98-2407. Financial Disclosure by Clinical Investigators  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 21 (Monday, February 2, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 5233-5254]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-2407]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Food and Drug Administration
    
    21 CFR Parts 54, 312, 314, 320, 330, 601, 807, 812, 814, and 860
    
    [Docket No. 93N-0445]
    
    
    Financial Disclosure by Clinical Investigators
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is issuing regulations 
    requiring the sponsor of any drug, including a biological product, or 
    device marketing application (applicant), to submit certain information 
    concerning the compensation to, and financial interests of, any 
    clinical investigator conducting certain clinical studies. This 
    requirement will apply to any covered clinical study of a drug or 
    device submitted in a marketing application that the applicant or FDA 
    relies on to establish that the product is effective, including studies 
    that show equivalence to an effective product, or that make a 
    significant contribution to the demonstration of safety. This final 
    rule requires applicants to certify to the absence of certain financial 
    interests of clinical investigators and/or disclose those financial 
    interests, as required, when covered clinical studies are submitted to 
    FDA in support of product marketing. This regulation is intended to 
    ensure that financial interests and arrangements of clinical 
    investigators that could affect reliability of data submitted to FDA in 
    support of product marketing are identified and disclosed by the 
    sponsor of any drug, biological product, or device marketing 
    application. If the applicant does not include certification or 
    disclosure, or both, if required, or does not certify that it was not 
    possible to obtain the information, the agency may refuse to file the 
    application. FDA intends to propose to extend these requirements to 
    submissions for marketing approval related to human foods, animal 
    foods, and animal drugs in a subsequent issue of the Federal Register.
    
    DATES: This regulation becomes effective on February 2, 1999. Submit 
    written comments on the information collection requirements by April 3, 
    1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written comments on the information collection 
    requirements to the Dockets Management Branch (HFA-305), Food and Drug 
    Administration, 12420 Parklawn Dr., rm. 1-23, Rockville, MD 20857.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mary C. Gross, Office of External 
    Affairs, Food and Drug Administration (HF-60), 5600 Fishers Lane, 
    Rockville, MD 20857, 301-827-3440, FAX 301-594-0113.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
    
    I. Background
    
        In the Federal Register of September 22, 1994 (59 FR 48708), FDA 
    published a proposed regulation to help ensure that financial interests 
    and arrangements of clinical investigators that could affect 
    reliability of data submitted to FDA in support of product marketing 
    are identified and disclosed by the sponsor of any drug, biological 
    product or device marketing application (applicant). In this document, 
    FDA proposed to require disclosure by applicants of the following types 
    of financial interests and arrangements: Compensation made to the 
    clinical investigator in which the value of the compensation could be 
    affected by the
    
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    study outcome; a proprietary interest by the investigator in the tested 
    product, such as a patent; a significant equity interest in the sponsor 
    of the covered study; or significant payments by the sponsor of the 
    covered study of other sorts, such as a grant to fund ongoing research, 
    compensation in the form of equipment, or retainers for ongoing 
    consultation or honoraria. If, to the best of the applicant's 
    knowledge, a clinical investigator did not have any of these financial 
    interests or arrangements, FDA proposed that an applicant might provide 
    a statement of certification to FDA.
        In the course of developing this rule, FDA met with many outside 
    groups with an interest in the issues involved, including regulated 
    industry, consumer groups, health professionals and clinical 
    investigators. These issues were also discussed at a meeting with FDA's 
    Science Board in September 1993, and, at that meeting, there was 
    general support for the concept of disclosure of potentially biasing 
    financial interests and arrangements of clinical investigators to FDA, 
    not only from Science Board members but also from the pharmaceutical, 
    device and biotechnology industries.
        FDA received 58 written comments on the proposed rule. Many of 
    these comments supported the proposed rule, some raised substantive 
    concerns and challenges to the rule, and one comment, from the 
    Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturer's Association urged FDA to 
    hold a public hearing on the provisions of the proposed rule. In 
    response, FDA convened a public meeting on July 20, 1995, to provide 
    interested parties with an opportunity to present further public 
    comment to FDA on the proposed rule. Representatives of seven 
    organizations presented testimony to FDA during the public meeting; 
    copies of the testimony and related comments have been filed with the 
    Dockets Management Branch (address above) and are available for public 
    review. FDA also convened a second meeting on March 29, 1996, with the 
    agency's Science Board. At this meeting, issues relating to the 
    proposed rule were discussed by a panel that included representatives 
    from the: Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers Association, Health 
    Industry Manufacturer's Association, Public Citizen Health Research 
    Group, American Medical Association, Association of American Medical 
    Colleges, and the Biotechnology Industry Organization. According to 
    representatives of drug and device manufacturers, the financial 
    arrangements in the proposed rule required to be disclosed are 
    uncommon, and the proposed rule as written would not impose an extreme 
    burden on industry. The groups represented and the Science Board 
    members agreed unanimously that applicants should disclose to FDA any 
    financial arrangement with a clinical investigator and any clinical 
    investigator interest, whereby the compensation to the clinical 
    investigator or interest could be affected by study outcome (e.g., 
    payments in the form of stock options or royalties, possession of a 
    patent, etc.), and Science Board members recommended that FDA finalize 
    the proposed rule with only slight modifications. Transcripts, meeting 
    minutes, and executive summaries from these open meetings may be 
    examined at FDA's Dockets Management Branch (address above).
    
    II. Summary of Comments
    
        1. Several comments stated that section 704 of the Federal Food, 
    Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 374) (the act) expressly prohibits 
    FDA from inspecting financial data of companies and that FDA cannot 
    obtain access to this information by having the request come from a 
    reviewing division at headquarters rather than a field investigator. 
    One comment said that there is nothing in section 505(d) of the act (21 
    U.S.C. 355(d)) that might be construed as authorizing FDA to require 
    submission of financial data in order to evaluate the approvability of 
    a new drug application (NDA). The same comment said that section 505(b) 
    of the act specifically lists the information that must be submitted 
    with an NDA, and it does not include submission of financial data.
        In the preamble to the proposal (59 FR 48708 at 48712 to 48713), 
    FDA discussed in detail the legal authority for this regulation. The 
    agency cited sections 505, 510(k), 513, 515, 519, 520(g), 522, and 
    701(a) of the act (21 U.S.C. 360(k), 360c, 360e, 360i, 360j(g), 360l, 
    371(a) and section 351 of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act) (42 
    U.S.C. 262)) as authority for the regulation and noted that the Supreme 
    Court has upheld FDA's authority to issue regulations to ensure the 
    reliability of clinical study results, including requirements to 
    minimize bias. (See Weinberger v. Hynson, Westcott & Dunning, Inc., 412 
    U.S. 606 (1973).) After reviewing the comments, FDA continues to 
    believe, for the reasons stated in the preamble to the proposal that it 
    has authority to require applicants to submit information concerning 
    certain financial interests of clinical investigators conducting 
    clinical studies. To conclude otherwise would unduly restrict FDA's 
    ability to perform the role assigned to it by Congress to assess data 
    submitted in product marketing applications and to determine whether 
    the products meet the criteria for approval set for in the act.
        Although the authority provided in section 704 of the act does not 
    extend to financial data, other provisions of the act provide the 
    agency with the authority to obtain the information it needs to 
    adequately assess the safety and effectiveness of drugs and devices. 
    For example, section 505(d) of the act includes the requirement that 
    efficacy of drugs be demonstrated by adequate and well controlled 
    investigations. The language in section 505(d) of the act is intended 
    to help ensure that consumers are not exposed to products for which 
    efficacy has not been demonstrated. A critical factor in determining 
    whether a study is well controlled is the extent to which potential 
    bias on the part of the investigator has been minimized (see 21 CFR 
    314.126(b)(5)). FDA believes that a clinical investigator's financial 
    interests could introduce bias into a study and affect the reliability 
    of data submitted to FDA in support of a marketing application. 
    Information about such interests is critical to the agency's role of 
    determining efficacy of products based on valid, reliable, and unbiased 
    data.
        Section 505(k) of the act also provides authority for the issuance 
    of these regulations. Under section 505(k) of the act, the agency may 
    issue regulations requiring the applicant to make and keep records and 
    reports of data relating to clinical study experience and other data 
    and information that are necessary to determine whether grounds exist 
    to withdraw approval of an NDA or an abbreviated new drug application 
    (ANDA). Section 505(k) of the act also provides the agency with the 
    authority to access such records and to copy and verify them. The 
    additional authorities relied on by FDA to issue these regulations are 
    discussed in the preamble to the proposal.
        FDA believes this rule is consistent with the agency's general 
    rulemaking authority set forth in section 701(a) of the act, which 
    authorizes the agency to issue regulations for the efficient 
    enforcement of the act. The agency continues to rely on the statutory 
    authorities discussed here and in the preamble to the proposal as 
    authority for this regulation.
        2. Some comments said that FDA has not demonstrated an adequate 
    need for the rule, that there is no factual justification for the rule 
    and that FDA
    
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    has never shown that if FDA does not receive financial disclosure 
    information, public health or safety would be threatened. One comment 
    said that there is no evidence to demonstrate that studies by clinical 
    investigators with particular financial interests are more likely to be 
    biased than studies performed by other clinical investigators, and that 
    there are many other potential sources of bias that FDA does not take 
    into account.
        FDA disagrees with these comments and believes there is factual 
    justification to require collection of this information. Over the past 
    several years, FDA has received information on potentially problematic 
    payment schemes through numerous sources, including: Published 
    newspaper articles, congressional reports, a Government Accounting 
    Office report, congressional inquiries and public testimony and 
    comments. Although FDA learned through these sources that problematic 
    financial interests and arrangements do exist, FDA has had no formal 
    mechanism to collect this information from applicants. FDA acknowledges 
    that other sources of potential bias exist and could influence a 
    clinical investigator's judgment or behavior, such as a quest for 
    prestige within the scientific community, a preference for confirming a 
    personal hypothesis or the desire for future contracts with the sponsor 
    of a study. Such potential biases are difficult to assess and minimize, 
    but the reliability to assess and minimize all bias does not argue 
    against addressing some potential sources of bias. Certain kinds of 
    payment arrangements for clinical trials would result in a higher 
    payment or financial gain from a particular outcome (that is, from a 
    ``successful'' study rather than one that did not show the therapy's 
    effectiveness) and gives the investigator a potential ``stake'' in that 
    outcome. Payments that are greater for one outcome than another or that 
    are in the form of stock options or royalties are examples of such 
    payment arrangements and clearly have the potential to bias the outcome 
    of clinical trials, adversely affecting the integrity of the data 
    submitted to FDA.
        In June 1991, the Inspector General of the Department of Health and 
    Human Services submitted a management advisory report to FDA asserting 
    that FDA's failure to have a mechanism for collecting information on 
    ``financial conflicts of interest'' among clinical investigators who 
    study products undergoing FDA review could constitute a ``material 
    weakness'' under the Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act. 
    Although FDA determined that a material weakness did not exist, FDA has 
    concluded there is a need to address this issue through rulemaking. In 
    the preamble to the proposed rule, the agency explained that the 
    existence of unbiased clinical research and reliable data are essential 
    to FDA's assessment of the safety and effectiveness of new human drugs, 
    biological products, and medical devices. Although payment arrangements 
    required to be disclosed in this final rule have been described by 
    industry sponsors as uncommon, small businesses in certain medical 
    device and biologic industries appear to enter into certain 
    arrangements more frequently, because of a lack of readily available 
    capital or as a natural byproduct of the ``inventor/investigator'' 
    relationship (see comment 3 of section I of this document). For these 
    reasons, FDA believes the rule is needed and justified.
        3. One comment, although not opposed to the concept of disclosure, 
    said the requirement as proposed was not an effective way to ferret out 
    the corruption of studies by financial arrangements. Another comment 
    said that disclosure is warranted, but that disclosure alone is not 
    enough, that clinical investigators should be banned from owning an 
    equity interest that exceeds $25,000 in the sponsor of a covered study 
    and should be banned from receiving significant payments of other sorts 
    from the sponsor of a covered study that exceed $5,000 per year.
        FDA's intention, by finalizing the rule, is to make the agency 
    aware of payments and financial arrangements by sponsors of covered 
    studies that could lead to the introduction of bias into the clinical 
    trial process, so that this can be taken into account in the review 
    process and to discourage such practices, not to ``ferret out 
    corruption of studies.'' FDA is encouraging applicants to work with FDA 
    and clinical investigators to minimize the occurrence of such financial 
    arrangements or to ensure that covered clinical studies are 
    sufficiently well designed and managed to eliminate the possibility 
    that bias due to potentially problematic financial arrangements will 
    influence the outcome of the study.
        FDA does not agree that it should ban certain financial 
    arrangements. FDA recognizes that therapeutically beneficial products 
    have been developed through clinical investigations that were conducted 
    by the product-patent holder, or for which clinical investigators were 
    compensated with equity in the sponsor's firm, and is therefore not 
    prohibiting any arrangement, nor ruling out the possibility of relying 
    on studies conducted under these circumstances as a basis for product 
    approval. Rather FDA intends to give such studies particularly close 
    scrutiny and evaluation.
        4. Several comments said the rule will affect acceptance of data 
    from studies conducted outside the United States by investigators who 
    are foreign nationals. One comment suggested that an exemption for 
    foreign investigators may be necessary. Some comments stated that the 
    disclosure requirements may be in conflict with foreign privacy 
    regulations, and that different cultural standards may prevent 
    compliance with the rule by foreign investigators. A few comments also 
    said the final rule should be applied prospectively to avoid penalizing 
    applicants and clinical investigators whose clinical investigations are 
    already in progress.
        In response to these comments, FDA notes that the comments relating 
    to acceptance of data from studies conducted outside the United States 
    did not specifically identify information pertinent to this rule that 
    could not be supplied by a foreign investigator. Most of the 
    information sought, even for studies conducted outside the United 
    States, is known to the applicant and needs no clinical investigator 
    disclosure. Only the question of ownership of equity in the sponsor of 
    the covered study requires disclosure by the clinical investigator. 
    With regard to comments about applying the rule retrospectively, FDA 
    believes it is important to know about the financial arrangements and 
    payments considered in this rule that are problematic in a timely 
    manner and does not believe implementation should be long deferred. In 
    order to give applicants time to comply with the final rule and to 
    avoid delayed submissions, however, FDA will require applicants to 
    comply with the rule 1 year after the publication date of the final 
    rule. FDA recognizes that there may be times where, despite the 
    applicant's diligent efforts to obtain the needed information to make 
    appropriate certification or disclosure, the applicant may be unable to 
    obtain the information. Thus, FDA is amending the final rule to permit 
    an applicant, who can show conclusively why this information cannot be 
    obtained, to certify that the applicant acted diligently to obtain the 
    information but was unable to do so and to include the reason why such 
    information could not be obtained.
        5. Several comments said the proposed rule is unnecessary because 
    adequate controls exist to ensure data integrity. For example, the 
    comments
    
