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Regulatory Affairs in EU/UK Pharmaceuticals: An Overview, Slides of Physical Chemistry

A comprehensive introduction to regulatory affairs in the uk and eu pharmaceutical industry. It covers the history of medicines regulation, the formation of regulatory bodies, the marketing authorization process, quality standards, post-approval changes, and brexit's impact. It also discusses the roles of various regulatory authorities and their responsibilities.

Typology: Slides

2023/2024

Available from 04/30/2024

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AN INTRODUCTION TO
EU/UK PHARMACEUTICAL
REGULATORY AFFAIRS
Clare Rosser MChem (Hons), PhD
Samantha Knight BSc (Hons)
Mandy Tyler-Mahon, MChem (Hons), PhD, MTOPRA
Jay Gandecha*, BSc (Hons), MRSC, MTOPRA
April 2023
*Main author of the presentation
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AN INTRODUCTION TO

EU/UK PHARMACEUTICAL

REGULATORY AFFAIRS

Clare Rosser MChem (Hons), PhD Samantha Knight BSc (Hons) Mandy Tyler-Mahon, MChem (Hons), PhD, MTOPRA Jay Gandecha,* BSc (Hons), MRSC, MTOPRA April 2023 *Main author of the presentation

Objectives

  • (^) An interactive session to share an overview of regulatory

affairs in UK and EU such that you have a basic

understanding of this topic at the end of the session

  • (^) See how patients experience the output of regulatory

affairs

  • (^) Give you an idea of what it is like to work within regulatory

affairs in a large pharmaceutical company

  • (^) Provide you with contacts in the pharma regulatory affairs

industry

  • (^) Answer any questions you may have

Contents

  • (^) Why we need to regulate medicines
  • (^) History of medicines regulation in the UK
  • (^) Formation of Regulatory Bodies in the UK
  • (^) Regulatory agencies across Europe
  • (^) Marketing Authorisation Process
  • (^) The Dossier – Common Technical Document
  • (^) Break
  • (^) Quality Standards
  • (^) Post approval changes
  • (^) Brexit

Why do we need to regulate medicines?

  • (^) Drugs are not ordinary consumers’ products. In most

instances, consumers are not in a position to make

decisions about when to use drugs , which drugs to use,

how to use them and to weigh potential benefits against risks

as no medicine is completely safe.

  • (^) Professional advice from either prescribers or dispensers are

needed in making these decisions. However, even healthcare

professionals nowadays are not in capacity to take

informed decisions about all aspects of medicines without

special training and access to necessary information.

  • (^) The production of medicines, their distribution and

dispensing also requires special knowledge and expertise

Brief history of UK medicines regulation

  • (^) Before the middle of the nineteenth century there were no

effective controls over the sale of medicines , and only limited

progress was made in ensuring their safety and efficacy

  • (^) A number of sudden deaths were reported following the

introduction of chloroform as an anaesthetic, as a result of which

a British Medical Association (BMA) working party suggested in

1880 the setting up of an independent body to assess drug

safety.

  • (^) Before the Medicines Act of 1968 medicines were classified as

poisons.

  • (^) A new category of dangerous drug introduced in 1920 and

therapeutic substances in 1925. Some legislation to control

the quality, sale and promotion of medicines existed before

then, but its impact was very limited.

The thalidomide disaster

  • (^) The thalidomide disaster in 1961 was the major

watershed that transformed medicines regulation in the

UK. Thalidomide first went on sale in 1956 as a

sedative and hypnotic.

  • (^) It was widely prescribed during the late 1950s and early

1960s for insomnia, because it was seen to be vastly

safer than barbiturates

  • (^) following anecdotal reports of benefits in the treatment of

vomiting in early pregnancy , it was heavily promoted

for the relief of morning sickness in the first few months

of pregnancy.

The thalidomide disaster

  • (^) But in 1959 reports started to appear of babies being born with malformed limbs and other associated internal malformations.
  • (^) November 1961 a possible link between these serious birth defects and thalidomide was highlighted , as a result of which the drug was withdrawn. Within nine months or so the epidemic of malformations returned to background levels.

Regulatory bodies

  • (^) Responsibility for this role initially lay with the

Medicines Division of the Department of Health for

human medicines. Rising demands and delays in

licensing led to the creation of the Medicines Control

Agency (MCA) in 1989

  • (^) MCA then merged with the Medical Device Agency to

become the Medicines and Healthcare products

Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in 2003

Regulatory bodies

  • (^) National Competent Authorities e.g. MHRA (UK)
    • (^) The MHRA is responsible for regulating all medicines and medical devices in the UK by ensuring they work and are acceptably safe.
    • (^) The MHRA also regulate Blood
    • (^) It is the responsibility of the MHRA and the expert advisory bodies set up by the Medicines Act to ensure that the sometimes difficult balance between safety and effectiveness is achieved.
    • (^) MHRA experts assess all applications for new medicines to ensure they meet the required standards. This is followed up by a system of inspection and testing which continues throughout the lifetime of the medicine.
    • (^) Safety monitoring is also continuous and the MHRA also ensures that doctors and patients receive up-to-date and accurate information about their medicines. This is achieved by ensuring that product labels, leaflets, prescribing information and advertising meets the required standards laid down by the Regulations.

Regulatory Agencies

  • (^) The HMA: Head of Medicines Agencies
    • (^) The Heads of Medicines Agencies (HMA) is a network of the heads of
the National Competent Authorities (NCA) whose organisations are
responsible for the regulation of medicinal products for human and
veterinary use in the European Economic Area.
  • (^) The HMA co-operates with the European Medicines Agency (EMA)
and the European Commission in the operation of the European
medicines regulatory network and it is a unique model for cooperation
on statutory as well as voluntary regulatory activities.
  • (^) The HMA:
    • (^) addresses key strategic issues for the network, such as the exchange of information, IT developments and sharing of best practices
    • (^) focuses on the development, co-ordination and consistency of the European medicines regulatory system
    • (^) ensures the most effective and efficient use of resources across the network. This includes developing and overseeing arrangements for work-sharing
    • (^) co-ordinates the mutual recognition (MRP) and decentralised procedures (DCP).

EU Member states

Principle responsibilities of regulatory authorities

  • (^) Licensing of the manufacture, import, export, distribution,

promotion and advertising of medicines

  • (^) Assessing the safety, efficacy and quality of medicines, and

issuing marketing authorisation for individual products

  • (^) Inspecting and surveillance of manufacturers, importers,

wholesalers and dispensers of medicines

  • (^) Controlling and monitoring the quality of medicines on the

market

  • (^) Controlling promotion and advertising of medicines
  • (^) Monitoring safety of marketed medicines including collecting

and analysing adverse reaction reports

  • (^) Providing independent information on medicines to

professionals and the public

The story so far…

Medicines regulation Regulatory Agencies National Agencies Pharmaceutical Companies