1 / 23

16 th February 2011

Navigating The Regulatory Maze. 16 th February 2011. Tim Adetona Voisin Consulting Life Sciences 3 rue des Longs Pres 92100 Boulogne France Tel: +33 1 41 31 83 02 email: adetona@voisinconsulting.com. Innovative Healthcare Product Development & Regulatory Strategy. Expertise.

lara-simon
Télécharger la présentation

16 th February 2011

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Navigating The Regulatory Maze 16th February 2011 Tim Adetona VoisinConsulting Life Sciences 3 rue des Longs Pres 92100 Boulogne France Tel: +33 1 41 31 83 02 email: adetona@voisinconsulting.com

  2. Innovative Healthcare Product Development & Regulatory Strategy

  3. Expertise Anticipate, convince and participate in creating forthcoming regulations

  4. Products • New classes of productsat borderbetween or combining drugs, biologics, bioactives, medical devices, diagnostics, cosmetics: • Personalized & predictive medicine • Targeted therapies

  5. One Multidisciplinary Team +/- 70 connected men & women working as one multicultural, scientific & regulatory team Ph.D, M.D, Pharm.D, M.Sc, Engineers Multilingual: English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Serbian, Hindi…

  6. Our Connected Offices Cambridge, MA - USA vccambridge@voisinconsulting.com Lausanne –Switzerland vclausanne@voisinconsulting.com Paris & Rennes - France vcparis@voisinconsulting.com vcrennes@voisinconluting.com Bangalore - India vcbangalore@voisinconsulting.com Melbournevcmelbourne@voisinconsulting.com Singapore vcsingapore@voisinconsulting.com

  7. Navigating The Nutraceutical Maze • The Nutraceutical Promise • Marketing Objectives • Historical Perspective & Current Status • Differing Classification Questions • Product Positioning Questions • Global Regulatory Frameworks • FSSAI Alignments • Universal Health Claim Considerations • Human Data Elements • Strategic Regulatory Advice

  8. The Nutraceutical Promise • Community of supplementusers continue to drive growthimpressively • A 2008 BCC research positions global Nutraceuticalsat 7.4% growth • Projected to hit $176.6 billion by 2013 • Herbalsupplements to 93 billion in 2015 (Global Industries Analysts) • Globalisation of Nutraceuticals has come to stay • Howeverincreasinggrowthtypicallyattractsincreasingregulation • High degree of consumer protection • Promotion of fairtrade, and • Not at the expense of productresearch & innovation • Hence, there are challenges inherentwith the growthpotentials

  9. Marketing Objectives • Get products to the market in the shortest time possible • Optimally communicate products’ health benefit to consumers • Achieved within the appropriate regulatory regimen • Preferably, operate the same requirements globally! • Harmonizationfacilitates global trade, R&D, predictability • Pharmas have takenveryhugeharmonizationstepsthroughICH • Global marketdevelopmentsuccess relies on soundknowledge of extensive as well as emerginglegislativeframeworks

  10. Historical Perspectives & Status • National regulations used to be “local” in concept and application • Harmonized rules present opportunities for global brands • Regional harmonization are gradually evolving e.g. ASEAN: AFTA • Asia, LAM at various stages of development • EC, USA, Canada, Japan are “stand-alone” at the most • With “work in progress” in key aspects e.g. EU’s • substances other than Vits/Min; • certain aspects of PARNUTS; • Nutrient Profile being a basis for NHCR • Discrepancy exists globally with definition, classification & requirements

  11. DifferingClassification Questions • Product designation • Food supplements, dietary Supplements, Vit/Min level, • PARNUTS, FOSHU, Medical Food, • Herbal Product, Botanical product, • Medicinal?, Nutrient?, Ingredient status? • Permmited List for Nutrients, Functional Food, • Probiotic, Prebiotic, • Novel?, Sports food, • Additive permitted, Excipients, • Nutricosmetics, Cosmeceuticals • Market authorization: • registration vs. notification, • duration of procedure, • Life Cycle Management impact

  12. ProductPositioning Questions • Regulatory approach questions: • Harmonized procedure • National procedure • Duration & Stringency • Communicating product’s health benefit questions: • NHCR, • Generic Art.13(1), Art.13(5), • Art.14(a) & (b), • Qualified health claims, • SSA, • National rules, • NHPD requirements • Global brand packaging differences: • Label content presentation, • Minimum font size requirements, • Regional RDA, • Mandatory warnings, • Geographical regions (Australia, USA, FDA, EU, Canada, LAM, MEA)

  13. Global RegulatoryFrameworks • EU (EFSA, National Authorities) • NHCR 1924/2006 • Nutrition claims/nutrient content • Art. 13 (1) & (5); Art. 14 (a) & (b) • PASSCLAIM criteria • USA (FDA) • Health Claims • NLEA 1990: Authorized Health Claims (SSA – Significant Scientific Agreement) • FDAMA 1997: Authoritative Statements by scientific bodies (not Food Supp) • CHI&BNI 2003: Qualified Health Claims (evidence not as strong as SSA) • Nutrient Claims: NLEA 1990 (similar to EU Nutrition claim) • Structure/Function Claims: DSHEA 1994 (FDA non pre-approveddisclaimer)

