With California’s electronic pedigree requirement set to take effect in 2015, we have been following recent efforts by Congress to enact a national prescription drug track and trace system (see our previous posts here, here, here, and here). The House passed a bill in June, H.R. 1919, that would create a national pedigree system and the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (“the Senate Committee”) passed a similar bill, S. 959, in May. Then, late on September 25, 2013, leaders from the Senate and House committees overseeing health care policy announced that they reached an agreement on bipartisan and bicameral legislation (“bicameral legislation”) that would amend the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (“FDCA”) to address compounding pharmacies and incorporate a national prescription drug track and trace system as well as national standards for prescription drug wholesale distributors (“wholesalers”) and third-party logistics providers (“3PLs”). The House passed the bicameral legislation, the Drug Quality and Security Act (H.R. 3204), on September 28, 2013 by voice vote. A detailed outline of the bicameral legislation prepared by Hyman, Phelps & McNamara, P.C. can be found here.
The track and trace system (i.e., pedigree) set forth in the bicameral legislation would preempt state pedigree requirements and eventually create a national interoperable electronic prescription drug track and trace system. While the bicameral legislation is in many respects similar to the Senate Committee’s bill, it contains some significant differences.
The bicameral legislation provides specific track and trace requirements for manufacturers, wholesalers, repackagers, and dispensers (e.g., pharmacies) of prescription drugs. Unlike the Senate Committee’s bill, it does not require 3PLs to be responsible for pedigrees. Under the bicameral legislation, manufacturers would be required to include a product identifier number on each “package and homogeneous case” of prescription drug product they produce within four years of enactment, while repackagers would be required to include it within five years. In the meantime, the bicameral legislation requires manufacturers, wholesalers, repackagers, to provide and/or receive pedigree by January 1, 2015, while dispensers are required to do so by July 1, 2015. In addition, wholesalers would be required to accept and distribute only those prescription drug products that include product identifiers within six years, while dispensers would be required to only receive proscription drug products with a product identifier within seven years. As such, other than for 3PLs, the timelines for incorporating and distributing drug products with a product identifier for manufacturers, wholesalers, dispensers, and repackagers remains unchanged from the earlier Senate Committee’s bill.
continue to read here
No comments:
Post a Comment