[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: 21CFR314.81]

[Page 119-123]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF 
 
PART 314_APPLICATIONS FOR FDA APPROVAL TO MARKET A NEW DRUG--
Table of Contents
 
                         Subpart B_Applications
 
Sec. 314.81  Other postmarketing reports.

    (a) Applicability. Each applicant shall make the reports for each of 
its approved applications and abbreviated applications required under 
this section and section 505(k) of the act.
    (b) Reporting requirements. The applicant shall submit to the Food 
and Drug Administration at the specified times two copies of the 
following reports:
    (1) NDA--Field alert report. The applicant shall submit information 
of the following kinds about distributed drug products and articles to 
the FDA district office that is responsible for the facility involved 
within 3 working days of receipt by the applicant. The information may 
be provided by telephone or other rapid communication means, with prompt 
written followup. The report and its mailing cover should be plainly 
marked: ``NDA--Field Alert Report.''
    (i) Information concerning any incident that causes the drug product 
or its labeling to be mistaken for, or applied to, another article.
    (ii) Information concerning any bacteriological contamination, or 
any significant chemical, physical, or other change or deterioration in 
the distributed drug product, or any failure of one or more distributed 
batches of the drug product to meet the specification established for it 
in the application.
    (2) Annual report. The applicant shall submit each year within 60 
days of the anniversary date of U.S. approval of the application, two 
copies of the report to the FDA division responsible for reviewing the 
application. Each annual report is required to be accompanied by a 
completed transmittal Form FDA 2252 (Transmittal of Periodic Reports for 
Drugs for Human Use), and must include all the information required 
under this section that the applicant received or otherwise obtained 
during the annual reporting interval that ends on the U.S. anniversary 
date. The report is required to contain in the order listed:
    (i) Summary. A brief summary of significant new information from the 
previous year that might affect the safety, effectiveness, or labeling 
of the drug product. The report is also required to contain a brief 
description of actions the applicant has taken or intends to take as a 
result of this new information, for example, submit a labeling 
supplement, add a warning to the labeling, or initiate a new study. The 
summary shall briefly state whether labeling supplements for pediatric 
use have been submitted and whether new studies in the pediatric 
population to support appropriate labeling for the pediatric population 
have been initiated. Where possible, an estimate of patient exposure to 
the drug product, with special reference to the pediatric population 
(neonates, infants, children, and adolescents) shall be provided, 
including dosage form.
    (ii) Distribution data. Information about the quantity of the drug 
product distributed under the approved application, including that 
distributed to distributors. The information is required to include the 
National Drug Code (NDC) number, the total number of dosage units of 
each strength or potency distributed (e.g., 100,000/5 milligram tablets, 
50,000/10 milliliter vials), and the quantities distributed for domestic 
use and the quantities distributed for foreign use. Disclosure of 
financial or pricing data is not required.

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    (iii) Labeling. (a) Currently used professional labeling, patient 
brochures or package inserts (if any), and a representative sample of 
the package labels.
    (b) The content of labeling required under Sec. 201.100(d)(3) of 
this chapter (i.e., the package insert or professional labeling), 
including all text, tables, and figures, must be submitted in electronic 
format. Electronic format submissions must be in a form that FDA can 
process, review, and archive. FDA will periodically issue guidance on 
how to provide the electronic submission (e.g., method of transmission, 
media, file formats, preparation and organization of files). Submissions 
under this paragraph must be made in accordance with part 11 of this 
chapter, except for the requirements of Sec. 11.10(a), (c) through (h), 
and (k), and the corresponding requirements of Sec. 11.30.
    (c) A summary of any changes in labeling that have been made since 
the last report listed by date in the order in which they were 
implemented, or if no changes, a statement of that fact.
    (iv) Chemistry, manufacturing, and controls changes. (a) Reports of 
experiences, investigations, studies, or tests involving chemical or 
physical properties, or any other properties of the drug (such as the 
drug's behavior or properties in relation to microorganisms, including 
both the effects of the drug on microorganisms and the effects of 
microorganisms on the drug). These reports are only required for new 
information that may affect FDA's previous conclusions about the safety 
or effectiveness of the drug product.
    (b) A full description of the manufacturing and controls changes not 
requiring a supplemental application under Sec. 314.70 (b) and (c), 
listed by date in the order in which they were implemented.
    (v) Nonclinical laboratory studies. Copies of unpublished reports 
and summaries of published reports of new toxicological findings in 
animal studies and in vitro studies (e.g., mutagenicity) conducted by, 
or otherwise obtained by, the applicant concerning the ingredients in 
the drug product. The applicant shall submit a copy of a published 
report if requested by FDA.
    (vi) Clinical data. (a) Published clinical trials of the drug (or 
abstracts of them), including clinical trials on safety and 
effectiveness; clinical trials on new uses; biopharmaceutic, 
pharmacokinetic, and clinical pharmacology studies; and reports of 
clinical experience pertinent to safety (for example, epidemiologic 
studies or analyses of experience in a monitored series of patients) 
conducted by or otherwise obtained by the applicant. Review articles, 
papers describing the use of the drug product in medical practice, 
papers and abstracts in which the drug is used as a research tool, 
promotional articles, press clippings, and papers that do not contain 
tabulations or summaries of original data should not be reported.
    (b) Summaries of completed unpublished clinical trials, or 
prepublication manuscripts if available, conducted by, or otherwise 
obtained by, the applicant. Supporting information should not be 
reported. (A study is considered completed 1 year after it is 
concluded.)
    (c) Analysis of available safety and efficacy data in the pediatric 
population and changes proposed in the labeling based on this 
information. An assessment of data needed to ensure appropriate labeling 
for the pediatric population shall be included.
    (vii) Status reports of postmarketing study commitments. A status 
report of each postmarketing study of the drug product concerning 
clinical safety, clinical efficacy, clinical pharmacology, and 
nonclinical toxicology that is required by FDA (e.g., accelerated 
approval clinical benefit studies, pediatric studies) or that the 
applicant has committed, in writing, to conduct either at the time of 
approval of an application for the drug product or a supplement to an 
application, or after approval of the application or a supplement. For 
pediatric studies, the status report shall include a statement 
indicating whether postmarketing clinical studies in pediatric 
populations were required by FDA under Sec. 201.23 of this chapter. The 
status of these postmarketing studies shall be reported annually until 
FDA notifies the applicant, in writing, that the agency concurs with the 
applicant's determination that the study commitment has

