List of Bulk Drug Substances for Which There Is a Clinical Need Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 15673-15682 [2021-06060]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 55 / Wednesday, March 24, 2021 / Notices
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1120
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Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2018–N–3240]
Mary B. Jones,
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[FR Doc. 2021–05992 Filed 3–23–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184–43–P
List of Bulk Drug Substances for
Which There Is a Clinical Need Under
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act
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AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA or Agency) is
developing a list of bulk drug
substances (active pharmaceutical
ingredients) for which there is a clinical
need (the 503B Bulks List). Drug
SUMMARY:
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products that outsourcing facilities
compound using bulk drug substances
on the 503B Bulks List can qualify for
certain exemptions from the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C
Act) provided certain conditions are
met. This notice identifies one bulk
drug substance that FDA has considered
and proposes to include on the 503B
Bulks List: Quinacrine hydrochloride
(‘‘quinacrine’’). This notice identifies
four bulk drug substances that FDA has
considered and proposes not to include
on the list: Bromfenac sodium,
mitomycin-C, nepafenac, and
hydroxychloroquine sulfate. Additional
bulk drug substances nominated by the
public for inclusion on this list are
currently under consideration and may
be the subject of future notices.
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Submit either electronic or
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24, 2021.
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as follows. Please note that late,
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The https://www.regulations.gov
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at the end of May 24, 2021. Comments
received by mail/hand delivery/courier
(for written/paper submissions) will be
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Written/Paper Submissions
Submit written/paper submissions as
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• Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier (for
written/paper submissions): Dockets
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• 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–
2018–N–3240 for ‘‘List of Bulk Drug
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Substances for Which There is a Clinical
Need Under Section 503B of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.’’
Received comments, those filed in a
timely manner (see ADDRESSES), will be
placed in the docket and, except for
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I. Background
Section 503B of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 353b) describes the conditions
that must be satisfied for drug products
compounded by an outsourcing facility
to be exempt from section 505 (21
U.S.C. 355) (concerning the approval of
drugs under new drug applications
(NDAs) or abbreviated new drug
applications (ANDAs)), section 502(f)(1)
(21 U.S.C. 352(f)(1)) (concerning the
labeling of drugs with adequate
directions for use), and section 582 of
the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360eee–1)
(concerning drug supply chain security
requirements).1
Drug products compounded that meet
the conditions in section 503B are not
exempt from current good
manufacturing practice (CGMP)
requirements in section 501(a)(2)(B) of
the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 351(a)(2)(B)).2
Outsourcing facilities are also subject to
FDA inspections according to a riskbased schedule, specific adverse event
reporting requirements, and other
conditions that help to mitigate the risks
of the drug products they compound.3
Outsourcing facilities may or may not
obtain prescriptions for identified
individual patients and can, therefore,
distribute compounded drugs to
healthcare practitioners for ‘‘office
stock,’’ to hold in their offices in
advance of patient need.4
One of the conditions that must be
met for a drug product compounded by
an outsourcing facility to qualify for
exemptions under section 503B of the
FD&C Act is that the outsourcing facility
may not compound a drug using a bulk
drug substance unless: (1) The bulk drug
substance appears on a list established
by the Secretary of Health and Human
Services identifying bulk drug
substances for which there is a clinical
need (the 503B Bulks List) or (2) the
drug compounded from such bulk drug
substances appears on the drug shortage
list in effect under section 506E of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 356e) at the time
of compounding, distribution, and
dispensing.5
Section 503B of the FD&C Act directs
FDA to establish the 503B Bulks List by:
(1) Publishing a notice in the Federal
Register proposing bulk drug substances
to be included on the list, including the
rationale for such proposal; (2)
providing a period of not less than 60
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elizabeth Hankla, Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research, Food and
Drug Administration, 10903 New
Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 51, Rm. 5216,
Silver Spring, MD 20993, 240–402–
3359.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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1 Section
503B(a) of the FD&C Act.
section 503A(a) of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 353a(a); exempting drugs compounded in
accordance with that section) with section 503B(a)
of the FD&C Act (not providing the exemption from
CGMP requirements).
3 Section 503B(b)(4) and (5) of the FD&C Act.
4 Section 503B(d)(4)(C) of the FD&C Act.
5 Section 503B(a)(2)(A) of the FD&C Act.
2 Compare
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calendar days for comment on the
notice; and (3) publishing a notice in the
Federal Register designating bulk drug
substances for inclusion on the list.6
FDA has published a series of Federal
Register notices addressing bulk drug
substances nominated for inclusion on
the 503B Bulks List.7 This notice
identifies one bulk drug substance that
FDA has considered and proposes to
include on the 503B Bulks List and four
bulk drug substances that FDA has
considered and proposes not to include
on the 503B Bulks List.
For purposes of section 503B of the
FD&C Act, bulk drug substance means
an active pharmaceutical ingredient as
defined in 21 CFR 207.1.8 Active
pharmaceutical ingredient means any
substance that is intended for
incorporation into a finished drug
product and is intended to furnish
pharmacological activity or other direct
effect in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation,
treatment, or prevention of disease, or to
affect the structure or any function of
the body, but the term does not include
intermediates used in the synthesis of
the substance.9 10
For further information about drug
compounding and the background for
the 503B Bulks List, see 83 FR 43877
(August 28, 2018).
II. Methodology for Developing the
503B Bulks List
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A. Process for Developing the List
FDA requested nominations for
specific bulk drug substances for the
Agency to consider for inclusion on the
503B Bulks List in the Federal Register
of December 4, 2013 (78 FR 72838). FDA
reopened the nomination process in the
Federal Register of July 2, 2014 (79 FR
37747), and provided more detailed
6 Section 503B(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) to (III) of the FD&C
Act.
7 See Federal Register of August 28, 2018 (83 FR
43877), March 4, 2019 (84 FR 7383), September 3,
2019 (84 FR 46014), and July 31, 2020 (85 FR
46126). The comment period for the July 2020
notice was reopened for 30 days on January 8, 2021
(86 FR 1515), to allow interested parties an
additional opportunity to comment. FDA has not
yet reached a final determination on whether the
substances evaluated in the September 2019 or July
2020 notice will be added to the 503B Bulks List.
In addition, bumetanide, which was considered in
the August 2018 notice remains under
consideration by the Agency.
8 21 CFR 207.3.
9 Section 503B(a)(2) of the FD&C Act and 21 CFR
207.1.
10 Inactive ingredients are not subject to section
503B(a)(2) of the FD&C Act and will not be
included in the 503B Bulks List because they are
not included within the definition of a bulk drug
substance. Pursuant to section 503B(a)(3) of the
FD&C Act, inactive ingredients used in
compounding must comply with the standards of
an applicable U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP) or National
Formulary monograph, if a monograph exists.
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information on what FDA needs to
evaluate nominations for the list. On
October 27, 2015 (80 FR 65770), the
Agency opened a new docket, FDA–
2015–N–3469, to provide an
opportunity for interested persons to
submit new nominations of bulk drug
substances or to renominate substances
with sufficient information.
As FDA evaluates bulk drug
substances, it intends to publish notices
for public comment in the Federal
Register that describe the FDA’s
proposed position on each substance
along with the rationale for that
position.11 After considering any
comments on FDA’s proposals regarding
whether to include nominated
substances on the 503B Bulks List, FDA
intends to consider whether input from
the Pharmacy Compounding Advisory
Committee (PCAC) on the nominations
would be helpful to the Agency in
making its determination, and if so, it
will seek PCAC input.12 Depending on
its review of the docket comments and
other relevant information before the
Agency, FDA may finalize its proposed
determination without change, or it may
finalize a modification to its proposal to
reflect new evidence or analysis
regarding clinical need. FDA will then
publish in the Federal Register a list
identifying the bulk drug substances for
which it has determined there is a
clinical need and FDA’s rationale in
making that final determination. FDA
will also publish in the Federal Register
a list of those substances it considered
but found that there is no clinical need
to use in compounding and FDA’s
rationale in making this decision.
FDA intends to maintain a list of all
bulk drug substances it has evaluated on
its website, and separately identify bulk
drug substances it has placed on the
503B Bulks List and those it has decided
not to place on the 503B Bulks List. This
list is available at https://www.fda.gov/
media/120692/download. FDA will only
place a bulk drug substance on the 503B
Bulks List where it has determined there
is a clinical need for outsourcing
facilities to compound drug products
using the bulk drug substance. If a
clinical need to compound drug
products using the bulk drug substance
has not been demonstrated, based on the
11 This is consistent with procedure set forth in
section 503B(a)(2)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act. Although
the statute only directs FDA to issue a Federal
Register notice and seek public comment when it
proposes to include bulk drug substances on the
503B Bulks List, we intend to seek comment when
the Agency has evaluated a nominated substance
and proposes either to include or not to include the
substance on the list.
12 Section 503B of the FD&C Act does not require
FDA to consult the PCAC before developing a 503B
Bulks List.
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information submitted by the nominator
and any other information considered
by the Agency, FDA will not place a
bulk drug substance on the 503B Bulks
List.
FDA is evaluating bulk drug
substances nominated for the 503B
Bulks List on a rolling basis. FDA
intends to evaluate and publish in the
Federal Register its proposed and final
determinations in groups of bulk drug
substances until all nominated
substances that were sufficiently
supported have been evaluated and
either placed on the 503B Bulks List or
identified as bulk drug substances that
were considered but determined not to
be appropriate for inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List (Ref. 1).13
B. Analysis of Substances Nominated
for the List
As noted above, the 503B Bulks List
will include bulk drug substances for
which there is a clinical need. The
Agency is currently evaluating bulk
drug substances that were nominated for
inclusion on the 503B Bulks List,
proceeding case by case, under the
clinical need standard provided by the
statute (Ref. 2).14 In applying this
standard to develop the proposals in
this notice, FDA is interpreting the
phrase ‘‘bulk drug substances for which
there is a clinical need’’ to mean that the
503B Bulks List may include a bulk
drug substance if: (1) There is a clinical
need for an outsourcing facility to
compound the drug product and (2) the
drug product must be compounded
using the bulk drug substance. FDA is
not interpreting supply issues, such as
backorders, to be within the meaning of
‘‘clinical need’’ for compounding with a
bulk drug substance. Section 503B
separately provides for compounding
from bulk drug substances under the
exemptions from the FD&C Act
13 On January 13, 2017, FDA announced the
availability of a revised final guidance for industry
that provides additional information regarding
FDA’s policies for bulk drug substances nominated
for the 503B Bulks List pending our review of
nominated substances under the ‘‘clinical need’’
standard entitled Interim Policy on Compounding
Using Bulk Drug Substances Under Section 503B of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act’’
(‘‘Interim Policy’’); available at https://
www.fda.gov/media/94402/download.
14 On March 4, 2019, FDA announced the
availability of a final guidance entitled ‘‘Evaluation
of Bulk Drug Substances Nominated for Use in
Compounding Under Section 503B of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act’’ (84 FR 7390);
available at https://www.fda.gov/media/121315/
download. This guidance describes FDA policies for
developing the 503B Bulks List and the Agency’s
interpretation of the phrase ‘‘bulk drug substances
for which there is a clinical need’’ as it is used in
section 503B of the FD&C Act. The analysis under
the statutory clinical need’’ standard described in
this notice is consistent with the approach
described in FDA’s guidance.
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discussed above if the drug product
compounded from the bulk drug
substance is on the FDA drug shortage
list at the time of compounding,
distribution, and dispensing.
Additionally, we are not considering
cost of the compounded drug product as
compared with an FDA-approved drug
product to be within the meaning of
‘‘clinical need.’’
Some of the bulk drug substances that
we are addressing in this notice are
components of FDA-approved drug
products,15 and we therefore began our
evaluation of these bulk drug substances
by asking one or both of the following
questions:
(1) Is there a basis to conclude, for
each FDA-approved product that
includes the nominated bulk drug
substance, that: (a) An attribute of the
FDA-approved drug product makes it
medically unsuitable to treat certain
patients for a condition that FDA has
identified for evaluation and (b) the
drug product proposed to be
compounded is intended to address that
attribute?
(2) Is there a basis to conclude that the
drug product proposed to be
compounded must be produced from a
bulk drug substance rather than from an
FDA-approved drug product?
The reason for question 1 is that
unless an attribute of the FDA-approved
drug is medically unsuitable for certain
patients, and a drug product
compounded using a bulk drug
substance that is a component of the
approved drug is intended to address
that attribute, there is no clinical need
to compound a drug product using that
bulk drug substance. Rather, such
compounding would unnecessarily
expose patients to the risks associated
with drug products that do not meet the
standards applicable to FDA-approved
drug products for safety, effectiveness,
quality, and labeling and would
undermine the drug approval process.
The reason for question 2 is that to place
a bulk drug substance on the 503B Bulks
List, FDA must determine that there is
a clinical need for outsourcing facilities
to compound a drug product using the
bulk drug substance rather than starting
with an FDA-approved drug product.
If the answer to both of these
questions is ‘‘yes,’’ there may be a
clinical need for outsourcing facilities to
compound using the bulk drug
substance, and we would evaluate the
substance further, applying the factors
described below. If the answer to either
of these questions is ‘‘no,’’ we generally
would not include the bulk drug
15 Specifically, bromfenac sodium, mitomycin-C,
nepafenac, and hydroxychloroquine sulfate.
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substance on the 503B Bulks List,
because there would not be a basis to
conclude that there may be a clinical
need to compound drug products using
the bulk drug substance instead of
administering or compounding starting
with an approved drug product. FDA
did not answer ‘‘yes’’ to both of the
threshold questions for the four bulk
drug substances that are components of
approved drug products that we are
addressing in this notice. Accordingly,
as explained further below, we did not
proceed further in our evaluation of
these substances and are proposing not
to include them on the 503B Bulks List.
