Fee for Using a Tropical Disease Priority Review Voucher in Fiscal Year 2019, 48437-48439 [2018-20772]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 186 / Tuesday, September 25, 2018 / Notices
Transparency and Communication for
NME (New Molecular Entity) NDAs and
Original BLAs, and risk evaluation and
mitigation strategies.
In addition, the draft guidance has
been consolidated to focus on the
fundamental values and operational
principles that serve as the foundation
for the GRMPs. Details of the review
process are covered in other documents
referenced by this guidance.
Fundamental values and operational
principles should remain relatively
constant over time, while processes
must be able to adapt and respond to
scientific advances in product
development and evolving public health
needs.
This draft guidance is being issued
consistent with FDA’s good guidance
practices regulation (21 CFR 10.115).
The draft guidance, when finalized, will
represent the current thinking of FDA
on GRMPs for NDAs and BLAs. It does
not establish any rights for any person
and is not binding on FDA or the public.
You can use an alternative approach if
it satisfies the requirements of the
applicable statutes and regulations. This
guidance is not subject to Executive
Order 12866.
II. Electronic Access
Persons with access to the internet
may obtain the draft guidance at https://
www.fda.gov/Drugs/Guidance
ComplianceRegulatoryInformation/
Guidances/default.htm, https://
www.fda.gov/BiologicsBloodVaccines/
GuidanceComplianceRegulatory
Information/default.htm, or https://
www.regulations.gov.
Dated: September 19, 2018.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2018–20789 Filed 9–24–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2018–N–0007]
Fee for Using a Tropical Disease
Priority Review Voucher in Fiscal Year
2019
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA or the Agency) is
announcing the fee rates for using a
tropical disease priority review voucher
for fiscal year (FY) 2019. The Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C
SUMMARY:
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I. Background
6 months after the receipt or filing date,
depending upon the type of application.
Information regarding the PDUFA goals
is available at: https://www.fda.gov/
downloads/forindustry/userfees/
prescriptiondruguserfee/
ucm511438.pdf.
The applicant that uses a priority
review voucher is entitled to a priority
review but must pay FDA a priority
review user fee in addition to any other
fee required by PDUFA. FDA published
guidance on its website about how this
tropical disease priority review voucher
program operates (available at: https://
www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/
GuidanceComplianceRegulatory
Information/Guidances/
ucm080599.pdf).
This notice establishes the tropical
disease priority review fee rate for FY
2019 as $2,457,140 and outlines FDA’s
process for implementing the collection
of the priority review user fees. This rate
is effective on October 1, 2018, and will
remain in effect through September 30,
2019, for applications submitted with a
tropical disease priority review voucher.
The payment of this priority review user
fee is required in addition to the
payment of any other fee that would
normally apply to such an application
under PDUFA before FDA will consider
the application complete and acceptable
for filing.
Section 1102 of FDAAA (Pub. L. 110–
85) added section 524 to the FD&C Act
(21 U.S.C. 360n). In section 524,
Congress encouraged development of
new drug and biological products for
prevention and treatment of tropical
diseases by offering additional
incentives for obtaining FDA approval
of such products. Under section 524, the
applicant of an eligible human drug
application submitted after September
27, 2007, for a tropical disease (as
defined in section 524(a)(3) of the FD&C
Act) shall receive a priority review
voucher upon approval of the tropical
disease product application (assuming
other criteria are met). The recipient of
a tropical disease priority review
voucher may either use the voucher
with a future submission to FDA under
section 505(b)(1) of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 355(b)(1)) or section 351(a) of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C.
262), or transfer (including by sale) the
voucher to another party. The voucher
may be transferred (including by sale)
repeatedly until it ultimately is used for
a human drug application submitted to
FDA under section 505(b)(1) of the
FD&C Act or section 351(a) of the Public
Health Service Act. A priority review is
a review conducted with a Prescription
Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) goal date of
II. Tropical Disease Priority Review
User Fee for FY 2019
FDA interprets section 524(c)(2) of the
FD&C Act as requiring that FDA
determine the amount of the tropical
disease priority review user fee each
fiscal year based on the difference
between the average cost incurred by
FDA in the review of a human drug
application subject to priority review in
the previous fiscal year and the average
cost incurred by FDA in the review of
a human drug application that is not
subject to priority review in the
previous fiscal year.
