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Regulatory News | 04 October 2016
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Tuesday published 67 generic drug-specific recommendations (34 new and 33 revised) describing the agency’s expectations for developing generics that are therapeutically equivalent to reference-listed drugs (RLDs).
The guidance is intended to help the generic pharmaceutical industry identify the most appropriate ways to generate evidence needed to support abbreviated new drug application (ANDA) approval.
This is FDA’s third release of new and revised bioequivalence guidance for generic drug developers in 2016, as the agency previously released 19 new draft guidance documents and 19 revisions in June, as well as 31 draft guidance recommendations in January and revisions for 11 products.
FDA, which is seeking feedback before finalizing the draft bioequivalence (BE) guidance and the 33 revisions, is focusing on the following new products:
To successfully develop and manufacture a generic drug, FDA says ANDA applicants should ensure their product is: pharmaceutically equivalent to its RLD (i.e., to have the same active ingredient, dosage form, strength and route of administration under the same conditions of use); bioequivalent to the RLD (i.e., to show no significant difference in the rate and extent of absorption of the active pharmaceutical ingredient); and therapeutically equivalent (i.e., to be substitutable for the RLD with the expectation that the generic product will have the same safety and efficacy as its reference listed drug).
Product-Specific Recommendations for Generic Drug Development
Tags: bioequivalence studies, generic drugs, FDA draft guidance