With respect to one bulk drug
substance we are addressing in this
notice that is not a component of an
FDA-approved drug product,
quinacrine, we are conducting a
balancing test with four factors,
considering each factor in the context of
the others and balancing them to
determine whether the statutory
‘‘clinical need’’ standard has been met.
The balancing test includes the
following factors:
• The physical and chemical
characterization of the substance;
• any safety issues raised by the use
of the substance in compounding;
• the available evidence of
effectiveness or lack of effectiveness of
a drug product compounded with the
substance, if any such evidence exists;
and
• current and historical use of the
substance in compounded drug
products, including information about
the medical condition(s) that the
substance has been used to treat and any
references in peer-reviewed medical
literature.
The discussion below reflects FDA’s
consideration of these four factors
where they are applicable and describes
how they were applied to develop
FDA’s proposal to include one bulk
drug substance on the 503B Bulks List.
C. Inclusion of a Bulk Drug Substance
on the 503B Bulks List
In preparing its proposal to include a
substance on the 503B Bulks List, FDA
considered whether the clinical need for
the bulk drug substance in the
compounded drug product is limited,
by, for example, route of administration
or dosage form. As appropriate, and as
explained further below, the Agency
tailored its proposed entry on the 503B
Bulks List to reflect its findings related
to clinical need for the bulk substance
proposed for inclusion on the list.
Specifically, the proposed entry would
authorize use of this bulk drug
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substance to compound drug products
for oral use only.16
III. Substance Considered and Proposed
for Inclusion on the 503B Bulks List
Because the substance in this section
is not a component of an FDA-approved
drug product, we applied the balancing
test described above. The bulk drug
substance that has been evaluated and
that FDA is proposing to place on the
503B Bulks List is quinacrine HCl. The
reasons for FDA’s proposal is included
below (Ref. 3).17
Quinacrine
FDA nominated quinacrine as a bulk
drug substance for the 503B Bulks List
to compound drug products in oral
dosage forms at strengths of 25–100
milligram (mg) for the treatment of
cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE).18
The nominated bulk drug substance is
not a component of an FDA-approved
drug product. We evaluated quinacrine
for potential inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List under the clinical need
standard in section 503B of the FD&C
Act, considering data and information
regarding the physical and chemical
characterization of quinacrine, safety
issues raised by use of this substance in
compounding, available evidence of
effectiveness or lack of effectiveness,
and historical and current use in
compounding (Ref. 3).
Quinacrine is well-characterized
physically and chemically. Although
there are concerns about its safety
profile in certain patient populations,
we believe these risks are well known
within the rheumatology and
dermatology specialties that most often
treat CLE, and the known risks could be
16 FDA requested comments on the proposal to
limit listings in this manner in notice of July 31,
2020 (85 FR 46126). The comment period for the
July 2020 notice was reopened for 30 days on
January 8, 2021 (86 FR 1515), to allow interested
parties an additional opportunity to comment. The
Agency has not finished evaluating the comments
received on this proposal, and we intend to take all
comments on this issue into consideration in
developing our final approach to listing substances
on the 503B Bulks List.
17 In addition to FDA’s quinacrine nomination for
the 503B Bulks List, the Agency considered data
and information from its earlier evaluation
regarding the use of this bulk drug substance for the
list of bulk drug substances that can be used in
compounding under section 503A of the FD&C Act
(the 503A Evaluation). See Appendices A–D in
‘‘FDA Memo to File, Clinical Need for Quinacrine
Hydrochloride in Compounding Under Section
503B of the FD&C Act’’ (Ref. 3). FDA also
considered a report provided by the University of
Maryland Center of Excellence in Regulatory
Science and Innovation and conducted a search for
relevant scientific literature and safety information,
focusing on materials published or submitted to
FDA since the 503A Evaluations (see Appendix H
in Ref. 3).
18 See Appendix G in Ref. 3.
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controlled with appropriate dosing and
monitoring. Quinacrine has been used
for several decades to treat systemic
lupus erythematosus and CLE, and there
is a significant body of experience,
documented in the scientific literature,
that quinacrine may be effective in the
treatment of patients with cutaneous
lupus, and patients who are not fully
clinically responsive to, or are intolerant
of, treatment with FDA approved
products alone. These patients may
respond to the addition of quinacrine to
their existing therapy, or to the use of
quinacrine alone. On balance, the
physical and chemical characterization,
safety, effectiveness, and historical and
current use of quinacrine weigh in favor
of including this substance on the 503B
Bulks List. Accordingly, we propose
adding quinacrine to the 503B Bulks
List for oral use only. We have not
identified sufficient evidence to support
its use in other routes of administration.
Due to the safety risks referred to
above, if quinacrine is placed on the
503B Bulks List, FDA intends to make
safety information about the use of
quinacrine available to prescribers,
pharmacists, outsourcing facilities, and
the public through information on
FDA’s website, in a safety guide, or
through other mechanisms, as
appropriate.
IV. Substances Evaluated and Not
Proposed for Inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List
Because the substances in this section
are components of FDA-approved drug
products, we considered one or both of
the following questions: (1) Is there is a
basis to conclude that an attribute of
each FDA-approved drug product
containing the bulk drug substance
makes each one medically unsuitable to
treat certain patients for a condition that
FDA has identified for evaluation, and
the drug product proposed to be
compounded is intended to address that
attribute and (2) is there a basis to
conclude that the drug product
proposed to be compounded must be
compounded using a bulk drug
substance.
The four bulk drug substances that
have been evaluated and that FDA is
proposing not to place on the list are as
follows: Bromfenac sodium, mitomycinC, nepafenac, and hydroxychloroquine
sulfate. The reasons for FDA’s proposals
are included below.
A. Bromfenac Sodium
Bromfenac sodium was nominated in
combination with moxifloxacin
hydrochloride and prednisolone for
inclusion on the 503B Bulks List to
compound drug products for
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postoperative inflammation and pain
following cataract surgery.19 The
proposed route of administration is
ophthalmic, the proposed dosage forms
are an ophthalmic injection 20 and a
topical ophthalmic solution,21 and the
proposed compounded product is
prednisolone-moxifloxacin-bromfenac
(1-0≤.5/0.4 percent). The nominated
bulk drug substance, bromfenac sodium,
is a component of FDA-approved drug
products (e.g., ANDA 203395, NDA
206911, and NDA 203168). FDA has
approved bromfenac sodium products
as 0.07 percent, 0.075 percent, and 0.09
percent EQ 22 acid ophthalmic
solution.23 24 The nomination proposes
to combine bromfenac sodium with two
other bulk drug substances,
moxifloxacin hydrochloride and
prednisolone, both of which are
components of FDA-approved products.
Prednisolone acetate 25 is a component
of FDA-approved drug products (NDA
017469 and NDA 017011) 26 27 and is
19 See Docket No. FDA–2015–N–3469, document
no. FDA–2015–N–3469–0004. We assume
‘‘bromfenac’’ as used in the nomination refers to
bromfenac sodium. The nominator did not
nominate moxifloxacin hydrochloride or
prednisolone separately.
20 We assume ‘‘injection’’ as used in the
nomination refers to ophthalmic injection.
21 The nominator did not specify whether they
propose to make an ophthalmic solution or an
ophthalmic suspension. We only considered
ophthalmic solutions for this review because ‘‘[a]ll
drug products containing bromfenac sodium
(except ophthalmic solutions)’’ is on the list of
‘‘Drug products withdrawn or removed from the
market for reasons of safety or effectiveness,’’
codified at 21 CFR 216.24 and available at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/
CFRSearch.cfm?fr=216.24, and should not be used
in compounding.
22 EQ refers to the equivalent strength of the
active moiety. See https://www.fda.gov/drugs/
development-approval-process-drugs/orange-bookpreface.
23 See, e.g., ANDA 203395 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://fdalabel.fda.gov/
fdalabel-r/services/spl/set-ids/e853723e-8419-444489e9-ee3f571b0974/spl-doc.
24 See, e.g., NDA 206911 labeling available as the
date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/3ae02266-5a0f4bf2-bc68-ae1c7d2f5239/3ae02266-5a0f-4bf2-bc68ae1c7d2f5239.xml.
25 The nomination did not specify which
prednisolone active pharmaceutical ingredient
(API) is proposed to be included in their
combination. There are several approved
ophthalmic formulations of prednisolone acetate or
prednisolone sodium phosphate in combination
with anti-infectives. The only single ingredient 1%
suspension approved for ophthalmic use is
prednisolone acetate. It is approved under two
separate NDAs, 017469 as OMNIPRED and 017011
as Pred-Forte®. OMNIPRED is available as 5 mL and
10 mL and Pred-Forte® is available in 1 mL, 5 mL,
10 mL, and 15 mL suspension containing
prednisolone acetate 1.0%.
26 See, e.g., NDA 017011 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/3fbf3327-59a24e6e-9e43-4f63ea23d54e/3fbf3327-59a2-4e6e-9e434f63ea23d54e.xml.
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available in a 1 milliliter (mL), 5 mL, 10
mL, and 15 mL suspension containing
prednisolone acetate 1.0 percent.
Moxifloxacin hydrochloride is a
component of FDA-approved drug
products (e.g., NDA 021598 and NDA
022428) 28 29 and is available as an EQ
0.5 percent base ophthalmic solution.
1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug
Product(s)
The nomination does not identify a
medical unsuitability in any of the FDAapproved products that contain
bromfenac, prednisolone, or
moxifloxacin hydrochloride when these
products are administered separately.
Instead, it states that the single activeingredient formulation of these products
may make them unsuitable for coadministration after ocular surgeries.
Specifically, the nomination states that
‘‘Compounded formulations may
alleviate the need for multiple
postoperative drops. Topical
compounded formulations also may
improve patient compliance and
alleviate patient confusion because they
typically require use of fewer drops.’’
However, the labeling for the FDAapproved bromfenac sodium products
(e.g., ANDA 203395) specifically warns
against the use of bromfenac sodium
with topical corticosteroids, which
include prednisolone. This is because
the use of bromfenac sodium with
topical corticosteroids may increase the
potential for healing problems.30 The
nomination does not address this
warning or provide support for the coadministration of these drug products.
We decline to find that the approved
drugs are medically unsuitable for some
patients because they may be difficult to
administer to patients under
circumstances that are specifically
27 See, e.g., NDA017469 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/00c60dec-b63c43ac-9f87-88aeff333136/00c60dec-b63c-43ac-9f8788aeff333136.xml.
28 See, e.g., NDA 021598 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/f9febc6f-db6d44e8-9730-f7c1a2354d71/f9febc6f-db6d-44e8-9730f7c1a2354d71.xml.
29 See, e.g., NDA 022428 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/41ea7ffb-02e744bd-8ec6-6d4c8e116b99/41ea7ffb-02e7-44bd-8ec66d4c8e116b99.xml.
30 According to the ‘‘Warnings and Precautions’’
section of the FDA-approved labeling for ANDA
203395, ‘‘All topical nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs) may slow or delay healing. Topical
corticosteroids are also known to slow or delay
healing. Concomitant use of topical NSAIDs and
topical steroids may increase the potential for
healing problems.’’ See https://fdalabel.fda.gov/
fdalabel-r/services/spl/set-ids/e853723e-8419-444489e9-ee3f571b0974/spl-doc.
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warned against in the approved
labeling.
Because co-administration of these
products is the subject of a labeled
warning, and therefore an inappropriate
basis for a finding of clinical need, we
do not evaluate the nomination’s claims
further. However, to help explain our
thinking about this nomination and
inform public comment, we address the
nomination’s statement that there is a
clinical need to compound a drug
containing multiple active ingredients
because it may improve patient
compliance relative to prescribing FDAapproved drugs that contain a single
active ingredient. The nomination does
not state that the approved drugs would
be medically unsuitable for some
patients for the conditions identified in
the nomination, and it does not provide
data or evidence to support that
proposition. Reducing the number of
drugs administered for the purpose of
convenience is not ‘‘clinical need’’;
medical unsuitability of the approved
drugs is required. While clinical need
does not have to be fully established in
FDA’s analysis of questions 1 and 2,
there must be a basis to conclude that
such a need may exist before FDA will
proceed to the more searching analysis
conducted under the balancing test. No
such basis is present here.31
Accordingly, with respect to the
bromfenac sodium drug products
proposed to be compounded by the
nominator, FDA finds no basis to
conclude that there is an attribute of
each of the FDA approved drug
products that makes each one medically
unsuitable to treat certain patients who
undergo cataract surgery. There is
therefore no attribute of the approved
drug products that the proposed
compounded drug products are
intended to address.
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2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be
Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because we have not identified a
population for whom the approved
products are medically unsuitable for
31 In general, we do not expect to find clinical
need for a bulk drug substance to compound drug
products containing two or more bulk drug
substances unless: (1) Combining the substances is
intended to address the medical unsuitability of the
FDA-approved drug products for certain patients
and (2) the combination is likely to address a
clinical need that could not be addressed by
delivering each component of the drug product
alone. Not including drug products with two or
more active ingredients on the 503B Bulks List
unless these conditions are met helps to ensure that
patients are not exposed to a drug product
containing an unnecessary active ingredient, helps
avoid risks of unwanted interactions or
complications in formulation, and protects the
integrity of the drug approval process.
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the proposed uses under question 1, we
are not considering whether there is a
basis to conclude that the drug products
proposed to be compounded must be
produced from a bulk drug substance
rather than from an FDA-approved drug
product under question 2.
3. Additional Comments
For the reasons stated above, we are
not evaluating this nomination under
the balancing test. However, if this
nomination for bromfenac sodium was
to proceed to the balancing test, there
would be some significant safety and
effectiveness concerns to evaluate,
which are not addressed in the
nomination.
Each of the three ingredients
proposed to be used in combination by
the nomination is indicated for different
medical conditions and has a different
FDA-approved dosing regimen: Once
daily for bromfenac sodium 0.09
percent,32 four times daily for
prednisolone acetate 33 and three times
daily for moxifloxacin hydrochloride.34
The duration of treatment for each
individual drug also differs.