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    said that FDA has adequate mechanisms in place in its review and 
    inspection processes to detect and deal with investigator bias. Another 
    comment said that FDA already has substantial oversight to assess 
    whether clinical studies are well controlled and designed with 
    scientific rigor. Others said that the primary methods for managing 
    potential bias based on financial interests are quality study design 
    (e.g. multiple investigators, multiple investigational sites, 
    segregation or pooling of data for comparative analyses and objective 
    tests to evaluate key safety and effectiveness parameters), study 
    monitoring, and statistical analysis. One comment said that for double-
    blinded studies, it was theoretically impossible for any type of bias 
    to affect the conduct of the study, irrespective of any separate 
    financial relationship.
        FDA agrees that excellence in study designs, careful monitoring and 
    analysis of trials by sponsors, the ability of FDA to inspect study 
    sites, and FDA's detailed review of studies are critical elements in 
    assessing data integrity. No single component is entirely adequate to 
    ensure study integrity, however, and as explained in the proposed rule, 
    the independence and lack of bias of clinical investigators is also 
    critical. FDA believes that in addition to other steps, a mechanism is 
    needed for collecting information concerning specific financial 
    interests of clinical investigators that could affect data integrity.
        6. Some comments objected to the lack of objective criteria for use 
    by FDA reviewers to evaluate financial interest disclosure statements. 
    These comments said that FDA reviewers should not be given unfettered 
    discretion in making this determination, but that FDA should develop 
    specific criteria based on factual need. One comment said that lack of 
    resources would prevent FDA from carrying out this function adequately 
    and that specific criteria should be developed to help alleviate this 
    concern. This comment also suggested that certain interests should be 
    prohibited to provide a more clear-cut and less labor intensive 
    evaluative approach. Other comments supported FDA's plan to evaluate 
    the information on a case-by-case basis, stating that FDA should 
    exercise flexibility and not state specific criteria for this purpose.
        As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, FDA believes that 
    the specific financial arrangements and the steps taken to minimize 
    bias (e.g., through study design) must be considered on a case-by-case 
    basis. Many factors could affect the believability of data derived from 
    clinical studies, such as the endpoint used, number of investigators, 
    the methods of blinding and the method of evaluation. For example, if a 
    covered study had randomized assignment of patients to treatment, an 
    easily determined endpoint or an endpoint assessed by a blinded 
    observer other than the investigator, and multiple study sites, FDA 
    could determine that an otherwise problematic financial interest of a 
    clinical investigator would not have affected the covered study. In 
    other cases, there might be sufficient replication of critical results 
    to render the questionable data less important, or it might be possible 
    to carry out further analyses or observations that would provide 
    assurance as to the reliability of the data. If FDA were to determine 
    that the financial interests of any clinical investigator raised a 
    serious question about the integrity of the data, FDA could choose from 
    a range of remedial actions. Depending on the seriousness of the 
    questions raised, the agency could initiate agency audits of the data 
    derived from the clinical investigator in question; request that the 
    applicant submit further analyses of the data (e.g., to evaluate the 
    effect of investigator's data on study results); or request that the 
    applicant conduct additional independent studies to confirm the results 
    of the covered study; or refuse to treat the covered clinical study as 
    pivotal or primary data upon which an agency action can be taken. Any 
    attempt to write rigid evaluation criteria would inhibit the 
    flexibility needed to interpret submissions in a fair and reasonable 
    way.
        7. Three comments suggested that applicants should know in advance 
    what FDA considers to be problematic arrangements so as not to delay 
    product review. One comment stated that FDA should include in the 
    regulation a timeframe for the agency to inform an applicant of a 
    remedial action that FDA might deem appropriate to take under new 
    Sec. 54.5(c). The comment added that, once FDA has received all 
    required financial disclosure information, the agency should be 
    required to inform the applicant within a reasonable period of time, 
    not to exceed 60 days, if the financial interests of a clinical 
    investigator raised a sufficiently serious question about the integrity 
    of the study data to warrant any of the steps included in new Sec. 54.5 
    (c), i.e., initiate agency audits of data derived from the clinical 
    investigator in question; request that the applicant submit further 
    analyses of data to evaluate the effect of the investigator's data; 
    request that the applicant conduct additional independent studies to 
    confirm the results of the covered study; or refuse to treat the 
    covered clinical study as pivotal or primary data upon which an agency 
    action could be based.
        FDA disagrees with the comments requesting that FDA be required to 
    inform the applicant about potentially problematic financial 
    arrangements within a specified time period because the determination 
    of such remedies is inseparable from the review of the application and 
    depends on such factors as the study design, and availability of other 
    data, etc. Concerns arising from financial disclosure will be treated 
    like any other concerns arising from the review of a marketing 
    application and will be communicated along similar timeframes. As was 
    stated in the proposed rule, however, FDA strongly encourages early 
    consultation with the agency in cases where the sponsor of the clinical 
    study is concerned that he may be entering into problematic financial 
    arrangements with a clinical investigator.
        8. In the proposed rule, FDA asked for comment on its proposed 
    definition of a significant equity interest as ``any ownership 
    interest, stock option, or other financial interest whose value cannot 
    be readily determined through reference to public prices, or any equity 
    interest in a publicly traded corporation that exceeds 5 percent of 
    total equity.'' The responses covered a wide range. One comment 
    requested that FDA clarify whether 5 percent of total equity refers to 
    5 percent of the investigator's equity or 5 percent of the equity of 
    the corporation and said that holding 5 percent of equity of publicly 
    traded companies is only relevant if it represents a significant 
    portion of the investigator's net worth. A second comment said that a 
    ``significant interest'' (determined by reference to a dollar amount) 
    in the equity or other securities of the sponsor should be of relevance 
    regardless of whether that interest exceeds 5 percent and that the 
    reference point of 5 percent is not sufficient in and of itself in 
    light of the wide range of capitalization of corporations in the 
    industry. Another comment said that FDA's rule should be made 
    consistent as far as setting dollar or equity thresholds with the 
    Public Health Service (PHS) final rule and the National Science 
    Foundation (NSF) statement of policy on objectivity in research 
    published on July 11, 1995. One comment recommended the threshold for 
    disclosure of an equity interest be $10,000 or 2.5 percent ownership 
    interest in the sponsor.
        FDA has carefully considered whether equity interests should be 
    disclosed to
    
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    FDA and what threshold level should trigger disclosure. There are 
    varied thresholds applied within academia, such as threshold levels at 
    some institutions for disclosure of $5,000 cash and $20,000 equity 
    interest in a publicly traded company. In addition, the PHS final rule 
    and the NSF statement of policy have defined a significant financial 
    interest to be ``anything of monetary value, including but not limited 
    to, salary or other payments for services (e.g., consulting fees or 
    honoraria); equity interests (e.g., stocks, stock options or other 
    ownership interests); and intellectual property rights (e.g., patents 
    copyrights and royalties from such rights). The term does not include * 
    * * :
        any equity interest that, when aggregated for the Investigator 
    and the Investigator's spouse and children, meets both the following 
    tests: does not exceed $10,000 in value as determined through 
    reference to public prices or other reasonable measures of fair 
    market value, and does not represent more than a 5 percent ownership 
    interest in any single entity; or salary, royalties or other 
    payments that when aggregated for the Investigator and the 
    Investigator's spouse and dependent children over the next 12 months 
    are not expected to exceed $10,000.
        In response to the comments submitted to the proposed rule, as well 
    as the comments and recommendations made by FDA's Science Board at the 
    meeting held on March 29, 1996, FDA has eliminated the 5 percent equity 
    holding provision from the final rule. The agency recognizes that for 
    many corporations, this would represent an unrealistically large 
    threshold interest. Instead, in this final rule, FDA defines 
    ``significant equity interest in the sponsor of the covered study'' to 
    mean any ownership interest, stock option, or other financial interest 
    whose value cannot be readily determined through reference to public 
    prices or any equity interest in a publicly traded company that exceeds 
    $50,000 that is held by the clinical investigator during the time the 
    clinical investigator is carrying out the study and for 1 year 
    following the completion of the study. FDA, thus, agrees with the 
    comments stating that a 5 percent equity interest in a publicly held 
    company could vary enormously and believes that a $50,000 disclosure 
    threshold strikes the appropriate balance between the agency's need to 
    be aware of and help minimize the potential for bias in clinical data 
    and the need to avoid unreasonably burdening clinical investigators and 
    applicants.
        9. A few comments said that the definition of significant payments 
    of other sorts in new Sec. 54.2(f) should apply only to research 
    grants, retainers and honoraria that are related to the study. A few 
    comments said that the $5,000 threshold limit for such payments was too 
    low and that the applicable timeframe should be clarified. Some 
    comments suggested that FDA only require disclosure of payments made 
    directly to the clinical investigator and not to an institution, such 
    as a university that employs the investigator. Some comments suggested 
    that FDA delete the requirement for disclosure of significant payments 
    of other sorts entirely.
        Retention of this provision, as proposed, was discussed at the FDA 
    Science Board meeting on March 29, 1996. Most Science Board members and 
    many panelists agreed that information on ``significant payments of 
    other sorts'' made by the sponsor of the covered study (such as a grant 
    to fund ongoing research, compensation in the form of equipment, a 
    retainer for ongoing consultation, or honoraria), even if not directly 
    related to the conduct of the study, should be disclosed because these 
    types of financial arrangements exist and have the potential to give 
    the clinical investigator an ``interest'' in the company. In response 
    to the comments that described the $5,000 disclosure threshold for 
    these payments as too low and taking into account the discussion with 
    Science Board members, FDA has raised the threshold dollar amount that 
    would trigger disclosure to FDA from $5,000 to any amount exceeding 
    $25,000 made by the sponsor of the covered study directly to the 
    clinical investigator or to the institution for support of activities 
    of the investigator, exclusive of costs associated with the conduct of 
    the trial or of any other clinical trial. FDA believes this approach 
    strikes a reasonable balance between the agency's need to be aware of 
    and help minimize the potential for bias in clinical data and the need 
    to avoid unreasonably burdening applicants. FDA is also clarifying that 
    the period for which this disclosure must be made includes the period 
    during the conduct of the study and for 1 year following completion of 
    the study.
        10. One comment said that applicants should not be responsible for 
    veracity of the investigators' disclosure statements to the companies.
        FDA recognizes that clinical investigators could provide incorrect 
    financial information to applicants. FDA does not expect to prosecute 
    any applicant who takes appropriate steps to obtain accurate 
    information and through no fault of its own unknowingly submits to FDA 
    erroneous financial information that was provided to the applicant by 
    the clinical investigator.
        11. In the proposed rule, FDA requested comment on whether 
    certification and disclosure statements should be generally disclosable 
    to the public. FDA received many comments on this issue, the majority 
    opposing the public release of this information. Those who argued in 
    favor of releasing this information said that public disclosure of 
    financial information in some useful form is critical because shrinking 
    Government resources make it impossible for FDA to monitor these 
    arrangements properly, and the public should be able to play some 
    effective oversight role in this area. These comments said that public 
    disclosure of this information is necessary in order to discourage the 
    occurrence of substantive financial abuses at the outset of the 
    clinical trial process. Comments opposing this view argued that the 
    public would not be in a position to interpret this information 
    properly, that public release of this information is an unwarranted 
    intrusion into the private affairs of clinical investigators, and that 
    disclosure of this information could discourage highly qualified 
    investigators from participating in research. One comment said that 
    there may be some instances where public disclosure should be required, 
    and that disclosure to an advisory committee should be kept 
    confidential and limited to the circumstances where the investigator's 
    interests surpass a specific threshold.
        FDA agrees with those comments that stated that certain types of 
    financial information requested under the rule, notably equity 
    interests, should be surrounded by a reasonable expectation of privacy. 
    Therefore, such information would be protected from public disclosure 
    unless circumstances clearly outweigh the identified privacy interest.
        FDA does believe, however, that there may be legitimate public 
    interest in the information that warrants its disclosure. Certain 
    requested information such as a patent ownership, already may be public 
    information and would, therefore, be releasable. In other cases, a 
    financial arrangement may so affect the reliability of the study that 
    it may become necessary for the information to be disclosed publicly 
    during the evaluation of the study (e.g., during an advisory committee 
    meeting).
        Because the full range and impact of such arrangements cannot be 
    predicted, and because of the variability of both clinical trials and 
    their financing mechanisms, it is impossible to establish a 
    comprehensive rule regarding public disclosure of reported information. 
    FDA, intends, therefore, to proceed on a case-by-case basis in 
    determining whether the circumstances
    
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    outweigh the privacy interest of the clinical investigator(s). FDA will 
    determine for each instance of disclosure when to make the information 
    public and by what means.
        In any consideration of disclosure issues, it is useful to keep in 
    mind FDA's expectation that these issues will not affect the great 
    majority of clinical investigators who participate in studies of FDA-
    regulated products. FDA expects that only a small minority of clinical 
    investigators will have financial interests of any kind that are 
    disclosable to FDA; and of that number, FDA expects that only a small 
    subset would be involved in situations in which the investigator's 
    privacy interest would be outweighed by the public interest. FDA 
    strongly encourages any firm that is required to disclose interests and 
    arrangements of one or more clinical investigators to meet with FDA 
    early on for guidance on management of the affected clinical study to 
    help ensure that the potential impact of the disclosed financial 
    situation on the integrity of the study does not rise to this level of 
    concern.
        12. Some comments said that compliance with PHS disclosure 
    requirements should be deemed sufficient to satisfy FDA's requirements. 
    One comment said that an investigator who receives PHS funds should be 
    required only to provide the company with a copy of his PHS disclosure 
    statement. A third comment said that FDA should reexamine timing of the 
    disclosure to be consistent with the PHS rule. Another comment said 
    that FDA should not rely on PHS disclosure because the two agencies are 
    separate and that research institutions should not have to rely on 
    disclosures submitted directly to institutions as substitutes for 
    compliance procedures imposed on companies.
        This issue was raised for comment in the September 1994 proposed 
    rule. After considering the comments, FDA concludes PHS and FDA 
    disclosures should not be interchangeable. Although the PHS rule and 
    the comparable NSF policy have some objectives similar to those of 
    FDA's rule, the PHS rule and the NSF policy have a different focus. 
    They deal with policies of Federal grant making agencies and the 
    credibility of the scientific enterprise, including such issues as: 
    Potential personal profit from federally funded research, undue secrecy 
    or refusal to share scientific data from publicly funded research, and 
    the potential detrimental effect upon academic programs by 
    inappropriate use of graduate students or ``conflicts of commitment.'' 
    Although FDA acknowledges the validity of such concerns, FDA's 
    responsibilities are directed at helping to ensure data integrity for 
    the purposes of product review. Thus, this rule is focused on payment 
    arrangements and other financial interests of clinical investigators 
    that have the potential for introducing bias into studies intended to 
    support marketing applications. It is important that FDA be aware of 
    such interests and arrangements as part of its evaluation of marketing 
    applications. Because much of the information reported under the PHS 
    rule is not related to the product review process, but is more relevant 
    to issues of basic research, FDA has determined that it is appropriate 
    for FDA to have different reporting requirements.
        13. Several comments argued that FDA underestimated the paperwork 
    burden on applicants and clinical investigators of the procedures for 
    financial disclosure specified in the proposed rule. One comment from a 
    pharmaceutical firm maintained that, while not overly onerous for 
    investigators, the accumulated paperwork would probably cost 
    pharmaceutical companies in excess of $1 to 1.5 million annually. 
    Another firm said that the rule would increase study costs by 5 
    percent. A trade association described the disclosure procedures as 
    amounting to a ``severe paperwork burden,'' and another comment alleged 
    that FDA conducted a cursory examination of the additional number of 
    hours required to comply with these procedures.
        The agency took a careful and thorough approach in assessing the 
    number of hours that would be spent by applicants because of a 
    continuing concern that the rulemaking should not impose undue burdens 
    on industry. FDA believes that the comments have overestimated the 
    costs and difficulties of complying with this regulation. In an effort 
    to provide a clearer understanding of the paperwork burden involved, 
    FDA has reassessed the potential paperwork costs for applicants, using 
    current data and more conservative assumptions than those used at the 
    time the proposed rule was drafted. To facilitate reporting, the agency 
    has developed forms for certification and disclosure and has added 
    language to the final rule to allow an applicant to attach to one 
    certification statement a list of all investigators for whom the 
    applicant is certifying. In this way, preparation and submission of 
    multiple statements is avoided, and the process is streamlined for 
    applicants.
        FDA believes that the collection of information required by this 
    regulation and the preparation and submission of a certification 
    statement would not be onerous. Firms who contracted for covered 
    studies would already have on hand all information pertaining to 
    financial arrangements with clinical investigators and significant 
    payments of other sorts; proprietary interests (e.g., patents) of 
    clinical investigators; and equity interests of investigators in 
    nonpublicly traded enterprises. Applicants who were the sponsors of 
    covered studies would need only to obtain from investigators 
    information on the clinical investigators' equity interests in the 
    applicant, a step that would be necessary only if the applicant is 
    publicly traded. Applicants who did not contract for covered studies 
    must obtain the required information from the sponsor of the covered 
    studies and the investigators or demonstrate conclusively that it was 
    not possible to do so. In either case, a large amount of time would not 
    be required. Clinical investigators, for their part, can reasonably be 
    expected to have easily accessible records on their personal equity 
    interests for tax purposes. They should not have difficulty providing 
    this information to sponsors of the covered studies.
        As noted, FDA believes that preparation and submission of the 
    certification statement and the list of investigators to whom the 
    statement applies represents a modest effort. In the estimate presented 
    in section V of this document, the agency has used the figure of 1 hour 
    of preparation time for these materials, which it believes to be more 
    than adequate to cover the actual work involved. FDA believes that 
    preparation of a disclosure statement and the accompanying explanation 
    of steps taken to minimize the potential for bias of the covered study 
    is appreciably more time-consuming and has assigned 4 hours to this 
    activity.
        The agency assumes that every applicant will submit a certification 
    statement for at least one clinical investigator. The agency further 
    assumes, based on current data, that 1,000 sponsors will submit 
    marketing applications for drugs, biologics, or devices each year, with 
    this number broken down for different types of applications as follows:
    
