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International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use

The International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) is an initiative that brings together regulatory authorities and pharmaceutical industry to discuss scientific and technical aspects of pharmaceutical product development and registration. The mission of the ICH is to promote public health by achieving greater harmonisation through the development of technical Guidelines and requirements for pharmaceutical product registration.[1]

Harmonisation leads to a more rational use of human, animal and other resources, the elimination of unnecessary delay in the global development, and availability of new medicines while maintaining safeguards on quality, safety, efficacy, and regulatory obligations to protect public health. Junod notes in her 2005 treatise on Clinical Drug Trials that "Above all, the ICH has succeeded in aligning clinical trial requirements."[2]

History edit

In the 1980s the European Union began harmonising regulatory requirements. In 1989, Europe, Japan, and the United States began creating plans for harmonisation. The International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) was created in April 1990 at a meeting in Brussels. ICH had the initial objective of coordinating the regulatory activities of the European, Japanese and United States regulatory bodies in consultation with the pharmaceutical trade associations from these regions, to discuss and agree the scientific aspects arising from product registration.[3] Since the new millennium, ICH's attention has been directed towards extending the benefits of harmonisation beyond the founding ICH regions.[citation needed]

In 2015, ICH underwent several reforms and changed its name to the International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use while becoming a legal entity in Switzerland as a non-profit association.[4][5] The aim of these reforms was to transform ICH into a truly global initiative supported by a robust and transparent governance structure.[6] The ICH Association established an Assembly as the over-arching governing body with the aim of focusing global pharmaceutical regulatory harmonisation work in one venue that allows pharmaceutical regulatory authorities and concerned industry organisations to be more actively involved in ICH’s harmonisation work. The new Assembly met for the first time on 23 October 2015.[5]

Structure edit

The ICH comprises the following bodies:[7]

  1. ICH Assembly
  2. ICH Management Committee
  3. MedDRA Management Committee
  4. ICH Secretariat

The ICH Assembly brings together all Members and Observers of the ICH Association as the overarching governing body of ICH. It adopts decisions in particular on matters such as on the adoption of ICH Guidelines, admission of new Members and Observers, and the ICH Association’s work plans and budget. Member representatives appointed to the Assembly are supported by ICH Coordinators who represent each Member to the ICH Secretariat on a daily basis.[citation needed]

The ICH Management Committee (MC) is the body that oversees operational aspects of ICH on behalf of all Members, including administrative and financial matters and oversight of the Working Groups (WGs).[citation needed]

The MedDRA Management Committee (MC) has responsibility for direction of MedDRA, ICH’s standardised medical terminology. The MedDRA MC has the role of managing, supporting, and facilitating the maintenance, development, and dissemination of MedDRA.[8]

The ICH Secretariat is responsible for day-to-day management of ICH, coordinating ICH activities as well as providing support to the Assembly, the MC and Working Groups. The ICH Secretariat also provides support for the MedDRA MC. The ICH Secretariat is located in Geneva, Switzerland.[citation needed]

The ICH WGs are established by the Assembly when a new technical topic is accepted for harmonisation, and are charged with developing a harmonised guideline that meets the objectives outlined in the Concept Paper and Business Plan. Face-to-face meetings of the WG will normally only take place during the biannual ICH meetings. Interim reports are made at each meeting of the Assembly and made publicly available on the ICH website.

Process of Harmonisation edit

ICH harmonisation activities fall into 4 categories: Formal ICH Procedure, Q&A Procedure, Revision Procedure and Maintenance Procedure, depending on the activity to be undertaken. The development of a new harmonised guideline and its implementation (the formal ICH procedure) involves 5 steps:[9]

Step 1: Consensus building edit

The WG works to prepare a consensus draft of the Technical Document, based on the objectives set out in the Concept Paper. When consensus on the draft is reached within the WG, the technical experts of the WG will sign the Step 1 Experts sign-off sheet. The Step 1 Experts Technical Document is then submitted to the Assembly to request adoption under Step 2 of the ICH process.

Step 2a: Confirmation of consensus on the Technical Document edit

Step 2a is reached when the Assembly agrees, based on the report of the WG, that there is sufficient scientific consensus on the technical issues for the Technical Document to proceed to the next stage of regulatory consultation. The Assembly then endorses the Step 2a Technical Document.

Step 2b: Endorsement of draft Guideline by Regulatory Members edit

Step 2b is reached when the Regulatory Members of the Assembly further endorse the draft Guideline.[10]

Step 3: Regulatory consultation and discussion edit

Step 3 occurs in three distinct stages: regulatory consultation, discussion, and finalisation of the Step 3 Expert Draft Guideline.