The nomination also describes
compounding drug products that
include bromfenac sodium in a
concentration (EQ 0.4 percent acid) 35
that is more than four times higher than
the FDA-approved product (the
approved product is available at
concentrations of EQ 0.07 percent acid,
EQ 0.075 percent acid, and EQ 0.09
percent acid). The nomination does not
provide any data or information
supporting the need for a higher
concentration than the approved drug.
Most of the bulk drug substance
nominations FDA has evaluated to date
have only proposed to compound drug
products containing a single active
ingredient. This nomination proposed to
compound drug products containing
more than one active ingredient. If FDA
finalizes its proposal not to include
bromfenac sodium on the 503B Bulks
List, we intend to remove the substance
from Category 1 for purposes of the
Interim Policy, which would mean that
ophthalmic solutions compounded
using the bulk drug substance
bromfenac sodium, including the
32 Bromfenac
sodium EQ 0.09% acid solution
(e.g., ANDA 203395) should be applied to the
affected eye once daily beginning 1 day prior to
cataract surgery, continued on the day of surgery,
and through the first 14 days of the postoperative
period.
33 Two drops topically in the eye(s) four times
daily (e.g., NDA 017469).
34 Instill one drop in the affected eye 3 times a
day for 7 days (e.g., NDA 021598).
35 The nomination states ‘‘0.4%.’’ We assume the
nominator intended a concentration of EQ 0.4%
acid.
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proposed compounded products
addressed in this notice, would fall
outside the enforcement discretion
described in the Interim Policy. We note
that FDA’s evaluation of bromfenac
sodium for inclusion on the 503B Bulks
List will not impact FDA’s evaluation of
any other bulk drug substances for
inclusion on the 503B Bulks List,
including prednisolone and
moxifloxacin hydrochloride, because
each bulk drug substance nominated for
inclusion on the 503B Bulks List
undergoes its own evaluation. We
previously proposed not to include
moxifloxacin hydrochloride on the 503B
Bulks List (85 FR 46126), and we are
currently reviewing comments on that
nomination. Nominations for
prednisolone, if they are not withdrawn,
remain the subject of future evaluations.
Finally, if FDA determines there is a
clinical need for outsourcing facilities to
use bulk drug substances to compound
the proposed drug products, we would
include each substance or combination
of substances, as appropriate, on the
503B Bulks List at the time that final
determination is made.
B. Mitomycin-C
Mitomycin-C was nominated for
inclusion on the 503B Bulks List to
compound drug products that treat
stomach, pancreas, anal (nonmetastatic),
bladder, cervical (recurrent or
metastatic), esophageal, gastric, and
non-small cell lung cancer.36 The
proposed route of administration is
injection and the proposed
concentration is 20–40 mg. We
evaluated the proposed products for
both the intravenous and intravesical
routes of administration because the
nomination proposed that there is a
need for a compounded mitomycin-C
drug product for injection and we
understand that mitomycin-C is used for
both intravesical and intravenous
administration in certain oncological
conditions. The nominated bulk drug
substance is a component of FDAapproved drug products (e.g., ANDA
064144, NDA 022572, and NDA
211728).37 FDA-approved mitomycin-C
36 See Docket No.FDA–2013–N–1524, document
no. FDA–2013–N–1524–2219.
37 Jelmyto, NDA 211728 was approved on April
15, 2020, as a 40 mg/vial powder for pyelocaliceal
administration for the treatment of adult patients
with low-grade Upper Tract Urothelial Cancer (LG–
UTUC). Jelmyto has not been considered in this
memorandum because of the complex nature of the
approved product and the fact that there is a more
appropriate comparator approved drug product
(mitomycin as a 5, 20, and 40 mg vial for solution
for intravenous administration). While the
nominated dosage form is unclear (‘‘injection’’), we
assume that the nominator intended to nominate a
solution or a powder for solution for intravesical
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(e.g., ANDA 064114) is available as a 5,
20, and 40 mg/mL vial for intravenous
administration.38 Mitomycin is also
approved as a 0.2 mg vial, which when
reconstituted with Sterile Water for
Injection, provides a solution for
application in glaucoma filtration
surgery for use as an adjunct to ab
externo glaucoma surgery (e.g., NDA
022572).
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1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug
Product(s)
Regarding the proposed use to treat
bladder cancer, the nomination does not
explain why an attribute of each of the
FDA-approved 5, 20, and 40 mg vials of
lyophilized powder for reconstituting
into solution is medically unsuitable for
the proposed use. For example, if there
are patients for whom products for
intravenous administration would be
medically unsuitable, the nomination
does not provide support or explain
why the FDA-approved products, or
products prepared using the FDAapproved products could not be used for
intravesical administration.39 The
nomination states that it may be
necessary to compound a mitomycin-C
drug product to attain a ‘‘higher, more
efficacious dose,’’ but the nomination
does not identify any specific higher
concentrations that the nominator
proposes to compound. The approved
product is available as a lyophilized
powder, which according to the
approved labeling, is reconstituted to a
final concentration of 0.5 mg/mL or
below.40 While the nomination includes
two articles which indicate that there
could be a need for a product with a
concentration above 0.5 mg/mL,41 the
administration (not, as Jelmyto is, a gel for
pyelocaliceal administration).
38 See, e.g., ANDA 064144 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/55ab68d0-c46a2f41-e054-00144ff88e88/55ab68d0-c46a-2f41-e05400144ff88e88.xml. When reconstituted with Sterile
Water for Injection, ANDA 064144, and other
ANDAs like it, provide a solution for intravenous
administration for therapy of disseminated
adenocarcinoma of the stomach or pancreas in
proven combinations with other approved
chemotherapeutic agents and as palliative treatment
when other modalities have failed.
39 In noting this issue, FDA is not suggesting or
implying that the approved drug products, or
products prepared from them, are approved for the
use proposed by the nomination. Mitomycin-C 5,
20, or 40 mg vials of lyophilized powders for
solution (for reconstitution) have not been shown
to be safe and effective for intravesical
administration to treat any condition or disease.
40 The approved product (e.g., ANDA 064144) is
available as a 5, 20, and 40 mg vial of lyophilized
powder, which according to the approved labeling,
is reconstituted in 10 mL, 40 mL or 80 mL Sterile
Water for Injection respectively for intravenous
administration.
41 For example, the nomination cites two articles
which used mitomycin administered intravesically
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nomination does not identify an
attribute of the FDA-approved products
that makes them medically unsuitable to
treat certain patients and that the
proposed compounded drug products
are intended to address. Further, the
nomination proposes to ‘‘include
excipients to prevent urine
acidification,’’ but the nomination does
not identify which excipients are
proposed for the compounded product,
nor does the nomination provide any
data or information supporting how the
proposed compounded drug products
will address that concern.42
Regarding the proposed use to treat
stomach, pancreas, anal (nonmetastic),
cervical (recurrent or metastic),
esophageal, gastric, and non-small cell
lung cancer, the nomination does not
identify an attribute for each FDAapproved product that makes it
medically unsuitable to treat certain
patients for these conditions and that
the proposed compounded products are
intended to address.
Accordingly, with respect to the
mitomycin products proposed to be
compounded, FDA finds no basis to
conclude that an attribute of the FDAapproved products makes them
medically unsuitable to treat certain
patients for a condition that FDA has
identified for evaluation and that the
proposed compounded drug products
are intended to address.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be
Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because the nomination does not
identify a population for whom the
FDA-approved products are medically
unsuitable for the proposed uses, FDA
did not consider whether there is a basis
to conclude that the drug products
proposed to be compounded must be
produced from a bulk drug substance
rather than from an FDA-approved drug
product under question 2.
for bladder cancer (Refs. 4 and 5). Colombo et al,
2012 administered mitomycin 40 mg in 40 mL
saline (1 mg/mL) intravesically to patients and Au
et al, 2001 administered mitomycin 40 mg in 20 mL
of sterile water (2 mg/mL) or 20 mg in 20 mL of
sterile water (1 mg/mL) intravesically to patients
(Ref. 4).
42 The nomination included one article that
states, ‘‘[i]n the case of mitomycin C, instability of
the drug in acidic urine is an additional problem.’’
However, the article does not identify excipients
that could be added to intravesically administered
mitomycin drug products to address this particular
attribute of the approved product. Nor does the
article provide data or information to support the
need for a compounded drug product containing
such excipients. Rather, it discusses administering
oral doses of sodium bicarbonate before treatment
with an intravesical mitomycin drug product to
reduce the acidity of the patient’s urine (Ref. 5).
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C. Nepafenac
Nepafenac was nominated in
combination with other bulk drug
substances, including prednisolone and
gatifloxacin,43 for inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List to compound drug products
for ‘‘post cataract surgery ocular
complications related to pain,
inflammation or bacterial
conjunctivitis.’’ 44 The proposed route of
administration is topical ophthalmic,
the proposed dosage forms are a
preserved (multidose) and a
preservative-free (unit dose) topical
ophthalmic suspension, and the
proposed compounded products are: (1)
‘‘Nepafenac 0.1%-Prednisolone 1%;’’
and (2) ‘‘Nepafenac 0.1%-Prednisolone
1%-Gatifloxacin 0.5%.’’ The nominated
bulk drug substance, nepafenac, is a
component of FDA-approved drug
products (e.g., NDA 021862 and NDA
203491).45 46 FDA has approved
nepafenac as 1.7 mL dropper bottle, and
a 4 mL dropper bottle filled with 3 mL
sterile ophthalmic suspension
containing 0.1 percent (1 mg/mL)
nepafenac and as a 4 mL bottle filled
with 1.7 mL and 3 mL sterile
ophthalmic suspension containing 0.3
percent (3 mg/mL) nepafenac for topical
administration.47 The nomination
proposes to combine nepafenac with
two other bulk drug substances,
prednisolone and gatifloxacin, both of
which are components of FDA-approved
products. Prednisolone acetate 48 is a
component of FDA-approved drug
products (NDA 017469 and NDA
017011) and is available in a 1 mL, 5
mL, 10 mL, and 15 mL suspension
containing prednisolone acetate 1.0
percent.49 50 Gatifloxacin is a
43 The nominator did not nominate prednisolone
or gatifloxacin separately.
44 See Docket No. FDA–2015–N–3469, document
no. FDA–2015–N–3469–0022.
45 See, e.g., NDA 021862 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2020/021862s017lbl.pdf.
46 See, e.g., NDA 203491 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2012/203491s001lbl.pdf.
47 See fns. 45 and 46, above.
48 The nominator did not specify which
prednisolone API is proposed to be included in
their combinations. There are several approved
ophthalmic formulations of prednisolone acetate or
prednisolone sodium phosphate in combination
with anti-infectives. The only single ingredient 1%
suspension approved for ophthalmic use is
prednisolone acetate.
49 See, e.g., NDA 017469 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2007/017469s040lbl.pdf.
50 See, e.g., NDA 017011 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2018/017011s050lbl.pdf.
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component of FDA-approved drug
products (e.g., NDA 022548),51 and is
available in a 1 mL or 2.5 mL solution
containing gatifloxacin .5 percent.52
1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug
Product(s)
The nomination does not identify a
medical unsuitability in any of the FDAapproved products that contain
nepafenac, prednisolone, or gatifloxacin
when these products are administered
separately. Instead, it states that the
single active-ingredient formulation of
these products may make them
unsuitable for co-administration after
ocular surgeries. Specifically, the
nomination states that ‘‘[a]s a solution,
fixed-dosage ophthalmic drug
combinations of different
pharmacological classes can be
efficacious, reduce the side effects of
each component and improve patient
compliance.’’ However, the labeling for
the FDA-approved nepafenac products
(e.g., NDA 021862 and NDA 203491)
specifically warns against the use of
nepafenac with topical corticosteroids,
which include prednisolone. This is
because the use of nepafenac with
topical corticosteroids may increase the
potential for healing problems. The
nomination does not address this
warning or provide support for the coadministration of these drug products.
We decline to find that the approved
drugs are medically unsuitable for some
patients because they may be difficult to
administer to patients under
circumstances that are specifically
warned against in the approved
labeling.
Because co-administration of these
products is the subject of a labeled
warning, and therefore an inappropriate
basis for a finding of clinical need, we
do not evaluate the nomination’s claims
further. However, to help explain our
thinking about this nomination and
inform public comment, we address the
nomination’s statement that there is a
clinical need to compound a drug
containing multiple active ingredients
because it may improve patient
compliance relative to prescribing FDAapproved drugs that contain a single
active ingredient. The nomination does
not state that the approved drugs would
be medically unsuitable for some
patients for the conditions identified in
the nomination, and it does not provide
data or evidence to support that
proposition. Reducing the number of
drugs administered for the purpose of
51 See, e.g., NDA 022548 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2016/022548s002lbl.pdf.
52 See fn. 51, above.
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convenience is not ‘‘clinical need’’;
medical unsuitability of the approved
drugs is required. While clinical need
does not have to be fully established in
FDA’s analysis of questions 1 and 2,
there must be a basis to conclude that
such a need may exist before FDA will
proceed to the more searching analysis
conducted under the balancing test. No
such basis is present here.53
Accordingly, with respect to the
nepafenac drug products proposed to be
compounded by the nominator, FDA
finds no basis to conclude that there is
an attribute of each of the approved
drug products that makes each one
medically unsuitable to treat certain
patients who undergo cataract surgery.
There is therefore no attribute of the
approved drug products that the
proposed compounded drug products
are intended to address.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be
Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because the nominator has not
identified a population for whom the
approved products are medically
unsuitable for the proposed uses under
question 1, we are not considering
whether there is a basis to conclude that
the drug product proposed to be
compounded must be produced from a
bulk drug substance rather than from an
FDA-approved drug product under
question 2.
