News March
FDA Chief Says Unique Generics Get Priority
14 th March 2006
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is taking steps to eliminate
a backlog of more than 800 pending generic drug applications by
focusing on those offering the first cheaper alternative therapy,
the agency's acting chief told Congress on Tuesday.
Acting FDA Commissioner Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach defended efforts
to bring cheaper drugs on the market by telling lawmakers the agency
aimed to ensure "that there's at least one generic available" for
most conditions, giving preference to the first one submitted. Similar
or identical generics are less of a priority, he told the Senate
Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development and
Related Agencies. "We're looking at this in a hierarchical fashion,"
von Eschenbach said at a hearing on the agency's budget. Sen. Herb
Kohl, a Wisconsin Democrat, called on the agency chief to act more
quickly to sort through waiting generics that he said could save
consumers up to $10 billion a year. Kohl questioned why the agency's
budget request did not seem to make any "effort to address that
backlog," noting the FDA budget calls for $400 million to review
88 new brand name drugs and $65 million to review 400 generics.
Von Eschenbach said the agency is approving an average of more
than one generic drug each business day and was "equally committed"
to both new and generic drugs. Still, at that rate, the FDA would
finish in about 3.5 years, panel chairman Utah Republican Sen. Robert
Bennett said after making a quick calculation. Supporters of generic
drugs contend they work just as well as brand-name versions but
cost less, and U.S. health officials often tout them as alternatives
to drugs bought on the Internet or from other countries such as
Canada.
Source
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?
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