  • Stage I - Regional regulatory consultation: The Guideline embodying the scientific consensus leaves the ICH process and becomes the subject of normal wide-ranging regulatory consultation in the ICH regions. Regulatory authorities and industry associations in other regions may also comment on the draft consultation documents by providing their comments to the ICH Secretariat.
  • Stage II - Discussion of regional consultation comments: After obtaining all comments from the consultation process, the EWG works to address the comments received and reach consensus on what is called the Step 3 Experts Draft Guideline.
  • Stage III - Finalisation of Step 3 Experts Draft Guideline: If, after due consideration of the consultation results by the WG, consensus is reached amongst the experts on a revised version of the Step 2b draft Guideline, the Step 3 Expert Draft Guideline is signed by the experts of the ICH Regulatory Members. The Step 3 Expert Draft Guideline with regulatory EWG signatures is submitted to the Regulatory Members of the Assembly to request adoption at Step 4 of the ICH process.

Step 4: Adoption of an ICH Harmonised Guideline edit

Step 4 is reached when the Regulatory Members of the Assembly agree that there is sufficient scientific consensus on the draft Guideline and adopt the ICH Harmonised Guideline.

Step 5: Implementation edit

The ICH Harmonised Guideline moves immediately to the final step of the process that is the regulatory implementation. This step is carried out according to the same national/regional procedures that apply to other regional regulatory guidelines and requirements in the ICH regions.

Information on the regulatory action taken and implementation dates are reported back to the Assembly and published by the ICH Secretariat on the ICH website.[11]

Work products edit

Guidelines edit

The ICH topics are divided into four categories and ICH topic codes are assigned according to these categories:[11]

  • Q: Quality Guidelines
  • S: Safety Guidelines
  • E: Efficacy Guidelines
  • M: Multidisciplinary Guidelines

ICH Guidelines are lack binding force, instead implemented by regulatory members through national and regional governance.[12]

MedDRA edit

MedDRA is a rich and highly specific standardised medical terminology developed by ICH to facilitate sharing of regulatory information internationally for medical products used by humans. It is used for registration, documentation and safety monitoring of medical products both before and after a product has been authorised for sale. Products covered by the scope of MedDRA include pharmaceuticals, vaccines and drug-device combination products.[13]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Mullin Theresa (17 Nov 2017). "International Regulation of Drugs and Biological Products". In Gallin, John I.; Ognibene, Frederick P.; Lee Johnson, Laura (eds.). Principles and Practice of Clinical Research. Academic Press. p. 88.
  2. ^ Junod, Valerie (2005). Clinical drug trials - Studying the safety and efficacy of new pharmaceuticals. (thesis for Faculté de droit de Genève) Bruxelles: Bruylant. p. 107.
  3. ^ Teasdale, Andrew; Elder, David; Nims, Raymond W. (9 Oct 2017). ICH Quality Guidelines: An Implementation Guide. John Wiley & Sons. p. 1.
  4. ^ ICH Makes Organizational Changes, Zachary Brennan, 26 October 2015, Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society
  5. ^ a b ICH is now International Council for Harmonisation – a Legal Swiss Entity, James Lind Institute
  6. ^ "International Council on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH)". European Medicines Agency. 2018-09-17.
  7. ^ Lourenco, C.; Orphanos, N.; Parker, C. (2016). "The International Council for Harmonisation : Positioning of the future with its recent reform and over 25 years of harmonisation work". Pharmaceuticals Policy and Law. 18 (1–4): 82. doi:10.3233/PPL-160434.
  8. ^ Mullin Theresa (17 Nov 2017). "International Regulation of Drugs and Biological Products". In Gallin, John I.; Ognibene, Frederick P.; Lee Johnson, Laura (eds.). Principles and Practice of Clinical Research. Academic Press. p. 92.
  9. ^ Van der Laan, Jan Willem; DeGeorge, Joseph (11 Feb 2013). Global Approach in Safety Testing: ICH Guidelines Explained. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 3.
  10. ^ Lourenco, C.; Orphanos, N.; Parker, C. (2016). "The International Council for Harmonisation : Positioning of the future with its recent reform and over 25 years of harmonisation work". Pharmaceuticals Policy and Law. 18 (1–4): 86. doi:10.3233/PPL-160434.
  11. ^ a b "Welcome to the ICH Official Website". International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH). 2022.
  12. ^ van Boxtel, Chris J.; Santoso, Budiono; Edwards, Ralph (2008). Drug Benefits and Risks: International Textbook of Clinical Pharmacology. IOS Press. p. 70.
  13. ^ "MedDRA/Work Products". Content is copied from this source, which is © ICH. Content may be used, reproduced, incorporated into other works, adapted, modified, translated or distributed under a public license provided that ICH's copyright in the information and material is acknowledged at all times.