    [[Page 5239]]
    
    
    
     Table 1.--Annual Estimated Number of Marketing Applications for Drugs, 
                             Biologics, and Devices                         
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Type of Application                    No. of Sponsors   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Drugs                                                                   
      New drug application (NDA)                                  135       
      NDA supplement                                              100       
      Abbreviated new drug application (ANDA)                     240       
      ANDA supplement                                             120       
      Rx to over-the-counter switch                                10       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Biologics                                                               
      Product license application (PLA)                            25       
      PLA supplement                                               10       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Devices                                                                 
      Premarket approval (PMA)                                     50       
      PMA supplement                                               10       
      Reclassification petitions                                    4       
      510(k)                                                      300       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        There is no firm basis for estimating the frequency of disclosure 
    by applicants. FDA assumes that from 1 to 10 percent of applicants 
    would need to submit disclosure for one or more clinical investigators. 
    In estimating the total burden hours for this activity, FDA has assumed 
    a 10 percent rate, which is the maximum number of applicants that might 
    be estimated to disclose annually. The agency believes this figure will 
    in all likelihood be smaller, perhaps markedly so.
        The conforming amendments to drug, biologics, and medical device 
    regulations that accompany this rule provide for sponsors of the 
    covered studies to obtain the necessary financial information (e.g., 
    equity interests) from investigators at the time the investigator is 
    retained by the sponsor of the covered study, along with other required 
    information. FDA concludes that it is reasonable to assume that a 
    sponsor could incorporate financial disclosure information into the 
    sponsor's existing system for maintaining investigator information, and 
    the addition of this information would represent a negligible 
    expenditure of time. It is estimated that 15 minutes will be required 
    to add this information to an application record.
        The agency estimates that to comply with information collection 
    activities under this final rule, applicants will spend a total of 
    1,000 hours annually for certification activities (1,000 applicants 
    multiplied by 1 hour) and 400 hours for disclosure (100 applicants 
    multiplied by 4 hours). The total time estimated to be spent by 
    clinical investigators is 4,600 hours (46,000 clinical investigators 
    multiplied by 6 minutes). The total estimated annual burden is 6,000 
    hours for the drug, biologics, and device industries and all clinical 
    investigators. Once again, FDA has reached this total after carefully 
    analyzing the activities involved, and using high-end assumptions for 
    both the amount of time that would be required for each activity and 
    the number of applicants who would disclose. As noted in section V of 
    this document, FDA invites comments on these estimates.
        14. Several comments alleged that FDA has failed to comply with the 
    requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. These comments stated 
    that FDA should conduct a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis under the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act, because ``the impact of the rule will fall 
    disproportionately on small firms, since they may not be able to pay 
    clinical investigators on a fee-for-service basis.'' These comments 
    said the rule would significantly affect small firms because of such 
    factors as ``the thousands of investigators who would need to provide 
    information to sponsors,'' the composition of the medical device 
    industry, 98 percent of which is made of small businesses, and the 
    ``severe paperwork burden.''
        Included in this final rule is a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis to 
    assess the impact of the regulation on the industries subject to this 
    rule. In this analysis, which is included in section IV of this 
    document, the agency concludes that this final rule does not have a 
    significant impact on a substantial number of small businesses.
        15. Several comments recommended that FDA limit the scope of the 
    rule with respect to covered studies. One comment said that Phase 1 
    safety studies should be exempted because they are ``preliminary in 
    nature and not as pivotal as state 2 or 3 trials.'' Another comment 
    said that the rule should cover only those studies that the applicant 
    considers to be ``adequate and well controlled investigations intended 
    to provide substantial evidence of effectiveness for new drugs.'' A 
    third comment urged that the rule exempt bioavailability/
    pharmacokinetic studies, which, the comment said, generally result in 
    objective, quantitative results based on tangible data. This comment 
    recommended limiting the studies covered by the regulation to studies 
    of a non-pharmacokinetic nature, studies with subjective endpoints, and 
    single-investigator studies. A comment from a pharmaceutical firm said 
    that the regulation should target specific types of investigations, 
    such as unblinded device studies. Another comment stated that, based on 
    the definition in new Sec. 54.2(e), the rule would appear to encompass 
    large-scale open-label studies, such as studies involving some 
    cardiovascular therapies, compassionate use studies, and parallel track 
    studies, all of which might be submitted in support of an NDA. The 
    comment noted that investigators in such studies could number in the 
    thousands and said that it would be an unwarranted administrative 
    burden to require an applicant to obtain financial information from 
    each clinical investigator.
        The definition of covered clinical study in the rule refers to 
    studies on which the sponsor relies to support efficacy and studies 
    where a single investigator makes a significant contribution to safety. 
    That generally would not include Phase 1 tolerance studies or 
    pharmacokinetic studies (except for bioequivalence studies) and would 
    include clinical pharmacology studies only when they are critical to an 
    efficacy determination. In general, large open studies, treatment 
    protocols and other studies with large numbers of investigators would 
    not be covered. In these studies, the large number of investigators 
    generally means that no single investigator has a major responsibility 
    for the data. In addition, important adverse events will generally be 
    apparent because they lead to cessation of therapy and submission of 
    the case report form. Although it is not impossible that a financial 
    interest could be important in these studies, it is relatively unlikely 
    and the agency has concluded that the effort needed to obtain financial 
    information for the investigators in these studies should not be 
    undertaken.
        16. Some comments maintained that the regulation would deter 
    investigators from participating in clinical research and would be a 
    hindrance to clinical research. One comment stated, ``while 
    investigators will initially see no issue, as soon as FDA takes the 
    first action to set a precedent, some investigators will become 
    reluctant to participate in clinical studies.''
        FDA does not agree. The agency estimates that the majority of 
    clinical investigators will have no financial arrangements or interests 
    subject to disclosure under the terms of the regulation. For those 
    investigators who have such interests, FDA is not prohibiting or 
    requiring divestiture of any financial interests, nor does FDA believe 
    an investigator should be penalized in any way for holding such
    
    [[Page 5240]]
    
    interests. It is, therefore, difficult to see why investigators would 
    be deterred by this regulation from participating in clinical research. 
    As for those comments suggesting that the regulation would hinder 
    clinical research, FDA does not believe the final regulation will 
    impose a significant burden and certainly not a burden sufficient to 
    hinder clinical research.
        17. In the preamble to the proposed rule, FDA requested comment on 
    whether the agency should require disclosure of interests held by a 
    clinical investigator in a firm considered to be a competitor of the 
    sponsor of the covered study. Comment received was almost equally 
    divided with respect to such disclosure. One comment in support of 
    disclosure of competing interests stated that competing interests are 
    just as likely to result in bias; others said that if the purpose of 
    financial disclosure is to detect bias, it shouldn't matter whether the 
    bias is positive or negative. Comments opposed to disclosure of such 
    interests said that such a requirement might not be realistic inasmuch 
    as it is often not possible to identify every company that is in 
    competition with the sponsor of the covered study. A comment from one 
    trade association stated that such interests should not concern FDA, 
    and a comment from another trade association said that, in this regard, 
    it should be sufficient to FDA for a sponsor of a covered study to be 
    willing to use an investigator.
        FDA agrees with the arguments presented by the comments opposing a 
    requirement for disclosure of competing interests, and such a 
    requirement is not included in this final rule.
        18. In the preamble to the proposed rule, FDA asked for comment on 
    whether the definition of a clinical investigator should include 
    business partners of the investigator, who might share in profits from 
    the investigator's arrangements or financial interests. The majority of 
    comments on this issue opposed the inclusion of business partners, but 
    these and other comments addressed other aspects of the definition. One 
    comment concurred with the definition. Several comments found the 
    definition to be too broad and stated that, as proposed, the definition 
    would involve all study personnel and, thus, pose an enormous 
    administrative burden. Two comments recommended limiting the scope of 
    the definition to the principal investigator only, and one comment 
    recommended that the definition include the principal investigator and 
    the principal investigator's immediate family. Other comments argued 
    that the definition should not include the investigator's immediate 
    family. Some comments suggested that the definition of clinical 
    investigator for the purposes of this rule should be consistent with 
    the definitions of clinical investigator in various agency regulations, 
    including regulations governing investigational drugs and devices, as 
    well as 21 CFR part 50, Protection of Human Subjects, and 21 CFR part 
    56, Institutional Review Boards, or consistent with the definition in 
    the PHS rule.
        FDA agrees with the comments opposing the inclusion of business 
    partners as unnecessary and potentially burdensome. With regard to 
    making the definition of clinical investigator consistent with the PHS 
    regulation on objectivity in research and various other agency 
    regulations, FDA believes that those definitions are broader than 
    needed to achieve the goals of this regulation. For example, the 
    definition of investigator in the PHS final rule on objectivity in 
    research means the principal investigator and any other persons 
    responsible for the design, conduct, or reporting of research funded by 
    PHS, or proposed for such funding. FDA agrees with those comments 
    supporting a more narrow definition of clinical investigator and 
    defines clinical investigator for the purpose of this rulemaking to be 
    any listed or identified investigator or subinvestigator who is 
    directly involved in the evaluation of research subjects. As in the PHS 
    rule, FDA's definition of clinical investigator, in new Sec. 54.2(d), 
    also includes the investigator's spouse and dependent children.
        19. FDA did not propose to require disclosure of financial 
    interests in, and arrangements with, the sponsor of the covered study 
    by full-time employees of the sponsor of the covered study, explaining 
    that the agency gives an appropriate level of scrutiny to the submitted 
    data in such instances on the assumption that such employees have a 
    clear financial as well as other interests in the outcome of the 
    research. The majority of comments agreed that the rule should not 
    cover such full-time employees. Some comments, however, did not support 
    a blanket exemption for such employees. One comment argued that 
    employee incentives such as promotion or termination could depend on 
    product approval. Another comment said that full-time employees should 
    be subject to disclosure requirements if they meet the equity 
    threshold. A third comment stated that if all employees are treated 
    with maximum scrutiny, further disclosure ``may not be necessary.'' One 
    comment said that employees who are part-time employees of the 
    applicant should also be exempt.
        The agency treats data from clinical investigators who are the 
    employees of sponsors with maximum scrutiny and will continue to do so 
    because such employees can be assumed to have significant financial 
    interests in the outcome of studies, often including stock options and 
    significant equity interest in their employers. Because part-time 
    employees also may receive such incentives, FDA would apply similar 
    scrutiny to them. Thus, FDA has changed the language in new Sec. 54.4 
    with respect to identifying clinical investigators who are full-time 
    employees of the sponsor to read ``full-or part-time employees of the 
    sponsor of a covered study,''clarifying that the agency will not 
    require certification or disclosure for part-time employees.
        20. Several comments argued that refusal to file a marketing 
    application is an overly harsh response to an investigator's financial 
    interests. One comment noted that applications may contain reports of 
    studies not conducted by the sponsor and asked whether such studies 
    would be excluded from the refusal-to-file provision. Another 
    questioned whether the agency would refuse to file an application if 
    one disclosure statement should be missing in the face of hundreds 
    being provided.
        In new Sec. 54.2(e) FDA has defined a covered clinical study as one 
    the applicant or FDA relies on to establish that the product is 
    effective or that make a significant contribution to the demonstration 
    of safety. This generally would not include studies reported only 
    briefly or in the form of a publication, unless the latter were 
    intended to be the critical supportive study. The rule emphasizes that 
    an applicant may consult with FDA as to which clinical studies 
    constitute ``covered clinical studies.'' Although most marketing 
    studies that meet this definition will have been conducted by the 
    applicant, some critical studies may have been conducted by an academic 
    or governmental organization (e.g., by the National Institutes of 
    Health or Veteran's Administration) or by another firm. In these cases, 
    the relevant financial interests are those that are sponsor-independent 
    (patent ownership) or that relate to the sponsor of the study (e.g., 
    payment in options or significant payments of other sorts). The 
    applicant should be aware of all interests that investigators might 
    have (e.g., patent rights) but the applicant may not be aware of prior 
    arrangements with the study sponsor such as an expectation of a royalty 
    payment, significant payments of other sorts, or of
    
    [[Page 5241]]
    
    an ownership interest in a nonpublicly traded study sponsor. It is 
    possible that some of this information cannot be obtained.
        The conforming amendments to parts 312 and 812 (21 CFR parts 312 
    and 812) require clinical investigators to provide sponsors the 
    information needed to allow an applicant to submit certification and 
    disclosure statements. FDA has given further consideration to the 
    application of the refusal-to-file provision, however, and concludes 
    that where circumstances make it impossible for an applicant of an 
    application to obtain the information needed for certification or 
    disclosure for one or more clinical investigators, and the applicant 
    explains these circumstances adequately, the agency will not refuse to 
    file an application. The refusal to file provision is not based on the 
    investigator's financial interest but on failure of the applicant to 
    disclose them.
        21. Two comments suggested that, before the final rule becomes 
    effective, FDA conduct a series of educational fora on these new 
    requirements to ensure that they are understood by the industry that 
    must comply with them.
        FDA welcomes the suggestion. Just as the agency has opened the 
    development of the regulation to public participation in a number of 
    ways, it will now seek opportunities to describe the provisions of the 
    final rule to all segments of the public. FDA will take these steps in 
    addition to working with applicants, as the agency has indicated 
    consistently it will do, to help ensure that their clinical research is 
    carefully managed with respect to protection from potential bias.
    
