• Login
    • Advanced search
    • Title
    • Channel
    • Module
  • Home
  • Industry
    •  

      • Aerospace, Defense, and Government Services
      • Automotive
      • Consumer
      • Manufacturing and Industrials
      • Education
      • Energy and Natural Resources
      • Financial Institutions
    •  

      • Insurance
      • Life Sciences and Health Care
      • Private Capital
      • Real Estate
      • Sports, Media and Entertainment
      • Technology and Telecoms
      • Transport and Logistics
  • Practice
    • Corporate & Finance

      • Banking and Loan Finance
      • Business Restructuring and Insolvency
      • Capital Markets
      • Corporate Governance and Public Company Representation
      • Digital Assets and Blockchain
      • Infrastructure, Energy, Resources, and Projects
      • Leveraged and Acquisition Finance
      • Mergers and Acquisitions
      • Pensions
      • Private Equity, Venture Capital and Investment Funds
      • Real Estate
      • Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
      • Tax
      • Transfer Pricing
    • Global Regulatory

      • Administrative and Public Law
      • Antitrust and Competition
      • Communications, Internet, and Media
      • Education
      • Energy Regulatory
      • Environment and Natural Resources
      • Financial Services
      • Food Law
      • Gaming Law
      • Government Contracts and Public Procurement
      • Government Relations and Public Affairs
      • Health
      • Immigration
      • International Trade and Investment
      • Medical Device and Technology Regulatory
      • New Nuclear
      • Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology Regulatory
      • Privacy and Cybersecurity
      • Space and Satellite
      • Strategic Operations, Agreements and Regulation
      • Transportation Regulatory
    • Intellectual Property

      • Copyright
      • Designs
      • Domain Names
      • IP and Technology Transactions
      • IP Enforcement
      • Patents
      • Trade Secrets and Confidential Know-how
      • Trademarks and Brands
      • Unfair Competition
    • Litigation, Arbitration, and Employment

      • Business and Human Rights
      • Construction and Engineering
      • Corporate and Securities Litigation
      • Employment
      • International Arbitration
      • Investigations, White Collar, and Fraud
      • Products Law
      • Risks, Disputes, and Litigation
  • Comparative guides
  • Engage Premium
  • Login
  • Register
Hogan Lovells Engage 5.7.13
      • Title
      • Channel
      • Module
    • Hit ENTER to search in content
    • Advanced search
    • Login
  • Home
  • Industry
    •  

      • Aerospace, Defense, and Government Services
      • Automotive
      • Consumer
      • Manufacturing and Industrials
      • Education
      • Energy and Natural Resources
      • Financial Institutions
    •  

      • Insurance
      • Life Sciences and Health Care
      • Private Capital
      • Real Estate
      • Sports, Media and Entertainment
      • Technology and Telecoms
      • Transport and Logistics
  • Practice
    • Corporate & Finance

      • Banking and Loan Finance
      • Business Restructuring and Insolvency
      • Capital Markets
      • Corporate Governance and Public Company Representation
      • Digital Assets and Blockchain
      • Infrastructure, Energy, Resources, and Projects
      • Leveraged and Acquisition Finance
      • Mergers and Acquisitions
      • Pensions
      • Private Equity, Venture Capital and Investment Funds
      • Real Estate
      • Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
      • Tax
      • Transfer Pricing
    • Global Regulatory

      • Administrative and Public Law
      • Antitrust and Competition
      • Communications, Internet, and Media
      • Education
      • Energy Regulatory
      • Environment and Natural Resources
      • Financial Services
      • Food Law
      • Gaming Law
      • Government Contracts and Public Procurement
      • Government Relations and Public Affairs
      • Health
      • Immigration
      • International Trade and Investment
      • Medical Device and Technology Regulatory
      • New Nuclear
      • Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology Regulatory
      • Privacy and Cybersecurity
      • Space and Satellite
      • Strategic Operations, Agreements and Regulation
      • Transportation Regulatory
    • Intellectual Property

      • Copyright
      • Designs
      • Domain Names
      • IP and Technology Transactions
      • IP Enforcement
      • Patents
      • Trade Secrets and Confidential Know-how
      • Trademarks and Brands
      • Unfair Competition
    • Litigation, Arbitration, and Employment

      • Business and Human Rights
      • Construction and Engineering
      • Corporate and Securities Litigation
      • Employment
      • International Arbitration
      • Investigations, White Collar, and Fraud
      • Products Law
      • Risks, Disputes, and Litigation
  • Comparative guides
  • Engage Premium
  • Login
  • Register
  1. News
  2. FDA offers new guidance on charging for investigational drugs

FDA offers new guidance on charging for investigational drugs

24 August 2022
    • Share by email
    • Share on
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • Get link
    • Get QR Code
    • Download
    • Print

On Monday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued the revised draft guidance, “Charging for Investigational Drugs Under an IND: Questions and Answers,” which responds to FAQs about FDA’s policies for charging patients for investigational new drugs under certain circumstances in clinical trials or expanded access for treatment use. The original guidance was issued in June 2016, but the new draft version adds agency responses to recently asked questions, and slightly revises previously existing FAQs. Below we analyze how FDA added into the new revised draft guidance information related to the need for submission of a statement by an independent certified public accountant under certain circumstances, and distribution of the manufacturing, administrative, or monitoring costs from the first year over the expected duration of the expanded access IND or protocol.

