Current through Register Vol. 43, No. 52, December 26, 2024
An application for a specific license to manufacture, prepare,
or distribute radiopharmaceuticals containing radioactive material and used by
persons as specified in part 6 of these regulations shall not be approved
unless the applicant meets the requirements of this regulation and all other
applicable requirements of these regulations.
(a) Each applicant shall meet the
requirements in K.A.R. 28-35-180a.
(b) Each applicant shall submit evidence of
either of the following:
(1) The
radiopharmaceutical containing radioactive material is subject to the federal
food, drug and cosmetic act or the public health service act and will be
manufactured, labeled, and packaged in accordance with a new drug application
(NDA) approved by the U.S. food and drug administration (FDA), a biologic
product license issued by the FDA, or a notice of claimed investigational
exemption for a new drug" (IND) accepted by the FDA.
(2) The manufacture and distribution of the
radiopharmaceutical containing radioactive material is not subject to the
federal food, drug, and cosmetic act or the public health service
act.
(c) Each applicant
shall submit evidence of at least one of the following:
(1) The applicant is registered or licensed
with the FDA as a drug manufacturer.
(2) The applicant is registered or licensed
with a state agency as a drug manufacturer.
(3) The applicant is licensed as a pharmacy
by the state board of pharmacy.
(4)
The applicant is operating as a nuclear pharmacy within a federal medical
institution.
(5) The applicant is
operating a positron emission tomography (PET) drug production
facility.
(d) Each
applicant shall submit the following information on the radionuclide:
(1) The chemical and physical form of the
material;
(2) the packaging in
which the radionuclide is shipped, including the maximum activity per package;
and
(3) evidence that the shielding
provided by the packaging of the radioactive material is appropriate for the
safe handling and storage of radiopharmaceuticals by group licensees.
(e)
(1) Each applicant shall comply with the
following labeling requirements:
(A) A label
that shall be affixed to each transport radiation shield, whether the shield is
constructed of lead, glass, plastic, or other material, of a radioactive drug
to be transferred for commercial distribution. The label shall include the
following:
(i) The radiation symbol and the
words CAUTION x20AC;x201C; RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL" or"DANGER x20AC;x201C;
RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL";
(ii) the
name of the radioactive drug and the abbreviation; and
(iii) the quantity of radioactivity at a
specified date and time. For radioactive drugs with a half-life greater than
100 days, the time may be omitted; and
(B) a label that shall be affixed to each
syringe, vial, or other container used to hold a radioactive drug to be
transferred for commercial distribution. The label shall include the radiation
symbol and the words"CAUTION x20AC;x201C; RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL" or"DANGER
x20AC;x201C; RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL" and an identifier that ensures that the
syringe, vial, or other container can be correlated with the information on the
transport radiation shield label.
(2) The labels, leaflets, or brochures
required by this regulation shall be made in addition to the labeling required
by the FDA. The labels, leaflets, or brochures may be separate from the FDA
labeling, or with the approval of the FDA, the labeling may be combined with
the labeling required by the FDA.
(f) All of the following shall apply to each
licensee described in paragraph (c)(3) or (c)(4), or both:
(1) The licensee may prepare radioactive
drugs for medical use, if each radioactive drug is prepared by either an
authorized nuclear pharmacist, as specified in paragraphs (2) and (4) of this
subsection, or an individual under the supervision of an authorized nuclear
pharmacist.
(2) The licensee may
allow a pharmacist to work as an authorized nuclear pharmacist if at least one
of the following conditions is met:
(A) The
pharmacist meets the requirements in
10 C.F.R.
35.55(b) and
35.59 as adopted by reference in
K.A.R. 2835-264, and the licensee has received an approved license amendment
identifying this individual as an authorized nuclear pharmacist.
(B) The pharmacist is designated as an
authorized nuclear pharmacist in accordance with paragraph (4) of this
subsection.
(C) The pharmacist
qualifies as an authorized nuclear pharmacist as defined in
10 C.F.R.
35.2, as adopted by reference in K.A.R.
28-35-264.
(3) The
actions authorized in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection shall be
permitted in spite of more restrictive language in license
conditions.
(4) The licensee may
designate a pharmacist as an authorized nuclear pharmacist if at least one of
the following conditions is met:
(A) The
individual was a nuclear pharmacist preparing only radioactive drugs containing
accelerator-produced radioactive material.
(B) The individual practiced at a government
agency or federally recognized Indian tribe pharmacy before November 30, 2007
or at any other pharmacy before August 8, 2009.
(5) Each licensee shall provide a copy of the
state pharmacy license or registration, not later than 30 days after the date
that the licensee allows an individual to work as an authorized nuclear
pharmacist under paragraph (2) of this subsection, and one of the following
documents to the department:
(A) The
individual's certification by a specialty board whose certification process has
been recognized as specified in
10 C.F.R.
35.55(a), as adopted by
reference in K.A.R. 28-35-264;
(B)
a department, NRC, or agreement state license listing the individual as an
authorized nuclear pharmacist;
(C)
an NRC master materials licensee permit listing the individual as an authorized
nuclear pharmacist;
(D) a permit
issued by a licensee of broad scope or an NRC master materials permittee or the
authorization from a commercial nuclear pharmacy that is authorized to list its
own authorized nuclear pharmacist; or
(E) documentation that only
accelerator-produced radioactive materials were used in the practice of nuclear
pharmacy at a government agency or federally recognized Indian tribe before
November 30, 2007 or at all other locations of use before August 8, 2009, or an
earlier date noticed by the NRC as permitted by
10 C.F.R.
35.13(b)(5).
(g) Each application
from a medical facility, an educational institution, or a federal facility to
produce positron emission tomography (PET) radioactive drugs for noncommercial
transfer to licensees within the applicant's consortium authorized for medical
use under part 6 of these regulations or equivalent agreement state
requirements shall include the following:
(1)
A request for authorization for the production of PET radionuclides or evidence
of an existing license issued under these regulations or equivalent NRC or
agreement state requirements for a PET radionuclide production facility within
the applicant's consortium from which the applicant receives PET
radionuclides;
(2) evidence that
the applicant is qualified to produce radioactive drugs for medical use by
meeting the requirements of subsection (c);
(3) the name of each individual authorized to
prepare PET radioactive drugs if the applicant is a pharmacy and documentation
that each individual meets the requirements of an authorized nuclear pharmacist
as specified in paragraphs (f)(2) and (f)(4); and
(4) the name of each PET radioactive drug for
production and noncommercial distribution to the applicant's consortium,
including the chemical and physical form of each drug.
(h) Each licensee licensed under subsection
(g) for the production of positron emission tomography (PET) radioactive drugs
for noncommercial transfer to licensees within the applicant's consortium
authorized for medical use under part 6 of these regulations or equivalent
agreement state requirements shall meet the following requirements:
(1) Comply with the labeling requirements
specified in subsection (e);
(2)
possess and use instrumentation to measure the radioactivity of PET radioactive
drugs intended for noncommercial distribution to members of the licensee's
consortium and have procedures for using the instrumentation;
(3) measure, by direct measurement or by a
combination of measurements and calculations, the amount of radioactivity in
dosages of alpha-, beta-, or photon-emitting radioactive drugs before transfer
for commercial distribution;
(4)
perform tests before initial use, periodically, and following repair on each
instrument for accuracy, linearity, and geometry dependence, as appropriate for
the use of the instrument, and make adjustments if necessary; and
(5) check each instrument for constancy and
proper operation at the beginning of each day of use.
(i) Nothing in these regulations shall exempt
the licensee from the requirement to comply with applicable FDA requirements
and other federal and state requirements governing radioactive drugs.