Accelerating Generic Drug Approvals Will Save Lives and Dollars


By Peter J. Pitts

Sitting atop the approval process for prescription medications, Dr. Scott Gottlieb is a little different from some of his more bureaucratic predecessors: He's listening.

Last month, the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration hosted a public meeting to solicit input from patients, care providers, and drug makers on how to improve the FDA's drug approval process and, just as importantly, expedite the introduction of generic drugs.

Far too often in Washington, regulators approach their mission by dictating terms to those in their purview. Gottlieb is different: His starting point is how the FDA can most efficiently get safe and effective treatments to the patients who need them. Improving the FDA's processes can drive healthcare costs down dramatically and save millions of lives.

Take generics: Between 2005 and 2014, generics generated about $1.7 trillion in healthcare savings in America.

They also pressure rival products to lower their prices. One FDA study found that when a brand-name drug has eight generic competitors, patients buying the generic versions pay on average just 20 percent of the cost of the brand name. When a drug has only four generic versions, patients pay twice as much -- 40 percent of the brand-name price.

And with only one generic competitor, generic buyers will see a minimal discount, paying on average 94 percent of the price of the brand-name. So in Gottlieb's view, the more the better.

But speeding up generic approvals will be a challenge. The existing FDA channels are notoriously slow, gummed up with antiquated procedures. It's been 30 years since the federal law governing generics has been significantly updated. The rules are especially unclear for complex generic drugs using delivery mechanisms that were invented only in the past few years.

This uncertainty lengthens the time it takes for a generic drug to win approval. The FDA is now staring down a backlog of 2,600 pending applications. Today, getting a new generic approved costs about $5 million and takes four years.

With delayed approval of generics, brand name drugs face less competition. For all too many drugs whose patents have expired, few companies if any have stepped up to create rival generic products. For about 10 percent of off-patent drugs, the FDA has received not a single generic application.

Without competition from other drug makers, manufacturers can charge monopoly-level prices even for decades-old medications. That's exactly what happened with the price hike that brought "Pharma Bro" Martin Shkreli to national notoriety. Shkreli's firm acquired the rights to produce the infection medication Daraprim -- then immediately jacked up the price from $13 to $750. That hike only was possible because Daraprim had no real generic competition.

Commissioner Gottlieb has made ending the needless delays his top priority. His team has already started clearing out the application backlog and has announced plans to provide faster consideration for applications for drugs for which there are fewer than three firms currently making generics.

The FDA will also publish a list of off-patent drugs for which no company has applied to produce a generic version. The agency hopes that collecting that information and publicizing it will attract competitors into the market and also reduce the potential for life-threatening drug shortages.

Gottlieb is tackling a tough and urgent public health issue head on. And Congress is helping -- specifically through reauthorizing the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA), a breakthrough 1992 piece of federal legislation that requires drug companies to pay fees to cover the cost of the review and approval of their products.

Back in the early 90s, the FDA was drowning in drug applications. It didn't have enough money or staff to review and approve medications in the pipeline. So Congress passed PDUFA to shore up the agency's financing and expedite reviews. The bill worked. The average drug approval time fell from two and half years to just under 11 months. PDUFA has since helped usher 1,500 new drugs to market.

Re-authorizing PDUFA will give Gottlieb the resources he needs to make these reforms a reality. A life- and cost-saving revolution is now underway at the FDA.

Peter J. Pitts, a former FDA associate commissioner, is president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest.

More Resources


01/10/2025
Carter Funeral Brings Rare, Needed Vision of Peace


more info


01/10/2025
Three More Biden Deceptions
The president can believe what he wants to believe, and at this point, there appears to be no convincing him otherwise.

more info


01/10/2025
A Nation Suffers Whiplash Between Biden and Trump
On any other day this might seem strange

more info


01/10/2025
Biden Admin Told Us To Censor True Info


more info


01/10/2025
Facebook Admits Error--'Fact Checkers' Still Complicit
Mark Zuckerberg seems to want to reverse Facebook's censorship efforts, but those publications that participated in the program are complicit.

more info


01/10/2025
In Defense of DEI
DEI refers to three simple but important words: diversity, equity and inclusion. These three values are indispensable

more info


01/10/2025
Woke Religion Burned People's Homes to the Ground
The wildfire devastation of Los Angeles occurred largely as a result of people in power adhering blindly and madly to a very bad religion.

more info


01/10/2025
LA's Poor Communication Should Have Residents Fuming


more info


01/10/2025
Republican Party's New Ground Game


more info


01/10/2025
Opening the DNC's Black Box
Why we're publishing a previously undisclosed list of all 448 members of the Democratic National Committee

more info


01/10/2025
The Most Under-Reported Story About Biden
What was the most under-reported news story during the Biden presidency? In the last week or so, there has been a sudden burst of recognition of the extent to which Democrats and the media worked together to cover up Biden's progressing cognitive decline. One media figure after another has com

more info


01/10/2025
Biden Is No Carter
In terms of character the 46th president doesn't come close to matching the 39th.

