Litcius/Paper detail

Regulatory reliance to approve new medicinal products in Latin American and Caribbean countries

Carlos E. Durán, Martín Cañás, Martín Urtasun, Monique Elseviers, Tatiana Andia, Robert Vander Stichele, Thierry Christiaens

2021Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the current status of regulatory reliance in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) by assessing the countries' regulatory frameworks to approve new medicines, and to ascertain, for each country, which foreign regulators are considered as trusted regulatory authorities to rely on. METHODS: (trusted) regulators defined as such by the corresponding national legislation. RESULTS: Regulatory documents regarding marketing authorization were found in 20 LAC regulators' websites, covering 34 countries. Seven countries do not accept reliance on foreign regulators. Thirteen regulatory authorities (Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and the unique Caribbean Regulatory System for 15 Caribbean States) explicitly accept relying on marketing authorizations issued by the European Medicines Agency, United States Food and Drug Administration, and Health Canada. Ten countries rely also on marketing authorizations from Australia, Japan, and Switzerland. Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Mexico are reference authorities for eight LAC regulators. CONCLUSIONS: Regulatory reliance has become a common practice in the LAC region. Thirteen out of 20 regulators directly recognize or abbreviate the marketing authorization process in case of earlier approval by a regulator from another jurisdiction. The regulators most relied upon are the European Medicines Agency, United States Food and Drug Administration, and Health Canada.

Topics & Concepts

Latin AmericansLegislationMarketing authorizationAuthorizationCaribbean regionAgency (philosophy)Regulatory authorityJurisdictionPolitical scienceBusinessRegulatory sciencePublic administrationEconomic growthMedicineLawEconomicsEpistemologyPathologyPhilosophyComputer securityBioinformaticsBiologyComputer sciencePharmaceutical Quality and CounterfeitingPharmaceutical Economics and PolicyBiomedical Ethics and Regulation