[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 5]
[Revised as of April 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR312.32]

[Page 61-63]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF 
 
PART 312_INVESTIGATIONAL NEW DRUG APPLICATION--Table of Contents
 
          Subpart B_Investigational New Drug Application (IND)
 
Sec. 312.32  IND safety reports.

    (a) Definitions. The following definitions of terms apply to this 
section:-
    Associated with the use of the drug. There is a reasonable 
possibility that the experience may have been caused by the drug.
    Disability. A substantial disruption of a person's ability to 
conduct normal life functions.
    Life-threatening adverse drug experience. Any adverse drug 
experience that places the patient or subject, in the view of the 
investigator, at immediate risk of death from the reaction as it 
occurred, i.e., it does not include a reaction that, had it occurred in 
a more severe form, might have caused death.
    Serious adverse drug experience: Any adverse drug experience 
occurring at any dose that results in any of the following outcomes: 
Death, a life-threatening adverse drug experience, inpatient 
hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, a 
persistent or significant disability/incapacity, or a congenital 
anomaly/birth defect. Important medical events that may not result in 
death, be life-threatening, or require hospitalization may be considered 
a serious adverse drug experience when, based upon appropriate medical 
judgment, they may jeopardize the patient or subject and may require 
medical or surgical intervention to prevent one of the outcomes listed 
in this definition. Examples of such medical events include allergic 
bronchospasm requiring intensive treatment in an emergency room or at 
home, blood dyscrasias or convulsions that do not result in inpatient 
hospitalization, or the development of drug dependency or drug abuse.
    Unexpected adverse drug experience: Any adverse drug experience, the 
specificity or severity of which is not consistent with the current 
investigator brochure; or, if an investigator brochure is not required 
or available, the specificity or severity of which is not consistent 
with the risk information described in the general investigational plan 
or elsewhere in the current application, as amended. For example, under 
this definition, hepatic necrosis would be unexpected (by virtue of 
greater severity) if the investigator

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brochure only referred to elevated hepatic enzymes or hepatitis. 
Similarly, cerebral thromboembolism and cerebral vasculitis would be 
unexpected (by virtue of greater specificity) if the investigator 
brochure only listed cerebral vascular accidents. ``Unexpected,'' as 
used in this definition, refers to an adverse drug experience that has 
not been previously observed (e.g., included in the investigator 
brochure) rather than from the perspective of such experience not being 
anticipated from the pharmacological properties of the pharmaceutical 
product.
    (b) Review of safety information. The sponsor shall promptly review 
all information relevant to the safety of the drug obtained or otherwise 
received by the sponsor from any source, foreign or domestic, including 
information derived from any clinical or epidemiological investigations, 
animal investigations, commercial marketing experience, reports in the 
scientific literature, and unpublished scientific papers, as well as 
reports from foreign regulatory authorities that have not already been 
previously reported to the agency by the sponsor.
    (c) IND safety reports--(1) Written reports--(i) The sponsor shall 
notify FDA and all participating investigators in a written IND safety 
report of:
    (A) Any adverse experience associated with the use of the drug that 
is both serious and unexpected; or
    (B) Any finding from tests in laboratory animals that suggests a 
significant risk for human subjects including reports of mutagenicity, 
teratogenicity, or carcinogenicity. Each notification shall be made as 
soon as possible and in no event later than 15 calendar days after the 
sponsor's initial receipt of the information. Each written notification 
may be submitted on FDA Form 3500A or in a narrative format (foreign 
events may be submitted either on an FDA Form 3500A or, if preferred, on 
a CIOMS I form; reports from animal or epidemiological studies shall be 
submitted in a narrative format) and shall bear prominent identification 
of its contents, i.e., ``IND Safety Report.'' Each written notification 
to FDA shall be transmitted to the FDA new drug review division in the 
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research or the product review division 
in the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research that has 
responsibility for review of the IND. If FDA determines that additional 
data are needed, the agency may require further data to be submitted.
    (ii) In each written IND safety report, the sponsor shall identify 
all safety reports previously filed with the IND concerning a similar 
adverse experience, and shall analyze the significance of the adverse 
experience in light of the previous, similar reports.
    (2) Telephone and facsimile transmission safety reports. The sponsor 
shall also notify FDA by telephone or by facsimile transmission of any 
unexpected fatal or life-threatening experience associated with the use 
of the drug as soon as possible but in no event later than 7 calendar 
days after the sponsor's initial receipt of the information. Each 
telephone call or facsimile transmission to FDA shall be transmitted to 
the FDA new drug review division in the Center for Drug Evaluation and 
Research or the product review division in the Center for Biologics 
Evaluation and Research that has responsibility for review of the IND.
    (3) Reporting format or frequency. FDA may request a sponsor to 
submit IND safety reports in a format or at a frequency different than 
that required under this paragraph. The sponsor may also propose and 
adopt a different reporting format or frequency if the change is agreed 
to in advance by the director of the new drug review division in the 
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research or the director of the products 
review division in the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research 
which is responsible for review of the IND.
    (4) A sponsor of a clinical study of a marketed drug is not required 
to make a safety report for any adverse experience associated with use 
of the drug that is not from the clinical study itself.
    (d) Followup. (1) The sponsor shall promptly investigate all safety 
information received by it.
    (2) Followup information to a safety report shall be submitted as 
soon as the relevant information is available.

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    (3) If the results of a sponsor's investigation show that an adverse 
drug experience not initially determined to be reportable under 
paragraph (c) of this section is so reportable, the sponsor shall report 
such experience in a written safety report as soon as possible, but in 
no event later than 15 calendar days after the determination is made.
    (4) Results of a sponsor's investigation of other safety information 
shall be submitted, as appropriate, in an information amendment or 
annual report.
    (e) Disclaimer. A safety report or other information submitted by a 
sponsor under this part (and any release by FDA of that report or 
information) does not necessarily reflect a conclusion by the sponsor or 
FDA that the report or information constitutes an admission that the 
drug caused or contributed to an adverse experience. A sponsor need not 
admit, and may deny, that the report or information submitted by the 
sponsor constitutes an admission that the drug caused or contributed to 
an adverse experience.

[52 FR 8831, Mar. 19, 1987, as amended at 52 FR 23031, June 17, 1987; 55 
FR 11579, Mar. 29, 1990; 62 FR 52250, Oct. 7, 1997; 67 FR 9585, Mar. 4, 
2002]