A priority review is a review
conducted with a PDUFA goal date of 6
months after the receipt or filing date,
depending on the type of application.
Under the PDUFA goals letter, FDA has
committed to reviewing and acting on
90 percent of the applications granted
priority review status within this
expedited timeframe. Normally, an
application for a human drug or
biological product will qualify for
priority review if the product is
intended to treat a serious condition
and, if approved, would provide a
significant improvement in safety or
effectiveness. An application that does
not receive a priority designation
receives a standard review. Under the
Act), as amended by the Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of
2007 (FDAAA), authorizes FDA to
determine and collect priority review
user fees for certain applications for
review of drug or biological products
when those applications use a tropical
disease priority review voucher. These
vouchers are awarded to the applicants
of certain tropical disease product
applications, submitted after September
27, 2007, upon FDA approval of such
applications. The amount of the fee
submitted to FDA with applications
using a tropical disease priority review
voucher is determined each fiscal year
based on the difference between the
average cost incurred by FDA to review
a human drug application designated as
priority review in the previous fiscal
year and the average cost incurred in the
review of an application that is not
subject to priority review in the
previous fiscal year. This notice
establishes the tropical disease priority
review fee rate for FY 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lola Olajide, Office of Financial
Management, Food and Drug
Administration, 8455 Colesville Rd.,
COLE–14541B, Silver Spring, MD
20993–0002, 240–402–4244.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 186 / Tuesday, September 25, 2018 / Notices
PDUFA goals letter, FDA committed to
reviewing and acting on 90 percent of
standard applications within 10 months
of the receipt or filing date, depending
on the type of application. A priority
review involves a more intensive level
of effort and a higher level of resources
than a standard review.
FDA is setting fees for FY 2019, and
the previous fiscal year is FY 2018.
However, the FY 2018 submission
cohort has not been closed out yet, and
the cost data for FY 2018 are not
complete. The latest year for which FDA
has complete cost data is FY 2017.
Furthermore, because FDA has never
tracked the cost of reviewing
applications that get priority review as
a separate cost subset, FDA estimated
this cost based on other data that the
Agency has tracked. FDA uses data that
the Agency estimates and publishes on
its website each year—standard costs for
review. FDA does not publish a
standard cost for ‘‘the review of a
human drug application subject to
priority review in the previous fiscal
year.’’ However, we expect all such
applications would contain clinical
data. The standard cost application
categories with clinical data that FDA
does publish each year are: (1) New
drug applications (NDAs) for a new
molecular entity (NME) with clinical
data and (2) biologics license
applications (BLAs).
The worksheets for standard costs for
FY 2017 show a standard cost of
$5,340,560 for an NME NDA and
$4,596,936 for a BLA. Based on these
standard costs, the total cost to review
the 57 applications in these two
categories in FY 2017 (31 NME NDAs
with clinical data and 26 BLAs) was
$285,077,688. (Note: These numbers
exclude the President’s Emergency Plan
for AIDS Relief NDAs; no
investigational new drug review costs
are included in this amount.) Of these
applications 33 (20 NDAs and 13 BLAs)
received priority review, which would
mean that the remaining 24 received
standard reviews. Because a priority
review compresses a review that
ordinarily takes 10 months into 6
months, FDA estimates that a multiplier
of 1.67 (10 months divided by 6 months)
should be applied to non-priority
review costs in estimating the effort and
cost of a priority review as compared to
a standard review. This multiplier is
consistent with published research on
this subject, which supports a priority
review multiplier in the range of 1.48 to
2.35 (Ref. 1). Using FY 2017 figures, the
costs of a priority and standard review
are estimated using the following
formula:
(33 a × 1.67) + (24 a) = $285,077,688
where ‘‘a’’ is the cost of a standard
review and ‘‘a times 1.67’’ is the cost of
a priority review. Using this formula,
the cost of a standard review for NME
NDAs and BLAs is calculated to be
$3,603,561 (rounded to the nearest
dollar) and the cost of a priority review
for NME NDAs and BLAs is 1.67 times
that amount, or $6,017,946 (rounded to
the nearest dollar). The difference
between these two cost estimates, or
$2,414,386, represents the incremental
cost of conducting a priority review
rather than a standard review.