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been fulfilled or that the study is either no longer feasible or would 
no longer provide useful information.
    (a) Content of status report. The following information must be 
provided for each postmarketing study reported under this paragraph:
    (1) Applicant's name.
    (2) Product name. Include the approved drug product's established 
name and proprietary name, if any.
    (3) NDA, ANDA, and supplement number.
    (4) Date of U.S. approval of NDA or ANDA.
    (5) Date of postmarketing study commitment.
    (6) Description of postmarketing study commitment. The description 
must include sufficient information to uniquely describe the study. This 
information may include the purpose of the study, the type of study, the 
patient population addressed by the study and the indication(s) and 
dosage(s) that are to be studied.
    (7) Schedule for completion and reporting of the postmarketing study 
commitment. The schedule should include the actual or projected dates 
for submission of the study protocol to FDA, completion of patient 
accrual or initiation of an animal study, completion of the study, 
submission of the final study report to FDA, and any additional 
milestones or submissions for which projected dates were specified as 
part of the commitment. In addition, it should include a revised 
schedule, as appropriate. If the schedule has been previously revised, 
provide both the original schedule and the most recent, previously 
submitted revision.
    (8) Current status of the postmarketing study commitment. The status 
of each postmarketing study should be categorized using one of the 
following terms that describes the study's status on the anniversary 
date of U.S. approval of the application or other agreed upon date:
    (i) Pending. The study has not been initiated, but does not meet the 
criterion for delayed.
    (ii) Ongoing. The study is proceeding according to or ahead of the 
original schedule described under paragraph (b)(2)(vii)(a)(7) of this 
section.
    (iii) Delayed. The study is behind the original schedule described 
under paragraph (b)(2)(vii)(a)(7) of this section.
    (iv) Terminated. The study was ended before completion but a final 
study report has not been submitted to FDA.
    (v) Submitted. The study has been completed or terminated and a 
final study report has been submitted to FDA.
    (9) Explanation of the study's status. Provide a brief description 
of the status of the study, including the patient accrual rate 
(expressed by providing the number of patients or subjects enrolled to 
date, and the total planned enrollment), and an explanation of the 
study's status identified under paragraph (b)(2)(vii)(a)(8) of this 
section. If the study has been completed, include the date the study was 
completed and the date the final study report was submitted to FDA, as 
applicable. Provide a revised schedule, as well as the reason(s) for the 
revision, if the schedule under paragraph (b)(2)(vii)(a)(7) of this 
section has changed since the last report.
    (b) Public disclosure of information. Except for the information 
described in this paragraph, FDA may publicly disclose any information 
described in paragraph (b)(2)(vii) of this section, concerning a 
postmarketing study, if the agency determines that the information is 
necessary to identify the applicant or to establish the status of the 
study, including the reasons, if any, for failure to conduct, complete, 
and report the study. Under this section, FDA will not publicly disclose 
trade secrets, as defined in Sec. 20.61 of this chapter, or 
information, described in Sec. 20.63 of this chapter, the disclosure of 
which would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
    (viii) Status of other postmarketing studies. A status report of any 
postmarketing study not included under paragraph (b)(2)(vii) of this 
section that is being performed by, or on behalf of, the applicant. A 
status report is to be included for any chemistry, manufacturing, and 
controls studies that the applicant has agreed to perform and for all 
product stability studies.