3. Additional Comments
Finally, if this nomination for
nepafenac were to proceed to the
balancing test, there would be some
significant safety and effectiveness
concerns to evaluate, which are not
addressed in the nomination. Each of
the three proposed ingredients intended
to be compounded into a single drug
product is indicated for different
medical conditions and has different
FDA-approved dosing regimens: Onetime daily for nepafenac,54 four times
daily for prednisolone,55 and two to
eight times daily for gatifloxacin.56 The
53 See
supra note 31.
drop of NDA 021862 0.1% should be
applied to the affected eye three times daily
beginning 1 day prior to cataract surgery, continued
on the day of surgery and through the first 2 weeks
of the postoperative period. One drop of NDA
203491 0.3% should be applied to the affected eye
one time daily beginning 1 day prior to cataract
surgery, continued on the day of surgery and
through the first 2 weeks of the postoperative
period. An additional drop should be administered
30 to 120 minutes prior to surgery.
55 Two drops topically in the eye(s) four times
daily.
56 Day 1: Instill one drop every two hours in the
affected eye(s) while awake, up to 8 times on Day
1. Days 2 through 7: instill one drop two to four
54 One
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
duration of treatment for each
individual drug also differs, as do the
approved indications.
Most of the bulk drug substance
nominations FDA has evaluated to date
have only proposed to compound drug
products containing a single active
ingredient. This nomination proposed to
compound drug products containing
more than one active ingredient. If FDA
finalizes its proposal not to include
nepafenac on the 503B Bulks List, we
intend to remove the substance from
Category 1 for purposes of the Interim
Policy, which would mean that
ophthalmic solutions compounded
using the bulk drug substance
nepafenac, including the proposed
compounded products addressed in this
notice, would fall outside the
enforcement discretion described in the
Interim Policy. We note that FDA’s
evaluation of nepafenac for inclusion on
the 503B Bulks List will not impact
FDA’s evaluation of any other bulk drug
substances for inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List, including prednisolone and
gatifloxacin, because each bulk drug
substance nominated for inclusion on
the 503B Bulks List undergoes its own
evaluation. Nominations for
prednisolone, if they are not withdrawn,
remain the subject of future evaluations.
Gatifloxacin has not been nominated for
inclusion on the 503B Bulks List, and
therefore has not been categorized under
the Interim Policy; its status under the
Interim Policy will not be affected if this
proposal is finalized. Finally, if FDA
determines there is a clinical need for
outsourcing facilities to use bulk drug
substances to compound the proposed
drug products, we would include each
substance or combination of substances,
as appropriate, on the 503B Bulks List
at the time that final determination is
made.
D. Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate was
nominated for inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List to compound drug products
that treat rheumatoid arthritis and
juvenile arthritis (also known as
juvenile idiopathic arthritis).57 The
proposed route of administration is oral,
the proposed dosage forms are a capsule
or suspension, and the proposed
concentrations are 200–500 mg capsules
and 100–200 mg/mL suspension. The
nominated bulk drug substance is a
component of FDA-approved drug
products (e.g., NDA 009768, ANDA
times daily in the affected eye(s) while awake on
Days 2 through 7.
57 See Docket No. FDA–2015–N–3469, document
no. FDA–2015–N–3469–0165.
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 55 / Wednesday, March 24, 2021 / Notices
040104, and ANDA 213342).58 59 60
FDA-approved hydroxychloroquine
sulfate is available as 200 mg
(equivalent to 155 mg of
hydroxychloroquine base), film-coated
tablets for oral administration.61
1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug
Product(s)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
There is a basis to conclude that an
attribute of the approved
hydroxychloroquine sulfate tablets for
oral administration makes them
medically unsuitable for the treatment
of some patients with rheumatoid
arthritis and juvenile arthritis.62 The
nomination suggests that the approved
oral tablets, a solid oral dosage form, are
medically unsuitable in pediatric
patients who are unable to swallow
tablets. We agree that there may be
certain patients for whom the approved
oral tablets are medically unsuitable and
this would depend on a patient’s
clinical presentation and age, among
other considerations. As a general
matter, the drug product proposed to be
compounded appears to be intended to
address the potential unsuitability of a
solid oral dosage form because the
nominator proposes to compound a
suspension of hydroxychloroquine
sulfate for oral administration.
The nominator further states that
‘‘pediatric dosing is not standardized
but weight-based, making getting the
correct dose difficult with tablets.’’ We
agree that an oral suspension could
58 See, e.g., NDA 009768 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2017/009768s037s045s047lbl.pdf.
59 See, e.g., ANDA 040104 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/a594d892-e496–
38f5-e053–2a95a90a9da8/a594d892-e496–38f5e053–2a95a90a9da8.xml.
60 See, e.g., ANDA 213342 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/f6b15217-3b654d0e-8546-5056d71d525e/f6b15217-3b65-4d0e8546-5056d71d525e.xml.
61 See, e.g., NDA 009768 labeling available as of
the date of this notice at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2017/009768s037s045s047lbl.pdf.
62 In noting this issue, we do not mean to suggest
or imply that the approved drug products, or
products prepared from them, are approved for all
of the uses proposed by the nomination. For the
question 1 analysis we asked a limited, threshold
question to determine whether there might be a
clinical need for a compounded drug product, by
asking what attributes of the approved drug the
proposed compounded drug would change, and
why. Because this nomination did not pass through
question 2, we did not reach the balancing test and
therefore did not consider the four factors,
including the available evidence of effectiveness or
lack of effectiveness of a drug product compounded
with hydroxychloroquine sulfate. The safety and
efficacy of chronic use of hydroxychloroquine
sulfate have not been established for juvenile
idiopathic arthritis.
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allow for more flexible dosing when
compared to the approved tablets when
following weight-based dosing
recommendations, and that this also
supports the proposition that the
approved product may be unsuitable for
certain patients.63
In addition to the proposed
suspension, the nominator also
proposes to compound
hydroxychloroquine sulfate 200–500 mg
capsules for oral administration. The
nomination does not explain how the
proposed compounded capsule
products are intended to address the
medical unsuitability of the approved
product. Similar to tablets, capsules are
less flexible in dosing and would be
difficult for patients to take if they are
unable to swallow tablets. In addition,
the nomination does not identify any
data or information as to the need for
compounded products with a higher
concentration than the approved
product.
The nomination also claims that some
patients are ‘‘unable to tolerate
excipients’’ in the approved product,
but the nomination does not identify
which excipients they are referring to,
nor do they provide any data or
information supporting how the
proposed drug products will address
that particular attribute.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be
Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because there is a basis to conclude
that an attribute of the approved
hydroxychloroquine sulfate tablets
makes them medically unsuitable for
some patients, and the proposed
compounded oral suspension is
intended to address that attribute, FDA
next considers whether there is a basis
to conclude that the proposed oral
suspension must be made from a bulk
drug substance rather than from an
FDA-approved product. The approved
hydroxychloroquine sulfate drug
products are 200 mg immediate release
tablets with film coating.64 Although the
approved products are film-coated, the
coating is not intended to change/
control the release profile. FDA is not
63 We note that the nominator’s proposed
concentration of 100–200 mg/mL would offer little
benefit in the younger aged pediatric population
because a suspension at this strength would likely
require administration of small volumes (e.g., ≤1
mL). We are aware of several published pharmacy
compounding formulations for hydroxychloroquine
sulfate 25 mg/mL suspensions (Refs. 6–8), which
may be more suitable for the younger pediatric
population.
64 The tablet is not scored. The approved product
labeling states that the ‘‘film-coated tablets cannot
be divided, therefore they should not be used to
treat patients who weigh less than 31 kg.’’
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15681
aware of issues with using the FDAapproved product as the starting
material when the compounding
process and equipment are
appropriately selected. We also note
that there is a draft USP monograph for
the compounded suspension that uses
an FDA-approved film-coated tablet as
the starting material (Ref. 8).65 As with
all suspensions, the particle size of the
powder should be carefully controlled
and the density of suspension vehicle
should be selected appropriately in
order to make the oral suspension
uniform and stable, which can affect the
dose administrated to the patients.
Because we do not find a basis to
conclude that a bulk drug substance is
needed to compound the proposed
compounded hydroxychloroquine
sulfate oral suspension, rather than
starting with the FDA approved
product, we do not find a need to
include hydroxychloroquine sulfate on
the 503B Bulks List under question 2.
V. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we
tentatively conclude that there is a
clinical need for outsourcing facilities to
compound drug products using the bulk
drug substance quinacrine for oral use,
and we therefore propose to include it
on the 503B Bulks List as described in
this notice.
At this time, we find no basis to
conclude that there is a clinical need for
outsourcing facilities to compound drug
products using the bulk drug substances
bromfenac sodium, mitomycin-C,
nepafenac, and hydroxychloroquine
sulfate. We therefore propose not to
include these bulk drug substances on
the 503B Bulks List.
VI. References
The following references marked with
an asterisk (*) are on display at the
Dockets Management Staff (see
ADDRESSES) and are available for
viewing by interested persons between
9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday; they are also available
electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov. References
without asterisks are not on public
display at https://www.regulations.gov
because they have copyright restriction.
Some may be available at the website
address, if listed. References without
asterisks are available for viewing only
at the Dockets Management Staff. FDA
65 We note that the product labeling for
hydroxychloroquine sulfate film-coated tablets (e.g.,
NDA 009768, ANDA 213342) states, ‘‘Do not crush
or divide hydroxychloroquine sulfate film-coated
tablets.’’ However, this does not change our view
that the product can be compounded starting with
the approved drug product.
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
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15682
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 55 / Wednesday, March 24, 2021 / Notices
from https://go.usp.org/l/323321/202004-08/33wcg6.
has verified the website addresses, as of
the date this document publishes in the
Federal Register, but websites are
subject to change over time.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
*1. FDA, Guidance for Industry, ‘‘Interim
Policy on Compounding Using Bulk
Drug Substances Under Section 503B of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act,’’ January 2017 (available at https://
www.fda.gov/media/94402/download).
*2. FDA, Guidance for Industry, ‘‘Evaluation
of Bulk Drug Substances Nominated for
Use in Compounding Under Section
503B of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act,’’ March 2019 (available at
https://www.fda.gov/media/121315/
download).
*3. FDA Memorandum to File, ‘‘Clinical
Need for Quinacrine Hydrochloride in
Compounding Under Section 503B of the
FD&C Act,’’ January 2021.
4. Colombo, R., L. Rocchini, N. Suardi, F.
Benigni, et al., 2012, ‘‘Neoadjuvant
Short-Term Intensive Intravesical
Mitomycin C Regimen Compared with
Weekly Schedule For Low-Grade
Recurrent Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder
Cancer: Preliminary Results of a
Randomised Phase 2 Study,’’ European
Urology, 62: 797–802.
5. Au, J. L., R. A. Badalament, M. G. Wientjes,
D. C. Young, et al., and International
Mitomycin-C Consortium, 2001.
‘‘Methods to Improve Efficacy of
Intravesical Mitomycin C: Results of a
Randomized Phase III Trial,’’ Journal of
the National Cancer Institute, 93: 597–
604.
6. McHenry, A. R., M. F. Wempe, and P. J.
Rice, 2017, ‘‘Stability of
Extemporaneously Prepared
Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate 25-mg/mL
Suspensions in Plastic Bottles and
Syringes,’’ International Journal of
Pharmaceutical Compounding, 21(3),
251–254 (APA). Retrieved from https://
ijpc.com/Abstracts/
Abstract.cfm?ABS=4322.
7. American Society of Hospital Pharmacists
(ASHP 2020), ’’ Hydroxychloroquine
Sulfate Suspension 25 mg/mL.’’
Retrieved from www.ashp.org.
8. USP 2020, ‘‘USP Draft Compounded
Preparation Monograph for
Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate
Compounded Oral Suspension.’’
Published for public comment in
Pharmacopeial Forum 46(2). Retrieved
Dated: March 19, 2021.
Lauren K. Roth,
Acting Principal Associate Commissioner for
Policy.
[FR Doc. 2021–06060 Filed 3–23–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2021–N–0279]
Determination That Folic Acid, Oral
Tablets, 1 Milligram, and Other Drug
Products Were Not Withdrawn From
Sale for Reasons of Safety or
Effectiveness
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA or Agency) has
determined that the drug products listed
in this document were not withdrawn
from sale for reasons of safety or
effectiveness. This determination means
that FDA will not begin procedures to
withdraw approval of abbreviated new
drug applications (ANDAs) that refer to
these drug products, and it will allow
FDA to continue to approve ANDAs that
refer to the products as long as they
meet relevant legal and regulatory
requirements.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stacy Kane, Center for Drug Evaluation
and Research, Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Bldg. 51, Rm. 6236, Silver Spring,
MD 20993–0002, 301–796–8363,
Stacy.Kane@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In 1984,
Congress enacted the Drug Price
Competition and Patent Term
Restoration Act of 1984 (Pub. L. 98–417)
(the 1984 amendments), which
authorized the approval of duplicate
SUMMARY:
versions of drug products approved
under an ANDA procedure. ANDA
applicants must, with certain
exceptions, show that the drug for
which they are seeking approval
contains the same active ingredient in
the same strength and dosage form as
the ‘‘listed drug,’’ which is a version of
the drug that was previously approved.
ANDA applicants do not have to repeat
the extensive clinical testing otherwise
necessary to gain approval of a new
drug application (NDA).
The 1984 amendments include what
is now section 505(j)(7) of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C.
355(j)(7)), which requires FDA to
publish a list of all approved drugs.
FDA publishes this list as part of the
‘‘Approved Drug Products with
Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations,’’
which is generally known as the
‘‘Orange Book.’’ Under FDA regulations,
a drug is removed from the list if the
Agency withdraws or suspends
approval of the drug’s NDA or ANDA
for reasons of safety or effectiveness, or
if FDA determines that the listed drug
was withdrawn from sale for reasons of
safety or effectiveness (21 CFR 314.162).
