Center for Drug Evaluation and Research

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FDA Building 51 is one of the main buildings in its White Oak campus that houses the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

The Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER, pronounced "see'-der") is a division of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that monitors most drugs as defined in the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Some biological products are also legally considered drugs, but they are covered by the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. The center reviews applications for brand name, generic, and over the counter pharmaceuticals, manages US current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) regulations for pharmaceutical manufacturing, determines which medications require a medical prescription, monitors advertising of approved medications, and collects and analyzes safety data about pharmaceuticals that are already on the market.

CDER receives considerable public scrutiny, and thus implements processes that tend toward objectivity and tend to isolate decisions from being attributed to specific individuals. The decisions on approval will often make or break a small company's stock price[citation needed] (e.g., Martha Stewart and Imclone), so the markets closely watch CDER's decisions.

The center has around 1,300 employees in "review teams" that evaluate and approve new drugs. Additionally, the CDER employs a "safety team" with 72 employees to determine whether new drugs are unsafe or present risks not disclosed in the product's labeling.[citation needed]

The FDA's budget for approving, labeling, and monitoring drugs is roughly $290 million per year[citation needed]. The safety team monitors the effects of more than 3,000 prescription drugs on 200 million people with a budget of about $15 million a year[citation needed].

Janet Woodcock is the director of CDER.[1]

Responsibilities[]

CDER reviews New Drug Applications to ensure that the drugs are safe and effective. Its primary objective is to ensure that all prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) medications are safe and effective when used as directed.

The FDA requires a four phased series of clinical trials for testing drugs. Phase I involves testing new drugs on healthy volunteers in small groups to determine the maximum safe dosage. Phase II trials involve patients with the condition the drug is intended to treat to test for safety and minimal efficacy in a somewhat larger group of people. Phase III trials involve one to five thousand patients to determine whether the drug is effective in treating the condition it is intended to be used for. After this stage, a new drug application is submitted. If the drug is approved, stage IV trials are conducted after marketing to ensure there are no adverse effects or long term effects of the drug that were not previously discovered.

With the rapid advancement of biologically-derived treatments, the FDA has stated that it is working to modernize the process of approval for new drugs. In 2017, Commissioner Scott Gottlieb estimated that they have more than 600 active applications for gene and cell based therapies.[2]

Divisions[]

CDER is divided into 8 sections with different responsibilities:[3][4]

  • Office of New Drugs
This office is responsible for oversight of clinical trials and other studies during drug development, and for the evaluation of new drug applications
The Office of New Drugs is divided into several departments based on the indication of the drug (the medical need for which it is being proposed)
  • Office of Generic Drugs
This office reviews generic drug applications to ensure generic drugs are equivalent to their branded forms
  • Office of Strategic Programs
This office is responsible for business programs, represents CDER in the FDA Bioinformatics Board, and communicates with other agencies
  • Office of Pharmaceutical Quality
This office is responsible for integrating assessment, inspection, surveillance, policy, and research activities to strengthen pharmaceutical quality on a global scale.
  • Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology
This office is responsible for post-marketing surveillance to identify adverse effects that may not have been apparent during clinical trials, using the MedWatch program
  • Office of Translational Sciences
This office promotes collaboration across offices in CDER by maintaining databases and biostatistical tools for evaluating drugs
  • Office of Medical and Regulatory Policy
This office develops and reviews guidelines pertinent to CDER's mission of ensuring the safety of drugs
  • Office of Compliance
This office ensures compliance with regulations relating to drug development and marketing

History[]

The FDA has had the responsibility of reviewing drugs since the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drugs Act. The 1938 Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act required all new drugs to be tested before marketing by submitting the original form of the new drug application. Within the first year, the FDA's Drug Division, the predecessor to CDER, received over 1200 applications. The required manufacturers to prove to the FDA that the drug in question was both safe and effective. In 1966, the division was reorganized to create the Office of New Drugs, which was responsible for reviewing new drug applications and clinical testing of drugs.[5]

In 1982, when the beginning of the biotechnology revolution blurred the line between a drug and a biologic, the Bureau of Drugs was merged with the FDA's Bureau of Biologics to form the National Center for Drugs and Biologics during an agency-wide reorganization under Commissioner Arthur Hayes.[6] This reorganization similarly merged the bureaus responsible for medical devices and radiation control into the Center for Devices and Radiological Health.

In 1987, under Commissioner Frank Young, CDER and the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) were split into their present form.[6] The two groups were charged with enforcing different laws and had significantly different philosophical and cultural differences.[6] At that time, CDER was more cautious about approving therapeutics and had a more adversarial relationship with the industry.[6] The growing crisis around HIV testing and treatment and an inter-agency dispute between officials from the former Bureau of Drugs and officials from the former Bureau of Biologics over whether to approve Genentech's Activase (tissue plasminogen activator) led to the split.[6]

In its original form, CDER was composed of six offices: Management, Compliance, Drug Standards, Drug Evaluation I, Drug Evaluation II, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and Research Resources. The Division of Antiviral Products was added in 1989 under Drug Evaluation II due to the large amount of drugs proposed for treating AIDS.[5] The Office of Generic Drugs was also formed.

In 2002, the FDA transferred a number of biologically produced therapeutics to CDER.[6] These include therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, proteins intended for therapeutic use, immunomodulators, and growth factors and other products designed to alter production of blood cells.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ "U.S. FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Key Officials" (PDF).
  2. ^ Burton, Thomas M. (7 September 2017). "FDA Modernizing Evaluations as Gene, Cell Therapy Fields Grow" – via www.wsj.com.
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-13. Retrieved 2017-02-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ Research, Center for Drug Evaluation and. "About the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research - CDER Offices and Divisions". www.fda.gov.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "A Brief History of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research". US FDA. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Reid, Ken. "CBER and CDER have long history of being lumped together and split up." Bioresearch Monitoring Alert Sept. 2002. page 4.
  7. ^ Research, Center for Drug Evaluation and. "About the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research - Drug Application and Approval Process -". www.fda.gov.

External links[]

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