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    (ix) Log of outstanding regulatory business. To facilitate 
communications between FDA and the applicant, the report may, at the 
applicant's discretion, also contain a list of any open regulatory 
business with FDA concerning the drug product subject to the application 
(e.g., a list of the applicant's unanswered correspondence with the 
agency, a list of the agency's unanswered correspondence with the 
applicant).
    (3) Other reporting--(i) Advertisements and promotional labeling. 
The applicant shall submit specimens of mailing pieces and any other 
labeling or advertising devised for promotion of the drug product at the 
time of initial dissemination of the labeling and at the time of initial 
publication of the advertisement for a prescription drug product. 
Mailing pieces and labeling that are designed to contain samples of a 
drug product are required to be complete, except the sample of the drug 
product may be omitted. Each submission is required to be accompanied by 
a completed transmittal Form FDA-2253 (Transmittal of Advertisements and 
Promotional Labeling for Drugs for Human Use) and is required to include 
a copy of the product's current professional labeling. Form FDA-2253 may 
be obtained from the PHS Forms and Publications Distribution Center, 
12100 Parklawn Dr., Rockville, MD 20857.
    (ii) Special reports. Upon written request the agency may require 
that the applicant submit the reports under this section at different 
times than those stated.
    (iii) Notification of discontinuance. (a) An applicant who is the 
sole manufacturer of an approved drug product must notify FDA in writing 
at least 6 months prior to discontinuing manufacture of the drug product 
if:
    (1) The drug product is life supporting, life sustaining, or 
intended for use in the prevention of a serious disease or condition; 
and
    (2) The drug product was not originally derived from human tissue 
and replaced by a recombinant product.
    (b) For drugs regulated by the Center for Drug Evaluation and 
Research (CDER) or the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research 
(CBER), one copy of the notification required by paragraph 
(b)(3)(iii)(a) of this section must be sent to the CDER Drug Shortage 
Coordinator, at the address of the Director of CDER; one copy to the 
CDER Drug Registration and Listing Team, Division of Compliance Risk 
Management and Surveillance; and one copy to either the director of the 
review division in CDER that is responsible for reviewing the 
application, or the director of the office in CBER that is responsible 
for reviewing the application.
    (c) FDA will publicly disclose a list of all drug products to be 
discontinued under paragraph (b)(3)(iii)(a) of this section. If the 
notification period is reduced under Sec. 314.91, the list will state 
the reason(s) for such reduction and the anticipated date that 
manufacturing will cease.
    (iv) Withdrawal of approved drug product from sale. (a) The 
applicant shall submit on Form FDA 2657 (Drug Product Listing), within 
15 working days of the withdrawal from sale of a drug product, the 
following information:
    (1) The National Drug Code (NDC) number.
    (2) The identity of the drug product by established name and by 
proprietary name.
    (3) The new drug application or abbreviated application number.
    (4) The date of withdrawal from sale. It is requested but not 
required that the reason for withdrawal of the drug product from sale be 
included with the information.
    (b) The applicant shall submit each Form FDA-2657 to the Records 
Repository Team (HFD-143), Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Food 
and Drug Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20857.
    (c) Reporting under paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this section constitutes 
compliance with the requirements under Sec. 207.30(a) of this chapter 
to report ``at the discretion of the registrant when the change 
occurs.''
    (c) General requirements--(1) Multiple applications. For all reports 
required by this section, the applicant shall submit the information 
common to more than one application only to the application first 
approved, and shall not report separately on each application. The 
submission is required to identify all the

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applications to which the report applies.
    (2) Patient identification. Applicants should not include in reports 
under this section the names and addresses of individual patients; 
instead, the applicant should code the patient names whenever possible 
and retain the code in the applicant's files. The applicant shall 
maintain sufficient patient identification information to permit FDA, by 
using that information alone or along with records maintained by the 
investigator of a study, to identify the name and address of individual 
patients; this will ordinarily occur only when the agency needs to 
investigate the reports further or when there is reason to believe that 
the reports do not represent actual results obtained.
    (d) Withdrawal of approval. If an applicant fails to make reports 
required under this section, FDA may withdraw approval of the 
application and, thus, prohibit continued marketing of the drug product 
that is the subject of the application.

(Collection of information requirements approved by the Office of 
Management and Budget under control number 0910-0001)

[50 FR 7493, Feb. 22, 1985; 50 FR 14212, Apr. 11, 1985, as amended at 50 
FR 21238, May 23, 1985; 55 FR 11580, Mar. 29, 1990; 57 FR 17983, Apr. 
28, 1992; 63 FR 66670, Dec. 2, 1998; 64 FR 401, Jan. 5, 1999; 65 FR 
64617, Oct. 30, 2000; 66 FR 10815, Feb. 20, 2001; 68 FR 69019, Dec. 11, 
2003; 69 FR 18766, Apr. 8, 2004; 69 FR 48775, Aug. 11, 2004; 72 FR 
58999, Oct. 18, 2007]