We Need More Overseas Inspections - Pharmaceutical Technology

Latest Issue
PharmTech

Latest Issue
PharmTech Europe

  • Search
  • Suppliers
  • Careers

Enter a company or product name

KeywordLocation
About Search
We Need More Overseas Inspections


Pharmaceutical Technology


Angie Drakulich
Offshore contracting is nothing new for the pharmaceutical industry. Neither is importing active ingredients, or prescription drugs, for that matter. But the authorities are having trouble keeping up with these growing international trends.

In August, Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) requested a briefing with the US Food and Drug Administration to discuss concerns about the agency's oversight abroad. He referenced former FDA associate commissioner William Hubbard's recent comments to the Washington Post that FDA's foreign inspections of pharmaceutical manufacturing plants are "dire and deteriorating" and called into question the agency's protocols and strategies. Indeed, the number of overseas inspections conducted by FDA is subpar (only 500 of the 2,700 inspections carried out in 2006 were abroad).

The ongoing concern over made-in-China products has not helped matters. Congress and Americans are paying much more attention now to what's coming across our borders and how things are regulated—as they should be. Being aware of imported products—and being reassured of their safety—is important, but if we are so concerned, blaming FDA won't do us any good. Instead, we need to call for more FDA support.

Take a look, for example, at the President's FY2008 budget for FDA programs. It provides only a 5.3% increase ($105.8 million) from FY2007, for a total FDA budget of $2.1 billion, despite the agency's ever-increasing responsibilities due to globalization. And sadly, there is barely a mention of international inspections in the agency's budget summary of goals and initiatives for the year ahead.

It's clear that we need a more efficient, multilateral regulatory system—even FDA officials will admit this when asked, which is why harmonization is becoming more and more popular by the minute. But to achieve the global capacity needed, everyone must be willing to contribute and support those tasked with the job.











Angie Drakulich is the managing editor of Pharmaceutical Technology,

ADVERTISEMENT

post a comment
Your email address will NOT be published.
appears with your comment
read our privacy policy
Note: does not support HTML
All comments submitted are subject to review, and may be delayed before posting. We reserve the right not to post comments.
LCGC E-mail Newsletters

Subscribe: Click to learn more about the newsletter
| Weekly
| Monthly
|Monthly
| Weekly

Survey
When sourcing raw materials and non-GMP intermediates or other chemicals, where are the majority of your suppliers located?
In the United States
In Western Europe
In Central and Eastern Europe
In Japan
In India
In China
In the United States
20%
In Western Europe
18%
In Central and Eastern Europe
3%
In Japan
2%
In India
29%
In China
28%
View Results
Eric LangerOutsourcing OutlookEric Langer A Bio View of Outsourcing
Patricia Van ArnumIngredients InsiderPatricia Van Arnum Advances in Custom Synthesis
Faiz kermaniSpotlightFaiz Kermani Reinvigorating European R&D innovation
Faiz kermaniStatistical Solutions Lynn Torbeck%RSD: Friend or Foe?
Life After Big Pharma
PhRMA Details Its Proposal for Internet and Social-Media Standards
The Unregulated Regulator
Rx-360 Goals Get off the Ground
US and Europe At Risk from Substandard Medicines
FindPharma Custom Search
Source: Pharmaceutical Technology,
Click here