    III. Conforming Amendments
    
        At the time the regulations in new part 54 were proposed, FDA 
    proposed conforming amendments to certain regulations for drugs, 
    biologics, and devices. The final amendments to these regulations have 
    been modified as necessary to ensure continuing conformity with the 
    final regulations and will take effect at the time those regulations 
    become effective. The amendments are described in detail in the 
    following sections.
    
    A. Amendments to Regulations for Human Drug Products
    
        In its regulations governing investigational new drug applications, 
    FDA is amending Sec. 312.53(c), which applies to the selection of 
    investigators, to require sponsors to obtain financial information from 
    clinical investigators. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, 
    this amendment provides for sponsors to acquire financial information 
    from clinical investigators before starting clinical investigations. 
    This will enable the sponsor, and any future potential applicant, to 
    discover potential bias on the part of the clinical investigator before 
    the investigation begins and permit the sponsor to consult with FDA on 
    management of the situation. As noted previously, the sponsor of a 
    clinical study and the applicant for a marketing application would be 
    the same entity in the majority of cases. However, in some cases, an 
    applicant would have obtained the product and related studies from the 
    study sponsor, including the relevant information as to financial 
    interests of clinical investigators.
        Section 312.57 is amended to require sponsors to maintain records 
    on financial interests and arrangements of investigators and 
    investigators' immediate families as required in new part 54.
        The agency is amending Secs. 314.50 and 314.60 (21 CFR 314.50 and 
    314.60) to require that all NDA's, amendments to applications, and 
    supplements that contain new data from a previously unreported study 
    include certification and disclosure statements as required in new part 
    54. FDA is amending Sec. 314.94 (21 CFR 314.94) to require 
    certification or disclosure statements in ANDA's. The agency originally 
    proposed that the certification and disclosure statements be included 
    on the application form. The agency has determined that this would be 
    impractical, and is therefore amending Secs. 314.60 and 314.94 to 
    require that the financial certification or disclosure statement be 
    part of the application submission, but not be included on the 
    application form.
        Under 21 CFR 314.101(d), the agency may refuse to file or receive 
    an application that is incomplete. Failure to include a financial 
    certification or disclosure statement, as required by amended 
    Secs. 314.50(l) and 314.94(a)(13), would give the agency grounds to 
    refuse to file or receive the application. Similarly, amended 
    Sec. 314.60(a) gives the agency authority to refuse to accept any 
    amendment to an unapproved application when that amendment contains new 
    clinical data from an unreported study and does not include a financial 
    certification or disclosure statement. These provisions incorporate the 
    requirement for a financial certification or disclosure statement found 
    in new part 54. In some situations, a certification or disclosure 
    statement is not required under new part 54, and thus the agency would 
    not refuse to file or receive the application, or refuse to accept the 
    amendment for failure to include the statement. For example, new 
    Sec. 54.4(c) in this final rule. FDA recognizes that it would not 
    refuse to file an application that contains a certification from the 
    applicant stating that it was not possible to obtain the information 
    required for certification and disclosure and the reason, e.g., if a 
    covered study were concluded prior to the requirement for a study 
    sponsor to obtain this information from investigators and the 
    investigators could not be reached or were unwilling to provide the 
    information voluntarily.
        FDA is amending 21 CFR 314.200 and 314.300 to require any person 
    who submits clinical data as part of the hearing process for refusals 
    to approve and for withdrawals of approvals for NDA's, abbreviated 
    antibiotic drug applications, or ANDA's, or the hearing process for 
    issuing, amending, and withdrawing antibiotic regulations, to submit a 
    certification or disclosure statement.
        Amendments to 21 CFR 320.36 require similar reporting and 
    recordkeeping for certification and disclosure statements accompanying 
    bioequivalence studies as would be required under part 312.
        Amendments to 21 CFR 330.10 require certification or disclosure 
    statements to accompany clinical data submitted as part of the over-
    the-counter drug monograph process.
    
    B. Amendments to Regulations for Biologicals
    
        FDA is amending the regulations at 21 CFR 601.2(a) governing the 
    filing of applications for product licenses to require the inclusion of 
    certification or disclosure statements, or both, as required in new 
    part 54.
    
    C. Amendments to Regulations for Medical Devices
    
        FDA is adding a new paragraph to 21 CFR 807.87 to require the 
    inclusion of certification or disclosure statements, or both, in a 
    premarket notification submission. A paragraph is added to Sec. 807.100 
    to allow FDA to withhold a decision on a premarket notification 
    submission until certification or disclosure statements are submitted 
    to FDA as required under new part 54.
        FDA is amending 21 CFR 807.31 to require that certification and 
    disclosure statements be retained at the establishment maintaining the 
    historical file. Section 812.110 is amended to require clinical 
    investigators to provide sponsors with sufficient accurate financial 
    information (see 812.110) for the preparation of certification or 
    disclosure statements.
        FDA is amending Sec. 812.43(c), which applies to the selection of 
    monitors and investigators, to require sponsors to
    
    [[Page 5242]]
    
    obtain financial information from clinical investigators. Although not 
    identified in the proposed rule as a conforming amendment to the device 
    regulations, this revision is consistent with the requirement in 
    Sec. 812.110(d) that investigators provide financial information to 
    sponsors to obtain the information. This amendment provides for 
    sponsors to acquire financial information from clinical investigators 
    before starting clinical investigations. This will enable the sponsor 
    (and any future applicant) to discover potential bias on the part of 
    the investigator before the investigation begins and permit the sponsor 
    to consult with FDA on management of the situation. This conforming 
    amendment parallels the drug conforming amendment in Sec. 312.53(c).
        FDA is amending Sec. 812.140(b)(3) to require sponsors to maintain 
    records on financial interests and arrangements of investigators and 
    investigators' immediate families as required in new part 54. This 
    conforming amendment is consistent with the recordkeeping requirements 
    in new part 54.
        FDA is amending 21 CFR 814.20 to require the inclusion of 
    certification or disclosure statements in premarket approval 
    applications. The agency is also amending 21 CFR 814.42 to provide that 
    the agency may refuse to file an application or amendments that contain 
    clinical data unless certifications or disclosure statements are 
    included as required by new part 54.
        FDA is amending 21 CFR 814.112 to require applicants of 
    humanitarian device exemption (HDE) applications to submit 
    certification or disclosure statements. The regulation on HDE's was 
    issued after publication of the financial disclosure proposal. This 
    amendment is consistent with the other conforming amendments requiring 
    financial disclosure information for premarket approval applications.
        Because supporting data are needed in a reclassification petition 
    to satisfy the requirements of a determination of safety and 
    effectiveness of a device, FDA is amending 21 CFR 860.123 to require 
    any sponsor who submits clinical data as part of a reclassification 
    petition to include certification or disclosure statements, or both, as 
    required by new part 54.
    
    IV. Summary of Changes
    
        FDA has made the following changes in the final rule in response to 
    comments received on the proposed rule as discussed previously in this 
    preamble and to clarify the intent of the regulation:
        1. Recognizing that the firm submitting a marketing application 
    might not have sponsored the covered studies, FDA has changed the term 
    defined in new Sec. 54.2(b) from ``Significant equity interest in the 
    applicant'' to ``Significant equity interest in the sponsor of a 
    covered study'' and has revised new Sec. 54.2(f) (``Significant 
    payments of other sorts'') to contain similar clarifying language. FDA 
    has defined ``applicant'' and sponsor of the covered study at new 
    Sec. 54.2(g) and (h) and has added language to the purpose statement in 
    21 CFR 51.1 to distinguish a sponsor of a covered study from a sponsor 
    of a marketing application (i.e., applicant). The agency has also added 
    language to the scope of the regulation in new Sec. 54.3, to make it 
    clear that the requirements of the regulation apply to applicants 
    whether or not the applicant was the sponsor of the studies submitted. 
    The applicant is responsible for obtaining the information required by 
    the regulation or for demonstrating conclusively why it is not possible 
    to do so. The agency has added similar clarifying language to 
    appropriate sections of the disclosure requirements in new Sec. 54.4 
    and requirements for recordkeeping and record retention in new 
    Sec. 54.6.
        2. FDA has made one further change in the definition of a 
    significant equity interest in new Sec. 54.2(b). In the proposed rule, 
    a disclosable equity interest in a publicly traded corporation was 
    defined as ``any equity interest in a publicly traded corporation that 
    exceeds 5 percent of total equity, and no applicable time period was 
    stated. In the final rule, FDA has defined an equity interest in a 
    publicly traded corporation as one that exceeds $50,000 during the time 
    the clinical investigator is carrying out the study and for 1 year 
    following completion of the study.'' FDA has eliminated the 5 percent 
    equity holding provision and has replaced it with the $50,000 threshold 
    because FDA recognizes that for many corporations, a 5 percent equity 
    interest represents an unrealistically large threshold interest. FDA 
    has clarified the time period whereby applicants are required to 
    disclose information to FDA for 1 year following completion of the 
    study (i.e., after enrollment of all the subjects and followup subjects 
    in accordance with the clinical protocol) to further reduce the 
    possibility that clinical investigators could exert undue influence 
    during final data analysis.
        3. In response to comments that the definition of ``clinical 
    investigator'' in new Sec. 54.2 (d) of FDA's proposed rule was too 
    broad, FDA has revised this definition to clarify that it includes only 
    principal and subinvestigators who are directly involved in the 
    treatment and evaluation of research subjects and their spouses and 
    dependent children.
        4. In the final rule, FDA has shortened and clarified the 
    definition of covered clinical study in new Sec. 54.2(e).
        5. In new Sec. 54.2(f) of the proposed rule, FDA defined 
    ``significant payments of other sorts'' as ``payments that exceed 
    $5,000 (e.g., grants to fund ongoing research compensation in the form 
    of equipment or retainers for ongoing consultation or honoraria) or 
    that exceed 5 percent of the total equity in a publicly held and widely 
    traded company.'' In the final rule, FDA has set the threshold for 
    disclosure of such payments at a value of more than $25,000 and has 
    further revised and clarified this definition so that it reads as 
    follows:
        Significant payments of other sorts means payments made by the 
    sponsor of a covered study to the investigator or the institution to 
    support activities of the investigator that have a monetary value of 
    more than $25,000, exclusive of the costs of conducting the clinical 
    study or other clinical studies (e.g., a grant to fund ongoing 
    research, compensation in the form of equipment or retainers for 
    ongoing consultation or honoraria), during the time the clinical 
    investigator is carrying out the study and for 1 year following 
    completion of the study.
        6. The opening paragraph of proposed Sec. 54.4 required the 
    applicant to ``completely and accurately disclose or certify 
    information concerning the financial interests of a clinical 
    investigator who is not a full-time employee of the sponsor * * *''. In 
    response to a comment, FDA is changing this phrase to read ``not a 
    full-time or part-time employee of the sponsor for each covered 
    clinical study.''
        7. Section 54.4(a) of the proposed rule stated that an applicant 
    shall submit for each covered clinical study either a certification or 
    disclosure statement. FDA has revised this statement to make it clear 
    that the applicant must submit a certification or disclosure statement 
    for each investigator who participated in a covered clinical study, as 
    opposed to each covered clinical study. FDA recognizes that, in some 
    instances, an applicant might need to submit both certification and 
    disclosure statements to cover the interests of all clinical 
    investigators who participated in one covered study. The agency has 
    also changed this statement to make it clear that the applicant may 
    submit one certification statement to cover all investigators for whom 
    certification is made.
        8. FDA has also made provision in new Sec. 54.4 of the final rule 
    for an
    
    [[Page 5243]]
    
    applicant who can demonstrate that it was not possible to obtain the 
    information required for certification and disclosure to certify that 
    the applicant, acted with due diligence, to obtain the information 
    needed to certify or disclose but was unable to do so. For example, if 
    the laws of a foreign country preclude the applicant from obtaining the 
    financial information, a statement submitted to FDA referencing such 
    laws would be appropriate.
        9. FDA has deleted the statement in new Sec. 54.6 of the proposed 
    rule that if the application is not approved, a sponsor shall retain 
    covered records ``for 2 years after the product, for which the 
    application was submitted, was shipped and delivered to clinical 
    investigators for testing.'' FDA has deleted this statement because it 
    is inconsistent with other recordkeeping requirements.
        10. Also in new Sec. 54.6(a)(1) and (a)(2), FDA has deleted the 
    requirement from the proposed rule that sponsors must show all 
    compensation paid to clinical investigators and has replaced it with a 
    statement requiring applicants to complete records showing any 
    financial arrangement as described in new Sec. 54.4(a)(3)(i) and 
    (a)(3)(ii). FDA has made the change in order to ease recordkeeping 
    requirements and require applicants to maintain records that may raise 
    potential problematic financial arrangements. Similarly, FDA has 
    revised the conforming amendments in Sec. 312.57 to ease recordkeeping 
    requirements and has added Sec. 812.43(c)(5) to identify the device 
    sponsors' requirements.
    
    V. Analysis of Impacts
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of the final rule under Executive 
    Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612). 
    Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all costs and benefits 
    of available regulatory alternatives and, when regulation is necessary, 
    to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including 
    potential economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other 
    advantages; and distributive impacts and equity). The agency believes 
    that this final rule is consistent with the regulatory philosophy and 
    principles identified in the Executive Order. The agency concludes that 
    the rule is a significant regulatory action as defined by the Executive 
    Order. The following discussion summarizes the agency's economic 
    assessment, and where possible, presents quantitative estimates of the 
    impact of the regulation on the industries subject to this rule.
    
