Tag Archives: FDA

Will The FDA Delay The DSCSA?

Dirty Harry.Do you Feel Lucky
Do you feel lucky?

More and more people are asking if the FDA will delay the January 1, 2015 requirements of the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA).  On that day, drug manufacturers, repackagers and wholesale distributors must begin exchanging Transaction Information (TI), Transaction History (TH) and Transaction Statements (TS), (dispensers join them next July) and the FDA is not even due to publish guidance on how to do that until November 27 (see “The Flaw That Must Be Addressed in H.R. 3204, The Drug Quality and Security Act“).  While they have said they hope to publish that guidance earlier than that date, it still won’t give companies much time to prepare.  So, will they delay it? Continue reading Will The FDA Delay The DSCSA?

Is Your Drug Exempt From The Federal Drug Supply Chain Security Act? Revisited

Exempt signI am working this week, but I know this is a popular time for vacations, especially for those who do not have children in school.  I typically write my Monday essays over the weekend, but because it was a holiday weekend and my wife and I did some leisure traveling, I decided to re-post a popular essay from earlier this year:  “Is Your Drug Exempt From The Federal Drug Supply Chain Security Act?“.

I wrote this essay to help companies, large and small, figure out whether or not their products might be exempt from the DSCSA.  In it, I provide a kind of a formula that you can use to determine if a given product is exempt or not.  At least it’s a series of questions or statements that you can ask yourself about your product.  So without further ado,

IS YOUR DRUG EXEMPT FROM THE FEDERAL DRUG SUPPLY CHAIN SECURITY ACT?

Ever since the Drug Quality and Security Act (DQSA) was signed into law last November Continue reading Is Your Drug Exempt From The Federal Drug Supply Chain Security Act? Revisited

2014 Fall Conference Season Preview

ConferenceIt is time to look at the better healthcare supply chain conferences coming up this fall.  This year the focus will be on the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA) and the Unique Device Identification (UDI) final rule implementations.  For the DSCSA I think we will see presentations aimed at both the immediate 2015 data exchange requirements and those aimed at the 2017 serialization requirements, but I also expect to see presentations aimed at “second generation” data exchange—those based on GS1’s recently updated Electronic Product Code Information Services (EPCIS) standard.  After meeting the initial data exchange requirements for Transaction Information (TI), Transaction History (TH) and Transaction Statements (TS) in January, companies will need to begin preparing for the second generation using EPCIS (see “DQSA: Getting To Electronic Transaction Data Exchange”).  That transition will likely occur over the next three years. Continue reading 2014 Fall Conference Season Preview

FDA Posts Small Entity Compliance Guide For UDI and GUDID

CDRH.CBER.logosYesterday the FDA posted a new document on their website with the title, “Unique Device Identification System: Small Entity Compliance Guide, Guidance for Industry and Food and Drug Administration Staff”.  The document is 23 pages long and it includes an explanation—in what the FDA calls “plain language”—of the FDA’s Unique Device Identification (UDI) system and the Global Unique Device Identification Database (GUDID).  It is aimed at small businesses, but it is a good read for anyone who wants an overview of the regulation.  The guidance contains non-binding recommendations for companies who must meet the UDI final rule, including makers of class III medical devices, which must comply by September 24 of this year.

The document was a requirement under Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.  That act requires the FDA to Continue reading FDA Posts Small Entity Compliance Guide For UDI and GUDID

The FDA’s Draft Guidance on Suspect Product, and Farewell Columbus

Suspect Product Draft GuidanceThe FDA published the draft guidance on the identification of suspect product and notification of suspect and illegitimate product on June 11 as mandated by Congress in the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA).  The document provides helpful suggestions for those who wish to reduce the risk that they will unknowingly acquire illegitimate product through increased vigilance.  The suggestions are based on the experience the FDA has gained in their investigations over the years of many situations where companies have been duped by criminals into purchasing drugs that turned out to be counterfeit, diverted, stolen, adulterated, or otherwise unfit for consumption.  No legitimate company wants to be a party to buying, selling or dispensing to patients that kind of product, so Continue reading The FDA’s Draft Guidance on Suspect Product, and Farewell Columbus

The Differences Between The DSCSA, FDA Rules and Guidance

???????????From reading the responses to the FDA docket requesting public feedback on standards for interoperable information exchange, I think it is time to review the difference between laws, FDA Rules and FDA guidance, like those stemming from the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA).  It appears that some people might be confusing these a little.

Dr. Connie Jung, RPh, PhD, Acting Associate Director of Policy and Communications, in the Office of Drug Security, Integrity and Recalls, in the Office of Compliance within the U.S. FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, helped put it all into perspective for me.  During one of the breaks at the recent FDA DSCSA Workshop (see “The 2014 FDA DSCSA Workshop“)  I asked Dr. Jung what the odds are Continue reading The Differences Between The DSCSA, FDA Rules and Guidance

Requesting an Extension/Exception to the U.S. FDA UDI Rules

iStock_000011089235SmallerAre you behind in your preparations for the September 24, 2014 deadline for Unique Device Identification on class III medical devices (see “UDI Deadline For Class III Medical Devices Quickly Approaching”)?  Do you need to apply for an 1-year extension of the compliance date for a class III medical device or a device licensed under the Public Health Service Act?  Do you need to file an exception from or alternative to the requirement for the label of a device to bear a unique device identifier (§ 801.20) or other UDI requirement under 21 CFR 801 Subpart B (Labeling Requirements for Unique Device Identification) for a specified device or a specified type of device?  Do you need to continue using an existing National Health Related Item Code (NHRIC) or National Drug Code (NDC) Labeler Code that was assigned to you by the FDA in the past (see “UDI And The Approaching End Of The NDC”)?

If you answered “yes”, or, “Uh…I think so”, to any of the questions above, then Continue reading Requesting an Extension/Exception to the U.S. FDA UDI Rules

The 2014 FDA DSCSA Workshop

WorkshopThe U.S. FDA held their first industry workshop focusing on the new Federal Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA) last Thursday and Friday at FDA Headquarters in Silver Spring, MD.  The goal of the workshop was to help the FDA collect ideas and preferences from industry stakeholders and technology providers for meeting the January 1, 2015 DSCSA requirement to exchange Transaction Information (TI), Transaction History (TH) and Transaction Statements (TS).  The FDA must publish a draft guidance document on the same topic before November 27, 2014, so this workshop, plus the responses to the recent docket, will help them write that draft.

The workshop was held in a large room with eleven big tables, each with about 18 chairs around them.  The FDA had Continue reading The 2014 FDA DSCSA Workshop