98-33029. Investigational New Drug Applications; Clinical Holds  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 239 (Monday, December 14, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 68676-68678]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-33029]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Food and Drug Administration
    
    21 CFR Part 312
    
    [Docket No. 98N-0979]
    
    
    Investigational New Drug Applications; Clinical Holds
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Direct final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is amending its 
    regulations governing investigational new drug applications (IND's) for 
    human drug and biological products. This action amends the IND clinical 
    hold requirements to state that the agency will respond in writing to a 
    sponsor's request that a clinical hold be removed from an investigation 
    within 30-calendar days of the agency's receipt of the request and the 
    sponsor's complete response to the issue(s) that led to the clinical 
    hold. FDA is taking this action in accordance with provisions of the 
    Food and Drug Administration Modernization Act of 1997 (the 
    Modernization Act). Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, 
    FDA is publishing a companion proposed rule under FDA's usual procedure 
    for notice-and-comment rulemaking to provide a procedural framework to 
    finalize the rule in the event the agency receives significant adverse 
    comments and withdraws this direct final rule.
    
    DATES: This regulation is effective April 28, 1999. Submit written 
    comments on or before March 1, 1999. If no timely significant adverse 
    comments are received, the agency will publish a document in the 
    Federal Register before March 29, 1999, confirming the effective date 
    of the direct final rule. If timely significant adverse comments are 
    received, the agency will publish a document of significant adverse 
    comment in the Federal Register withdrawing this direct final rule 
    before March 29, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written comments to the Dockets Management Branch 
    (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, 
    Rockville, MD 20852.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
        Murray M. Lumpkin, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (HFD-2), 
    Food and Drug Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20857, 
    301-594-5400, or
        Rebecca A. Devine, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research 
    (HFM-10), Food and Drug Administration, 1401 Rockville Pike, Rockville, 
    MD 20852, 301-827-0373.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Discussion
    
    A. Introduction
    
        On November 21, 1997, President Clinton signed into law the 
    Modernization Act (Pub. L. 105-115). Section 117 of the Modernization 
    Act amends the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act) by 
    codifying in section 505(i) (21 U.S.C. 355(i)) several of the 
    procedures and requirements governing the use of investigational new 
    drugs that are already set forth in FDA's regulations (parts 50 and 312 
    (21 CFR parts 50 and 312)).
        Section 505(i)(2) of the act, as amended by the Modernization Act, 
    provides that if a sponsor of an IND that has been placed on clinical 
    hold requests in writing that the clinical hold be removed and submits 
    a complete response to the issue(s) identified in the clinical hold 
    order, FDA is required to respond in writing to the sponsor within 30-
    calendar days of receipt of the complete response. This direct final 
    rule amends Sec. 312.42(e) to reflect this new statutory requirement 
    and to clarify when a sponsor may resume an investigation after FDA 
    issues a clinical hold order.
        In the Federal Register of May 14, 1998 (63 FR 26809), FDA 
    announced the availability of a guidance document entitled ``Submitting 
    and Reviewing Complete Responses to Clinical Holds.'' This guidance to 
    industry describes how applicants should submit responses to clinical 
    holds so that they may be identified as complete responses.
    
