News Release

National experts and nonprofit organizations call to end FDA user fees and to improve drug safety

Peer-Reviewed Publication

George Washington University

Opposition to current drug safety legislation is growing, as a group of 22 experts on drug safety and regulation and a coalition of 12 patient, consumer, science, and public health organizations issue two separate open letters to lawmakers. The letter from FDA experts asks the lawmakers to not reauthorize the user fees system that finances the review of new drugs by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The letter from the coalition of nonprofit organizations calls for substantial changes to the Enhancing Drug Safety and Innovation Act introduced by Senators Kennedy and Enzi.

“User fees may appear to save the taxpayer money, but at an unacceptable cost to public health,” the letter from the 22 experts warns, citing findings of a panel of experts recently convened by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to address drug safety at the FDA. They call for Congress and the nation to carefully reassess the system in which drugs are developed, tested, approved and followed post-approval, and they support replacing the current user fee model with increased direct appropriations for the FDA. The letter is also signed by drug safety expert Dr. Jerome Avorn; four IOM panel members including Dr. Bruce Psaty and Prof. Alta Charo; three former Editors-in-Chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Marcia Angell, Dr. Jerome Kassirer, and Dr. Arnold Relman; and former Asst. Secretary for Health Phil Lee, along with other respected experts from medicine, academia, and public policy.

The letter from the coalition of patient, consumer, science, and public health organizations agrees that PDUFA is undermining patient safety, and criticizes a drug safety bill introduced by Senators Kennedy and Enzi, stating it “does not include the provisions necessary to prevent another Vioxx, Accutane, or Ketek from reaching the market and harming patients and their families. The bill needs to be strengthened to protect consumers from the dangers of unreported drug risks and to safeguard against future drug safety disasters.”

Both letters cite the need for reforms suggested by the IOM panel, which found that the FDA’s drug safety system is impaired by resource constraints, problems with organizational culture, and unclear and insufficient regulatory authority.

Unlike other user fee programs in the federal government, PDUFA is negotiated with representatives of fee payers – in this case, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). Under this arrangement, the risks of drugs already on the market receive little attention, and FDA has very limited resources to conduct post-marketing drug safety surveillance. Recent polls show that public confidence in the FDA is at an all-time low.

“The FDA lacks the resources and authority it needs to carry out its duty of safeguarding public health,” says Susan F. Wood, PhD of George Washington University. “FDA needs both legislation and leadership to enact the much-needed reforms recommended by the IOM panel and others.” Wood resigned her position at the FDA's Director of the Office of Women’s Health and Assistant Commissioner for Women’s Health in 2005 over the agency’s failure to support FDA scientists’ recommendation to approve Plan B emergency contraception for over-the-counter sale.

Recommendations contained in the experts’ open letter came out of two events – a panel discussion featuring four former FDA commissioners and an expert workshop – held last month on that topic, convened by the project on Scientific Knowledge and Public Policy at the George Washington University. If PDUFA must be reauthorized to ensure an adequate FDA budget, the FDA experts recommend that it be re-authorized for no more than one year and that it include the following characteristics:

• Allow FDA leadership to determine how the agency allocates the fees collected to fulfill all aspects of its mission.
• Deadlines or targets for speed of review must be eliminated or modified to allow flexibility and adequate time for evaluation and analysis by reviewers.
• New performance goals must be linked with safety or other public health outcomes, not just speedy approval decisions.
• Adequate resources must be made available for scientific research and training for FDA scientific and medical staff, including in drug safety epidemiology and risk management.

The coalition letter urges Congress to make public health goals a priority, strengthening safeguards that have been weakened under PDUFA. The signers of both letters agree, “The FDA’s mission is to protect and advance the public’s health. As it currently exists, and would exist in its proposed form, PDUFA stands in the way of this objective.”

###

The complete text of the letters and list of signers is available at www.defendingscience.org/newsroom and http://www.center4research.org/news.html

For more information about the FDA experts’ letter, contact Dr. Susan Wood at (202) 994-5169.

For more information about the letter from the 12 patient, consumer, science, and public health organizations, contact Hydi Miller at (202) 223-4000.


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.