Under § 314.161(a) (21 CFR
314.161(a)), the Agency must determine
whether a listed drug was withdrawn
from sale for reasons of safety or
effectiveness: (1) Before an ANDA that
refers to that listed drug may be
approved, (2) whenever a listed drug is
voluntarily withdrawn from sale and
ANDAs that refer to the listed drug have
been approved, and (3) when a person
petitions for such a determination under
21 CFR 10.25(a) and 10.30. Section
314.161(d) provides that if FDA
determines that a listed drug was
withdrawn from sale for safety or
effectiveness reasons, the Agency will
initiate proceedings that could result in
the withdrawal of approval of the
ANDAs that refer to the listed drug.
FDA has become aware that the drug
products listed in the table are no longer
being marketed.
Application No.
Drug name
Active ingredient(s)
Strength(s)
Dosage form/route
Applicant
NDA 006135 ...
NDA 016131 ...
Folic Acid .....................
CLOMID ......................
Folic Acid ....................
Clomiphene Citrate .....
1 milligram (mg) ..........
50 mg ..........................
Tablet; Oral .................
Tablet; Oral .................
NDA 016419 ...
Propanolol Hydrochloride.
Pimozide .....................
1 mg/milliliter (mL) .......
Injectable; Injection .....
NDA 017473 ...
Propranolol Hydrochloride.
ORAP ..........................
1 mg; 2 mg ..................
Tablet; Oral .................
NDA 019916 ...
NDA 019967 ...
Morphine Sulfate .........
ULTRAVATE ...............
Morphine Sulfate .........
Halobetasol Propionate
1 mg/mL; 5 mg/mL ......
0.05% ..........................
Injectable; Injection .....
Cream; Topical ............
NDA 020647 ...
ELDEPRYL .................
5 mg ............................
Capsule; Oral ..............
NDA 020925 ...
TAVIST–1 ....................
Selegiline Hydrochloride.
Clemastine Fumarate ..
Eli Lilly & Co.
Sanofi-Aventis U.S.
LLC.
Baxter Healthcare
Corp.
Teva Pharms., USA,
Inc.
ICU Medical, Inc.
Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, Inc.
Somerset Pharms., Inc.
1.34 mg .......................
Tablet; Oral .................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Mar 23, 2021
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E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
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GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare.
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 55 (Wednesday, March 24, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15673-15682]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-06060]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2018-N-3240]
List of Bulk Drug Substances for Which There Is a Clinical Need
Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA or Agency) is developing
a list of bulk drug substances (active pharmaceutical ingredients) for
which there is a clinical need (the 503B Bulks List). Drug products
that outsourcing facilities compound using bulk drug substances on the
503B Bulks List can qualify for certain exemptions from the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) provided certain conditions are
met. This notice identifies one bulk drug substance that FDA has
considered and proposes to include on the 503B Bulks List: Quinacrine
hydrochloride (``quinacrine''). This notice identifies four bulk drug
substances that FDA has considered and proposes not to include on the
list: Bromfenac sodium, mitomycin-C, nepafenac, and hydroxychloroquine
sulfate. Additional bulk drug substances nominated by the public for
inclusion on this list are currently under consideration and may be the
subject of future notices.
[[Page 15674]]
DATES: Submit either electronic or written comments on the notice by
May 24, 2021.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments as follows. Please note that late,
untimely filed comments will not be considered. Electronic comments
must be submitted on or before May 24, 2021. The https://www.regulations.gov electronic filing system will accept comments until
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time at the end of May 24, 2021. Comments received
by mail/hand delivery/courier (for written/paper submissions) will be
considered timely if they are postmarked or the delivery service
acceptance receipt is on or before that date.
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 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 public,
submit the comment as a written/paper submission and in the manner
detailed (see ``Written/Paper Submissions'' and ``Instructions'').
Written/Paper Submissions
Submit written/paper submissions as follows:
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-2018-N-3240 for ``List of Bulk Drug Substances for Which There is a
Clinical Need Under Section 503B of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act.'' Received comments, those filed in a timely manner (see
ADDRESSES), will be placed in the docket and, except for those
submitted as ``Confidential Submissions,'' publicly viewable at https://www.regulations.gov or at the Dockets Management Staff between 9 a.m.
and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, 240-402-7500.
Confidential Submissions--To submit a comment with
confidential information that you do not wish to be made publicly
available, submit your comments only as a written/paper submission. You
should submit two copies total. One copy will include the information
you claim to be confidential with a heading or cover note that states
``THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION.'' The Agency will
review this copy, including the claimed confidential information, in
its consideration of comments. The second copy, which will have the
claimed confidential information redacted/blacked out, will be
available for public viewing and posted on https://www.regulations.gov.
Submit both copies to the Dockets Management Staff. If you do not wish
your name and contact information to be made publicly available, you
can provide this information on the cover sheet and not in the body of
your comments and you must identify this information as
``confidential.'' Any information marked as ``confidential'' will not
be disclosed except in accordance with 21 CFR 10.20 and other
applicable disclosure law. For more information about FDA's posting of
comments to public dockets, see 80 FR 56469, September 18, 2015, or
access the information at: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2015-09-18/pdf/2015-23389.pdf.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
the electronic and written/paper comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov and insert the docket number, found in brackets in
the heading of this document, into the ``Search'' box and follow the
prompts and/or go to the Dockets Management Staff, 5630 Fishers Lane,
Rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852, 240-402-7500.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elizabeth Hankla, Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, 10903 New
Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 51, Rm. 5216, Silver Spring, MD 20993, 240-402-
3359.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 503B of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 353b) describes the
conditions that must be satisfied for drug products compounded by an
outsourcing facility to be exempt from section 505 (21 U.S.C. 355)
(concerning the approval of drugs under new drug applications (NDAs) or
abbreviated new drug applications (ANDAs)), section 502(f)(1) (21
U.S.C. 352(f)(1)) (concerning the labeling of drugs with adequate
directions for use), and section 582 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360eee-
1) (concerning drug supply chain security requirements).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 503B(a) of the FD&C Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drug products compounded that meet the conditions in section 503B
are not exempt from current good manufacturing practice (CGMP)
requirements in section 501(a)(2)(B) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
351(a)(2)(B)).\2\ Outsourcing facilities are also subject to FDA
inspections according to a risk-based schedule, specific adverse event
reporting requirements, and other conditions that help to mitigate the
risks of the drug products they compound.\3\ Outsourcing facilities may
or may not obtain prescriptions for identified individual patients and
can, therefore, distribute compounded drugs to healthcare practitioners
for ``office stock,'' to hold in their offices in advance of patient
need.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Compare section 503A(a) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 353a(a);
exempting drugs compounded in accordance with that section) with
section 503B(a) of the FD&C Act (not providing the exemption from
CGMP requirements).
\3\ Section 503B(b)(4) and (5) of the FD&C Act.
\4\ Section 503B(d)(4)(C) of the FD&C Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the conditions that must be met for a drug product
compounded by an outsourcing facility to qualify for exemptions under
section 503B of the FD&C Act is that the outsourcing facility may not
compound a drug using a bulk drug substance unless: (1) The bulk drug
substance appears on a list established by the Secretary of Health and
Human Services identifying bulk drug substances for which there is a
clinical need (the 503B Bulks List) or (2) the drug compounded from
such bulk drug substances appears on the drug shortage list in effect
under section 506E of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 356e) at the time of
compounding, distribution, and dispensing.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Section 503B(a)(2)(A) of the FD&C Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 503B of the FD&C Act directs FDA to establish the 503B
Bulks List by: (1) Publishing a notice in the Federal Register
proposing bulk drug substances to be included on the list, including
the rationale for such proposal; (2) providing a period of not less
than 60
[[Page 15675]]
calendar days for comment on the notice; and (3) publishing a notice in
the Federal Register designating bulk drug substances for inclusion on
the list.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Section 503B(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) to (III) of the FD&C Act.
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FDA has published a series of Federal Register notices addressing
bulk drug substances nominated for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List.\7\
This notice identifies one bulk drug substance that FDA has considered
and proposes to include on the 503B Bulks List and four bulk drug
substances that FDA has considered and proposes not to include on the
503B Bulks List.
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\7\ See Federal Register of August 28, 2018 (83 FR 43877), March
4, 2019 (84 FR 7383), September 3, 2019 (84 FR 46014), and July 31,
2020 (85 FR 46126). The comment period for the July 2020 notice was
reopened for 30 days on January 8, 2021 (86 FR 1515), to allow
interested parties an additional opportunity to comment. FDA has not
yet reached a final determination on whether the substances
evaluated in the September 2019 or July 2020 notice will be added to
the 503B Bulks List. In addition, bumetanide, which was considered
in the August 2018 notice remains under consideration by the Agency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For purposes of section 503B of the FD&C Act, bulk drug substance
means an active pharmaceutical ingredient as defined in 21 CFR
207.1.\8\ Active pharmaceutical ingredient means any substance that is
intended for incorporation into a finished drug product and is intended
to furnish pharmacological activity or other direct effect in the
diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or to
affect the structure or any function of the body, but the term does not
include intermediates used in the synthesis of the
substance.9 10
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\8\ 21 CFR 207.3.
\9\ Section 503B(a)(2) of the FD&C Act and 21 CFR 207.1.
\10\ Inactive ingredients are not subject to section 503B(a)(2)
of the FD&C Act and will not be included in the 503B Bulks List
because they are not included within the definition of a bulk drug
substance. Pursuant to section 503B(a)(3) of the FD&C Act, inactive
ingredients used in compounding must comply with the standards of an
applicable U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP) or National Formulary monograph,
if a monograph exists.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information about drug compounding and the background
for the 503B Bulks List, see 83 FR 43877 (August 28, 2018).
II. Methodology for Developing the 503B Bulks List
A. Process for Developing the List
FDA requested nominations for specific bulk drug substances for the
Agency to consider for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List in the Federal
Register of December 4, 2013 (78 FR 72838). FDA reopened the nomination
process in the Federal Register of July 2, 2014 (79 FR 37747), and
provided more detailed information on what FDA needs to evaluate
nominations for the list. On October 27, 2015 (80 FR 65770), the Agency
opened a new docket, FDA-2015-N-3469, to provide an opportunity for
interested persons to submit new nominations of bulk drug substances or
to renominate substances with sufficient information.
As FDA evaluates bulk drug substances, it intends to publish
notices for public comment in the Federal Register that describe the
FDA's proposed position on each substance along with the rationale for
that position.\11\ After considering any comments on FDA's proposals
regarding whether to include nominated substances on the 503B Bulks
List, FDA intends to consider whether input from the Pharmacy
Compounding Advisory Committee (PCAC) on the nominations would be
helpful to the Agency in making its determination, and if so, it will
seek PCAC input.\12\ Depending on its review of the docket comments and
other relevant information before the Agency, FDA may finalize its
proposed determination without change, or it may finalize a
modification to its proposal to reflect new evidence or analysis
regarding clinical need. FDA will then publish in the Federal Register
a list identifying the bulk drug substances for which it has determined
there is a clinical need and FDA's rationale in making that final
determination. FDA will also publish in the Federal Register a list of
those substances it considered but found that there is no clinical need
to use in compounding and FDA's rationale in making this decision.
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\11\ This is consistent with procedure set forth in section
503B(a)(2)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act. Although the statute only directs
FDA to issue a Federal Register notice and seek public comment when
it proposes to include bulk drug substances on the 503B Bulks List,
we intend to seek comment when the Agency has evaluated a nominated
substance and proposes either to include or not to include the
substance on the list.
\12\ Section 503B of the FD&C Act does not require FDA to
consult the PCAC before developing a 503B Bulks List.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FDA intends to maintain a list of all bulk drug substances it has
evaluated on its website, and separately identify bulk drug substances
it has placed on the 503B Bulks List and those it has decided not to
place on the 503B Bulks List. This list is available at https://www.fda.gov/media/120692/download. FDA will only place a bulk drug
substance on the 503B Bulks List where it has determined there is a
clinical need for outsourcing facilities to compound drug products
using the bulk drug substance. If a clinical need to compound drug
products using the bulk drug substance has not been demonstrated, based
on the information submitted by the nominator and any other information
considered by the Agency, FDA will not place a bulk drug substance on
the 503B Bulks List.
FDA is evaluating bulk drug substances nominated for the 503B Bulks
List on a rolling basis. FDA intends to evaluate and publish in the
Federal Register its proposed and final determinations in groups of
bulk drug substances until all nominated substances that were
sufficiently supported have been evaluated and either placed on the
503B Bulks List or identified as bulk drug substances that were
considered but determined not to be appropriate for inclusion on the
503B Bulks List (Ref. 1).\13\
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\13\ On January 13, 2017, FDA announced the availability of a
revised final guidance for industry that provides additional
information regarding FDA's policies for bulk drug substances
nominated for the 503B Bulks List pending our review of nominated
substances under the ``clinical need'' standard entitled Interim
Policy on Compounding Using Bulk Drug Substances Under Section 503B
of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act'' (``Interim Policy'');
available at https://www.fda.gov/media/94402/download.
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B. Analysis of Substances Nominated for the List
As noted above, the 503B Bulks List will include bulk drug
substances for which there is a clinical need. The Agency is currently
evaluating bulk drug substances that were nominated for inclusion on
the 503B Bulks List, proceeding case by case, under the clinical need
standard provided by the statute (Ref. 2).\14\ In applying this
standard to develop the proposals in this notice, FDA is interpreting
the phrase ``bulk drug substances for which there is a clinical need''
to mean that the 503B Bulks List may include a bulk drug substance if:
(1) There is a clinical need for an outsourcing facility to compound
the drug product and (2) the drug product must be compounded using the
bulk drug substance. FDA is not interpreting supply issues, such as
backorders, to be within the meaning of ``clinical need'' for
compounding with a bulk drug substance. Section 503B separately
provides for compounding from bulk drug substances under the exemptions
from the FD&C Act
[[Page 15676]]
discussed above if the drug product compounded from the bulk drug
substance is on the FDA drug shortage list at the time of compounding,
distribution, and dispensing. Additionally, we are not considering cost
of the compounded drug product as compared with an FDA-approved drug
product to be within the meaning of ``clinical need.''
