUFA
recommendations, and not focus on policy.
B. How do you register for the meeting or submit comments?
If you wish to attend and/or present at the meeting, please
register by email to GDUFA_Meeting4@fda.hhs.gov by December 12, 2011.
Your email should contain complete contact information for each
attendee, including name, title, affiliation, address, email address,
and telephone number. Registration is free and will be on a first-come,
first-served basis. Early registration is recommended because seating
is limited. FDA may limit the number of participants from each
organization, as well as the total number of participants, based on
space limitations. Registrants will receive confirmation once they have
been accepted. Onsite registration on the day of the meeting will be
based on space availability. We will try to accommodate all persons who
wish to make a presentation. The time allotted for presentations may
depend on the number of persons who wish to speak, and if the entire
meeting time is not needed for presentations, FDA reserves the right to
terminate the meeting early. If you need special accommodations because
of disability, please contact Mari Long or Peter Beckerman (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT) at least 7 days before the meeting.
In addition, any person may submit written or electronic comments
to the Division of Dockets Management (see ADDRESSES). Submit a single
copy of electronic comments or two paper copies of any mailed comments,
except that individuals may submit one paper copy. Comments are to be
identified with the docket number found in brackets in the heading of
this document. Received comments may be seen in the Division of Dockets
Management between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. To ensure
consideration, all comments must be received by January 6, 2012.
Submission of comments prior to the meeting is strongly encouraged.
C. Will the meeting be Web cast?
For those unable to attend in person, FDA will Web cast and provide
a telephone audio link to the meeting. To join the Web meeting, please
go to https://collaboration.fda.gov/gdufa/. For audio, please call 301-
796-2700 and enter participant code 121947. If you have never attended
a Connect Pro meeting before, you may wish to test your connection by
going to: https://collaboration.fda.gov/common/help/en/support/meeting_test.htm.
D. Will meeting transcripts be available?
Please be advised that as soon as a transcript is available it will
be accessible at https://www.regulations.gov and https://www.fda.gov. It
may be viewed at the Division of Dockets Management (see ADDRESSES). A
transcript will also be made available in either hard copy or on CD-
ROM, after submission of a Freedom of Information request. Written
requests are to be sent to the Division of Freedom of Information
(ELEM)-1029, Food and Drug Administration, 12420 Parklawn Dr., Element
Bldg., Rockville, MD 20857.
Dated: December 5, 2011.
Leslie Kux,
Acting Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2011-31630 Filed 12-6-11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-P