For the FY 2019 fee, FDA will need
to adjust the FY 2017 incremental cost
by the average amount by which FDA’s
average costs increased in the 3 years
prior to FY 2018, to adjust the FY 2017
amount for cost increases in FY 2018.
That adjustment, published in the
Federal Register on August 1, 2018 (83
FR 37504), setting FY 2019 PDUFA fees,
is 1.7708 percent for the most recent
year, not compounded. Increasing the
FY 2017 incremental priority review
cost of $2,414,386 by 1.7708 percent (or
0.017708) results in an estimated cost of
$2,457,140 (rounded to the nearest
dollar). This is the tropical disease
priority review user fee amount for FY
2019 that must be submitted with a
priority review voucher for a human
drug application in FY 2019, in addition
to any PDUFA fee that is required for
such an application.
III. Fee Schedule for FY 2019
The fee rate for FY 2019 is set out in
table 1:
TABLE 1—TROPICAL DISEASE PRIORITY REVIEW SCHEDULE FOR FY 2019
Fee category
Fee rate for
FY 2019
Application submitted with a tropical disease priority review voucher in addition to the normal PDUFA fee ....................................
$2,457,140
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
IV. Implementation of Tropical Disease
Priority Review User Fee
Under section 524(c)(4)(A) of the
FD&C Act, the priority review user fee
is due upon submission of a human
drug application for which the priority
review voucher is used. Section
524(c)(4)(B) of the FD&C Act specifies
that the application will be considered
incomplete if the priority review user
fee and all other applicable user fees are
not paid in accordance with FDA
payment procedures. In addition, FDA
may not grant a waiver, exemption,
reduction, or refund of any fees due and
payable under section 524 of the FD&C
Act (see section 524(c)(4)(C)), and FDA
may not collect priority review voucher
fees ‘‘except to the extent provided in
advance in appropriation Acts.’’
(Section 524(c)(5)(B) of the FD&C Act.)
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The tropical disease priority review
fee established in the new fee schedule
must be paid for any application that is
received on or after October 1, 2018, and
submitted with a priority review
voucher. This fee must be paid in
addition to any other fee due under
PDUFA. Payment should be made in
U.S. currency by electronic check,
check, bank draft, wire transfer, credit
card, or U.S. postal money order
payable to the order of the Food and
Drug Administration. The preferred
payment method is online using
electronic check (Automated Clearing
House (ACH) also known as eCheck).
Secure electronic payments can be
submitted using the User Fees Payment
Portal at https://userfees.fda.gov/pay.
(Note: only full payments are accepted.
No partial payments can be made
online). Once you search for your
invoice, select ‘‘Pay Now’’ to be
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redirected to Pay.gov. Note that
electronic payment options are based on
the balance due. Payment by credit card
is available for balances that are less
than $25,000. If the balance exceeds this
amount, only the ACH option is
available. Payments should be made
using U.S bank accounts as well as U.S.
credit cards.
FDA has partnered with the U.S.
Department of the Treasury to use
Pay.gov, a web-based payment
application, for online electronic
payment. The Pay.gov feature is
available on the FDA website after the
user fee identification (ID) number is
generated.
If paying with a paper check, the user
fee ID number should be included on
the check, followed by the words
‘‘Tropical Disease Priority Review.’’ All
paper checks should be in U.S. currency
from a U.S. bank made payable and
E:\FR\FM\25SEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 186 / Tuesday, September 25, 2018 / Notices
mailed to: Food and Drug
Administration, P.O. Box 979107, St.
Louis, MO 63197–9000.