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\14\ On March 4, 2019, FDA announced the availability of a final
guidance entitled ``Evaluation of Bulk Drug Substances Nominated for
Use in Compounding Under Section 503B of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act'' (84 FR 7390); available at https://www.fda.gov/media/121315/download. This guidance describes FDA policies for developing
the 503B Bulks List and the Agency's interpretation of the phrase
``bulk drug substances for which there is a clinical need'' as it is
used in section 503B of the FD&C Act. The analysis under the
statutory clinical need'' standard described in this notice is
consistent with the approach described in FDA's guidance.
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Some of the bulk drug substances that we are addressing in this
notice are components of FDA-approved drug products,\15\ and we
therefore began our evaluation of these bulk drug substances by asking
one or both of the following questions:
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\15\ Specifically, bromfenac sodium, mitomycin-C, nepafenac, and
hydroxychloroquine sulfate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Is there a basis to conclude, for each FDA-approved product
that includes the nominated bulk drug substance, that: (a) An attribute
of the FDA-approved drug product makes it medically unsuitable to treat
certain patients for a condition that FDA has identified for evaluation
and (b) the drug product proposed to be compounded is intended to
address that attribute?
(2) Is there a basis to conclude that the drug product proposed to
be compounded must be produced from a bulk drug substance rather than
from an FDA-approved drug product?
The reason for question 1 is that unless an attribute of the FDA-
approved drug is medically unsuitable for certain patients, and a drug
product compounded using a bulk drug substance that is a component of
the approved drug is intended to address that attribute, there is no
clinical need to compound a drug product using that bulk drug
substance. Rather, such compounding would unnecessarily expose patients
to the risks associated with drug products that do not meet the
standards applicable to FDA-approved drug products for safety,
effectiveness, quality, and labeling and would undermine the drug
approval process. The reason for question 2 is that to place a bulk
drug substance on the 503B Bulks List, FDA must determine that there is
a clinical need for outsourcing facilities to compound a drug product
using the bulk drug substance rather than starting with an FDA-approved
drug product.
If the answer to both of these questions is ``yes,'' there may be a
clinical need for outsourcing facilities to compound using the bulk
drug substance, and we would evaluate the substance further, applying
the factors described below. If the answer to either of these questions
is ``no,'' we generally would not include the bulk drug substance on
the 503B Bulks List, because there would not be a basis to conclude
that there may be a clinical need to compound drug products using the
bulk drug substance instead of administering or compounding starting
with an approved drug product. FDA did not answer ``yes'' to both of
the threshold questions for the four bulk drug substances that are
components of approved drug products that we are addressing in this
notice. Accordingly, as explained further below, we did not proceed
further in our evaluation of these substances and are proposing not to
include them on the 503B Bulks List.
With respect to one bulk drug substance we are addressing in this
notice that is not a component of an FDA-approved drug product,
quinacrine, we are conducting a balancing test with four factors,
considering each factor in the context of the others and balancing them
to determine whether the statutory ``clinical need'' standard has been
met. The balancing test includes the following factors:
The physical and chemical characterization of the
substance;
any safety issues raised by the use of the substance in
compounding;
the available evidence of effectiveness or lack of
effectiveness of a drug product compounded with the substance, if any
such evidence exists; and
current and historical use of the substance in compounded
drug products, including information about the medical condition(s)
that the substance has been used to treat and any references in peer-
reviewed medical literature.
The discussion below reflects FDA's consideration of these four
factors where they are applicable and describes how they were applied
to develop FDA's proposal to include one bulk drug substance on the
503B Bulks List.
C. Inclusion of a Bulk Drug Substance on the 503B Bulks List
In preparing its proposal to include a substance on the 503B Bulks
List, FDA considered whether the clinical need for the bulk drug
substance in the compounded drug product is limited, by, for example,
route of administration or dosage form. As appropriate, and as
explained further below, the Agency tailored its proposed entry on the
503B Bulks List to reflect its findings related to clinical need for
the bulk substance proposed for inclusion on the list. Specifically,
the proposed entry would authorize use of this bulk drug substance to
compound drug products for oral use only.\16\
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\16\ FDA requested comments on the proposal to limit listings in
this manner in notice of July 31, 2020 (85 FR 46126). The comment
period for the July 2020 notice was reopened for 30 days on January
8, 2021 (86 FR 1515), to allow interested parties an additional
opportunity to comment. The Agency has not finished evaluating the
comments received on this proposal, and we intend to take all
comments on this issue into consideration in developing our final
approach to listing substances on the 503B Bulks List.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Substance Considered and Proposed for Inclusion on the 503B Bulks
List
Because the substance in this section is not a component of an FDA-
approved drug product, we applied the balancing test described above.
The bulk drug substance that has been evaluated and that FDA is
proposing to place on the 503B Bulks List is quinacrine HCl. The
reasons for FDA's proposal is included below (Ref. 3).\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ In addition to FDA's quinacrine nomination for the 503B
Bulks List, the Agency considered data and information from its
earlier evaluation regarding the use of this bulk drug substance for
the list of bulk drug substances that can be used in compounding
under section 503A of the FD&C Act (the 503A Evaluation). See
Appendices A-D in ``FDA Memo to File, Clinical Need for Quinacrine
Hydrochloride in Compounding Under Section 503B of the FD&C Act''
(Ref. 3). FDA also considered a report provided by the University of
Maryland Center of Excellence in Regulatory Science and Innovation
and conducted a search for relevant scientific literature and safety
information, focusing on materials published or submitted to FDA
since the 503A Evaluations (see Appendix H in Ref. 3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quinacrine
FDA nominated quinacrine as a bulk drug substance for the 503B
Bulks List to compound drug products in oral dosage forms at strengths
of 25-100 milligram (mg) for the treatment of cutaneous lupus
erythematosus (CLE).\18\ The nominated bulk drug substance is not a
component of an FDA-approved drug product. We evaluated quinacrine for
potential inclusion on the 503B Bulks List under the clinical need
standard in section 503B of the FD&C Act, considering data and
information regarding the physical and chemical characterization of
quinacrine, safety issues raised by use of this substance in
compounding, available evidence of effectiveness or lack of
effectiveness, and historical and current use in compounding (Ref. 3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See Appendix G in Ref. 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quinacrine is well-characterized physically and chemically.
Although there are concerns about its safety profile in certain patient
populations, we believe these risks are well known within the
rheumatology and dermatology specialties that most often treat CLE, and
the known risks could be
[[Page 15677]]
controlled with appropriate dosing and monitoring. Quinacrine has been
used for several decades to treat systemic lupus erythematosus and CLE,
and there is a significant body of experience, documented in the
scientific literature, that quinacrine may be effective in the
treatment of patients with cutaneous lupus, and patients who are not
fully clinically responsive to, or are intolerant of, treatment with
FDA approved products alone. These patients may respond to the addition
of quinacrine to their existing therapy, or to the use of quinacrine
alone. On balance, the physical and chemical characterization, safety,
effectiveness, and historical and current use of quinacrine weigh in
favor of including this substance on the 503B Bulks List. Accordingly,
we propose adding quinacrine to the 503B Bulks List for oral use only.
We have not identified sufficient evidence to support its use in other
routes of administration.
Due to the safety risks referred to above, if quinacrine is placed
on the 503B Bulks List, FDA intends to make safety information about
the use of quinacrine available to prescribers, pharmacists,
outsourcing facilities, and the public through information on FDA's
website, in a safety guide, or through other mechanisms, as
appropriate.
IV. Substances Evaluated and Not Proposed for Inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List
Because the substances in this section are components of FDA-
approved drug products, we considered one or both of the following
questions: (1) Is there is a basis to conclude that an attribute of
each FDA-approved drug product containing the bulk drug substance makes
each one medically unsuitable to treat certain patients for a condition
that FDA has identified for evaluation, and the drug product proposed
to be compounded is intended to address that attribute and (2) is there
a basis to conclude that the drug product proposed to be compounded
must be compounded using a bulk drug substance.
The four bulk drug substances that have been evaluated and that FDA
is proposing not to place on the list are as follows: Bromfenac sodium,
mitomycin-C, nepafenac, and hydroxychloroquine sulfate. The reasons for
FDA's proposals are included below.
A. Bromfenac Sodium
Bromfenac sodium was nominated in combination with moxifloxacin
hydrochloride and prednisolone for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List to
compound drug products for postoperative inflammation and pain
following cataract surgery.\19\ The proposed route of administration is
ophthalmic, the proposed dosage forms are an ophthalmic injection \20\
and a topical ophthalmic solution,\21\ and the proposed compounded
product is prednisolone-moxifloxacin-bromfenac (1-0>.5/0.4 percent).
The nominated bulk drug substance, bromfenac sodium, is a component of
FDA-approved drug products (e.g., ANDA 203395, NDA 206911, and NDA
203168). FDA has approved bromfenac sodium products as 0.07 percent,
0.075 percent, and 0.09 percent EQ \22\ acid ophthalmic solution.\23\
\24\ The nomination proposes to combine bromfenac sodium with two other
bulk drug substances, moxifloxacin hydrochloride and prednisolone, both
of which are components of FDA-approved products. Prednisolone acetate
\25\ is a component of FDA-approved drug products (NDA 017469 and NDA
017011) \26\ \27\ and is available in a 1 milliliter (mL), 5 mL, 10 mL,
and 15 mL suspension containing prednisolone acetate 1.0 percent.
Moxifloxacin hydrochloride is a component of FDA-approved drug products
(e.g., NDA 021598 and NDA 022428) \28\ \29\ and is available as an EQ
0.5 percent base ophthalmic solution.
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\19\ See Docket No. FDA-2015-N-3469, document no. FDA-2015-N-
3469-0004. We assume ``bromfenac'' as used in the nomination refers
to bromfenac sodium. The nominator did not nominate moxifloxacin
hydrochloride or prednisolone separately.
\20\ We assume ``injection'' as used in the nomination refers to
ophthalmic injection.
\21\ The nominator did not specify whether they propose to make
an ophthalmic solution or an ophthalmic suspension. We only
considered ophthalmic solutions for this review because ``[a]ll drug
products containing bromfenac sodium (except ophthalmic solutions)''
is on the list of ``Drug products withdrawn or removed from the
market for reasons of safety or effectiveness,'' codified at 21 CFR
216.24 and available at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/CFRSearch.cfm?fr=216.24, and should not be used in
compounding.
\22\ EQ refers to the equivalent strength of the active moiety.
See https://www.fda.gov/drugs/development-approval-process-drugs/orange-book-preface.
\23\ See, e.g., ANDA 203395 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://fdalabel.fda.gov/fdalabel-r/services/spl/set-ids/e853723e-8419-4444-89e9-ee3f571b0974/spl-doc.
\24\ See, e.g., NDA 206911 labeling available as the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/3ae02266-5a0f-4bf2-bc68-ae1c7d2f5239/3ae02266-5a0f-4bf2-bc68-ae1c7d2f5239.xml.
\25\ The nomination did not specify which prednisolone active
pharmaceutical ingredient (API) is proposed to be included in their
combination. There are several approved ophthalmic formulations of
prednisolone acetate or prednisolone sodium phosphate in combination
with anti-infectives. The only single ingredient 1% suspension
approved for ophthalmic use is prednisolone acetate. It is approved
under two separate NDAs, 017469 as OMNIPRED and 017011 as Pred-
Forte[supreg]. OMNIPRED is available as 5 mL and 10 mL and Pred-
Forte[supreg] is available in 1 mL, 5 mL, 10 mL, and 15 mL
suspension containing prednisolone acetate 1.0%.
\26\ See, e.g., NDA 017011 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/3fbf3327-59a2-4e6e-9e43-4f63ea23d54e/3fbf3327-59a2-4e6e-9e43-4f63ea23d54e.xml.
\27\ See, e.g., NDA017469 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/00c60dec-b63c-43ac-9f87-88aeff333136/00c60dec-b63c-43ac-9f87-88aeff333136.xml.
\28\ See, e.g., NDA 021598 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/f9febc6f-db6d-44e8-9730-f7c1a2354d71/f9febc6f-db6d-44e8-9730-f7c1a2354d71.xml.
\29\ See, e.g., NDA 022428 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/41ea7ffb-02e7-44bd-8ec6-6d4c8e116b99/41ea7ffb-02e7-44bd-8ec6-6d4c8e116b99.xml.
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1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug Product(s)
The nomination does not identify a medical unsuitability in any of
the FDA-approved products that contain bromfenac, prednisolone, or
moxifloxacin hydrochloride when these products are administered
separately. Instead, it states that the single active-ingredient
formulation of these products may make them unsuitable for co-
administration after ocular surgeries. Specifically, the nomination
states that ``Compounded formulations may alleviate the need for
multiple postoperative drops. Topical compounded formulations also may
improve patient compliance and alleviate patient confusion because they
typically require use of fewer drops.''
However, the labeling for the FDA-approved bromfenac sodium
products (e.g., ANDA 203395) specifically warns against the use of
bromfenac sodium with topical corticosteroids, which include
prednisolone. This is because the use of bromfenac sodium with topical
corticosteroids may increase the potential for healing problems.\30\
The nomination does not address this warning or provide support for the
co-administration of these drug products. We decline to find that the
approved drugs are medically unsuitable for some patients because they
may be difficult to administer to patients under circumstances that are
specifically
[[Page 15678]]
warned against in the approved labeling.
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\30\ According to the ``Warnings and Precautions'' section of
the FDA-approved labeling for ANDA 203395, ``All topical
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may slow or delay
healing. Topical corticosteroids are also known to slow or delay
healing. Concomitant use of topical NSAIDs and topical steroids may
increase the potential for healing problems.'' See https://fdalabel.fda.gov/fdalabel-r/services/spl/set-ids/e853723e-8419-4444-89e9-ee3f571b0974/spl-doc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because co-administration of these products is the subject of a
labeled warning, and therefore an inappropriate basis for a finding of
clinical need, we do not evaluate the nomination's claims further.
