EUROPEAN/U.S. PHYTOMEDICINES COALITION SEEKING OTC ENTRY TO U.S. MARKET

EUROPEAN/U.S. PHYTOMEDICINES COALITION SEEKING OTC ENTRY TO U.S. MARKET for plant-based pharmaceuticals based on demonstrated safety-in-use data from the marketing of these products in Western Europe. A petition filed by the European-American Phytomedicines Coalition proposes that phytomedicines marketed in Western Europe for a "material time" and to a "material extent" be considered by FDA for marketing as over-the-counter drugs. The petition suggests general guidelines that define material time and extent as at least five years on the market and retail sales of 10 mil. dosage units. Demonstration of safety-in-use should also include market authorization in one or more drug export country listed in the 1986 Drug Export Amendments Act, the petition suggests. EAPC Coalition members "would like to have their products regulated as drugs because they have dealt in that milieu and this is something they're most comfortable in," EAPC counsel Robert Pinco (Washington, D.C. office of Baker & Hostetler) told FDA representatives at a Sept. 30 OTC "feedback" meeting. The meeting was called to discuss the petition, filed July 24. Pinco estimated that the coalition would bring 10-15 substances to FDA as candidates for review "in the next few years" if the agency granted its petition. The number of submissions would be limited because of safety, efficacy and statistical data requirements and because some phytomedicines marketed abroad "make broader claims than we know could be available in the United States," he noted. EAPC members are Dr. William Schwabe GmbH, Madaus AG, Indena SpA, the French Institut Henri Beaufor, Boehringer-Ingelheim of Germany, Bioforce (the Netherlands, Switzerland and the U.S), Lichtwer Pharma GmbH, R.P. Scherer, the Israel-based firm Botanicare Natural Products and U.S.-based Murdock International. Pinco outlined the challenges the coalition will face if the agency decides to consider phytomedicines based on foreign safety- in-use data. The challenges are to convince FDA that "more health- oriented claims...fit into the OTC review," that a new category should be created and that these claims "are self- diagnosable," Pinco said. Health claims that companies can make for OTC garlic tablets, for instance, include, depending on the country, helping to "maintain a healthy heart and circulation," aiding in the prevention of arteriosclerosis or helping to lower cholesterol, a Lichtwer representative noted. Lichtwer's U.S. subsidiary markets Kwai garlic tablets domestically as a dietary supplement. FDA's OTC Drug Policy Staff Director Michael Kennedy said he thought the issue of health claims may be discussed by the OTC drugs advisory committee, which is scheduled to meet for the first time on Dec. 15-16 ("The Pink Sheet" Sept. 21, p. 9). Kennedy noted that the agency is evaluating a proposal that would spin off a category of "fiber laxatives" with ingredients such as psyllium from the OTC laxative products. Under the proposal, these fiber products would be allowed to make cholesterol-lowering claims. He stressed that these products "need something showing efficacy" before such claims can be considered. Whether a phytomedicine ingredient is sold exclusively as a drug or marketed both as a food product and a drug might depend on the ingredient, Baker & Hostetler's Mark Yacura said. Garlic, for instance, could be regulated as a food or a drug based on label claims. However, valerian, which is marketed as a sleep aid in Europe, only may be suitable for U.S. consideration as a drug because "it may not be very safe to have people taking valerian ...when it's not really properly labeled...and driving around in automobiles," Yacura said. Yacura also conceded that the five year, 10 mil. dosage units parameters outlined in the EAPC petition were "somewhat arbitrary," but said the coalition felt that the time and dosage guidelines "would give a very strong marketing history of the product" and "should give FDA some comfort level as to safety through use." Examples of phytomedicines given in EAPC's petition for consideration as Category I OTCs are valerian as a sleep aid and chamomile as a topical anti-inflammatory. The European Scientific Cooperative for Phytotherapy (ESCOP), an umbrella trade organization, is compiling data for proposals to the European Community Commission for European monographs on phytomedicine ingredients. In March, ESCOP offered proposals for 10 ingredients: marigold flower, peppermint oil, dandelion leaf and root, bearberry leaf, garlic bulb, hawthorn, hops, passiflora and ispaghula. Actions of the herbs listed in the proposals include laxative, sedative, "improvement of cardiac function," anti-inflammatory, wound healing and antiseptic. Five additional ingredients were proposed in October 1990. A petition similar to EAPC's is pending at the FDA concerning OTC sunscreens. European sunscreen manufacturers E. Merck, Givaudan, Haarmann & Reimer and L'Oreal filed a petition in July 1990 asking that the sunscreen rulemaking be reopened to accept European safety and efficacy data.

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Pink Sheet for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Archive

Ocaliva: Still No Clarity On Why EU Court Opposed Revocation Of Approval

 

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.

Final Chance To Have Your Say: Take Our Reader Survey This Week

 
• By 

This is your final call to participate in the survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. The deadline is 20 September.

Shape Our Content: Take The Reader Survey

 
• By 

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.

Brazil Pilots Digital Drug Pack Inserts

 

A new pilot aims to take Brazil closer to ‘digital transformation.’

More from Pink Sheet

EU Pharma Reform: Exclusivity Vouchers Alone Are Insufficient Incentive For Antimicrobials, Industry Says

 

European pharma trade associations EFPIA and EUCOPE outline their respective views on how the EU’s pharma legislation overhaul should tackle antimicrobial resistance, and why transferable exclusivity vouchers alone will not suffice as incentives.

Trump Administration Push For Dismissal, Transfer Of Mifepristone Case Leaves Overhang For Pharma

 

The Trump Administration requested a dismissal or transfer of a lawsuit seeking to tighten the safety requirements for the abortion pill mifepristone on procedural grounds, which still leaves the administration's position on the case's merits unclear.

Opioid Safety: US FDA Hears Mixed Messages On Adding Posmarketing Studies To Labeling

 
• By 

Some advisory committee members said adding quantitative data on misuse, abuse, opioid use disorder and overdose to labeling would be helpful, but others worried the two epidemiological studies were not sufficiently generalizable to a broader population.