If checks are sent by a courier that
requests a street address, the courier can
deliver the checks to: U.S. Bank,
Attention: Government Lockbox 979107,
1005 Convention Plaza, St. Louis, MO
63101. (Note: This U.S. Bank address is
for courier delivery only.) If you have
any questions concerning courier
delivery, contact the U.S. Bank at 314–
418–4013. (This telephone number is
only for questions about courier
delivery.) The FDA post office box
number (P.O. Box 979107) must be
written on the check. If needed, FDA’s
tax identification number is 53–
0196965.
If paying by wire transfer, please
reference your unique user fee ID
number when completing your transfer.
The originating financial institution
may charge a wire transfer fee. If the
financial institution charges a wire
transfer fee, it is required to add that
amount to the payment to ensure that
the invoice is paid in full. The account
information is as follows: U.S. Dept. of
Treasury, TREAS NYC, 33 Liberty St.,
New York, NY 10045, Account Number:
75060099, Routing Number: 021030004,
SWIFT: FRNYUS33.
V. Reference
The following reference is on display
with the Dockets Management Staff
(HFA–305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852, and is
available for viewing by interested
persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday; it is not
available electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov as this reference is
copyright protected. FDA has verified
the website address, as of the date this
document publishes in the Federal
Register, but websites are subject to
change over time.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
1. Ridley, D.B., H.G. Grabowski, and J.L. Moe,
‘‘Developing Drugs for Developing
Countries,’’ Health Affairs, vol. 25, no. 2,
pp. 313–324, 2006, available at: https://
faculty.fuqua.duke.edu/∼willm/HSM_
RA/Documents/HA2006_Ridley_
Vouchers.pdf.
Dated: September 19, 2018.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2018–20772 Filed 9–24–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2014–D–0900]
Benefit-Risk Factors To Consider
When Determining Substantial
Equivalence in Premarket Notifications
(510(k)) With Different Technological
Characteristics; Guidance for Industry
and Food and Drug Administration
Staff; Availability
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice of availability.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA or Agency) is
announcing the availability of the final
guidance entitled ‘‘Benefit-Risk Factors
to Consider When Determining
Substantial Equivalence in Premarket
Notifications (510(k)) with Different
Technological Characteristics.’’ This
guidance document describes factors
FDA considers when evaluating the
benefit-risk profile of a device in
comparison to a predicate device in a
510(k) when the device has the same
intended use as the predicate device,
and different technological
characteristics that do not raise different
questions of safety and effectiveness.
This guidance can be helpful in
situations when there is an increase in
risk and increase or equivalent benefit,
or a decrease in benefit and a decrease
or equivalent risk when comparing a
new device to a predicate device. FDA
developed this guidance to improve the
predictability, consistency, and
transparency of the 510(k) premarket
review process.
DATES: The announcement of the
guidance is published in the Federal
Register on September 25, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit either
electronic or written comments on
Agency guidances at any time as
follows:
SUMMARY:
Electronic Submissions
Submit electronic comments in the
following way:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Comments submitted electronically,
including attachments, to https://
www.regulations.gov will be posted to
the docket unchanged. Because your
comment will be made public, you are
solely responsible for ensuring that your
comment does not include any
confidential information that you or a
third party may not wish to be posted,
such as medical information, your or
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48439
anyone else’s Social Security number, or
confidential business information, such
as a manufacturing process. Please note
that if you include your name, contact
information, or other information that
identifies you in the body of your
comments, that information will be
posted on https://www.regulations.gov.
• If you want to submit a comment
with confidential information that you
do not wish to be made available to the
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manner detailed (see ‘‘Written/Paper
Submissions’’ and ‘‘Instructions’’).
Written/Paper Submissions
Submit written/paper submissions as
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• Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier (for
written/paper submissions): Dockets
Management Staff (HFA–305), Food and
Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers
Lane, Rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
• For written/paper comments
submitted to the Dockets Management
Staff, FDA will post your comment, as
well as any attachments, except for
information submitted, marked and
identified, as confidential, if submitted
as detailed in ‘‘Instructions.’’