However, to help explain our thinking about this nomination and inform
public comment, we address the nomination's statement that there is a
clinical need to compound a drug containing multiple active ingredients
because it may improve patient compliance relative to prescribing FDA-
approved drugs that contain a single active ingredient. The nomination
does not state that the approved drugs would be medically unsuitable
for some patients for the conditions identified in the nomination, and
it does not provide data or evidence to support that proposition.
Reducing the number of drugs administered for the purpose of
convenience is not ``clinical need''; medical unsuitability of the
approved drugs is required. While clinical need does not have to be
fully established in FDA's analysis of questions 1 and 2, there must be
a basis to conclude that such a need may exist before FDA will proceed
to the more searching analysis conducted under the balancing test. No
such basis is present here.\31\
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\31\ In general, we do not expect to find clinical need for a
bulk drug substance to compound drug products containing two or more
bulk drug substances unless: (1) Combining the substances is
intended to address the medical unsuitability of the FDA-approved
drug products for certain patients and (2) the combination is likely
to address a clinical need that could not be addressed by delivering
each component of the drug product alone. Not including drug
products with two or more active ingredients on the 503B Bulks List
unless these conditions are met helps to ensure that patients are
not exposed to a drug product containing an unnecessary active
ingredient, helps avoid risks of unwanted interactions or
complications in formulation, and protects the integrity of the drug
approval process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, with respect to the bromfenac sodium drug products
proposed to be compounded by the nominator, FDA finds no basis to
conclude that there is an attribute of each of the FDA approved drug
products that makes each one medically unsuitable to treat certain
patients who undergo cataract surgery. There is therefore no attribute
of the approved drug products that the proposed compounded drug
products are intended to address.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because we have not identified a population for whom the approved
products are medically unsuitable for the proposed uses under question
1, we are not considering whether there is a basis to conclude that the
drug products proposed to be compounded must be produced from a bulk
drug substance rather than from an FDA-approved drug product under
question 2.
3. Additional Comments
For the reasons stated above, we are not evaluating this nomination
under the balancing test. However, if this nomination for bromfenac
sodium was to proceed to the balancing test, there would be some
significant safety and effectiveness concerns to evaluate, which are
not addressed in the nomination.
Each of the three ingredients proposed to be used in combination by
the nomination is indicated for different medical conditions and has a
different FDA-approved dosing regimen: Once daily for bromfenac sodium
0.09 percent,\32\ four times daily for prednisolone acetate \33\ and
three times daily for moxifloxacin hydrochloride.\34\ The duration of
treatment for each individual drug also differs.
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\32\ Bromfenac sodium EQ 0.09% acid solution (e.g., ANDA 203395)
should be applied to the affected eye once daily beginning 1 day
prior to cataract surgery, continued on the day of surgery, and
through the first 14 days of the postoperative period.
\33\ Two drops topically in the eye(s) four times daily (e.g.,
NDA 017469).
\34\ Instill one drop in the affected eye 3 times a day for 7
days (e.g., NDA 021598).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The nomination also describes compounding drug products that
include bromfenac sodium in a concentration (EQ 0.4 percent acid) \35\
that is more than four times higher than the FDA-approved product (the
approved product is available at concentrations of EQ 0.07 percent
acid, EQ 0.075 percent acid, and EQ 0.09 percent acid). The nomination
does not provide any data or information supporting the need for a
higher concentration than the approved drug.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ The nomination states ``0.4%.'' We assume the nominator
intended a concentration of EQ 0.4% acid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most of the bulk drug substance nominations FDA has evaluated to
date have only proposed to compound drug products containing a single
active ingredient. This nomination proposed to compound drug products
containing more than one active ingredient. If FDA finalizes its
proposal not to include bromfenac sodium on the 503B Bulks List, we
intend to remove the substance from Category 1 for purposes of the
Interim Policy, which would mean that ophthalmic solutions compounded
using the bulk drug substance bromfenac sodium, including the proposed
compounded products addressed in this notice, would fall outside the
enforcement discretion described in the Interim Policy. We note that
FDA's evaluation of bromfenac sodium for inclusion on the 503B Bulks
List will not impact FDA's evaluation of any other bulk drug substances
for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List, including prednisolone and
moxifloxacin hydrochloride, because each bulk drug substance nominated
for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List undergoes its own evaluation. We
previously proposed not to include moxifloxacin hydrochloride on the
503B Bulks List (85 FR 46126), and we are currently reviewing comments
on that nomination. Nominations for prednisolone, if they are not
withdrawn, remain the subject of future evaluations. Finally, if FDA
determines there is a clinical need for outsourcing facilities to use
bulk drug substances to compound the proposed drug products, we would
include each substance or combination of substances, as appropriate, on
the 503B Bulks List at the time that final determination is made.
B. Mitomycin-C
Mitomycin-C was nominated for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List to
compound drug products that treat stomach, pancreas, anal
(nonmetastatic), bladder, cervical (recurrent or metastatic),
esophageal, gastric, and non-small cell lung cancer.\36\ The proposed
route of administration is injection and the proposed concentration is
20-40 mg. We evaluated the proposed products for both the intravenous
and intravesical routes of administration because the nomination
proposed that there is a need for a compounded mitomycin-C drug product
for injection and we understand that mitomycin-C is used for both
intravesical and intravenous administration in certain oncological
conditions. The nominated bulk drug substance is a component of FDA-
approved drug products (e.g., ANDA 064144, NDA 022572, and NDA
211728).\37\ FDA-approved mitomycin-C
[[Page 15679]]
(e.g., ANDA 064114) is available as a 5, 20, and 40 mg/mL vial for
intravenous administration.\38\ Mitomycin is also approved as a 0.2 mg
vial, which when reconstituted with Sterile Water for Injection,
provides a solution for application in glaucoma filtration surgery for
use as an adjunct to ab externo glaucoma surgery (e.g., NDA 022572).
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\36\ See Docket No.FDA-2013-N-1524, document no. FDA-2013-N-
1524-2219.
\37\ Jelmyto, NDA 211728 was approved on April 15, 2020, as a 40
mg/vial powder for pyelocaliceal administration for the treatment of
adult patients with low-grade Upper Tract Urothelial Cancer (LG-
UTUC). Jelmyto has not been considered in this memorandum because of
the complex nature of the approved product and the fact that there
is a more appropriate comparator approved drug product (mitomycin as
a 5, 20, and 40 mg vial for solution for intravenous
administration). While the nominated dosage form is unclear
(``injection''), we assume that the nominator intended to nominate a
solution or a powder for solution for intravesical administration
(not, as Jelmyto is, a gel for pyelocaliceal administration).
\38\ See, e.g., ANDA 064144 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/55ab68d0-c46a-2f41-e054-00144ff88e88/55ab68d0-c46a-2f41-e054-00144ff88e88.xml. When reconstituted with Sterile Water for
Injection, ANDA 064144, and other ANDAs like it, provide a solution
for intravenous administration for therapy of disseminated
adenocarcinoma of the stomach or pancreas in proven combinations
with other approved chemotherapeutic agents and as palliative
treatment when other modalities have failed.
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1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug Product(s)
Regarding the proposed use to treat bladder cancer, the nomination
does not explain why an attribute of each of the FDA-approved 5, 20,
and 40 mg vials of lyophilized powder for reconstituting into solution
is medically unsuitable for the proposed use. For example, if there are
patients for whom products for intravenous administration would be
medically unsuitable, the nomination does not provide support or
explain why the FDA-approved products, or products prepared using the
FDA-approved products could not be used for intravesical
administration.\39\ The nomination states that it may be necessary to
compound a mitomycin-C drug product to attain a ``higher, more
efficacious dose,'' but the nomination does not identify any specific
higher concentrations that the nominator proposes to compound. The
approved product is available as a lyophilized powder, which according
to the approved labeling, is reconstituted to a final concentration of
0.5 mg/mL or below.\40\ While the nomination includes two articles
which indicate that there could be a need for a product with a
concentration above 0.5 mg/mL,\41\ the nomination does not identify an
attribute of the FDA-approved products that makes them medically
unsuitable to treat certain patients and that the proposed compounded
drug products are intended to address. Further, the nomination proposes
to ``include excipients to prevent urine acidification,'' but the
nomination does not identify which excipients are proposed for the
compounded product, nor does the nomination provide any data or
information supporting how the proposed compounded drug products will
address that concern.\42\
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\39\ In noting this issue, FDA is not suggesting or implying
that the approved drug products, or products prepared from them, are
approved for the use proposed by the nomination. Mitomycin-C 5, 20,
or 40 mg vials of lyophilized powders for solution (for
reconstitution) have not been shown to be safe and effective for
intravesical administration to treat any condition or disease.
\40\ The approved product (e.g., ANDA 064144) is available as a
5, 20, and 40 mg vial of lyophilized powder, which according to the
approved labeling, is reconstituted in 10 mL, 40 mL or 80 mL Sterile
Water for Injection respectively for intravenous administration.
\41\ For example, the nomination cites two articles which used
mitomycin administered intravesically for bladder cancer (Refs. 4
and 5). Colombo et al, 2012 administered mitomycin 40 mg in 40 mL
saline (1 mg/mL) intravesically to patients and Au et al, 2001
administered mitomycin 40 mg in 20 mL of sterile water (2 mg/mL) or
20 mg in 20 mL of sterile water (1 mg/mL) intravesically to patients
(Ref. 4).
\42\ The nomination included one article that states, ``[i]n the
case of mitomycin C, instability of the drug in acidic urine is an
additional problem.'' However, the article does not identify
excipients that could be added to intravesically administered
mitomycin drug products to address this particular attribute of the
approved product. Nor does the article provide data or information
to support the need for a compounded drug product containing such
excipients. Rather, it discusses administering oral doses of sodium
bicarbonate before treatment with an intravesical mitomycin drug
product to reduce the acidity of the patient's urine (Ref. 5).
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Regarding the proposed use to treat stomach, pancreas, anal
(nonmetastic), cervical (recurrent or metastic), esophageal, gastric,
and non-small cell lung cancer, the nomination does not identify an
attribute for each FDA-approved product that makes it medically
unsuitable to treat certain patients for these conditions and that the
proposed compounded products are intended to address.
Accordingly, with respect to the mitomycin products proposed to be
compounded, FDA finds no basis to conclude that an attribute of the
FDA-approved products makes them medically unsuitable to treat certain
patients for a condition that FDA has identified for evaluation and
that the proposed compounded drug products are intended to address.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because the nomination does not identify a population for whom the
FDA-approved products are medically unsuitable for the proposed uses,
FDA did not consider whether there is a basis to conclude that the drug
products proposed to be compounded must be produced from a bulk drug
substance rather than from an FDA-approved drug product under question
2.
C. Nepafenac
Nepafenac was nominated in combination with other bulk drug
substances, including prednisolone and gatifloxacin,\43\ for inclusion
on the 503B Bulks List to compound drug products for ``post cataract
surgery ocular complications related to pain, inflammation or bacterial
conjunctivitis.'' \44\ The proposed route of administration is topical
ophthalmic, the proposed dosage forms are a preserved (multidose) and a
preservative-free (unit dose) topical ophthalmic suspension, and the
proposed compounded products are: (1) ``Nepafenac 0.1%-Prednisolone
1%;'' and (2) ``Nepafenac 0.1%-Prednisolone 1%-Gatifloxacin 0.5%.'' The
nominated bulk drug substance, nepafenac, is a component of FDA-
approved drug products (e.g., NDA 021862 and NDA 203491).\45\ \46\ FDA
has approved nepafenac as 1.7 mL dropper bottle, and a 4 mL dropper
bottle filled with 3 mL sterile ophthalmic suspension containing 0.1
percent (1 mg/mL) nepafenac and as a 4 mL bottle filled with 1.7 mL and
3 mL sterile ophthalmic suspension containing 0.3 percent (3 mg/mL)
nepafenac for topical administration.\47\ The nomination proposes to
combine nepafenac with two other bulk drug substances, prednisolone and
gatifloxacin, both of which are components of FDA-approved products.
Prednisolone acetate \48\ is a component of FDA-approved drug products
(NDA 017469 and NDA 017011) and is available in a 1 mL, 5 mL, 10 mL,
and 15 mL suspension containing prednisolone acetate 1.0 percent.\49\
\50\ Gatifloxacin is a
[[Page 15680]]
component of FDA-approved drug products (e.g., NDA 022548),\51\ and is
available in a 1 mL or 2.5 mL solution containing gatifloxacin .5
percent.\52\
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\43\ The nominator did not nominate prednisolone or gatifloxacin
separately.
\44\ See Docket No. FDA-2015-N-3469, document no. FDA-2015-N-
3469-0022.
\45\ See, e.g., NDA 021862 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2020/021862s017lbl.pdf.
\46\ See, e.g., NDA 203491 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2012/203491s001lbl.pdf.
\47\ See fns. 45 and 46, above.
\48\ The nominator did not specify which prednisolone API is
proposed to be included in their combinations. There are several
approved ophthalmic formulations of prednisolone acetate or
prednisolone sodium phosphate in combination with anti-infectives.
The only single ingredient 1% suspension approved for ophthalmic use
is prednisolone acetate.
\49\ See, e.g., NDA 017469 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2007/017469s040lbl.pdf.
\50\ See, e.g., NDA 017011 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2018/017011s050lbl.pdf.
\51\ See, e.g., NDA 022548 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2016/022548s002lbl.pdf.
\52\ See fn. 51, above.