    A. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to prepare a 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis for each rule unless the agency 
    certifies that the rule would not have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of entities. As explained in section IV.B of this 
    document, the agency believes that this final rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
    Nevertheless, the rule may impose significant costs on a few small 
    businesses. Because FDA cannot adequately quantify all of this impact, 
    it has prepared a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis as part of its 
    economic assessment. This analysis, which is summarized in section IV.B 
    of this document, is available for review at the Dockets Management 
    Branch (address above).
        FDA finds that it is important to the public health to ensure, as 
    much as possible, that the safety and efficacy data submitted to the 
    agency in support of marketing applications are free of the effects of 
    any bias that may result from the financial interests of investigators. 
    The information received through the reporting requirements in the 
    final rule will help the agency to determine the reliability of data 
    submitted in marketing applications. In addition, the reporting 
    requirements will help to ensure that sponsors of covered studies 
    consider potentially problematic financial arrangements and interests 
    in the early stages of product development and, if necessary, consider 
    how best to minimize such potential sources of bias in their clinical 
    studies.
        The final rule will affect firms that sponsor marketing 
    applications containing clinical data in the human drug, biologic, and 
    medical device industries. Although FDA receives about 1,000 marketing 
    applications and supplements per year that will be subject to this 
    rule, the agency believes that only a few of these applications will be 
    more than minimally affected. Public comments in response to the 
    proposed rule indicate that potentially problematic financial 
    arrangements occur only occasionally, although perhaps more often 
    within the small biotechnology and medical device firms that choose to 
    utilize, for example, the inventor of a product as a clinical 
    investigator, or to make payments to the clinical investigator in the 
    form of equity interests such as stock options. While FDA cannot 
    determine the precise number of such arrangements, representatives from 
    the drug and device industries (Science Board Meeting, March 29, 1996) 
    report that sponsors only rarely reimbursed clinical investigators by 
    those means described as problematic in the final rule.
        The rule will create costs in three areas: Reporting, 
    recordkeeping, and research. Reporting and recordkeeping are discussed 
    in section V of this document. The agency estimates that total 
    reporting costs of sponsors and investigators will be less that 
    $450,000 annually and estimates no additional costs for recordkeeping. 
    However, these costs are offset by the significant public health 
    benefits of FDA's being able to adequately assess the reliability of 
    clinical trial data and thus ensure the safety and efficacy of 
    regulated products. As described previously, financial interests 
    especially if combined with unblinded study designs, studies with 
    subjective endpoints, and single investigator studies may increase the 
    risk that purposeful or inadvertent bias could influence the outcome of 
    the study.
        Research costs can be incurred either before the product 
    application has been submitted to the agency or after the agency begins 
    its review. Costs may be incurred before an application is submitted 
    when a clinical investigator has a disclosable interest and the sponsor 
    modifies a trial protocol or alters procedures to minimize the 
    potential for investigator bias. However, even where the investigator 
    has a disclosable interest or arrangement, many clinical protocols will 
    not need to be modified because they already are designed to minimize 
    potential for investigator bias. (Sponsors are encouraged to meet with 
    FDA to discuss protocol design and this is common practice with 
    sponsors of covered clinical studies of human drugs and biologics). 
    Although a few protocols may require some adjustment to the design, 
    such as having a blinded observer carry out critical observations, most 
    changes would be minor and not costly. In some cases, sponsors might 
    choose a different investigator. Where a protocol is altered, however, 
    sponsors would incur costs for modifying the protocol, preparing 
    additional analyses, or hiring additional investigators. This would 
    occur, however, only where there was a potentially important problem to 
    resolve.
        Costs could also occur after a marketing application is submitted 
    if FDA determined that the financial interests of an investigator raise 
    serious questions about the integrity of the data. In such a case, the 
    agency may audit the data derived from the investigator, request that 
    the applicant submit further analyses of the data, request that the
    
    [[Page 5244]]
    
    applicant conduct additional independent studies to confirm the results 
    of the questioned study, or refuse to accept the result of the covered 
    clinical study. The likelihood that this rule would require additional 
    research will decline rapidly, however, as applicants adjust to the new 
    requirements by designing studies that minimize the potential bias.
        Because relevant clinical trials for most new drug and biological 
    products are blinded and involve multiple sites and multiple 
    investigators, the agency does not anticipate significant modifications 
    to protocols for most of these products. Clinical trials for medical 
    devices, however, tend to be smaller, involving fewer sites and fewer 
    investigators. In addition, there is a higher possibility of 
    ``inventor/ investigator'' relationships in this industry and, 
    therefore, the sponsors of medical device marketing applications may be 
    more likely than sponsors of applications in other industries to 
    require protocol modifications that could lead to higher costs.
        Unfortunately, until the agency collects the financial disclosure 
    information that could be used to determine the frequency and type of 
    future research protocol adjustments, it cannot project the likely 
    magnitude of these research costs. That is, because FDA does not know 
    which clinical protocols may have unacceptable potential biases, the 
    agency has no means of quantifying the number of the research protocols 
    that might be modified or the associated costs of such modifications. 
    FDA notes, however, that such costs would occur only in the presence of 
    potentially biased clinical trial data that would otherwise be used to 
    support new product approval decisions and would therefore be 
    worthwhile. Because such occurrences would be quite uncommon, FDA 
    concludes that, in aggregate, these costs would be small.
    
    B. Small Business Impact
    
        The Small Business Administration (SBA) uses employment size 
    criteria to identify small businesses in the industries affected by 
    this rule. SBA defines a drug company (Standard Industrial Code (SIC) 
    2834) as small if there are fewer than 750 employees; whereas biologic 
    (SIC's 2835 and 2836) and medical device companies (SIC's 3841, 3842, 
    3843, 3844, 3845, and 3851) are considered small if employment is less 
    than 500. Table 2 displays the distribution of companies by employment 
    size. Even if the employment size category of 500+, which is the 
    largest category reported by SBA, were considered as the small business 
    threshold, approximately 87 percent of drug companies, 85 percent of 
    biologic companies and 94 percent of device companies would be 
    considered small. On this basis, most of the firms affected by this 
    rule are small businesses.
    