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket No. FDA–
2014–D–0900 for ‘‘Benefit-Risk Factors
to Consider When Determining
Substantial Equivalence in Premarket
Notifications (510(k)) with Different
Technological Characteristics.’’
Received comments will be placed in
the docket and, except for those
submitted as ‘‘Confidential
Submissions,’’ publicly viewable at
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Dockets Management Staff between 9
a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
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• Confidential Submissions—To
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submission. You should submit two
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with a heading or cover note that states
‘‘THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS
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E:\FR\FM\25SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 186 (Tuesday, September 25, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48437-48439]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-20772]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2018-N-0007]
Fee for Using a Tropical Disease Priority Review Voucher in
Fiscal Year 2019
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA or the Agency) is
announcing the fee rates for using a tropical disease priority review
voucher for fiscal year (FY) 2019. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act (FD&C Act), as amended by the Food and Drug Administration
Amendments Act of 2007 (FDAAA), authorizes FDA to determine and collect
priority review user fees for certain applications for review of drug
or biological products when those applications use a tropical disease
priority review voucher. These vouchers are awarded to the applicants
of certain tropical disease product applications, submitted after
September 27, 2007, upon FDA approval of such applications. The amount
of the fee submitted to FDA with applications using a tropical disease
priority review voucher is determined each fiscal year based on the
difference between the average cost incurred by FDA to review a human
drug application designated as priority review in the previous fiscal
year and the average cost incurred in the review of an application that
is not subject to priority review in the previous fiscal year. This
notice establishes the tropical disease priority review fee rate for FY
2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lola Olajide, Office of Financial Management, Food and Drug
Administration, 8455 Colesville Rd., COLE-14541B, Silver Spring, MD
20993-0002, 240-402-4244.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 1102 of FDAAA (Pub. L. 110-85) added section 524 to the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360n). In section 524, Congress encouraged
development of new drug and biological products for prevention and
treatment of tropical diseases by offering additional incentives for
obtaining FDA approval of such products. Under section 524, the
applicant of an eligible human drug application submitted after
September 27, 2007, for a tropical disease (as defined in section
524(a)(3) of the FD&C Act) shall receive a priority review voucher upon
approval of the tropical disease product application (assuming other
criteria are met). The recipient of a tropical disease priority review
voucher may either use the voucher with a future submission to FDA
under section 505(b)(1) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 355(b)(1)) or
section 351(a) of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 262), or
transfer (including by sale) the voucher to another party. The voucher
may be transferred (including by sale) repeatedly until it ultimately
is used for a human drug application submitted to FDA under section
505(b)(1) of the FD&C Act or section 351(a) of the Public Health
Service Act. A priority review is a review conducted with a
Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) goal date of 6 months after the
receipt or filing date, depending upon the type of application.
Information regarding the PDUFA goals is available at: https://www.fda.gov/downloads/forindustry/userfees/prescriptiondruguserfee/ucm511438.pdf.
The applicant that uses a priority review voucher is entitled to a
priority review but must pay FDA a priority review user fee in addition
to any other fee required by PDUFA. FDA published guidance on its
website about how this tropical disease priority review voucher program
operates (available at: https://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/Guidances/ucm080599.pdf).
This notice establishes the tropical disease priority review fee
rate for FY 2019 as $2,457,140 and outlines FDA's process for
implementing the collection of the priority review user fees. This rate
is effective on October 1, 2018, and will remain in effect through
September 30, 2019, for applications submitted with a tropical disease
priority review voucher. The payment of this priority review user fee
is required in addition to the payment of any other fee that would
normally apply to such an application under PDUFA before FDA will
consider the application complete and acceptable for filing.
II. Tropical Disease Priority Review User Fee for FY 2019
FDA interprets section 524(c)(2) of the FD&C Act as requiring that
FDA determine the amount of the tropical disease priority review user
fee each fiscal year based on the difference between the average cost
incurred by FDA in the review of a human drug application subject to
priority review in the previous fiscal year and the average cost
incurred by FDA in the review of a human drug application that is not
subject to priority review in the previous fiscal year.
