Lawmakers said the new bill would apply uniform national standards to pharmacy compounding while enacting a track-and-trace system to ensure drugs are safe throughout the supply chain.
Currently, a patchwork of state and federal regulations complicates oversight of drug compounders, who either customize medications on a prescription-by-prescription basis or produce drugs in large quantities like a manufacturer.
Lawmakers had urged for a clarification of the FDA's duties following a multistate outbreak of fungal meningitis that has killed more than 60 people since last year.
The deaths were caused by tainted steroid injections produced by the New England Compounding Center, a now-shuttered company whose safety violations were never fully penalized by regulators.
The outbreak prompted a series of hearings in both the House and Senate and a vigorous debate over whether the FDA deserved new powers to oversee compounding.
Republican and Democratic leaders praised the final agreement as a victory for patients and victims' families and a move against further tragedy.
"This legislation is a major stride toward the goal of ensuring the quality and safety of the medicines Americans rely upon every day," said House Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) in a statement.
"This is undoubtedly a step forward for public health."
Read more: http://thehill.com/blogs/healthwatch/public-global-health/324755-lawmakers-strike-agreement-on-compounding-pharmacy-regulation#ixzz2g190oMQU
No comments:
Post a Comment