    B. Background
    
        The procedures and requirements governing the use of 
    investigational new drugs, including the submission and review of 
    IND's, are set forth in part 312. An investigational new drug is a new 
    drug or biological drug that is used in a clinical investigation. A 
    clinical investigation is an experiment in which a drug is administered 
    or dispensed to, or used involving, one or more human subjects. An 
    investigational new drug that meets the requirements of part 312 is 
    exempt from the premarket approval requirements that are otherwise 
    applicable, and may be shipped lawfully for the purpose of conducting 
    clinical investigations of the drug.
        Part 312 applies to all clinical investigations of products that 
    are subject to section 505 of the act, or to the licensing provisions 
    of section 351 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 262), with 
    one principal exemption--certain clinical investigations of drugs that 
    have received premarket approval and are lawfully marketed.
        The person who takes responsibility for and initiates a clinical 
    investigation of an investigational new drug is the IND sponsor. The 
    sponsor may be an individual, a pharmaceutical company, a government 
    agency, an academic institution, or other entity. The individual who 
    actually conducts a clinical investigation and administers the 
    investigational drug to patients is the investigator (the investigator 
    may also be the sponsor). Responsibilities of a sponsor include: (1) 
    Notifying FDA of any serious and unexpected adverse experience 
    associated with the use of the drug; (2) selecting qualified 
    investigators and overseeing the conduct of those investigators; (3) 
    ensuring that the investigations are performed in accordance with the 
    investigational plan and protocols contained in the IND; (4) providing 
    investigators with an investigator's brochure; and (5) submitting an 
    annual report to FDA.
        A sponsor may not begin clinical testing with an investigational 
    new drug until an IND is submitted to FDA and is in effect for that 
    drug. The IND content and format requirements are set forth in 
    Sec. 312.23. An IND automatically becomes effective 30-calendar days 
    after FDA receives the initial IND submission (or earlier upon FDA's 
    notification), unless FDA informs the sponsor that the investigation 
    may not proceed (i.e., a clinical hold is issued).
        A clinical hold is an order that FDA issues to the sponsor to delay 
    a proposed clinical investigation or to suspend an ongoing 
    investigation. Section 505(i) of the act, as amended by the 
    Modernization Act, verifies FDA's authority to issue a clinical hold 
    and
    
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    endorses FDA regulations that describe the grounds upon which a 
    clinical hold may be issued. Under such regulations, codified in 
    Sec. 312.42, the basis for a clinical hold depends on the phase of the 
    clinical study. FDA may place a proposed or ongoing Phase 1 
    investigation on clinical hold if it finds any of the following: (1) 
    Unreasonable and significant risk of illness or injury; (2) unqualified 
    clinical investigators; (3) a misleading, erroneous, or materially 
    incomplete investigator brochure; or (4) insufficient information in 
    the IND to assess the risks to subjects. A Phase 2 or Phase 3 study may 
    be suspended for any of these reasons or, in addition, because it is 
    deficient in design to meet its stated objectives. The clinical hold 
    regulations specify additional grounds for placing a hold on a 
    treatment IND or treatment protocol or any study not designed to be 
    adequate and well-controlled (Sec. 312.42(b)(3) and (b)(4)). An 
    investigation that has been placed on clinical hold may resume only 
    after the deficiency that prompted the clinical hold is corrected by 
    the sponsor and the hold has been released by FDA.
    
    C. Description of the Direct Final Rule
    
        Current Sec. 312.42(e) describes when a clinical investigation may 
    resume after a clinical hold has been imposed by FDA. An investigation 
    may resume after the Division Director with responsibility for review 
    of the IND notifies the sponsor that the investigation may proceed. 
    This notification is usually made after the sponsor corrects the 
    deficiency or deficiencies that resulted in the clinical hold. 
    Resumption of an investigation may be authorized by telephone or other 
    means of rapid communication. Under the current regulation, no 
    timeframe is given within which FDA will notify the sponsor that an 
    investigation may resume after the sponsor has submitted answers to the 
    deficiencies that resulted in the clinical hold and has requested that 
    FDA remove the clinical hold.
        As explained previously, FDA is now required under section 
    505(i)(2) of the act to respond to a written request from a sponsor 
    that a clinical hold be removed within 30-calendar days of receipt of 
    the request and the sponsor's complete response to the issue(s) that 
    led to the clinical hold. Therefore, FDA is amending Sec. 312.42(e) to 
    reflect this requirement. In requesting that the clinical hold be 
    removed, the sponsor of the IND must address all of the clinical hold 
    issues that the agency noted in the clinical hold order. FDA may notify 
    the sponsor of its decision on the request to release the clinical hold 
    by telephone or other means of rapid communication, but a written 
    response will be issued within 30-calendar days of receipt of the 
    sponsor's request and complete response to the issue(s) that led to the 
    clinical hold. If FDA determines that the clinical hold will be 
    maintained, the written response will state the reasons for such 
    decision.
        In addition, under current Sec. 312.42(e), the terms of certain 
    clinical holds may permit an investigation to resume without FDA's 
    prior notification once the correction or modification that caused the 
    clinical hold is made. FDA is deleting the first sentence of current 
    Sec. 312.42(e) because it does not accurately reflect the agency's 
    practice in imposing a clinical hold. The types of concerns that FDA 
    might raise with regard to a clinical investigation that could be 
    remedied and implemented without prior agency notification do not 
    require the imposition of a clinical hold. Such concerns are generally 
    resolved through discussions between the sponsor and FDA. FDA generally 
    imposes a clinical hold on an investigation if the deficiencies are 
    such that the study's resumption would require prior approval by the 
    agency. This revision will help eliminate any confusion regarding 
    whether a clinical hold has been placed and the process of removing a 
    clinical hold from an investigation and any inconsistent treatment of 
    IND's by different units within FDA.
    