A priority review is a review conducted with a PDUFA goal date of 6
months after the receipt or filing date, depending on the type of
application. Under the PDUFA goals letter, FDA has committed to
reviewing and acting on 90 percent of the applications granted priority
review status within this expedited timeframe. Normally, an application
for a human drug or biological product will qualify for priority review
if the product is intended to treat a serious condition and, if
approved, would provide a significant improvement in safety or
effectiveness. An application that does not receive a priority
designation receives a standard review. Under the
[[Page 48438]]
PDUFA goals letter, FDA committed to reviewing and acting on 90 percent
of standard applications within 10 months of the receipt or filing
date, depending on the type of application. A priority review involves
a more intensive level of effort and a higher level of resources than a
standard review.
FDA is setting fees for FY 2019, and the previous fiscal year is FY
2018. However, the FY 2018 submission cohort has not been closed out
yet, and the cost data for FY 2018 are not complete. The latest year
for which FDA has complete cost data is FY 2017. Furthermore, because
FDA has never tracked the cost of reviewing applications that get
priority review as a separate cost subset, FDA estimated this cost
based on other data that the Agency has tracked. FDA uses data that the
Agency estimates and publishes on its website each year--standard costs
for review. FDA does not publish a standard cost for ``the review of a
human drug application subject to priority review in the previous
fiscal year.'' However, we expect all such applications would contain
clinical data. The standard cost application categories with clinical
data that FDA does publish each year are: (1) New drug applications
(NDAs) for a new molecular entity (NME) with clinical data and (2)
biologics license applications (BLAs).
The worksheets for standard costs for FY 2017 show a standard cost
of $5,340,560 for an NME NDA and $4,596,936 for a BLA. Based on these
standard costs, the total cost to review the 57 applications in these
two categories in FY 2017 (31 NME NDAs with clinical data and 26 BLAs)
was $285,077,688. (Note: These numbers exclude the President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief NDAs; no investigational new drug review
costs are included in this amount.) Of these applications 33 (20 NDAs
and 13 BLAs) received priority review, which would mean that the
remaining 24 received standard reviews. Because a priority review
compresses a review that ordinarily takes 10 months into 6 months, FDA
estimates that a multiplier of 1.67 (10 months divided by 6 months)
should be applied to non-priority review costs in estimating the effort
and cost of a priority review as compared to a standard review. This
multiplier is consistent with published research on this subject, which
supports a priority review multiplier in the range of 1.48 to 2.35
(Ref. 1). Using FY 2017 figures, the costs of a priority and standard
review are estimated using the following formula:
(33 [alpha] x 1.67) + (24 [alpha]) = $285,077,688
where ``[alpha]'' is the cost of a standard review and ``[alpha] times
1.67'' is the cost of a priority review. Using this formula, the cost
of a standard review for NME NDAs and BLAs is calculated to be
$3,603,561 (rounded to the nearest dollar) and the cost of a priority
review for NME NDAs and BLAs is 1.67 times that amount, or $6,017,946
(rounded to the nearest dollar). The difference between these two cost
estimates, or $2,414,386, represents the incremental cost of conducting
a priority review rather than a standard review.
For the FY 2019 fee, FDA will need to adjust the FY 2017
incremental cost by the average amount by which FDA's average costs
increased in the 3 years prior to FY 2018, to adjust the FY 2017 amount
for cost increases in FY 2018. That adjustment, published in the
Federal Register on August 1, 2018 (83 FR 37504), setting FY 2019 PDUFA
fees, is 1.7708 percent for the most recent year, not compounded.
Increasing the FY 2017 incremental priority review cost of $2,414,386
by 1.7708 percent (or 0.017708) results in an estimated cost of
$2,457,140 (rounded to the nearest dollar). This is the tropical
disease priority review user fee amount for FY 2019 that must be
submitted with a priority review voucher for a human drug application
in FY 2019, in addition to any PDUFA fee that is required for such an
application.