                                Table 2.--Number of Firms by Employment Size for 1993\1\                            
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      Employment Size                               
                Industry             -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            <20 20="" to="" 99="" 100="" to="" 499="" total="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" drug="" 332="" 155="" 80="" 85="" 652="" biologic="" 208="" 92="" 50="" 65="" 415="" medical="" device="" 2,936="" 835="" 381="" 273="" 4,425="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" \1\="" source:="" special="" census="" tabulation="" prepared="" by="" u.s.="" bureau="" of="" census="" for="" u.s.="" small="" business="" administration,="" tab="" 3="" -="" united="" states.="" one="" industry="" comment="" expressed="" concern="" that="" the="" ``impact="" of="" the="" rule="" will="" fall="" disproportionately="" on="" small="" firms,="" since="" they="" may="" not="" be="" able="" to="" pay="" clinical="" investigators="" on="" a="" fee-for-service="" basis.''="" the="" writer="" was="" particularly="" concerned="" about="" the="" adverse="" effect="" this="" rule="" will="" have="" on="" the="" medical="" device="" industry="" and="" the="" ``thousands="" of="" investigators="" who="" would="" need="" to="" provide="" information="" to="" sponsors.''="" fda="" agrees="" that="" the="" smallest="" firms="" will="" exhibit="" the="" highest="" incidence="" of="" potentially="" problematic="" financial="" arrangements.="" medical="" device="" and="" biotechnology="" sponsors="" that="" have="" few="" resources,="" especially="" new="" start-up="" companies,="" are="" more="" likely="" to="" engage="" in="" unconventional="" compensation="" arrangements="" than="" other="" companies.="" these="" smaller="" firms="" would="" also="" be="" more="" likely="" than="" the="" larger="" firms="" to="" have="" ``inventor/="" investigator''="" relationships.="" even="" among="" the="" smallest="" firms,="" however,="" very="" few="" will="" incur="" significant="" costs.="" in="" fact,="" the="" majority="" of="" companies="" counted="" in="" table="" 2="" will="" not="" be="" affected="" by="" this="" rule.="" for="" example,="" only="" about="" 5="" percent="" of="" the="" approximately="" 6,000="" medical="" device="" companies="" will="" produce="" any="" devices="" affected="" by="" the="" rule.="" for="" those="" relatively="" few="" firms="" that="" sponsor="" or="" conduct="" clinical="" trials,="" fda="" has="" been="" told="" by="" industry="" representatives="" that="" only="" a="" small="" subset="" will="" have="" disclosable="" arrangements.="" and="" even="" a="" smaller="" subset="" of="" firms="" may="" incur="" increased="" research="" costs,="" because="" only="" in="" rare="" cases="" would="" sponsors="" of="" the="" covered="" study="" need="" to="" modify="" original="" protocols,="" particularly="" because="" sponsors="" of="" the="" covered="" studies="" are="" encouraged="" to="" consult="" with="" the="" agency="" whenever="" a="" questionable="" financial="" arrangement="" or="" interest="" emerges.="" these="" consultations="" are="" particularly="" important,="" because="" the="" cost="" to="" modify="" a="" clinical="" trial="" design="" before="" a="" clinical="" trial="" is="" conducted="" is="" far="" lower="" than="" the="" cost="" to="" address="" a="" problem="" after="" the="" trial="" is="" completed.="" for="" these="" few="" instances="" where="" a="" sponsor="" of="" a="" covered="" study="" may="" need="" to="" take="" additional="" steps="" to="" minimize="" the="" potential="" for="" bias,="" fda="" believes="" that="" the="" benefits="" of="" correcting="" potentially="" biased="" results="" will="" more="" than="" offset="" the="" costs="" of="" any="" needed="" research="" modifications.="" c.="" analysis="" of="" alternatives="" fda="" has="" considered="" various="" alternatives="" to="" publishing="" this="" final="" rule="" including="" not="" requiring="" submission="" of="" this="" information="" to="" the="" agency.="" after="" meeting="" with="" numerous="" groups="" including="" regulated="" industry="" and="" others,="" it="" was="" decided="" that="" it="" was="" necessary="" for="" fda="" to="" require="" submission="" of="" this="" information="" in="" order="" for="" fda="" to="" be="" adequately="" aware="" of="" influences="" that="" could="" affect="" data="" reliability.="" fda="" also="" considered="" the="" need="" to="" prohibit="" certain="" financial="" interests="" where="" the="" original="" investigator="" was="" compensated="" in="" ways="" that="" have="" the="" potential="" to="" influence="" the="" outcome="" of="" the="" study.="" fda="" decided="" against="" that="" option,="" however,="" because="" fda="" recognizes="" that="" therapeutic="" products="" that="" benefit="" the="" public="" health="" have="" been="" developed="" by="" these="" means.="" instead,="" fda="" intends="" to="" give="" these="" types="" of="" financial="" arrangements="" close="" scrutiny.="" changes="" to="" the="" september="" 1994="" proposed="" rule="" have="" been="" made="" to="" clarify="" the="" intent="" of="" the="" regulation="" and="" as="" a="" result="" of="" public="" comment,="" including="" meetings="" with="" industry,="" consumer="" groups,="" health="" professionals,="" and="" clinical="" investigators.="" table="" 3="" lists="" [[page="" 5245]]="" changes="" made="" in="" the="" final="" rule="" that="" will="" reduce="" the="" economic="" impact="" on="" small="" businesses:="" table="" 3.--comparison="" of="" the="" impact="" of="" the="" proposed="" rule="" and="" final="" rule="" on="" financial="" disclosure="" by="" clinical="" investigations="" in="" reducing="" the="" economic="" impact="" on="" small="" businesses="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" proposed="" rule="" final="" rule="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" (a)="" definition="" of="" significant="" equity="" interest="" ``any="" (a)="" significant="" equity="" defined="" as="" exceeding="" $50,000="" ownership="" interest="" stock="" option,="" or="" other="" financial="" during="" the="" time="" the="" trial="" is="" carried="" out="" for="" 1="" year="" interest="" whose="" value="" cannot="" be="" readily="" determined="" following="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" through="" reference="" to="" public="" prices,="" or="" any="" equity="" interest="" in="" a="" publicly="" traded="" corporation="" that="" exceeds="" 5="" percent="" of="" total="" equity''.="" (b)="" $5,000="" disclosure="" threshold="" for="" significant="" (b)="" increased="" disclosure="" threshold="" to="" amounts="" exceeding="" payments="" of="" other="" sorts="" from="" the="" sponsor.="" $25,000.="" (c)="" broader="" definition="" of="" clinical="" investigator="" and="" (c)="" narrowed="" definition="" to="" principal="" and="" asked="" for="" comment="" on="" the="" inclusion="" of="" business="" subinvestigators="" and="" their="" immediate="" families.="" partners.="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" vi.="" paperwork="" reduction="" act="" of="" 1995="" this="" final="" rule="" contains="" information="" collection="" requirements="" that="" are="" subject="" to="" review="" by="" the="" office="" of="" management="" and="" budget="" (omb)="" under="" the="" paperwork="" reduction="" act="" of="" 1995="" (44="" u.s.c.="" 3501-3520).="" the="" title,="" description,="" and="" respondent="" description="" of="" the="" information="" collection="" requirements="" are="" shown="" below="" with="" an="" estimate="" of="" the="" annual="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" burden.="" included="" in="" the="" estimate="" is="" the="" time="" for="" reviewing="" instructions,="" searching="" existing="" data="" sources,="" gathering="" and="" maintaining="" the="" data="" needed,="" and="" completing="" and="" reviewing="" each="" collection="" of="" information.="" title:="" financial="" disclosure="" by="" clinical="" investigators="" description:="" this="" final="" rule="" requires="" the="" sponsor="" of="" any="" drug="" (including="" a="" biological="" product),="" or="" device="" marketing="" application="" to="" certify="" to="" the="" absence="" of="" certain="" financial="" interests="" of="" clinical="" investigators="" and/or="" disclose="" those="" financial="" interests="" as="" required,="" when="" covered="" clinical="" studies="" are="" submitted="" to="" fda="" in="" support="" of="" product="" marketing.="" description="" of="" respondents:="" respondents="" are="" sponsors="" of="" marketing="" applications="" containing="" clinical="" data="" from="" studies="" covered="" by="" the="" regulation.="" these="" sponsors="" represents="" pharmaceutical,="" biologic="" and="" medical="" device="" firms.="" many="" of="" these="" firms="" are="" small="" entities="" especially="" in="" the="" areas="" of="" medical="" devices="" and="" biologics/biotechnology.="" respondents="" are="" also="" clinical="" investigators="" who="" provide="" financial="" information="" to="" sponsors="" of="" marketing="" applications.="" fda="" received="" a="" number="" of="" comments="" on="" the="" information="" collection="" estimates="" in="" the="" proposed="" rule="" (see="" comment="" no.="" 13="" of="" section="" ii="" of="" this="" document="" for="" a="" summary="" and="" response="" to="" these="" comments).="" the="" agency="" has="" added="" language="" to="" the="" final="" rule="" to="" allow="" one="" certification="" statement="" to="" cover="" all="" investigators="" for="" which="" the="" applicant="" is="" certifying="" in="" an="" application.="" fda="" has="" also="" recalculated="" its="" estimate="" of="" the="" total="" number="" of="" hours="" that="" will="" be="" necessary="" to="" complete="" the="" information="" collection="" requirements="" associated="" with="" this="" final="" rule.="" the="" applicant="" will="" incur="" reporting="" costs="" in="" order="" to="" comply="" with="" the="" final="" rule.="" applicants="" will="" be="" required="" to="" submit,="" for="" example,="" a="" complete="" list="" of="" clinical="" investigators="" for="" each="" covered="" study,="" a="" list="" that="" is="" already="" required="" in="" a="" marketing="" application.="" for="" investigators="" not="" employed="" by="" the="" applicant="" and/or="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study,="" the="" applicant="" must="" either="" certify="" to="" the="" absence="" of="" certain="" financial="" arrangements="" with="" clinical="" investigators="" or="" disclose="" those="" arrangements="" to="" fda.="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" will="" have="" to="" supply="" information="" pertaining="" to="" significant="" stock="" ownership="" in="" that="" company="" (e.g.,="" whether="" the="" clinical="" investigator,="" his="" spouse="" or="" dependent="" child="" owns="" $50,000="" or="" more="" stock="" in="" that="" company).="" because="" the="" sponsor="" would="" be="" aware="" of="" any="" payments="" to="" investigators,="" patents="" or="" licenses="" held="" by="" investigators,="" and="" any="" other="" significant="" financial="" arrangements="" with="" investigators,="" most="" of="" the="" information="" that="" is="" necessary="" to="" certify="" or="" disclose="" is="" already="" available="" to="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" study.="" similarly,="" sponsors="" that="" are="" nonpublicly="" traded="" corporations="" can="" easily="" identify="" their="" stockholders.="" the="" only="" information="" that="" the="" sponsor="" will="" need="" to="" obtain="" from="" the="" investigator="" would="" be="" the="" investigator's="" stock="" holdings="" in="" the="" sponsor,="" if="" the="" sponsor="" is="" publicly="" traded.="" fda="" expects="" that="" almost="" all="" applicants="" will="" submit="" a="" certification="" statement="" in="" sec.="" 54.4(a)(1)="" and="" (a)(2).="" preparation="" of="" the="" statement="" using="" the="" following="" form="" fda="" 3454="" will="" represent="" little="" effort="" and="" should="" require="" no="" more="" than="" 1="" hour="" per="" study="" (80="" percent="" clerical="" time,="" 20="" percent="" managerial).="" billing="" code="" 4160-01-f="" [[page="" 5246]]="" [graphic]="" [tiff="" omitted]="" tr02fe98.004="" billing="" code="" 4160-01-c="" [[page="" 5247]]="" table="" 4.--estimated="" number="" of="" applications,="" clinical="" trials,="" and="" investigators="" subject="" to="" the="" proposed="" rule="" by="" type="" of="" application\1\="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" number="" of="" application="" type="" total="" number="" applications="" number="" of="" trials="" number="" of="" applications="" affected="" investigators="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" drugs="" new="" drug="" application="" (nda),="" new="" molecular="" entity="" (nme)="" 35="" 35="" 3="" to="" 10="" 3="" to="" 100="" nda="" nonnme="" 100="" 100="" 1="" to="" 3="" 10="" to="" 30="" nda="" efficacy="" supplement="" 100="" 100="" 1="" to="" 3="" 10="" to="" 30="" abbreviated="" new="" drug="" application="" (anda)="" 400="" 240="" 1.1="" 2="" anda="" supplement="" 2,500="" 120="" 1="" 2="" rx="" switch="" 20="" 10="" 2="" 4="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" biologics="" product="" license="" application="" (pla)="" 25="" 25="" 3="" to="" 10="" 3="" to="" 100="" pla="" efficacy="" supplement="" 10="" 10="" 1="" to="" 3="" 3="" to="" 100="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" medical="" devices="" premarket="" approval="" (pma)="" 50="" 50="" 1="" 10="" to="" 20="" pma="" supplement="" 400="" 10="" 1="" 3="" to="" 10="" reclassification="" petitions="" 8="" 4="" 1="" 3="" to="" 10="" 510(k)="" 6,000="" 300="" 1="" 20="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" \1\="" source:="" agency="" estimates.="" when="" certification="" is="" not="" possible="" and="" disclosure="" is="" made="" using="" the="" following="" form="" fda="" 3455,="" the="" applicant="" must="" describe="" the="" financial="" arrangements="" or="" interests="" and="" the="" steps="" that="" were="" taken="" to="" minimize="" the="" potential="" for="" bias="" in="" the="" affected="" study.="" as="" the="" applicant="" will="" be="" fully="" aware="" of="" those="" arrangements="" and="" steps="" taken,="" describing="" them="" will="" be="" straightforward.="" the="" agency="" estimates="" that="" it="" will="" take="" about="" 4="" hours="" to="" prepare="" this="" narrative,="" 90="" percent="" management="" time="" and="" 10="" percent="" clerical.="" billing="" code="" 4160-01-f="" [[page="" 5248]]="" [graphic]="" [tiff="" omitted]="" tr02fe98.005="" billing="" code="" 4160-01-c="" [[page="" 5249]]="" until="" the="" agency="" begins="" to="" collect="" information="" on="" the="" financial="" arrangements="" between="" investigators="" and="" applicants,="" it="" cannot="" know="" the="" actual="" number="" of="" disclosable="" arrangements.="" therefore,="" it="" is="" not="" possible="" to="" predict="" the="" total="" cost="" to="" industry="" of="" preparing="" these="" explanatory="" statements="" with="" any="" certainty,="" although="" the="" agency="" was="" told="" by="" industry="" representatives="" that="" few="" would="" be="" needed="" because="" the="" financial="" arrangements="" described="" in="" this="" rule="" are="" uncommon.="" fda="" estimates="" that="" from="" 1="" percent="" to="" 10="" percent="" of="" the="" applications="" would="" need="" disclosure="" statements,="" and="" has="" used="" the="" extremely="" conservative="" estimate="" of="" 10="" percent="" in="" table="" 5="" below.="" investigators="" must="" provide="" sponsors="" of="" the="" covered="" studies="" with="" sufficient="" accurate="" information="" to="" make="" the="" required="" disclosure="" or="" certification.="" because="" much="" of="" the="" information="" required="" can="" be="" obtained="" from="" the="" applicant's="" own="" records,="" the="" costs="" incurred="" by="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" will="" be="" minimal.="" clinical="" investigators="" are="" required="" to="" do="" one="" of="" two="" things:="" (1)="" provide="" a="" statement="" that="" they,="" their="" spouse,="" and="" their="" dependent="" children="" did="" not="" have="" a="" significant="" equity="" interest="" (greater="" than="" $50,000)="" in="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study="" during="" the="" time="" of="" the="" clinical="" study="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" after,="" or="" (2)="" disclose="" such="" interest.="" most="" people="" know="" the="" financial="" holdings="" of="" their="" immediate="" family="" and="" records="" of="" such="" interests="" are="" generally="" accessible="" because="" they="" are="" needed="" for="" preparing="" tax="" records.="" the="" time="" required="" for="" this="" task="" may="" range="" from="" 5="" to="" 15="" minutes.="" assuming="" a="" physician's="" hourly="" cost="" of="" $87.69,\1\="" a="" $336,695="" estimated="" cost="" to="" investigators="" was="" calculated.="" clinical="" investigators="" are="" accustomed="" to="" supplying="" such="" information="" in="" even="" greater="" detail="" when="" applying="" for="" research="" grants.="" table="" 5.--estimated="" annual="" reporting="" burden="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" annual="" 21="" cfr="" section="" no.="" of="" frequency="" per="" total="" annual="" hours="" per="" total="" hours="" respondents="" response="" responses="" response="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" 54.4(a)(1)="" and="" (a)(2)="" 1,000="" 1="" 1="" 1="" 1,000="" 54.4(a)(3)="" 100="" 1="" 1="" 4="" 400="" 54.4="" (clinical="" investigators)="" 46,000="" 1="" 1="" .10="" 4,600="" total="" 6,000="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" the="" sponsors="" of="" covered="" studies="" will="" be="" required="" to="" maintain="" complete="" records="" of="" compensation="" agreements="" with="" any="" compensation="" paid="" to="" nonemployee="" clinical="" investigators,="" including="" information="" showing="" any="" financial="" interests="" held="" by="" the="" clinical="" investigator,="" for="" a="" time="" period="" of="" 2="" years="" after="" the="" date="" of="" approval="" of="" the="" application.="" this="" time="" is="" consistent="" with="" the="" current="" recordkeeping="" requirements="" for="" other="" information="" related="" to="" marketing="" applications="" for="" human="" drugs,="" biologics,="" and="" medical="" devices.="" fda="" judged="" the="" incremental="" costs="" associated="" with="" this="" new="" activity="" to="" be="" negligible="" because="" firms="" already="" maintain="" records="" of="" compensation="" as="" standard="" business="" practice="" and="" the="" required="" records="" pertaining="" to="" the="" financial="" interests="" of="" the="" investigators="" will="" typically="" consist="" of="" only="" one="" additional="" piece="" of="" paper="" per="" investigator.="" currently,="" sponsors="" of="" covered="" studies="" must="" maintain="" many="" records="" with="" regard="" to="" clinical="" investigators,="" including="" protocol="" agreements="" and="" investigator="" resumes="" or="" curriculum="" vitae="" and="" the="" inclusion="" of="" information="" required="" by="" this="" rulemaking="" would="" add="" little="" to="" this="" recordkeeping="" burden.="" fda="" estimates="" that="" an="" average="" 15="" minutes="" will="" be="" required="" for="" each="" recordkeeper="" to="" add="" this="" record="" to="" clinical="" investigators'="" files.="" table="" 6.--estimated="" annual="" recordkeeping="" burden="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" annual="" 21="" cfr="" section="" no.="" of="" frequency="" per="" total="" annual="" hours="" per="" total="" hours="" recordkeepers="" recordkeeping="" records="" recordkeeper="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" 54.6="" 1,000="" 1="" 1,000="" .25="" 250="" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------="" there="" are="" no="" operating="" and="" maintenance="" costs="" or="" capital="" costs="" associated="" with="" this="" information="" collection="" of="" information.="" although="" the="" september="" 22,="" 1994="" (59="" fr="" 48708),="" proposed="" rule="" provided="" a="" 90-day="" comment="" period="" under="" the="" paperwork="" reduction="" act="" of="" 1980,="" and="" this="" final="" rule="" responds="" to="" the="" comments="" received,="" fda="" is="" providing="" an="" additional="" opportunity="" for="" public="" comment="" under="" the="" paperwork="" reduction="" act="" of="" 1995="" that="" became="" effective="" after="" the="" expiration="" of="" the="" comment="" period="" and="" applies="" to="" this="" final="" rule.