FDA has invited comments on the draft guidance through October 24.

According to the 2009 rule “Charging for investigational drugs under an IND,” FDA may permit sponsors of investigational new drugs and other companies to charge for unapproved drug products, under certain circumstances, including that, among other requirements:

  • a sponsor justifies the amount to be charged.
  • the sponsors obtains prior written authorization from FDA to charge for the investigational drug.
  • the charging is not interfering with the development of a drug for marketing approval.
  • a sponsor who wishes to charge for its investigational drug:
    • provides evidence that the drug has a potential clinical benefit that, if demonstrated in the clinical investigations, would provide a “significant advantage” over available products in the diagnosis, treatment, mitigation, or prevention of a disease or condition),
    • demonstrates that the data to be obtained from the clinical trial would be “essential” to establishing that the drug is effective or safe for the purpose of obtaining initial approval of a drug, or would support a significant change in the labeling of an approved drug (e.g., new indication, inclusion of comparative safety information), and
    • demonstrates that the clinical trial could not be conducted without charging because the cost of the drug is extraordinary to the sponsor.
  • a sponsor who wishes to charge for expanded access to an investigational drug for treatment use provides “reasonable assurance” that charging will not interfere with developing the drug for marketing approval. An expanded access program (EAP), also called “compassionate use,” is a potential pathway for patients an immediately life-threatening condition or serious disease or condition to gain access to an investigational medical product for treatment outside of clinical trials when no comparable or satisfactory alternative therapy options are available, as we recently described online here.

Since 2009, FDA has received a number of questions concerning its implementation of this “charging regulation,” and so it issued final guidance in 2016, providing recommendations in a Q&A format. Then, earlier this week, FDA issued a revised draft version of the guidance related to the same questions surrounding charging for clinical trials, for expanded access use, and cost recovery calculations.

Notable changes in the 2022 draft guidance include the following:

  • Consistent with FDA’s recently stated priorities of increasing racial and ethnic diversity in clinical trials, which we last analyzed online here, the new draft guidance adds the recommendation that sponsors ensure that charging for drugs in clinical trials or expanded access use does not create barriers to access that may exacerbate disparities in clinical trial participants or expanded access patients.

  • The new draft guidance clarifies that when the amount to be charged for a drug is simply the amount charged to the expanded access sponsor by a third party who provides the drug to the expanded access sponsor, such that there is no calculation of cost made by the sponsor for an independent certified public accountant to approve and to which the requirement under § 312.8(d)(3) applies, the expanded access sponsor should provide a copy of the receipt or invoice from the source that provided the drug to the expanded access sponsor to justify the amount to be charged for the drug.

  • The revised draft guidance explicitly states that a sponsor of an intermediate or treatment IND or protocol seeking to charge for the investigational drug can distribute the costs associated with monitoring the program for the intermediate or treatment IND or protocol and other administrative “startup” costs over the expected duration of the IND or protocol, rather than in the first year of the treatment.

  • Similarly, a sponsor of an expanded access IND or protocol seeking to charge for the investigational drug may distribute any higher manufacturing costs associated with manufacturing the drug in the first year compared to subsequent years, over the duration of the IND or protocol, rather than in the first year of the treatment, the revised draft guidance clarifies.

 

When finalized, the new revised draft guidance will replace the 2016 final guidance. FDA has invited comments on the draft guidance through October 24, 2022. If you may wish to comment, or have any questions or charging for investigational drugs, or on the IND or expanded access program generally, please contact either of the authors of this alert or the Hogan Lovells attorney with whom you generally work.

 

Authored by Heidi Gertner and Robert Church

Contacts
Heidi Gertner
Partner
Washington, D.C.
Robert Church
Partner
Los Angeles
Related Materials
Pharma-Biotech_Labeled Prescriptions Close Up

FDA may permit Rx-to-OTC switch using additional conditions beyond traditional labeling

go arrow

Six strategies for clinical trial & marketing application success as FDA requires HCT/P BLAs

Pharma-Biotech_Lab Technicians Inspecting Test Tubes

FDA RWD/RWE regulatory considerations in draft guidance highlight opportunities and challenges

GO-Pharma-Biotech_molecules(2)_health

After a long and winding road, FDA finalizes much-debated “intended use” rule

marbles - diversity

FDA issues ambitious new draft guidance to promote clinical trial diversity

Keywords charging, IND, expanded access, compassionate use, investigational drug, new drug, protocol, clinical study, fda, essential, reasonable assurance, significant advantage, prior authorization, pricing
Languages English
Topics Clinical Trials, Life Science Government Enforcement and Compliance, Life Cycle Management of Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology, Drug Pricing and Government Reporting
Countries United States
Delete Comment ?

Are you sure want to delete comment ?

Get link
Embed
Share by email
Get QR Code

Scan this QR Code to share this content

  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Legal Notices
  • Terms of Use

 

This website is operated by Hogan Lovells International LLP, whose registered office is at Atlantic House, Holborn Viaduct, London, EC1A 2FG. For further details of Hogan Lovells International LLP and the international legal practice that comprises Hogan Lovells International LLP, Hogan Lovells US LLP and their affiliated businesses ("Hogan Lovells"), please see our Legal Notices page. © 2022 Hogan Lovells.

Attorney advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

Thomson Reuters HighQ Logo
© 2023 Hogan Lovells | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service