Monday, May 18, 2009

Distribution of Reprints: Another Example of FDA Flexing Its Enforcement Muscles

Recently, the FDA sent Sanofi-Aventis (SA) an untitled letter requesting that the company cease the distribution of a reprint from the Journal of Clinical Oncology, which describes a study comparing the efficacy of its breast cancer drug Taxotere to that of Bristol-Myers Squibb’s Taxol.

Actually, FDA did not request that SA cease distribution of the reprint itself. It said that the "violative promotional material," which in this case is the "reprint carrier," should no longer be distributed.

The reprint carrier -- the folder or binder in which the reprint is inserted -- was "false or misleading because it presents unsubstantiated superiority claims and overstates the efficacy of Taxotere," according to the FDA.

In January, 2009, the FDA issued new guidance on the the distribution to physicians of medical journal articles (reprints) on "unapproved new uses of approved drugs" by Rx drug marketers (see the "FDA Guidance Document"). The SA letter, however, is NOT related to a violation of this guidance. The claims made on the carrier were the focus of the FDA. Those claims were not substantiated by the results of the study that was the topic of the reprint. In fact, the FDA said it was unaware of ANY evidence in support of those claims:
"These claims misleadingly suggest that Taxotere is superior to paclitaxel in the treatment of patients with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer after failure of prior chemotherapy, and overstate the efficacy of Taxotere. FDA is unaware of substantial evidence to support these claims."
Of interest is the fact that the FDA based its analysis on materials submitted under cover of Form FDA 2253 by SA and obtained at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in June 2008 -- almost one year ago! That material was in the possession of the FDA even before the reprint guidance cited above was issued in January, 2009.

I have often complained that regulatory actions of the FDA is akin to closing the barn door AFTER the cows have left (see, for example, "FDA and YAZ: Is FDA Helping Marketers Work Around Regulations?"). By law, the SA Form 2253 must have been submitted "at the time of initial dissemination of the labeling and at the time of initial publication of the advertisement for a prescription drug product." Therefore, FDA sat on this for almost 11 months.

Of course, a lot happened during those 11 months -- notably a change in FDA administration. There may be several other pieces of evidence sitting around the FDA that soon will generate new letters as part of FDA's new enforcement muscle flexing. The SA letter is just one of several recent actions by the FDA that demonstrate this new-found regulatory imperative.

In closing, I quote Mark Senak of Eye on FDA Blog (see "Warning Letter Quarterly Update, Last Quarter 2008, First Quarter 2009, Part 1"): "The lesson learned here? It would be prudent for companies to consider whether or not the regulatory environment is shifting based on the evidence of the infamous 14 letters and the Cheerios warning. It may be time to strategically review and take stock all current promotional materials to assess with a new and highly critical eye to question again whether or not there is a potential violation. Because the message so far out of FDA is that just because you have been engaged in a promotional practice for some time, doesn't mean that it won't be the subject of future regulatory actions. There is no statute of limitations on promotional practices and their eventual regulation by the FDA."

4 comments:

  1. John,

    You need to read the end of the letter more carefully regarding other materials that contain "violations such as those described above."

    Also, FDA's 2009 Good Reprint Practices guidance does not apply (likely), not because FDA cited a carrier, but because the reprint and reprint carrier in question relate to claims regarding an approved use, otherwise the company would not have generated promotional material (a reprint carrier) for the reprint (and promoted an unapproved new use). FDA's guidance relates to the dissimination of information regarding new intended uses or unapproved new uses of approved drugs.

    Also, you can't violate a guidance. You can fail to follow it and consequently violate a law or regulation to which the guidance relates.

    Just clarifying. I know your passion for clarity.

    Finally, coverage of these issues always seems carry a presumption that the FDA was correct in their assessment, which may or may not be correct, depending on the facts, which are known at this time only to the company and to FDA.

    John Murray

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  2. John,

    Thanks for the clarification.

    Are drug companies completely free to disseminate reprints -- even those that relate to approved use -- to docs via sales reps? or at medical meeting display booths? Do docs need to make a request first?

    This is another issue I would like clarification on.

    ReplyDelete
  3. John,

    It depends who you ask, but no one in their right minds would would say companies are completely free to disseminate reprints. FDA undoubtedly would claim its broadest possible discretion to cite companies for misbranding their drugs by disseminating reprints (and they have). If sales reps are proactively disseminating a reprint FDA will claim that labeling regulations apply, unless you are following the Good Reprint Practices guidance. However, GRP applies to reprints for unapproved uses.

    For reprints regarding approved uses FDA has its labeling regulations and the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act itself to rely on, in which case, it applies typical requirements related to any other promotional material. It's somewhat irrational, because by virtue of FDA's guidance, on-label (promotional) reprints actually have to adhere to higher substantiation standards. I'm sure that is not what is intended, but that's where the logic leads.

    If reprints are disseminated in response to bona fide unsolicited requests (e.g. at a convention), FDA does not assert its authority to regulate it as promotion. In this case the company does not submit it on a 2253 because it does not constitute "promotional material." There are lots of other caveats to this though.

    Other than that, there are lots of other nuanced perspectives depending on one's view of the U.S. Constitution, the Washington Legal Foundation case in the late 90s and other things. Discussion on this issue could go on forever. FDA regulation of reprints has an extraordinarily colorful history (kind of the way social media is shaping up).

    John Murray

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  4. It is a very useful article. Actually I have not enough knowledge on this matter. When I read your blog…I got some knowledge from here. Thanks buddy

    ReplyDelete

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