="" therefore,="" fda="" now="" invites="" comments="" on:="" (1)="" whether="" the="" proposed="" collection="" of="" information="" is="" necessary="" for="" the="" proper="" performance="" of="" fda's="" functions,="" including="" whether="" the="" information="" will="" have="" practical="" utility;="" (2)="" the="" accuracy="" of="" fda's="" estimate="" of="" the="" burden="" of="" the="" proposed="" collection="" of="" information,="" including="" the="" validity="" of="" the="" methodology="" and="" assumptions="" used;="" (3)="" ways="" to="" enhance="" the="" quality,="" utility,="" and="" clarity="" of="" the="" information="" to="" be="" collected;="" and="" (4)="" ways="" to="" minimize="" the="" burden="" of="" the="" collection="" of="" information="" on="" respondents,="" including="" through="" the="" use="" of="" automated="" collection="" techniques,="" when="" appropriate,="" and="" other="" forms="" of="" information="" technology.="" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------="" \1\="" physician="" mean="" net="" income="" (after="" expenses,="" before="" taxes)="" for="" all="" specialties="" is="" $182,395.20.="" source:="" american="" medical="" association.="" wage="" rate="" assumes="" 2,080="" hours="" worked="" per="" year.="" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------="" individuals="" and="" organizations="" may="" submit="" comments="" on="" the="" information="" collection="" provisions="" of="" this="" final="" rule="" by="" april="" 3,="" 1998..="" comments="" should="" be="" directed="" to="" the="" dockets="" management="" branch="" (address="" above).="" comments="" should="" be="" identified="" with="" the="" docket="" number="" found="" in="" brackets="" in="" the="" heading="" of="" this="" document.="" at="" the="" close="" of="" the="" 60-day="" comment="" period,="" fda="" will="" review="" the="" comments="" received,="" revise="" the="" information="" collection="" provisions="" as="" necessary,="" and="" submit="" these="" provisions="" to="" omb="" for="" review.="" fda="" will="" publish="" a="" notice="" in="" the="" federal="" register="" when="" the="" information="" collection="" provisions="" are="" submitted="" to="" omb,="" and="" an="" opportunity="" for="" public="" comment="" to="" omb="" will="" be="" provided="" at="" that="" time.="" prior="" to="" the="" effective="" date="" of="" this="" final="" rule,="" fda="" will="" publish="" a="" notice="" in="" the="" federal="" register="" of="" omb's="" [[page="" 5250]]="" decision="" to="" approve,="" modify,="" or="" disapprove="" the="" information="" collection="" provisions.="" an="" agency="" may="" not="" conduct="" or="" sponsor,="" and="" a="" person="" is="" not="" required="" to="" respond="" to,="" a="" collection="" of="" information="" unless="" it="" displays="" a="" currently="" valid="" omb="" control="" number.="" list="" of="" subjects="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 54="" biologics,="" drugs,="" medical="" devices,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 312="" drugs,="" exports,="" imports,="" investigations,="" labeling,="" medical="" research,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements,="" safety.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 314="" administrative="" practice="" and="" procedure,="" confidential="" business="" information,="" drugs,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 320="" drugs,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 330="" over-the-counter="" drugs.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 601="" administrative="" practice="" and="" procedure,="" biologics,="" confidential="" business="" information.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 807="" confidential="" business="" information,="" imports,="" medical="" devices,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 812="" health="" records,="" medical="" devices,="" medical="" research,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 814="" administrative="" practice="" and="" procedure,="" confidential="" business="" information,="" medical="" devices,="" medical="" research,="" reporting="" and="" recordkeeping="" requirements.="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 860="" administrative="" practice="" and="" procedure,="" medical="" devices.="" therefore,="" under="" the="" federal="" food,="" drug,="" and="" cosmetic="" act,="" and="" under="" authority="" delegated="" to="" the="" commissioner="" of="" food="" and="" drugs,="" 21="" cfr="" chapter="" i="" is="" amended="" as="" follows:="" 1.="" part="" 54="" is="" added="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" part="" 54--financial="" disclosure="" by="" clinical="" investigators="" sec.="" 54.1="" purpose.="" 54.2="" definitions.="" 54.3="" scope.="" 54.4="" certification="" and="" disclosure="" requirements.="" 54.5="" agency="" evaluation="" of="" financial="" interests.="" 54.6="" recordkeeping="" and="" record="" retention.="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 321,="" 331,="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 355,="" 356,="" 357,="" 360,="" 360c-360j,="" 371,="" 372,="" 373,="" 374,="" 375,="" 376,="" 379;="" 42="" u.s.c.="" 262.="" sec.="" 54.1="" purpose.="" (a)="" the="" food="" and="" drug="" administration="" (fda)="" evaluates="" clinical="" studies="" submitted="" in="" marketing="" applications,="" required="" by="" law,="" for="" new="" human="" drugs="" and="" biological="" products="" and="" marketing="" applications="" and="" reclassification="" petitions="" for="" medical="" devices.="" (b)="" the="" agency="" reviews="" data="" generated="" in="" these="" clinical="" studies="" to="" determine="" whether="" the="" applications="" are="" approvable="" under="" the="" statutory="" requirements.="" fda="" may="" consider="" clinical="" studies="" inadequate="" and="" the="" data="" inadequate="" if,="" among="" other="" things,="" appropriate="" steps="" have="" not="" been="" taken="" in="" the="" design,="" conduct,="" reporting,="" and="" analysis="" of="" the="" studies="" to="" minimize="" bias.="" one="" potential="" source="" of="" bias="" in="" clinical="" studies="" is="" a="" financial="" interest="" of="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" in="" the="" outcome="" of="" the="" study="" because="" of="" the="" way="" payment="" is="" arranged="" (e.g.,="" a="" royalty)="" or="" because="" the="" investigator="" has="" a="" proprietary="" interest="" in="" the="" product="" (e.g.,="" a="" patent)="" or="" because="" the="" investigator="" has="" an="" equity="" interest="" in="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study.="" this="" section="" and="" conforming="" regulations="" require="" an="" applicant="" whose="" submission="" relies="" in="" part="" on="" clinical="" data="" to="" disclose="" certain="" financial="" arrangements="" between="" sponsor(s)="" of="" the="" covered="" studies="" and="" the="" clinical="" investigators="" and="" certain="" interests="" of="" the="" clinical="" investigators="" in="" the="" product="" under="" study="" or="" in="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" studies.="" fda="" will="" use="" this="" information,="" in="" conjunction="" with="" information="" about="" the="" design="" and="" purpose="" of="" the="" study,="" as="" well="" as="" information="" obtained="" through="" on-site="" inspections,="" in="" the="" agency's="" assessment="" of="" the="" reliability="" of="" the="" data.="" sec.="" 54.2="" definitions.="" for="" the="" purposes="" of="" this="" part:="" (a)="" compensation="" affected="" by="" the="" outcome="" of="" clinical="" studies="" means="" compensation="" that="" could="" be="" higher="" for="" a="" favorable="" outcome="" than="" for="" an="" unfavorable="" outcome,="" such="" as="" compensation="" that="" is="" explicitly="" greater="" for="" a="" favorable="" result="" or="" compensation="" to="" the="" investigator="" in="" the="" form="" of="" an="" equity="" interest="" in="" the="" sponsor="" of="" a="" covered="" study="" or="" in="" the="" form="" of="" compensation="" tied="" to="" sales="" of="" the="" product,="" such="" as="" a="" royalty="" interest.="" (b)="" significant="" equity="" interest="" in="" the="" sponsor="" of="" a="" covered="" study="" means="" any="" ownership="" interest,="" stock="" options,="" or="" other="" financial="" interest="" whose="" value="" cannot="" be="" readily="" determined="" through="" reference="" to="" public="" prices="" (generally,="" interests="" in="" a="" nonpublicly="" traded="" corporation),="" or="" any="" equity="" interest="" in="" a="" publicly="" traded="" corporation="" that="" exceeds="" $50,000="" during="" the="" time="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" is="" carrying="" out="" the="" study="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" (c)="" proprietary="" interest="" in="" the="" tested="" product="" means="" property="" or="" other="" financial="" interest="" in="" the="" product="" including,="" but="" not="" limited="" to,="" a="" patent,="" trademark,="" copyright="" or="" licensing="" agreement.="" (d)="" clinical="" investigator="" means="" any="" listed="" or="" identified="" investigator="" or="" subinvestigator="" who="" is="" directly="" involved="" in="" the="" treatment="" or="" evaluation="" of="" research="" subjects.="" the="" term="" also="" includes="" the="" spouse="" and="" each="" dependent="" child="" of="" the="" investigator.="" (e)="" covered="" clinical="" study="" means="" any="" study="" of="" a="" drug="" or="" device="" in="" humans="" submitted="" in="" a="" marketing="" application="" or="" reclassification="" petition="" subject="" to="" this="" part="" that="" the="" applicant="" or="" fda="" relies="" on="" to="" establish="" that="" the="" product="" is="" effective="" (including="" studies="" that="" show="" equivalence="" to="" an="" effective="" product)="" or="" that="" make="" a="" significant="" contribution="" to="" the="" demonstration="" of="" safety.="" an="" applicant="" may="" consult="" with="" fda="" as="" to="" which="" clinical="" studies="" constitute="" ``covered="" clinical="" studies''="" for="" purposes="" of="" complying="" with="" financial="" disclosure="" requirements.="" (f)="" significant="" payments="" of="" other="" sorts="" means="" payments="" made="" by="" the="" sponsor="" of="" a="" covered="" study="" to="" the="" investigator="" or="" the="" institution="" to="" support="" activities="" of="" the="" investigator="" that="" have="" a="" monetary="" value="" of="" more="" than="" $25,000,="" exclusive="" of="" the="" costs="" of="" conducting="" the="" clinical="" study="" or="" other="" clinical="" studies,="" (e.g.,="" a="" grant="" to="" fund="" ongoing="" research,="" compensation="" in="" the="" form="" of="" equipment="" or="" retainers="" for="" ongoing="" consultation="" or="" honoraria)="" during="" the="" time="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" is="" carrying="" out="" the="" study="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" the="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" (g)="" applicant="" means="" the="" party="" who="" submits="" a="" marketing="" application="" to="" fda="" for="" approval="" of="" a="" drug,="" device,="" or="" biologic="" product.="" the="" applicant="" is="" responsible="" for="" submitting="" the="" appropriate="" certification="" and="" disclosure="" statements="" required="" in="" this="" part.="" (h)="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" clinical="" study="" means="" the="" party="" supporting="" a="" [[page="" 5251]]="" particular="" study="" at="" the="" time="" it="" was="" carried="" out.="" sec.="" 54.3="" scope.="" the="" requirements="" in="" this="" part="" apply="" to="" any="" applicant="" who="" submits="" a="" marketing="" application="" for="" a="" human="" drug,="" biological="" product,="" or="" device="" and="" who="" submits="" covered="" clinical="" studies.="" the="" applicant="" is="" responsible="" for="" making="" the="" appropriate="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" where="" the="" applicant="" either="" contracted="" with="" one="" or="" more="" clinical="" investigators="" to="" conduct="" the="" studies="" or="" submitted="" studies="" conducted="" by="" others="" not="" under="" contract="" to="" the="" applicant.="" sec.="" 54.4="" certification="" and="" disclosure="" requirements.="" for="" purposes="" of="" this="" part,="" an="" applicant="" must="" submit="" a="" list="" of="" all="" clinical="" investigators="" who="" conducted="" covered="" clinical="" studies="" to="" determine="" whether="" the="" applicant's="" product="" meets="" fda's="" marketing="" requirements,="" identifying="" those="" clinical="" investigators="" who="" are="" full-="" time="" or="" part-time="" employees="" of="" the="" sponsor="" of="" each="" covered="" study.="" the="" applicant="" must="" also="" completely="" and="" accurately="" disclose="" or="" certify="" information="" concerning="" the="" financial="" interests="" of="" a="" clinical="" investigator="" who="" is="" not="" a="" full-time="" or="" part-time="" employee="" of="" the="" sponsor="" for="" each="" covered="" clinical="" study.="" clinical="" investigators="" subject="" to="" investigational="" new="" drug="" or="" investigational="" device="" exemption="" regulations="" must="" provide="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" study="" with="" sufficient="" accurate="" information="" needed="" to="" allow="" subsequent="" disclosure="" or="" certification.="" the="" applicant="" is="" required="" to="" submit="" for="" each="" clinical="" investigator="" who="" participates="" in="" a="" covered="" study,="" either="" a="" certification="" that="" none="" of="" the="" financial="" arrangements="" described="" in="" sec.="" 54.2="" exist,="" or="" disclose="" the="" nature="" of="" those="" arrangements="" to="" the="" agency.="" where="" the="" applicant="" acts="" with="" due="" diligence="" to="" obtain="" the="" information="" required="" in="" this="" section="" but="" is="" unable="" to="" do="" so,="" the="" applicant="" shall="" certify="" that="" despite="" the="" applicant's="" due="" diligence="" in="" attempting="" to="" obtain="" the="" information,="" the="" applicant="" was="" unable="" to="" obtain="" the="" information="" and="" shall="" include="" the="" reason.="" (a)="" the="" applicant="" (of="" an="" application="" submitted="" under="" sections="" 505,="" 506,="" 507,="" 519(k),="" 513,="" or="" 515="" of="" the="" federal="" food,="" drug,="" and="" cosmetic="" act,="" or="" section="" 351="" of="" the="" public="" health="" service="" act)="" that="" relies="" in="" whole="" or="" in="" part="" on="" clinical="" studies="" shall="" submit,="" for="" each="" clinical="" investigator="" who="" participated="" in="" a="" covered="" clinical="" study,="" either="" a="" certification="" described="" in="" paragraph="" (a)(1)="" of="" this="" section="" or="" a="" disclosure="" statement="" described="" in="" paragraph="" (a)(3)="" of="" this="" section.="" (1)="" certification:="" the="" applicant="" covered="" by="" this="" section="" shall="" submit="" for="" all="" clinical="" investigators="" (as="" defined="" in="" sec.="" 54.2(d)),="" to="" whom="" the="" certification="" applies,="" a="" completed="" form="" fda="" 3454="" attesting="" to="" the="" absence="" of="" financial="" interests="" and="" arrangements="" described="" in="" paragraph="" (a)(3)="" of="" this="" section.="" the="" form="" shall="" be="" dated="" and="" signed="" by="" the="" chief="" financial="" officer="" or="" other="" responsible="" corporate="" official="" or="" representative.="" (2)="" if="" the="" certification="" covers="" less="" than="" all="" covered="" clinical="" data="" in="" the="" application,="" the="" applicant="" shall="" include="" in="" the="" certification="" a="" list="" of="" the="" studies="" covered="" by="" this="" certification.="" (3)="" disclosure="" statement:="" for="" any="" clinical="" investigator="" defined="" in="" sec.="" 54.2(d)="" for="" whom="" the="" applicant="" does="" not="" submit="" the="" certification="" described="" in="" paragraph="" (a)(1)="" of="" this="" section,="" the="" applicant="" shall="" submit="" a="" completed="" form="" fda="" 3455="" disclosing="" completely="" and="" accurately="" the="" following:="" (i)="" any="" financial="" arrangement="" entered="" into="" between="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study="" and="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" involved="" in="" the="" conduct="" of="" a="" covered="" clinical="" trial,="" whereby="" the="" value="" of="" the="" compensation="" to="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" for="" conducting="" the="" study="" could="" be="" influenced="" by="" the="" outcome="" of="" the="" study;="" (ii)="" any="" significant="" payments="" of="" other="" sorts="" from="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study,="" such="" as="" a="" grant="" to="" fund="" ongoing="" research,="" compensation="" in="" the="" form="" of="" equipment,="" retainer="" for="" ongoing="" consultation,="" or="" honoraria;="" (iii)="" any="" proprietary="" interest="" in="" the="" tested="" product="" held="" by="" any="" clinical="" investigator="" involved="" in="" a="" study;="" (iv)="" any="" significant="" equity="" interest="" in="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study="" held="" by="" any="" clinical="" investigator="" involved="" in="" any="" clinical="" study;="" and="" (v)="" any="" steps="" taken="" to="" minimize="" the="" potential="" for="" bias="" resulting="" from="" any="" of="" the="" disclosed="" arrangements,="" interests,="" or="" payments.="" (b)="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" shall="" provide="" to="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study="" sufficient="" accurate="" financial="" information="" to="" allow="" the="" sponsor="" to="" submit="" complete="" and="" accurate="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statements="" as="" required="" in="" paragraph="" (a)="" of="" this="" section.="" the="" investigator="" shall="" promptly="" update="" this="" information="" if="" any="" relevant="" changes="" occur="" in="" the="" course="" of="" the="" investigation="" or="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" (c)="" refusal="" to="" file="" application.="" fda="" may="" refuse="" to="" file="" any="" marketing="" application="" described="" in="" paragraph="" (a)="" of="" this="" section="" that="" does="" not="" contain="" the="" information="" required="" by="" this="" section="" or="" a="" certification="" by="" the="" applicant="" that="" the="" applicant="" has="" acted="" with="" due="" diligence="" to="" obtain="" the="" information="" but="" was="" unable="" to="" do="" so="" and="" stating="" the="" reason.="" sec.="" 54.5="" agency="" evaluation="" of="" financial="" interests.="" (a)="" evaluation="" of="" disclosure="" statement.="" fda="" will="" evaluate="" the="" information="" disclosed="" under="" sec.="" 54.4(a)(2)="" about="" each="" covered="" clinical="" study="" in="" an="" application="" to="" determine="" the="" impact="" of="" any="" disclosed="" financial="" interests="" on="" the="" reliability="" of="" the="" study.="" fda="" may="" consider="" both="" the="" size="" and="" nature="" of="" a="" disclosed="" financial="" interest="" (including="" the="" potential="" increase="" in="" the="" value="" of="" the="" interest="" if="" the="" product="" is="" approved)="" and="" steps="" that="" have="" been="" taken="" to="" minimize="" the="" potential="" for="" bias.="" (b)="" effect="" of="" study="" design.="" in="" assessing="" the="" potential="" of="" an="" investigator's="" financial="" interests="" to="" bias="" a="" study,="" fda="" will="" take="" into="" account="" the="" design="" and="" purpose="" of="" the="" study.="" study="" designs="" that="" utilize="" such="" approaches="" as="" multiple="" investigators="" (most="" of="" whom="" do="" not="" have="" a="" disclosable="" interest),="" blinding,="" objective="" endpoints,="" or="" measurement="" of="" endpoints="" by="" someone="" other="" than="" the="" investigator="" may="" adequately="" protect="" against="" any="" bias="" created="" by="" a="" disclosable="" financial="" interest.="" (c)="" agency="" actions="" to="" ensure="" reliability="" of="" data.