III. Fee Schedule for FY 2019
The fee rate for FY 2019 is set out in table 1:
Table 1--Tropical Disease Priority Review Schedule for FY 2019
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fee rate for FY
Fee category 2019
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application submitted with a tropical disease priority $2,457,140
review voucher in addition to the normal PDUFA fee....
------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Implementation of Tropical Disease Priority Review User Fee
Under section 524(c)(4)(A) of the FD&C Act, the priority review
user fee is due upon submission of a human drug application for which
the priority review voucher is used. Section 524(c)(4)(B) of the FD&C
Act specifies that the application will be considered incomplete if the
priority review user fee and all other applicable user fees are not
paid in accordance with FDA payment procedures. In addition, FDA may
not grant a waiver, exemption, reduction, or refund of any fees due and
payable under section 524 of the FD&C Act (see section 524(c)(4)(C)),
and FDA may not collect priority review voucher fees ``except to the
extent provided in advance in appropriation Acts.'' (Section
524(c)(5)(B) of the FD&C Act.)
The tropical disease priority review fee established in the new fee
schedule must be paid for any application that is received on or after
October 1, 2018, and submitted with a priority review voucher. This fee
must be paid in addition to any other fee due under PDUFA. Payment
should be made in U.S. currency by electronic check, check, bank draft,
wire transfer, credit card, or U.S. postal money order payable to the
order of the Food and Drug Administration. The preferred payment method
is online using electronic check (Automated Clearing House (ACH) also
known as eCheck). Secure electronic payments can be submitted using the
User Fees Payment Portal at https://userfees.fda.gov/pay. (Note: only
full payments are accepted. No partial payments can be made online).
Once you search for your invoice, select ``Pay Now'' to be redirected
to Pay.gov. Note that electronic payment options are based on the
balance due. Payment by credit card is available for balances that are
less than $25,000. If the balance exceeds this amount, only the ACH
option is available. Payments should be made using U.S bank accounts as
well as U.S. credit cards.
FDA has partnered with the U.S. Department of the Treasury to use
Pay.gov, a web-based payment application, for online electronic
payment. The Pay.gov feature is available on the FDA website after the
user fee identification (ID) number is generated.
If paying with a paper check, the user fee ID number should be
included on the check, followed by the words ``Tropical Disease
Priority Review.'' All paper checks should be in U.S. currency from a
U.S. bank made payable and
[[Page 48439]]
mailed to: Food and Drug Administration, P.O. Box 979107, St. Louis, MO
63197-9000.
If checks are sent by a courier that requests a street address, the
courier can deliver the checks to: U.S. Bank, Attention: Government
Lockbox 979107, 1005 Convention Plaza, St. Louis, MO 63101. (Note: This
U.S. Bank address is for courier delivery only.) If you have any
questions concerning courier delivery, contact the U.S. Bank at 314-
418-4013. (This telephone number is only for questions about courier
delivery.) The FDA post office box number (P.O. Box 979107) must be
written on the check. If needed, FDA's tax identification number is 53-
0196965.
If paying by wire transfer, please reference your unique user fee
ID number when completing your transfer. The originating financial
institution may charge a wire transfer fee. If the financial
institution charges a wire transfer fee, it is required to add that
amount to the payment to ensure that the invoice is paid in full. The
account information is as follows: U.S. Dept. of Treasury, TREAS NYC,
33 Liberty St., New York, NY 10045, Account Number: 75060099, Routing
Number: 021030004, SWIFT: FRNYUS33.
V. Reference
The following reference is on display with the Dockets Management
Staff (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852, and is available for viewing by interested
persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday; it is not
available electronically at https://www.regulations.gov as this
reference is copyright protected. FDA has verified the website address,
as of the date this document publishes in the Federal Register, but
websites are subject to change over time.
1. Ridley, D.B., H.G. Grabowski, and J.L. Moe, ``Developing Drugs
for Developing Countries,'' Health Affairs, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 313-
324, 2006, available at: https://faculty.fuqua.duke.edu/~willm/
HSM_RA/Documents/HA2006_Ridley_Vouchers.pdf.
Dated: September 19, 2018.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2018-20772 Filed 9-24-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164-01-P