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1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug Product(s)
The nomination does not identify a medical unsuitability in any of
the FDA-approved products that contain nepafenac, prednisolone, or
gatifloxacin when these products are administered separately. Instead,
it states that the single active-ingredient formulation of these
products may make them unsuitable for co-administration after ocular
surgeries. Specifically, the nomination states that ``[a]s a solution,
fixed-dosage ophthalmic drug combinations of different pharmacological
classes can be efficacious, reduce the side effects of each component
and improve patient compliance.'' However, the labeling for the FDA-
approved nepafenac products (e.g., NDA 021862 and NDA 203491)
specifically warns against the use of nepafenac with topical
corticosteroids, which include prednisolone. This is because the use of
nepafenac with topical corticosteroids may increase the potential for
healing problems. The nomination does not address this warning or
provide support for the co-administration of these drug products. We
decline to find that the approved drugs are medically unsuitable for
some patients because they may be difficult to administer to patients
under circumstances that are specifically warned against in the
approved labeling.
Because co-administration of these products is the subject of a
labeled warning, and therefore an inappropriate basis for a finding of
clinical need, we do not evaluate the nomination's claims further.
However, to help explain our thinking about this nomination and inform
public comment, we address the nomination's statement that there is a
clinical need to compound a drug containing multiple active ingredients
because it may improve patient compliance relative to prescribing FDA-
approved drugs that contain a single active ingredient. The nomination
does not state that the approved drugs would be medically unsuitable
for some patients for the conditions identified in the nomination, and
it does not provide data or evidence to support that proposition.
Reducing the number of drugs administered for the purpose of
convenience is not ``clinical need''; medical unsuitability of the
approved drugs is required. While clinical need does not have to be
fully established in FDA's analysis of questions 1 and 2, there must be
a basis to conclude that such a need may exist before FDA will proceed
to the more searching analysis conducted under the balancing test. No
such basis is present here.\53\
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\53\ See supra note 31.
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Accordingly, with respect to the nepafenac drug products proposed
to be compounded by the nominator, FDA finds no basis to conclude that
there is an attribute of each of the approved drug products that makes
each one medically unsuitable to treat certain patients who undergo
cataract surgery. There is therefore no attribute of the approved drug
products that the proposed compounded drug products are intended to
address.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because the nominator has not identified a population for whom the
approved products are medically unsuitable for the proposed uses under
question 1, we are not considering whether there is a basis to conclude
that the drug product proposed to be compounded must be produced from a
bulk drug substance rather than from an FDA-approved drug product under
question 2.
3. Additional Comments
Finally, if this nomination for nepafenac were to proceed to the
balancing test, there would be some significant safety and
effectiveness concerns to evaluate, which are not addressed in the
nomination. Each of the three proposed ingredients intended to be
compounded into a single drug product is indicated for different
medical conditions and has different FDA-approved dosing regimens: One-
time daily for nepafenac,\54\ four times daily for prednisolone,\55\
and two to eight times daily for gatifloxacin.\56\ The duration of
treatment for each individual drug also differs, as do the approved
indications.
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\54\ One drop of NDA 021862 0.1% should be applied to the
affected eye three times daily beginning 1 day prior to cataract
surgery, continued on the day of surgery and through the first 2
weeks of the postoperative period. One drop of NDA 203491 0.3%
should be applied to the affected eye one time daily beginning 1 day
prior to cataract surgery, continued on the day of surgery and
through the first 2 weeks of the postoperative period. An additional
drop should be administered 30 to 120 minutes prior to surgery.
\55\ Two drops topically in the eye(s) four times daily.
\56\ Day 1: Instill one drop every two hours in the affected
eye(s) while awake, up to 8 times on Day 1. Days 2 through 7:
instill one drop two to four times daily in the affected eye(s)
while awake on Days 2 through 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most of the bulk drug substance nominations FDA has evaluated to
date have only proposed to compound drug products containing a single
active ingredient. This nomination proposed to compound drug products
containing more than one active ingredient. If FDA finalizes its
proposal not to include nepafenac on the 503B Bulks List, we intend to
remove the substance from Category 1 for purposes of the Interim
Policy, which would mean that ophthalmic solutions compounded using the
bulk drug substance nepafenac, including the proposed compounded
products addressed in this notice, would fall outside the enforcement
discretion described in the Interim Policy. We note that FDA's
evaluation of nepafenac for inclusion on the 503B Bulks List will not
impact FDA's evaluation of any other bulk drug substances for inclusion
on the 503B Bulks List, including prednisolone and gatifloxacin,
because each bulk drug substance nominated for inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List undergoes its own evaluation. Nominations for prednisolone,
if they are not withdrawn, remain the subject of future evaluations.
Gatifloxacin has not been nominated for inclusion on the 503B Bulks
List, and therefore has not been categorized under the Interim Policy;
its status under the Interim Policy will not be affected if this
proposal is finalized. Finally, if FDA determines there is a clinical
need for outsourcing facilities to use bulk drug substances to compound
the proposed drug products, we would include each substance or
combination of substances, as appropriate, on the 503B Bulks List at
the time that final determination is made.
D. Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate was nominated for inclusion on the 503B
Bulks List to compound drug products that treat rheumatoid arthritis
and juvenile arthritis (also known as juvenile idiopathic
arthritis).\57\ The proposed route of administration is oral, the
proposed dosage forms are a capsule or suspension, and the proposed
concentrations are 200-500 mg capsules and 100-200 mg/mL suspension.
The nominated bulk drug substance is a component of FDA-approved drug
products (e.g., NDA 009768, ANDA
[[Page 15681]]
040104, and ANDA 213342).\58\ \59\ \60\ FDA-approved hydroxychloroquine
sulfate is available as 200 mg (equivalent to 155 mg of
hydroxychloroquine base), film-coated tablets for oral
administration.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ See Docket No. FDA-2015-N-3469, document no. FDA-2015-N-
3469-0165.
\58\ See, e.g., NDA 009768 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2017/009768s037s045s047lbl.pdf.
\59\ See, e.g., ANDA 040104 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/a594d892-e496-38f5-e053-2a95a90a9da8/a594d892-e496-38f5-e053-2a95a90a9da8.xml.
\60\ See, e.g., ANDA 213342 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/f6b15217-3b65-4d0e-8546-5056d71d525e/f6b15217-3b65-4d0e-8546-5056d71d525e.xml.
\61\ See, e.g., NDA 009768 labeling available as of the date of
this notice at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2017/009768s037s045s047lbl.pdf.
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1. Suitability of FDA-Approved Drug Product(s)
There is a basis to conclude that an attribute of the approved
hydroxychloroquine sulfate tablets for oral administration makes them
medically unsuitable for the treatment of some patients with rheumatoid
arthritis and juvenile arthritis.\62\ The nomination suggests that the
approved oral tablets, a solid oral dosage form, are medically
unsuitable in pediatric patients who are unable to swallow tablets. We
agree that there may be certain patients for whom the approved oral
tablets are medically unsuitable and this would depend on a patient's
clinical presentation and age, among other considerations. As a general
matter, the drug product proposed to be compounded appears to be
intended to address the potential unsuitability of a solid oral dosage
form because the nominator proposes to compound a suspension of
hydroxychloroquine sulfate for oral administration.
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\62\ In noting this issue, we do not mean to suggest or imply
that the approved drug products, or products prepared from them, are
approved for all of the uses proposed by the nomination. For the
question 1 analysis we asked a limited, threshold question to
determine whether there might be a clinical need for a compounded
drug product, by asking what attributes of the approved drug the
proposed compounded drug would change, and why. Because this
nomination did not pass through question 2, we did not reach the
balancing test and therefore did not consider the four factors,
including the available evidence of effectiveness or lack of
effectiveness of a drug product compounded with hydroxychloroquine
sulfate. The safety and efficacy of chronic use of
hydroxychloroquine sulfate have not been established for juvenile
idiopathic arthritis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The nominator further states that ``pediatric dosing is not
standardized but weight-based, making getting the correct dose
difficult with tablets.'' We agree that an oral suspension could allow
for more flexible dosing when compared to the approved tablets when
following weight-based dosing recommendations, and that this also
supports the proposition that the approved product may be unsuitable
for certain patients.\63\
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\63\ We note that the nominator's proposed concentration of 100-
200 mg/mL would offer little benefit in the younger aged pediatric
population because a suspension at this strength would likely
require administration of small volumes (e.g., <=1 mL). We are aware
of several published pharmacy compounding formulations for
hydroxychloroquine sulfate 25 mg/mL suspensions (Refs. 6-8), which
may be more suitable for the younger pediatric population.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the proposed suspension, the nominator also proposes
to compound hydroxychloroquine sulfate 200-500 mg capsules for oral
administration. The nomination does not explain how the proposed
compounded capsule products are intended to address the medical
unsuitability of the approved product. Similar to tablets, capsules are
less flexible in dosing and would be difficult for patients to take if
they are unable to swallow tablets. In addition, the nomination does
not identify any data or information as to the need for compounded
products with a higher concentration than the approved product.
The nomination also claims that some patients are ``unable to
tolerate excipients'' in the approved product, but the nomination does
not identify which excipients they are referring to, nor do they
provide any data or information supporting how the proposed drug
products will address that particular attribute.
2. Whether the Drug Product Must Be Compounded From a Bulk Drug
Substance
Because there is a basis to conclude that an attribute of the
approved hydroxychloroquine sulfate tablets makes them medically
unsuitable for some patients, and the proposed compounded oral
suspension is intended to address that attribute, FDA next considers
whether there is a basis to conclude that the proposed oral suspension
must be made from a bulk drug substance rather than from an FDA-
approved product. The approved hydroxychloroquine sulfate drug products
are 200 mg immediate release tablets with film coating.\64\ Although
the approved products are film-coated, the coating is not intended to
change/control the release profile. FDA is not aware of issues with
using the FDA-approved product as the starting material when the
compounding process and equipment are appropriately selected. We also
note that there is a draft USP monograph for the compounded suspension
that uses an FDA-approved film-coated tablet as the starting material
(Ref. 8).\65\ As with all suspensions, the particle size of the powder
should be carefully controlled and the density of suspension vehicle
should be selected appropriately in order to make the oral suspension
uniform and stable, which can affect the dose administrated to the
patients.
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\64\ The tablet is not scored. The approved product labeling
states that the ``film-coated tablets cannot be divided, therefore
they should not be used to treat patients who weigh less than 31
kg.''
\65\ We note that the product labeling for hydroxychloroquine
sulfate film-coated tablets (e.g., NDA 009768, ANDA 213342) states,
``Do not crush or divide hydroxychloroquine sulfate film-coated
tablets.'' However, this does not change our view that the product
can be compounded starting with the approved drug product.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because we do not find a basis to conclude that a bulk drug
substance is needed to compound the proposed compounded
hydroxychloroquine sulfate oral suspension, rather than starting with
the FDA approved product, we do not find a need to include
hydroxychloroquine sulfate on the 503B Bulks List under question 2.
V. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we tentatively conclude that there is
a clinical need for outsourcing facilities to compound drug products
using the bulk drug substance quinacrine for oral use, and we therefore
propose to include it on the 503B Bulks List as described in this
notice.
At this time, we find no basis to conclude that there is a clinical
need for outsourcing facilities to compound drug products using the
bulk drug substances bromfenac sodium, mitomycin-C, nepafenac, and
hydroxychloroquine sulfate. We therefore propose not to include these
bulk drug substances on the 503B Bulks List.
VI. References
The following references marked with an asterisk (*) are on display
at the Dockets Management Staff (see ADDRESSES) and are available for
viewing by interested persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday; they are also available electronically at https://www.regulations.gov. References without asterisks are not on public
display at https://www.regulations.gov because they have copyright
restriction. Some may be available at the website address, if listed.
References without asterisks are available for viewing only at the
Dockets Management Staff. FDA
[[Page 15682]]
has verified the website addresses, as of the date this document
publishes in the Federal Register, but websites are subject to change
over time.
*1. FDA, Guidance for Industry, ``Interim Policy on Compounding
Using Bulk Drug Substances Under Section 503B of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act,'' January 2017 (available at https://www.fda.gov/media/94402/download).
*2. FDA, Guidance for Industry, ``Evaluation of Bulk Drug Substances
Nominated for Use in Compounding Under Section 503B of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act,'' March 2019 (available at https://www.fda.gov/media/121315/download).
*3. FDA Memorandum to File, ``Clinical Need for Quinacrine
Hydrochloride in Compounding Under Section 503B of the FD&C Act,''
January 2021.
4. Colombo, R., L. Rocchini, N. Suardi, F. Benigni, et al., 2012,
``Neoadjuvant Short-Term Intensive Intravesical Mitomycin C Regimen
Compared with Weekly Schedule For Low-Grade Recurrent Non-Muscle-
Invasive Bladder Cancer: Preliminary Results of a Randomised Phase 2
Study,'' European Urology, 62: 797-802.
5. Au, J. L., R. A. Badalament, M. G. Wientjes, D. C. Young, et al.,
and International Mitomycin-C Consortium, 2001. ``Methods to Improve
Efficacy of Intravesical Mitomycin C: Results of a Randomized Phase
III Trial,'' Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 93: 597-604.
6. McHenry, A. R., M. F. Wempe, and P. J. Rice, 2017, ``Stability of
Extemporaneously Prepared Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate 25-mg/mL
Suspensions in Plastic Bottles and Syringes,'' International Journal
of Pharmaceutical Compounding, 21(3), 251-254 (APA). Retrieved from
https://ijpc.com/Abstracts/Abstract.cfm?ABS=4322.
7. American Society of Hospital Pharmacists (ASHP 2020), ''
Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate Suspension 25 mg/mL.'' Retrieved from
www.ashp.org.
8. USP 2020, ``USP Draft Compounded Preparation Monograph for
Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate Compounded Oral Suspension.'' Published
for public comment in Pharmacopeial Forum 46(2). Retrieved from
https://go.usp.org/l/323321/2020-04-08/33wcg6.
Dated: March 19, 2021.
Lauren K. Roth,
Acting Principal Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2021-06060 Filed 3-23-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164-01-P