="" if="" fda="" determines="" that="" the="" financial="" interests="" of="" any="" clinical="" investigator="" raise="" a="" serious="" question="" about="" the="" integrity="" of="" the="" data,="" fda="" will="" take="" any="" action="" it="" deems="" necessary="" to="" ensure="" the="" reliability="" of="" the="" data="" including:="" (1)="" initiating="" agency="" audits="" of="" the="" data="" derived="" from="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" in="" question;="" (2)="" requesting="" that="" the="" applicant="" submit="" further="" analyses="" of="" data,="" e.g.,="" to="" evaluate="" the="" effect="" of="" the="" clinical="" investigator's="" data="" on="" overall="" study="" outcome;="" (3)="" requesting="" that="" the="" applicant="" conduct="" additional="" independent="" studies="" to="" confirm="" the="" results="" of="" the="" questioned="" study;="" and="" (4)="" refusing="" to="" treat="" the="" covered="" clinical="" study="" as="" providing="" data="" that="" can="" be="" the="" basis="" for="" an="" agency="" action.="" sec.="" 54.6="" recordkeeping="" and="" record="" retention.="" (a)="" financial="" records="" of="" clinical="" investigators="" to="" be="" retained.="" an="" applicant="" who="" has="" submitted="" a="" marketing="" application="" containing="" covered="" clinical="" studies="" shall="" keep="" on="" file="" certain="" information="" pertaining="" to="" the="" financial="" interests="" of="" clinical="" investigators="" who="" conducted="" studies="" on="" which="" the="" application="" relies="" and="" who="" are="" not="" full="" or="" part-time="" employees="" of="" the="" applicant,="" as="" follows:="" [[page="" 5252]]="" (1)="" complete="" records="" showing="" any="" financial="" interest="" or="" arrangement="" as="" described="" in="" sec.="" 54.4(a)(3)(i)="" paid="" to="" such="" clinical="" investigators="" by="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study.="" (2)="" complete="" records="" showing="" significant="" payments="" of="" other="" sorts,="" as="" described="" in="" sec.="" 54.4(a)(3)(ii),="" made="" by="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" clinical="" study="" to="" the="" clinical="" investigator.="" (3)="" complete="" records="" showing="" any="" financial="" interests="" held="" by="" clinical="" investigators="" as="" set="" forth="" in="" sec.="" 54.4(a)(3)(iii)="" and="" (a)(3)(iv).="" (b)="" requirements="" for="" maintenance="" of="" clinical="" investigators'="" financial="" records.="" (1)="" for="" any="" application="" submitted="" for="" a="" covered="" product,="" an="" applicant="" shall="" retain="" records="" as="" described="" in="" paragraph="" (a)="" of="" this="" section="" for="" 2="" years="" after="" the="" date="" of="" approval="" of="" the="" application.="" (2)="" the="" person="" maintaining="" these="" records="" shall,="" upon="" request="" from="" any="" properly="" authorized="" officer="" or="" employee="" of="" fda,="" at="" reasonable="" times,="" permit="" such="" officer="" or="" employee="" to="" have="" access="" to="" and="" copy="" and="" verify="" these="" records.="" part="" 312--investigational="" new="" drug="" application="" 2.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 312="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 321,="" 331,="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 355,="" 356,="" 357,="" 371;="" 42="" u.s.c.="" 262.="" 3.="" section="" 312.53="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (c)(4)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 312.53="" selecting="" investigators="" and="" monitors.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (c)="" *="" *="" *="" (4)="" financial="" disclosure="" information.="" sufficient="" accurate="" financial="" information="" to="" allow="" the="" sponsor="" to="" submit="" complete="" and="" accurate="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statements="" required="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" the="" sponsor="" shall="" obtain="" a="" commitment="" from="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" to="" promptly="" update="" this="" information="" if="" any="" relevant="" changes="" occur="" during="" the="" course="" of="" the="" investigation="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" the="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 4.="" section="" 312.57="" is="" amended="" by="" redesignating="" paragraphs="" (b)="" and="" (c)="" as="" paragraphs="" (c)="" and="" (d)="" and="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (b)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 312.57="" recordkeeping="" and="" record="" retention.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (b)="" a="" sponsor="" shall="" maintain="" complete="" and="" accurate="" records="" showing="" any="" financial="" interest="" in="" sec.="" 54.4(a)(3)(i),="" (a)(3)(ii),="" (a)(3)(iii),="" and="" (a)(3)(iv)="" of="" this="" chapter="" paid="" to="" clinical="" investigators="" by="" the="" sponsor="" of="" the="" covered="" study.="" a="" sponsor="" shall="" also="" maintain="" complete="" and="" accurate="" records="" concerning="" all="" other="" financial="" interests="" of="" investigators="" subject="" to="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 5.="" section="" 312.64="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (d)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 312.64="" investigator="" reports.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (d)="" financial="" disclosure="" reports.="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" shall="" provide="" the="" sponsor="" with="" sufficient="" accurate="" financial="" information="" to="" allow="" an="" applicant="" to="" submit="" complete="" and="" accurate="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statements="" as="" required="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" shall="" promptly="" update="" this="" information="" if="" any="" relevant="" changes="" occur="" during="" the="" course="" of="" the="" investigation="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" the="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" part="" 314--applications="" for="" fda="" approval="" to="" market="" a="" new="" drug="" or="" an="" antibiotic="" drug="" 6.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 314="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 321,="" 331,="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 355,="" 356,="" 357,="" 371,="" 374,="" 379e.="" 7.="" section="" 314.50="" is="" amended="" by="" redesignating="" paragraph="" (k)="" as="" paragraph="" (l)="" and="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (k)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 314.50="" content="" and="" format="" of="" an="" application.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (k)="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement.="" the="" application="" shall="" contain="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 8.="" section="" 314.60="" is="" amended="" in="" paragraph="" (a)="" by="" adding="" a="" new="" sentence="" at="" the="" end="" of="" the="" paragraph="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 314.60="" amendments="" to="" an="" unapproved="" application.="" (a)="" *="" *="" *="" an="" amendment="" that="" contains="" new="" clinical="" data="" from="" a="" previously="" unreported="" study="" shall="" contain="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter,="" or="" fda="" may="" refuse="" to="" accept="" any="" such="" amendment.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 9.="" section="" 314.94="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (a)(13)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 314.94="" content="" and="" format="" of="" an="" abbreviated="" application.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (a)="" *="" *="" *="" (13)="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement.="" an="" abbreviated="" application="" shall="" contain="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 10.="" section="" 314.200="" is="" amended="" in="" paragraph="" (d)(3)="" by="" adding="" a="" new="" sentence="" after="" the="" first="" sentence="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 314.200="" notice="" of="" opportunity="" for="" hearing;="" notice="" of="" participation="" and="" request="" for="" hearing;="" grant="" or="" denial="" of="" hearing.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (d)="" *="" *="" *="" (3)="" *="" *="" *="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter="" must="" accompany="" all="" clinical="" data="" submitted.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 11.="" section="" 314.300="" is="" amended="" in="" the="" introductory="" text="" of="" paragraph="" (b)(6)="" by="" adding="" a="" new="" sentence="" after="" the="" first="" sentence="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 314.300="" procedure="" for="" the="" issuance,="" amendment,="" or="" repeal="" of="" regulations.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (b)="" *="" *="" *="" (6)="" *="" *="" *="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter="" must="" accompany="" all="" clinical="" data="" submitted="" with="" the="" request="" for="" hearing.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" part="" 320--bioavailability="" and="" bioequivalence="" requirements="" 12.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 320="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 321,="" 351,="" 352,="" 355,="" 357,="" 371.="" 13.="" section="" 320.36="" is="" amended="" by="" designating="" the="" existing="" text="" as="" paragraph="" (a)="" and="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (b)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 320.36="" requirements="" for="" maintenance="" of="" records="" of="" bioequivalence="" testing.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (b)="" any="" person="" who="" contracts="" with="" another="" party="" to="" conduct="" a="" bioequivalence="" study="" from="" which="" the="" data="" are="" intended="" to="" be="" submitted="" to="" fda="" as="" part="" of="" an="" application="" submitted="" under="" part="" 314="" of="" this="" chapter="" shall="" obtain="" from="" the="" person="" conducting="" the="" study="" sufficient="" accurate="" financial="" information="" to="" allow="" the="" submission="" of="" complete="" and="" accurate="" financial="" certifications="" or="" disclosure="" statements="" [[page="" 5253]]="" required="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter="" and="" shall="" maintain="" that="" information="" and="" all="" records="" relating="" to="" the="" compensation="" given="" for="" that="" study="" and="" all="" other="" financial="" interest="" information="" required="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter="" for="" 2="" years="" after="" the="" date="" of="" approval="" of="" the="" application.="" the="" person="" maintaining="" these="" records="" shall,="" upon="" request="" for="" any="" properly="" authorized="" officer="" or="" employee="" of="" the="" food="" and="" drug="" administration,="" at="" reasonable="" time,="" permit="" such="" officer="" or="" employee="" to="" have="" access="" to="" and="" copy="" and="" verify="" these="" records.="" part="" 330--over-the-counter="" (otc)="" human="" drugs="" which="" are="" generally="" recognized="" as="" safe="" and="" effective="" and="" not="" misbranded="" 14.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 330="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 321,="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 355,="" 360,="" 371.="" 15.="" section="" 330.10="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (f)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 330.10="" procedures="" for="" classifying="" otc="" drugs="" generally="" recognized="" as="" safe="" and="" effective="" and="" not="" misbranded,="" and="" for="" establishing="" monographs.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (f)="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement.="" any="" clinical="" data="" submitted="" under="" this="" section="" must="" be="" accompanied="" by="" financial="" certifications="" or="" disclosure="" statements="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" part="" 601--licensing="" 16.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 601="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 321,="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 355,="" 360,="" 360c-360f,="" 360h-360j,="" 371,="" 374,="" 379e,="" 381;="" 42="" u.s.c.="" 216,="" 241,="" 262,="" 263;="" 15="" u.s.c.="" 1451-1461.="" 17.="" the="" introductory="" test="" of="" section="" 601.2="" is="" amended="" in="" the="" introductory="" text="" of="" paragraph="" (a)="" by="" adding="" a="" sentence="" after="" the="" first="" sentence="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 601.2="" applications="" for="" establishment="" and="" product="" licenses;="" procedures="" for="" filing.="" (a)="" *="" *="" *="" the="" applicant="" shall="" also="" include="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement(s)="" or="" both="" for="" clinical="" investigators="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" part="" 807--establishment="" registration="" and="" device="" listing="" for="" manufacturers="" and="" distributors="" of="" devices="" 18.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 807="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 331,="" 351,="" 352,="" 360,="" 360c,="" 360e,="" 360i,="" 360j,="" 371,="" 374.="" 19.="" section="" 807.31="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (d)(3)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 807.31="" additional="" listing="" information.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (d)="" *="" *="" *="" (3)="" a="" copy="" of="" the="" certification="" and="" disclosure="" statements="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter="" shall="" be="" retained="" and="" physically="" located="" at="" the="" establishment="" maintaining="" the="" historical="" file.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 20.="" section="" 807.87="" is="" amended="" by="" redesignating="" paragraphs="" (i)="" through="" (k)="" as="" paragraphs="" (j)="" through="" (l),="" respectively,="" and="" by="" adding="" a="" new="" paragraph="" (i)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 807.87="" information="" required="" in="" a="" premarket="" notification="" submission.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (i)="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both,="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 21.="" section="" 807.100="" is="" amended="" by="" redesignating="" paragraph="" (a)(4)="" as="" paragraph="" (a)(5)="" and="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (a)(4)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 807.100="" fda="" action="" on="" a="" premarket="" notification.="" (a)="" *="" *="" *="" (4)="" withhold="" the="" decision="" until="" a="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" is="" submitted="" to="" fda="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" part="" 812--investigational="" device="" exemptions="" 22.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 812="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 331,="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 355,="" 356,="" 357,="" 360,="" 360c-360f,="" 360h-360j,="" 371,="" 372,="" 374,="" 379e,="" 381,="" 382,="" 383;="" 42="" u.s.c.="" 216,="" 241,="" 262,="" 263b-263n.="" 23.="" section="" 812.43="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (c)(5)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 812.43="" selecting="" investigators="" and="" monitors.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (c)="" *="" *="" *="" (5)="" sufficient="" accurate="" financial="" disclosure="" information="" to="" allow="" the="" sponsor="" to="" submit="" a="" complete="" and="" accurate="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" as="" required="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" the="" sponsor="" shall="" obtain="" a="" commitment="" from="" the="" clinical="" investigator="" to="" promptly="" update="" this="" information="" if="" any="" relevant="" changes="" occur="" during="" the="" course="" of="" the="" investigation="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" this="" information="" shall="" not="" be="" submitted="" in="" an="" investigational="" device="" exemption="" application,="" but="" shall="" be="" submitted="" in="" any="" marketing="" application="" involving="" the="" device.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 24.="" section="" 812.110="" is="" amended="" by="" redesignating="" paragraph="" (d)="" as="" paragraph="" (e)="" and="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (d)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 812.110="" specific="" responsibilities="" of="" investigators.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (d)="" financial="" disclosure.="" a="" clinical="" investigator="" shall="" disclose="" to="" the="" sponsor="" sufficient="" accurate="" financial="" information="" to="" allow="" the="" applicant="" to="" submit="" complete="" and="" accurate="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statements="" required="" under="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" the="" investigator="" shall="" promptly="" update="" this="" information="" if="" any="" relevant="" changes="" occur="" during="" the="" course="" of="" the="" investigation="" and="" for="" 1="" year="" following="" completion="" of="" the="" study.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 25.="" section="" 812.140="" is="" amended="" by="" revising="" paragraph="" (b)(3)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 812.140="" records.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (b)="" *="" *="" *="" (3)="" signed="" investigator="" agreements="" including="" the="" financial="" disclosure="" information="" required="" to="" be="" collected="" under="" sec.="" 812.43(c)(5)="" in="" accordance="" with="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" part="" 814--premarket="" approval="" of="" medical="" devices="" 26.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 814="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 351,="" 352,="" 353,="" 360,="" 360c-360j,="" 371,="" 372,="" 373,="" 374,="" 375,="" 379,="" 379e,="" 381.="" 27.="" section="" 814.20="" is="" amended="" by="" redesignating="" paragraph="" (b)(12)="" as="" paragraph="" (b)(13)="" and="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (b)(12)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 814.20="" application.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (b)="" *="" *="" *="" (12)="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" 28.="" section="" 814.42="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (e)(5)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" [[page="" 5254]]="" sec.="" 814.42="" filing="" a="" pma.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" (e)="" *="" *="" *="" (5)="" the="" pma="" is="" not="" accompanied="" by="" a="" statement="" of="" either="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" 29.="" section="" 814.112="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (a)(4)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 814.112="" filing="" an="" hde.="" (a)="" *="" *="" *="" (4)="" the="" hde="" is="" not="" accompanied="" by="" a="" statement="" of="" either="" certification="" or="" disclosure,="" or="" both,="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" part="" 860--medical="" device="" classification="" procedures="" 30.="" the="" authority="" citation="" for="" 21="" cfr="" part="" 860="" continues="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" authority:="" 21="" u.s.c.="" 360c,="" 360d,="" 360e,="" 360i,="" 360j,="" 371,="" 374.="" 31.="" section="" 860.123="" is="" amended="" by="" adding="" new="" paragraph="" (a)(10)="" to="" read="" as="" follows:="" sec.="" 860.123="" reclassification="" petition:="" content="" and="" form.="" (a)="" *="" *="" *="" (10)="" a="" financial="" certification="" or="" disclosure="" statement="" or="" both="" as="" required="" by="" part="" 54="" of="" this="" chapter.="" *="" *="" *="" *="" *="" dated:="" october="" 15,="" 1997.="" michael="" a.="" friedman,="" lead="" deputy="" commissioner="" for="" the="" food="" and="" drug="" administration.="" donna="" e.="" shalala,="" secretary="" of="" health="" and="" human="" services.="" [fr="" doc.="" 98-2407="" filed="" 1-30-98;="" 8:45="" am]="" billing="" code="" 4160-01-f="">

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/2/1999
Published:
02/02/1998
Department:
Food and Drug Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-2407
Dates:
This regulation becomes effective on February 2, 1999. Submit written comments on the information collection requirements by April 3, 1998.
Pages:
5233-5254 (22 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 93N-0445
PDF File:
98-2407.pdf
CFR: (30)
21 CFR 54.2(d)
21 CFR 812.110(d)
21 CFR 54.2(g)
21 CFR 54.1
21 CFR 54.2
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