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Promotion of Prescription Drugs and Biologics Thomas O. Henteleff Kleinfeld, Kaplan and Becker LLP Company logo here www.diahome.org Scope of FDA Regulation • Labeling • Rx Advertising • Other Promotional Vehicles – Sales Presentations – Educational/marketing events www.diahome.org Jurisdiction • Rx Drugs – Review Division – Division of Drug Marketing, Advertising and Communications (Thomas W. Abrams) • Biologics – Review Division – Advertising & Promotional Labeling Branch (Maryann Gallagher) www.diahome.org Jurisdiction (cont.) • Over-The-Counter Drugs – Advertising - Federal Trade Commission – Labeling - FDA www.diahome.org Labeling vs. Advertising • Labeling – written, printed, or graphic matter “accompanying” the drug – No physical connection required; textual relationship is key (e.g., website) – Defined by regulation to include brochures, booklets, detail pieces, catalogs, price lists, bulletins, etc (21 C.F.R. § 202.1(l)(2)) • Advertising – generally paid media – Journals, magazines, TV, radio, etc. www.diahome.org General FDA Requirements • Not false or misleading – Affirmative (mis)statements & failure to reveal material facts • Consistent with approved package insert (i.e., not “off-label”) • Adequately supported by scientific evidence • Fair Balance www.diahome.org Submissions to FDA • New Drugs/Biologics – 21 C.F.R. §§ 314.81(b)(3), 601.12(f)(4) – Labeling & advertising: at initial dissemination or publication • Accelerated Approval (§§ 314.550, 601.45) – Initial (for use during 1st 120 days) labeling & advertising must be submitted before approval – Thereafter, 30 days prior to first use www.diahome.org Types of Ads • Preapproval – Coming Soon Ads – Institutional Ads • Post-approval – Full Product Ads – Reminder Ads (21 C.F.R. § 202.1(e)(2)(i)) – Comparative Ads • Help Seeking/Disease Awareness www.diahome.org Direct-to-Consumer • Current FDA initiative • Brief Summary • Broadcast Ads – Major Statement – Adequate Provision www.diahome.org Comparative Claims • Efficacy, safety, or cost comparisons • Must relate to approved conditions of use • Head-to-head data generally required in support • Comparison of information in Package Inserts is not adequate support www.diahome.org Investigational Drugs • 21 C.F.R. § 312.7 • Cannot promote or represent as safe or effective • Cannot commercially distribute or test market • Cannot commercialize by charging higher price than necessary to recover costs www.diahome.org Off-Label Information • Dissemination of mfr generated off-label info is strictly prohibited • Limited ability to disseminated materials generated by third parties: – Unsolicited Requests – FDA Modernization Act of 1997 (FDAMA) – Washington Legal Foundation Case (WLF) www.diahome.org Unsolicited Requests • FDA policy/FDAMA – will not object to responses to unsolicited requests Truly unsolicited – no prompting Document the request Monitor to detect prompting Medical Affairs, rather than Marketing Provide objective, balanced information www.diahome.org FDAMA Section 401 • Safe harbor to disseminate info about offlabel uses of approved drugs in limited circumstances (21 C.F.R. Part 99) • Detailed, burdensome requirements – – – – Authorized information Authorized audience/recipients Prior notice to FDA/sNDA filing Mandatory disclosures www.diahome.org WLF Case – 1st Amendment • 1st Amendment right to exchange of truthful scientific information relating to off-label uses • Court’s injunction was overturned as moot, but decision was procedural and the District Court analysis is still persuasive • Very circumscribed dissemination of information pertaining to off-label uses may be protected by the 1st Amendment www.diahome.org WLF (cont.) • Unaltered bona fide peer-reviewed journal article or reference textbook • Only to healthcare professionals • Product must be approved • Identify mfr’s interest in product • Disclose that use is not approved • Avoid dissemination as a launching pad for discussion of off-label information www.diahome.org Continuing Medical Education • Industry-supported CME is regulated as promotion if not independent of mfr’s substantive influence • 1997 FDA Guidance identifies criteria to evaluate independence • Primary issue: discussion of off-label information www.diahome.org FDA Enforcement • Untitled Letter • Warning Letter – Cease conduct; possible remedial action • Adverse Publicity • Injunction or consent decree – Kabi Pharmacia (1993) – Syntex (1991) – Eli Lilly (2005); Serono (2005); Warner-Lambert (2004); Tap (2001) www.diahome.org Eli Lilly (12/2005) • Off-label promotion of Evista • Company pled guilty to criminal count of violating FDCA by misbranding Evista • Consent decree of permanent injunction – Detailed compliance requirements • Criminal fines and disgorgement total $36 million www.diahome.org