more info


01/10/2025
Biden Says He Could've Beaten Trump. That's Delusional
Not only is Biden overestimating his political skills, he's also ungraciously insulting his vice president.

more info


01/10/2025
Dresden in Los Angeles and Our Confederacy of Dunces
LA is burning. And the derelict people responsible are worried that they are found out as charlatans and empty suits.

more info


01/10/2025
The L.A. Apocalypse Was Entirely Predictable
Today on TAP: The hills above my hometown regularly catch fire, and developers regularly build there nonetheless.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Congress: Let's Talk About Trade Enforcement


The Trump administration has set an ambitious trade agenda for the remainder of 2020. In a House Ways and Means Committee hearing earlier this summer, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer stressed the president's intent to crack down on foreign countries that discriminate against American business and innovators.

With Biomedical Research, Taxpayers are Getting a Great Deal


Gilead Sciences' novel drug remdesivir has shown immense promise for treating coronavirus. Yet every time a company develops a promising drug, some policymakers call for the government to take control of the compound in question.

Marx on Christianity, Judaism, and Evolution/Race


"If someone calls it socialism," said the Rev. William Barber at an August 2019 conference of the Democratic National Committee, "then we must compel them to acknowledge that the Bible must then promote socialism, because Jesus offered free health care to everyone, and he never charged a leper a co-pay."

Abusing March-in Rights Would Jeopardize COVID-19 Research


Thirty-one state attorneys general recently urged the Trump administration to disregard the intellectual property protections on remdesivir -- the only FDA-approved treatment for COVID-19 -- and then license its patents to multiple drug manufacturers.

Judge Amy Coney Barrett and the Purdue Sexual Assault Case


Will some senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee vilify Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Trump's Supreme Court nominee? Attacks on her religion, her large family, or claims that she will block the advance of women may make good fodder for Facebook, but senators who pursue those tacks are likely to reap public disapproval from their own constituents. What is more likely is that liberal senators will take a page from liberal/progressive organizations like Public Justice and portray Barrett as soft on and complicit with campus sexual abusers. How?

President Trump's Executive Order Will Put an End to Pharmaceutical Breakthroughs


Every day, scientists get closer to a COVID-19 vaccine. A handful of biopharmaceutical firms hope to make one available by year's end.

The Mayflower Mystique: Remembering the Pilgrims


Few can name which groups the Godspeed and the Arabella brought to America. They were the Jamestown colonists in 1607 and the Puritans to Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630, respectively. But the Mayflower, which brought the Pilgrims to Plymouth in 1620, has sailed into history and ranks with the Titanic, the Lusitania, the Bismarck, and the Queen Mary as the world’s most famous ships. What accounts for the Mayflower’s mystique?

COVID's Second Wave Underscores the Threats Facing Disabled Americans


The second wave of COVID-19 has arrived with a vengeance.

Triumph of the Vaccine—No Shape-Shifting Enemy


Here’s a thought experiment. What if our experience with COVID-19 turns out to be a warm-up for responding to a worse plague in the future? COVID-19 is devastating for a significant number of older people but relatively innocuous for the young. I am thankful that this is not like the Justinian plague, nor the Athenian one, nor like smallpox. What if—God forbid—we find ourselves hosting a plague like one of these? Something as deadly as Ebola but as infectious as SARS-CoV-2?

Who is Perfect? Biden, Trump, McConnell, Pelosi?


Democrats have proven once again that they can find fault in President Donald Trump. Faults and flaws were found in him before the election. Many years before politics there were never any rave reviews about him being perfect.

The 340B Prescription-Drug Swindle Has Gone on Long Enough


In a recent hearing, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra revealed just how unfit he is to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.

Vaccination is the Ticket to Getting the U.S. Back On Track


The end of the pandemic in the U.S. is in sight. The Covid-19 vaccines currently available in the United States have proven to be outstandingly effective at protecting recipients from coronavirus and they are also safe.

Private Deborah Sampson, 'The Female Soldier'


There are those who would say that Private Deborah Sampson deserved the Medal of Honor, but she didn’t sign up for that; she joined the Army to fight for her country and wound up making history. Private Sampson was America’s first woman combat soldier. She served, disguised as a man by the name of Robert Shurtleff, under the command of General George Washington in the Continental Army during the American Revolution.

The End of Covid-19 Could Start in the Hair Salon


President Biden has floated an ambitious goal -- vaccinate enough Americans to achieve some sense of normalcy by July 4.

President Biden Is Right to Redefine Infrastructure


President Biden is in ongoing talks to discuss his multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure plan. Ever since its release, critics have claimed that many aspects of the plan have nothing to do with infrastructure.

America Needs Strong Patent Laws to Keep Inventing


In May, the Biden administration announced its support for a proposal at the World Trade Organization to suspend international intellectual property protections on Covid-19 vaccines.