China Daily (Hong Kong)

Faster drug approvals on the way

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China will expedite approval procedures by one to two years for drugs developed overseas that are in urgent demand domestical­ly, an official with the country’s top drug regulator said on Friday.

The National Drug Administra­tion of China will speed up approvals for drugs proved effective in fighting rare diseases as well as anticancer and anti-AIDS drugs, said Jiao Hong, head of the administra­tion.

Jiao told a news briefing hosted by the State Council Informatio­n Office that of the 415 new drugs approved for sale in developed countries over the past 10 years, 76 have been approved for sale in China. Another 201 drugs are undergoing clinical trials in China.

In order to fast-track approval procedures, the drug regulator will accept clinical data collected overseas for drugs approved for sale overseas for some lifethreat­ening diseases that are without effective cure, or for rare diseases, she said. There must also be research that proves there is no racial or

ethnic difference in response to such drugs.

For drugs that require clinical trials in China, the authority will refine testing procedures to cut the time required before approval, she said.

The authority has also canceled the requiremen­t for inspection of imported drugs at customs, which would enable the drugs to be shipped directly to pharmacies after customs clearance. The authority would instead step up spot checks.

Wang Lifeng, head of the

department for product registrati­on for drugs and cosmetics at the administra­tion, said the authority would also enforce a period of data protection for drugs that are developed overseas.

No new drugs of the same category would be approved during the protection period, he said, adding that other measures will also be adopted to protect intellectu­al property rights.

Jiao said the administra­tion will develop a profession­al group of inspectors to

conduct spot checks during the research, developmen­t and production procedures of drugs.

It will also closely monitor cases of adverse reactions for drugs, and suspend their sales or trials, she added.

China is the second-largest market for pharmaceut­ical products, with a total value of $55.9 billion in 2017, up by 16.3 percent year-on-year, according to the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Medicines and Health Products.

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