    II. Direct Final Rulemaking
    
        FDA has determined that this amendment to the agency's regulations 
    governing IND's for human drug and biological products is suitable for 
    a direct final rule. The actions taken should be noncontroversial and 
    the agency does not anticipate receiving any significant adverse 
    comments. This direct final rule amends Sec. 312.42(e) to reflect 
    section 117 of the Modernization Act and current agency practice in 
    imposing a clinical hold.
        If FDA does not receive significant adverse comment on or before 
    March 1, 1999, the agency will publish a document in the Federal 
    Register before March 29, 1999, confirming the effective date of the 
    direct final rule. A significant adverse comment is one that explains 
    why the rule would be inappropriate, including challenges to the rule's 
    underlying premise or approach, or would be ineffective or unacceptable 
    without a change. A comment recommending a rule change in addition to 
    this rule will not be considered a significant adverse comment, unless 
    the comment states why this rule would be ineffective without the 
    additional change. If timely significant adverse comments are received, 
    the agency will publish a notice of significant adverse comment in the 
    Federal Register withdrawing this direct final rule before March 29, 
    1999.
        Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, FDA is publishing 
    a companion proposed rule, which is identical to the direct final rule, 
    that provides a procedural framework within which the rule may be 
    finalized in the event the direct final rule is withdrawn because of 
    significant adverse comment. The comment period for the direct final 
    rule runs concurrently with that of the companion proposed rule. Any 
    comments received under the companion proposed rule will be treated as 
    comments regarding the direct final rule. Likewise, significant adverse 
    comments submitted to the direct final rule will be considered as 
    comments to the companion proposed rule and the agency will consider 
    such comments in developing a final rule. FDA will not provide 
    additional opportunity for comment on the companion proposed rule.
        If a significant adverse comment applies to part of this rule and 
    that part may be severed from the remainder of the rule, FDA may adopt 
    as final those parts of the rule that are not the subject of a 
    significant adverse comment. A full description of FDA's policy on 
    direct final rule procedures may be found in a guidance document 
    published in the Federal Register of November 21, 1997 (62 FR 62466).
    
    III. Environmental Impact
    
        The agency has determined under 21 CFR 25.30(h) that this action is 
    of a class of actions that do not individually or cumulatively have a 
    significant effect on the human environment. Therefore, neither an 
    environmental assessment nor an environmental impact statement is 
    required.
    
