PATENT CERTIFICATIONS ARE NECESSARY FOR NEW-USE NDA SUPPLEMENTS
PATENT CERTIFICATIONS ARE NECESSARY FOR NEW-USE NDA SUPPLEMENTS or filings for other conditions of use, such as route of administration, formulation changes, and strength changes. FDA informed NDA and ANDA holders of the policy in an Oct. 31 letter. Center for Drugs & Biologics Deputy Director Paul Parkman said "most supplements should be treated like full and abbreviated applications" with respect to patent certifications. However, he noted that supplements for such things as changes in manufacturing site or packaging would not require a patent certification. Parkman said all NDA holders and applicants should certify the indications or other conditions of use covered by any use patent. He added that it would also be helpful if NDA applicants would state the indications of use covered by a patent that are approved for inclusion on labeling in the U.S. Parkman said FDA will publish information on indications covered by each use patent in the (ITALICS)Orange Book.(END ITALICS) For patents that claim a drug substance, Parkman said NDA applicants should only file information on patents that refer to an approved drug product. The agency's letter was the fourth in a series of letters concerning FDA policy and interpretation of the Waxman/Hatch Act. Parkman requested comments on FDA's policies and said they would be taken into account, if possible, when the agency prepares proposed regulations to implement the law. FDA urged companies to bring questions on patent dates to the agency's attention. "If anyone disputes the accuracy or relevance of patent information submitted by an NDA applicant and published by FDA, or believes that an NDA applicant has failed to submit required patent information, that person should first notify the agency informally, stating the grounds for the disagreement," Parkman said. The agency "will write to the NDA holder requesting that the correctness of the filing or omission be confirmed. Unless the NDA holder withdraws or changes the patent filing, the agency will not change the patent information in the list." Parkman explained that "if the NDA holder does not change the information filed, a section 505(b)(2) or 505(j) application submitted for the drug should, despite any disagreement, contain a certification for each listed patent and any patent challenge can then be pursued through private legal action under the patent laws." Discussing the requirements for obtaining marketing exclusivity, FDA reiterated that an application for exclusivity must contain clinical trials conducted by the sponsor that are essential for approval. FDA said it interprets the phrase "essential to approval" to "mean that the application could not be approved by the FDA without that investigation." The agency said an applicant must "submit a list of all published studies or publicly available reports of clinical investigations known to the applicant that are relevant to the conditions of approval sought in the application or the change sought in the supplement." Further, the agency stated that an applicant must submit a certification that the applicant sponsored (provided 50% or more of the cost) or conducted the study.
More from Archive
Advanz Pharma would have had to show that the European Commission’s decision to revoke Ocaliva’s conditional marketing approval risked causing serious and irreparable harm, according to lawyers from Van Bael & Bellis.
This is your final call to participate in the survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. The deadline is 20 September.
We are conducting a survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. If there are any changes you’d like to see in coverage topics, article format, or the method in which you access the Pink Sheet – or if you love it how it is – now is the time to have your voice heard.
A new pilot aims to take Brazil closer to ‘digital transformation.’
More from Pink Sheet
Artificial intelligence tools used for clinical research should be developed with input from patients and focus on their needs and abilities, FDA experts said.
The UK government is making it easier for millions of people to participate in clinical trials and is boosting transparency around how studies are delivered across the National Health Service.
The UK drug regulator acknowledges that technology will “move on” and, as such, has designed its decentralized manufacturing regulation to be as “enduring” as possible. Experts from the MHRA explain what products are covered by the new framework and how it has been future-proofed.