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2012 Mid-Year Report on FDA: Opportunities, Threats and Accomplishments

 

So much is going on at FDA right now, that it is difficult to pick just one topic for this week’s FDA Matters. Instead, we are going to take a quick tour of some “hot spots” at FDA and how they might affect the agency over the remainder of the year and beyond.

Please read on…there is something for everyone in the topics covered.

The “Lost” FSMA Regulations. At the very end of 2010, Congress passed the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA). The law was intended to fundamentally re-set the term under which FDA acts to assure a safe food supply. It focuses on preventing problems, rather than fixing or limiting them afterward. FSMA provides the agency with new authorities and additional resources consistent with FDA’s role of overseeing a global food supply.

The first provisions of FSMA went into effect in January 2012 and additional requirements become effective this month. To guide implementation of these requirements, FDA has produced four draft regulations. None have been published; all are stuck in the review process at OMB.

The mystery of the “lost” FSMA regulations prompted two reporters to call me this past week and ask: is OMB holding back these (and other) regulations until after the election, presumably for political reasons. I couldn’t see an electoral connection, plus the first of the proposed regulations was submitted to OMB in December 2011, a very long time before the election.

The “lost” FSMA draft regulations are worrisome by themselves, but especially with so much else going on at FDA that may require OMB review.  

FDA’s Drug Safety Monitoring Program Hits Target, Will Expand. We don’t read often enough about the successes that come from cooperation and hard-work at FDA. In the 2007 user fee reauthorization legislation, Congress directed FDA to construct a nationwide electronic post-market safety monitoring system that would allow FDA to examine tens of millions of patient records to discover or refute possible safety concerns about FDA-approved products.

In a recent edition of FDA Voice, the FDA’s own blog site, the agency reported that the monitoring system, called “Sentinel,” now has access to the de-identified medical and/or insurance records of about 126 million Americans, collected through 17 data sources (e.g. VA, Kaiser). Sentinel is definitely still a “work in progress” on a number of levels, but it will be of increasing value as medical products become even more complex and even more integral to medical care.  

Funding Ups and Downs. Despite Congressional reauthorization of the prescription drug and medical device user fee programs, the budget authority (BA) (taxpayer-funded) portion of FDA’s budget is still the bulk of the dollars. The Senate has included a small increase in BA funding for FDA for FY 13; the House has proposed a small decrease.

Of compelling concern is the strong potential that FDA (along with all federal discretionary funding programs) will be hit with a 7% to 10% “sequestration”—an across-the-board cut–on January 2, 2013. This would reduce the agency’s budget  by between $175 million and $250 million in FY 13. This is FDA’s “contribution” to saving the federal budget more than $1 trillion over the next 10 years. 

If sequestration occurs, FDA will try to avoid lay-offs by shifting more employees from taxpayer funding to user fees. In that case, increases in user fee income will be backfilling the BA cuts, rather than contributing to real agency growth. Yet, FDA will be obligated to undertake the user fee-driven activities and meet the law’s performance measures as if the new user fee money was paying for additional staff.

User Fee Reauthorization Will Drive, Not Disrupt, the Agency Agenda. Five years ago, the user fee reauthorization (PDUFA 4) didn’t become law until late September, a few days before fiscal year 2008. The combination of immediate deadlines, delays in collecting user fees, and insufficient trained personnel set off a series of problems that took three years to fully overcome.

This time, Congress finished the reauthorization in late June and FDA has been planning the law’s smooth implementation for months. Instead of panic, CDER in particular, seems to be feeling good about the path forward and the many changes called for in PDUFA 5. 

Dr. Janet Woodcock, head of CDER, has listed her priorities as, among other things: timely transition to new user fee requirements (including start-up of new generic drug and biosimilars user fees); dealing with drug shortages, moving forward on data standards and new IT support systems, and advancing regulatory science.

Results are still what matters and there are always critics….but a sense of optimism at CDER is always welcome.

 Steven

2 Responses to “2012 Mid-Year Report on FDA: Opportunities, Threats and Accomplishments”

  1. Mark McCarty says:

    At the risk of sounding like a dyed-in-the-wool skeptic, I'll note the passage:
     
    "increases in user fee income will be backfilling the BA cuts, rather than contributing to real agency growth."
     
    That seems an almost a guaranteed outcome. This is a real tough conclusion to avoid when you look at what happened to patent fees at the Patent and Trademark Office in the America Invents Act, Not trying to be fashionably cynical, but it takes more political effort to avoid this scenario than to make it happen. Hence, it's the default unless Congress and the White House can come up with budgets.
     
    Even a completed budget will have a tough time avoiding the meat cleaver, though.

  2. Mark—We are in agreement. What I hoped to convey (especially to industry paying those user fees), is that they are not "safe" just because sequestration doesn't cut user fees. Rather, they are in the muck with everyone else. You are not my only journalist/reader–and I hope all of you can help spread this word. Thanks for the comment, Steven

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