[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR20.89]

[Page 215-216]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                                SERVICES
 
PART 20--PUBLIC INFORMATION--Table of Contents
 
                  Subpart E--Limitations on Exemptions
 
Sec. 20.89  Communications with foreign government officials.

    Communications with foreign government officials shall have the same 
status as communications with any member of the public, except that:
    (a) Investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes by 
foreign government officials who perform counterpart functions to the 
Food and Drug Administration in a foreign country, and trade secrets and 
confidential commercial or financial information obtained by such 
officials, which are voluntarily disclosed to the Food and Drug 
Administration as part of cooperative law enforcement and regulatory 
efforts, shall be exempt from public disclosure to the same extent to 
which the records would be so exempt pursuant to Secs. 20.61 and 20.64, 
as if they had been prepared by or submitted directly to Food and Drug 
Administration employees, except that investigatory records shall be 
exempt from disclosure for a longer period of time if the foreign 
government officials so require as a condition of their furnishing the 
information to the Food and Drug Administration.
    (b) Disclosure of investigatory records compiled for law enforcement 
purposes by the Food and Drug Administration to foreign government 
officials who perform counterpart functions to the Food and Drug 
Administration in a foreign country as part of cooperative law 
enforcement efforts does not invoke the rule established in Sec. 20.21 
that such records shall be made available for disclosure to all members 
of the public.
    (c)(1) The Commissioner of Food and Drugs, or any other officer or 
employee of the Food and Drug Administration whom the Commissioner may 
designate to act on his or her behalf for the purpose, may authorize the 
disclosure of confidential commercial information submitted to the Food 
and Drug Administration, or incorporated into agency-prepared records, 
to foreign government officials who perform counterpart functions to the 
Food and Drug Administration as part of cooperative law enforcement or 
regulatory efforts, provided that:
    (i) The foreign government agency has provided both a written 
statement establishing its authority to protect confidential commercial 
information from public disclosure and a written commitment not to 
disclose any such information provided without the written permission of 
the sponsor or written confirmation by the Food and Drug Administration 
that the information no longer has confidential status; and
    (ii) The Commissioner of Food and Drugs or the Commissioner's 
designee makes one or more of the following determinations:
    (A) The sponsor of the product application has provided written 
authorization for the disclosure;
    (B) Disclosure would be in the interest of public health by reason 
of the foreign government's possessing information concerning the 
safety, efficacy, or quality of a product or information concerning an 
investigation; or
    (C) The disclosure is to a foreign scientist visiting the Food and 
Drug Administration on the agency's premises as part of a joint review 
or long-term cooperative training effort authorized under section 708 of 
the act, the review

[[Page 216]]

is in the interest of public health, the Food and Drug Administration 
retains physical control over the information, the Food and Drug 
Administration requires the visiting foreign scientist to sign a written 
commitment to protect the confidentiality of the information, and the 
scientist provides a written assurance that he or she has no financial 
interest in the regulated industry of the type that would preclude 
participation in the review of the matter if the individual were subject 
to the conflict of interest rules applicable to the Food and Drug 
Administration advisory committee members under Sec. 14.80(b)(1) of this 
chapter. Subject to all of the foregoing conditions, visiting foreign 
scientists may have access to trade secret information, entitled to 
protection under section 301(j) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic 
Act (the act), in those cases where such disclosures would be a 
necessary part of the joint review or training.
    (2) Except as provided under paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(C) of this 
section, this provision does not authorize the disclosure to foreign 
government officials of other countries of trade secret information 
concerning manufacturing methods and processes prohibited from 
disclosure by section 301(j) of the act, unless pursuant to an express 
written authorization provided by the submitter of the information.
    (3) Any disclosure under this section of information submitted to 
the Food and Drug Administration or incorporated into agency-prepared 
records does not invoke the rule established in Sec. 20.21 that such 
records shall be made available to all members of the public.
    (d)(1) The Senior Associate Commissioner for Policy, Planning, and 
Legislation, or the Deputy Commissioner for International and 
Constituent Relations, or any other officer or employee of the Food and 
Drug Administration whom the Senior Associate Commissioner for Policy, 
Planning, and Legislation or the Deputy Commissioner for International 
and Constituent Relations may designate to act on their behalf for the 
purpose, may authorize the disclosure to, or receipt from, an official 
of a foreign government agency of nonpublic, predecisional documents 
concerning the Food and Drug Administration's or the other government 
agency's regulations or other regulatory requirements, or other 
nonpublic information relevant to either agency's activities, as part of 
cooperative efforts to facilitate global harmonization of regulatory 
requirements, cooperative regulatory activities, or implementation of 
international agreements, provided that:
    (i) The foreign government agency has the authority to protect such 
nonpublic documents from public disclosure and will not disclose any 
such documents provided without the written confirmation by the Food and 
Drug Administration that the documents no longer have nonpublic status; 
and
    (ii) The Senior Associate Commissioner for Policy, Planning, and 
Legislation or the Deputy Commissioner for International and Constituent 
Relations or their designee makes the determination that the exchange is 
reasonably necessary to facilitate global harmonization of regulatory 
requirements, cooperative regulatory activities, or implementation of 
international agreements.
    (2) Any exchange under this section of nonpublic documents does not 
invoke the rule established in Sec. 20.21 that such records shall be 
made available to all members of the public.
    (e) For purposes of this section, the term ``official of a foreign 
government agency'' includes, but is not limited to, employees (whether 
temporary or permanent) of and agents contracted by the foreign 
government, or by an international organization established by law, 
treaty, or other governmental action and having responsibility to 
facilitate global or regional harmonization of standards and 
requirements in FDA's areas of responsibility or to promote and 
coordinate public health efforts. For such officials, the statement and 
commitment required by paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section shall be 
provided on behalf of both the organization and the individual.

[42 FR 15616, Mar. 22, 1977, as amended at 58 FR 61603, Nov. 19, 1993; 
60 FR 63382, Dec. 8, 1995; 65 FR 11888, Mar. 7, 2000]