    IV. Analysis of Impact
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of this direct final rule under 
    Executive Order 12866, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-
    612), and the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4). 
    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; distributive impacts; and equity). Executive Order 12866 
    classifies a rule as significant if it meets any one of a number of 
    specified conditions, including having an annual effect on the
    
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    economy of $100 million or adversely affecting in a material way a 
    sector of the economy, competition, or jobs, or if it raises novel 
    legal or policy issues. The agency believes that this rule is 
    consistent with the regulatory philosophy and principles identified in 
    the Executive Order. In addition, the rule is not a significant 
    regulatory action as defined by the Executive Order and so is not 
    subject to review under the Executive Order.
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to analyze 
    regulatory options to minimize any significant impact on small 
    entities. The agency has considered the effect that this rule will have 
    on small entities, including small businesses, and certifies that the 
    rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities. Therefore, under the Regulatory Flexibility 
    Act, no further analysis is required.
        The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act requires an agency to prepare a 
    budgetary impact statement before issuing any rule likely to result in 
    a Federal mandate that may result in expenditures by State, local, and 
    tribal governments or the private sector of $100 million (adjusted 
    annually for inflation) in any 1 year. This rule will not result in an 
    expenditure of $100 million or more on any governmental entity or the 
    private sector, so no budgetary impact statement is required.
    
    V. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        This direct final rule contains no collections of information. 
    Therefore, clearance by the Office of Management and Budget under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 is not required.
    
    VI. Request for Comments
    
        Interested persons may, on or before March 1, 1999, submit to the 
    Dockets Management Branch (address above) written comments regarding 
    this rule. Two copies of any comments are to be submitted, except that 
    individuals may submit one copy. Comments are to be identified with the 
    docket number found in brackets in the heading of this document. 
    Received comments may be seen in the office above between 9 a.m. and 4 
    p.m., Monday through Friday.
    
    List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 312
    
        Drugs, Exports, Imports, Investigations, Labeling, Medical 
    research, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Safety.
        Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, the 
    Public Health Service Act, and under authority delegated to the 
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR part 312 is amended to read as 
    follows:
    
    PART 312--INVESTIGATIONAL NEW DRUG APPLICATION
    
        1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 312 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 351, 352, 353, 355, 371; 42 
    U.S.C. 262.
    
        2. Section 312.42 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 312.42  Clinical holds and requests for modification.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Resumption of clinical investigations. An investigation may 
    only resume after FDA (usually the Division Director, or the Director's 
    designee, with responsibility for review of the IND) has notified the 
    sponsor that the investigation may proceed. Resumption of the affected 
    investigation(s) will be authorized when the sponsor corrects the 
    deficiency(ies) previously cited or otherwise satisfies the agency that 
    the investigation(s) can proceed. FDA may notify a sponsor of its 
    determination regarding the clinical hold by telephone or other means 
    of rapid communication. If a sponsor of an IND that has been placed on 
    clinical hold requests in writing that the clinical hold be removed and 
    submits a complete response to the issue(s) identified in the clinical 
    hold order, FDA shall respond in writing to the sponsor within 30-
    calendar days of receipt of the request and the complete response. 
    FDA's response will either remove or maintain the clinical hold, and 
    will state the reasons for such determination. Notwithstanding the 30-
    calendar day response time, a sponsor may not proceed with a clinical 
    trial on which a clinical hold has been imposed until the sponsor has 
    been notified by FDA that the hold has been lifted.
    * * * * *
    
        Dated: December 4, 1998.
    William B. Schultz,
    Deputy Commissioner for Policy.
    [FR Doc. 98-33029 Filed 12-11-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/28/1999
Published:
12/14/1998
Department:
Food and Drug Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Direct final rule.
Document Number:
98-33029
Dates:
This regulation is effective April 28, 1999. Submit written comments on or before March 1, 1999. If no timely significant adverse comments are received, the agency will publish a document in the Federal Register before March 29, 1999, confirming the effective date of the direct final rule. If timely significant adverse comments are received, the agency will publish a document of significant adverse comment in the Federal Register withdrawing this direct final rule before March 29, 1999.
Pages:
68676-68678 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 98N-0979
PDF File:
98-33029.pdf
CFR: (3)
21 CFR 312.42(e)
21 CFR 312.23
21 CFR 312.42