House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health Hearing
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Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, thank you for inviting me to share with you my views on the
I am here to speak in strong support of the
Since 1984, the prescription-drug market has been transformed: Sales of generic drugs have skyrocketed and now constitute the vast majority of all prescriptions filled. This is a good thing. Yet despite considerable changes in the market,
In terms of labeling responsibility, generic manufacturers today are in a position similar to that of brand-name companies in 1982, when those companies urged the
The concerns that motivated the
What is different now is that generic drugs comprise such a large percentage of all prescriptions filled and such an overwhelming percentage of all prescriptions filled for off-patent drugs. Therefore, today, to fulfill the goal of providing timely labeling updates to physicians and patients, the CBE process must be available to generic, as well as to brand-name, manufacturers. As generic market share increases, the brand-name manufacturer loses incentive to devote resources to post-approval safety monitoring. Given that the
Last summer, Public Citizen compiled a list of drugs for which black-box warnings-- reserved for the most serious warnings--were added after a generic equivalent entered the market. Restricting our research to a five-year period, we identified 53 drugs for which a black-box warning calling attention to serious or life-threatening risks was added after generic market entry--and the list is likely incomplete. The data show that new safety issues of the most serious type commonly arise after generics have entered the market, and they underscore the public health imperative of maintaining an incentive for generic manufacturer surveillance for safety. n5 A 2013 article authored jointly by three
This point is particularly important because brand-name manufacturers not only drop to a small market share fairly quickly after introduction of a generic onto the market, but the brand-name manufacturer often stops selling the drug altogether. n7 In fact, a 2012 study by the
Our research and the medical literature confirm the findings of a 2010
It is no answer to say that the
The concern that the proposed rule would result in confusing or inconsistent labeling is unwarranted. First, the
Moreover, currently, despite the "sameness" requirements of the Hatch-Waxman Amendments, brand-name and generic labeling often vary, a fact that "stands in stark contrast to the expectations of providers, the
By giving generic manufacturers more responsibility for labeling, the proposed rule also encourages more vigilance, both to monitor adverse events and medical literature to determine when labeling updates are called for and also to monitor the
In addition, generic manufacturers are fully capable of initiating labeling changes. Mechanically, the procedure already exists, as the CBE process is well-established, and generic manufacturers already have in place procedures for revising labeling in response to
Another objection recently made to the
Finally, the generic manufacturers have suggested several economic arguments in opposition to the rule change, based on the fact that they would be open to liability for harm to patients if, after the rule change, they failed to provide adequate warnings about safety risks associated with their products. Specifically, the companies have argued that the proposed rule, when finalized, will increase the cost of generics drugs, that insurers may refuse to insure the companies, and that some companies may even go out of business or decline to enter the market as a result. Although to initiate safety labeling revisions would also allow the manufacturers to be held accountable to patients for failure to warn, this accountability does not pose the grave problems suggested by generic drug companies. Rather, very recent history proves these theories wrong.
For all but the last three years, generic drug manufacturers have faced liability risk because, until the
Further, as the cost per prescription did not drop after the
Moreover, the generic manufacturers are wrong to assume that they will incur large liability costs if the proposal is finalized. Rather, with greater ability to make prompt safety updates, the proposed rule should help avoid liability, as compared to the circumstances prior to
It is important to keep in mind that lawsuits for failure to warn, when meritorious, occur because a patient suffered injury due to the lack of an adequate warning. For example, the
Yet the brand-name company did not add a warning to the labeling, although the reports were available for both the brand-name and generic manufacturers to see. Finally, in 2009, the
Of course, the manufacturer is not responsible every time that a patient is injured. Sometimes, the patient should not prevail in court. But sometimes, as in the case of Accutane, the manufacturers, including generic manufacturers, had the information but turned a blind eye. The current system is complicit in allowing generic manufacturers to do that. The result is more injury and more costs. Why more costs? Because immunizing the companies from liability does not make the injured patients' costs go away. The medical expenses and lost wages from lost work time still exist; they are carried by the patients, health insurers, and taxpayers, through
Finally, while the objections to the proposed rule center on liability, the primary concern should be with safety. The potential for liability is relevant in this regard because it incentivizes manufacturers to take extra care to ensure that their products are as safe as possible. As
In short, properly used, the revised rule will improve patient safety, and by reducing injuries should also reduce actual instances of litigation as compared to the years before
I would be glad to take questions. Thank you.
n1 A copy of the citizen petition is available at http://www.citizen.org/documents/Citizen-Petition-8-26.pdf and attached to my written testimony, along with a 2013 study referred to later in this testimony. See infra note 5. These documents set forth in greater detail the reasons why the proposed rule fills an important gap in the regulation of drug safety.
n2 See 47 Fed. Reg. 46622, 46634 (1982).
n3 Id. at 46635.
n4 Id.
n5 Public Citizen, Generic Drug Labeling: A report on serious warnings added to approved drugs and on generic drugs marketed without a brand-name equivalent 7-10 (2013), available at http://www.citizen.org/documents/2138.pdf. And attached as an exhibit to this testimony.
n6
n7
n8 Generic Pharm. Ass'n, Generic Drug Savings in the U.S. at 8 (4th ed. 2012).
n9 78 Fed. Reg. 67985, 67988 (2013) (proposed rule).
n10
n11 Lester, supra note 6, at 303.
n12 Id. at 67990.
n13 78 Fed. Reg. at 67999 (proposed revision to [Sec.] 314.70(c)(8)(iv)).
n14
n15 Id.
n16 See Alaric Dearment, Countdown to 2011: A Big Year for Generics,
n17 Lester, supra note 11.
n18 See FDA, FDA Adverse Event Reporting System, at http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/GuidanceComplianceRegulatory Information/Surveillance/AdverseDrugEffects/default.htm
n19
n20 FDA Career Staff Objected To Agency Preemption Policies,
n21 Id.
n22
n23
n24 FDA Career Staff, supra note 20, at 2.
n25 Id.
Read this original document at: http://docs.house.gov/meetings/IF/IF14/20140303/101823/HHRG-113-IF14-Wstate-ZieveA-20140303.pdf
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