  14. Global RegulatoryFrameworks • Japan • Foods for special health Use (FOSHU) established from 1991 • Includes processed food products, tablets & capsule forms • Dietary ingredients with beneficial physiological functions in humans • Maintain/promote health; improve health conditions • Similar to other structure/function claims in USA or other functions in Codex Alimentarius • Requires validation of quality, efficacy and safety • Disease risk reduction possible (Ca & osteoporosis; Fä & neural tube defects) • Since 2005, Qualified FOSHU claims (a la FDA) also possible • ASEAN (Association of South East Asian Nations) • Progressive harmonization at the instance of ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (AFTA, 1967) • Definition of Food supplement • Supplements diet to enhance or improve the health function of the human body • Contains one or more of vitamins, minerals, amino acids, enzymes, probiotics, bioactives • Health claim evidence increases from general/nutritional; functional; disease risk reduction

  15. Global RegulatoryFrameworks • Korea (KFDA) • Health functional food (HFF) includes • Any form of foods, food supplements with functional ingredients useful to the body • Established in 2002, regulation recognizes Generic HFF (with spec & standards in HFF code) • And product-specific HFF (requires pre-market registration/approval of specific ingredients) • 3 types of claims: nutrient function; other function; reduction of disease (Codex Alimentarius) • Other functions. convincing; probable; or insufficient • China (SFDA) • Functional food: has special health functions or is able to supply vitamins or minerals • Suitable for consumption by special groups of people and regulates human body functions • Toxicity, functionality, stability and hygiene tests are required for pre-market approval • 27 categories of product-specific health claims (function and reduction of disease risk) • Historical/traditional & present-day use data to be provided on herbs

  16. Global RegulatoryFrameworks • Latin America • No harmonized provisions on health claims and substantiation • National legislations to be considered separately (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico) • Argentina • No provisions for health claims in the food regulation • Claims on diseases and therapeutic conditions are prohibited • Ads can describe physiological effect of nutrients (vitamins & minerals) on healthy people • Brazil • Food and food supplement labeling is regulated • Positive list on functional and health claims approved in 2008 for 18 nutrients & ingredients • Evidence to support food claims: nutritional, physiological, toxicological trials on animals; biochemical, epidemiological, clinical trials; proof of efficacy through traditional use in the population; and scientific literature • Mexico • Guidelines on nutrition and health claims are based on the Codex Alimentarius

  17. FSSAI Alignment • Food Safety and Standards Authorities of India (FSSAI) • Traditionalmedicines not part of Nutraceuticals • USA’sDietarySupplementsincludetraditional and herbalproducts • Canada’s Natural HealthProductsincludetraditional and herbalproducts • EU’s Food Supplements (TraditionalHerbalMedicinesseparatelyregulated) • Japan’s FOSHU (Traditional & HerbalMedicines not part of definition for dietarysupp) • FSSA 2006 listsingredients (& properties) thatcanbeNutraceuticals • Foods for SpecialDietary Uses • May contain plants/botanicals, vit/min, substances of animal origin & dietarysupps • Similar to EU’s Food supplements • ReferencesIndiaRDA • Ca|Vit. D: [EU: 800mg|200IU]; [US/CAN: 1000+mg|600IU]; [Ind: 400/600mg|400IU]

  18. UniversalHealth Claim Considerations • Clarify the relationship between the food/constituent and health effect • Clarify valid measurements for the food/constituent and the health effect • Rank all the pertinent scientific data • Verify the quality of each supportive scientific data • Interpret each pertinent study • Consider the totality and the weighing of available scientific evidence • Best substantiated by well-designed human intervention studies. • Demonstrates association between food/constituent and health effect • Observational studies are not typically accepted as strong evidence

  19. Human Data Elements • Sufficient characterization of the food component for the claimed effect • Study group is representative of the target population • The use of appropriate controls • Adequate duration of exposure in view of the intended effect • Sufficient characterization of the study group’s background diet and lifestyle • Amount of food/component is consistent with intended pattern of consumption • Compliance monitoring & test of hypothesis • Use of appropriate markers instead of difficult-to-measure true endpoints • Use of biologically valid biomarkers

  20. Strategic Regulatory Advice • Determine ideal classification (e.g. EU Ingredient Decision Tree) • Become familiar with pertinent regulatory requirement • Determine optimal regulatory strategy • Investigate possible alternative market authorization route • Review every aspects of the product and pack presentation • Analyze and validate ingredients & formulas in different markets • Conduct data gap analysis for registration/notification & claims • Verify compliant product labeling as per market • Design and compile technical dossier as per chosen strategy

  21. More Regulatory Advice • Deploy strategic planning for changing regulatory environment • Invest time & effort behind marketing claim proposition • Investigate appropriate regulatory strategy for claim positioning • Ensure protocol design & study data supports NHCR, HC, QHC, SSA … • Identify & bridge gaps in claim support data • Consider compromise claims wordings as interim strategy • Conduct comprehensive products’ regulatory market readiness • Validate your findings with experienced Experts • Develop & market product on the basis of expert-validated outputs • Plan for Adverse Events Reporting/Vigilance reporting (US, France…)

  22. Lest We Forget • The Nutraceuticals market holds much promise • And directly affected by apparent regulatory classification constraints • Passing a health claim application presents another hurdle • Within these challenges are opportunities, and solutions remains in: • Strategic consideration of life-cycle and regulatory alternatives, • Correct application of knowledge of local/national/regionalpeculiarities • Rigorous gap analysis of regulatory market readiness plans • Constructive scientific data positioning and justification • The obvious may not necessarily be the only or optimal pathway • The seeming difficulty may not be a “show-stopper” • To every problem is a solution! We only need to find the right one.

  23. Thank You Tim Adetona Voisin Consulting 3 rue des Longs Pres 92100 Boulogne France Tel: +33 1 41 31 83 02 Mob: +41 7 95 49 38 12 email: adetona@voisinconsulting.com

More Related