Reproductive information on labels slated for
revision.
by Mechcatie, Elizabeth
The system that uses letters of the alphabet to categorize
drugs' pregnancy and lactation risks will be replaced by a more
consistent format designed to be more useful to health care
professionals and patients who are of childbearing age, pregnant, or
breast-feeding, the Food and Drug Administration announced.
The proposed rule would change the content and the format of the
pregnancy and lactation information that is included in the labeling of
human drugs and biologics. Under the proposal, the drug label
"would explain the potential benefits and risks for the mother, and
the developing baby or fetus, and how these risks may change over the
course of pregnancy" Dr. Sandra Kweder, deputy director of the
FDA's Office of New Drugs, said during a media briefing.
Established in 1979, the current category system uses the letters
A, B, C, D, and X to indicate degrees of risk during pregnancy. Many
critics in the medical community say the system provides inaccurate and
oversimplified information, and that it has caused difficulty in
updating labels as new information becomes available.
Under the proposed rule, labels would also include "relevant
clinical information to help health care providers make prescribing
decisions and counsel women about the use of drugs during pregnancy
and/or lactation," according to the FDA. A new pregnancy section
would contain three subsections:
* The "Fetal Risk Summary" would summarize known risks of
the drug for a fetus and explain whether risks are based on human and/or
animal data.
* "Clinical Considerations" would include information
about the effects of a drug taken by a woman before she knows she is
pregnant.
* "Data" would provide details on the available human and
animal data found in the fetal risk summary on the effects of the drug.
The pregnancy section would also contain information about any
available pregnancy registries of women exposed to specific drugs.
There would also be a lactation section, which would include the
same three subsections used in the pregnancy section.
The section on labor and delivery, which is included in current
labels, would be eliminated; this information would be included in the
pregnancy section.
Recent studies show that on average, women receive three to five
different prescription drugs during pregnancy, she said.
Once the rule is finalized, the new label format would be required
for newly approved drugs. Manufacturers of previously approved drugs
would be required to comply over a certain number of years or when, for
example, another change is made to the label.
More information about the labeling changes is available at
www.fda.gov/cder/regulatory/pregnancy_labeling/default.htm.
BY ELIZABETH MECHCATIE
Senior Writer
COPYRIGHT 2008 International Medical News
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