External links edit

  • ICH website
  • Analysis: New ICH M2 Requirements into eCTD NMV (=RPS)
  • ANVISA, Brazil
  • BIO
  • EC, Europe
  • EFPIA
  • FDA, US
  • Health Canada, Canada
  • HSA, Singapore
  • IGBA
  • JPMA
  • MedDRA website
  • MFDS, Republic of Korea
  • MHLW/PMDA, Japan
  • PhRMA
  • Swissmedic, Switzerland
  • TFDA, Chinese Taipei
  • WSMI

international, council, harmonisation, technical, requirements, pharmaceuticals, human, initiative, that, brings, together, regulatory, authorities, pharmaceutical, industry, discuss, scientific, technical, aspects, pharmaceutical, product, development, regist. The International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use ICH is an initiative that brings together regulatory authorities and pharmaceutical industry to discuss scientific and technical aspects of pharmaceutical product development and registration The mission of the ICH is to promote public health by achieving greater harmonisation through the development of technical Guidelines and requirements for pharmaceutical product registration 1 Harmonisation leads to a more rational use of human animal and other resources the elimination of unnecessary delay in the global development and availability of new medicines while maintaining safeguards on quality safety efficacy and regulatory obligations to protect public health Junod notes in her 2005 treatise on Clinical Drug Trials that Above all the ICH has succeeded in aligning clinical trial requirements 2 Contents 1 History 2 Structure 3 Process of Harmonisation 3 1 Step 1 Consensus building 3 2 Step 2a Confirmation of consensus on the Technical Document 3 3 Step 2b Endorsement of draft Guideline by Regulatory Members 3 4 Step 3 Regulatory consultation and discussion 3 5 Step 4 Adoption of an ICH Harmonised Guideline 3 6 Step 5 Implementation 4 Work products 4 1 Guidelines 4 2 MedDRA 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksHistory editIn the 1980s the European Union began harmonising regulatory requirements In 1989 Europe Japan and the United States began creating plans for harmonisation The International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use ICH was created in April 1990 at a meeting in Brussels ICH had the initial objective of coordinating the regulatory activities of the European Japanese and United States regulatory bodies in consultation with the pharmaceutical trade associations from these regions to discuss and agree the scientific aspects arising from product registration 3 Since the new millennium ICH s attention has been directed towards extending the benefits of harmonisation beyond the founding ICH regions citation needed In 2015 ICH underwent several reforms and changed its name to the International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use while becoming a legal entity in Switzerland as a non profit association 4 5 The aim of these reforms was to transform ICH into a truly global initiative supported by a robust and transparent governance structure 6 The ICH Association established an Assembly as the over arching governing body with the aim of focusing global pharmaceutical regulatory harmonisation work in one venue that allows pharmaceutical regulatory authorities and concerned industry organisations to be more actively involved in ICH s harmonisation work The new Assembly met for the first time on 23 October 2015 5 Structure editThe ICH comprises the following bodies 7 ICH Assembly ICH Management Committee MedDRA Management Committee ICH SecretariatThe ICH Assembly brings together all Members and Observers of the ICH Association as the overarching governing body of ICH It adopts decisions in particular on matters such as on the adoption of ICH Guidelines admission of new Members and Observers and the ICH Association s work plans and budget Member representatives appointed to the Assembly are supported by ICH Coordinators who represent each Member to the ICH Secretariat on a daily basis citation needed The ICH Management Committee MC is the body that oversees operational aspects of ICH on behalf of all Members including administrative and financial matters and oversight of the Working Groups WGs citation needed The MedDRA Management Committee MC has responsibility for direction of MedDRA ICH s standardised medical terminology The MedDRA MC has the role of managing supporting and facilitating the maintenance development and dissemination of MedDRA 8 The ICH Secretariat is responsible for day to day management of ICH coordinating ICH activities as well as providing support to the Assembly the MC and Working Groups The ICH Secretariat also provides support for the MedDRA MC The ICH Secretariat is located in Geneva Switzerland citation needed The ICH WGs are established by the Assembly when a new technical topic is accepted for harmonisation and are charged with developing a harmonised guideline that meets the objectives outlined in the Concept Paper and Business Plan Face to face meetings of the WG will normally only take place during the biannual ICH meetings Interim reports are made at each meeting of the Assembly and made publicly available on the ICH website Process of Harmonisation editICH harmonisation activities fall into 4 categories Formal ICH Procedure Q amp A Procedure Revision Procedure and Maintenance Procedure depending on the activity to be undertaken The development of a new harmonised guideline and its implementation the formal ICH procedure involves 5 steps 9 Step 1 Consensus building edit The WG works to prepare a consensus draft of the Technical Document based on the objectives set out in the Concept Paper When consensus on the draft is reached within the WG the technical experts of the WG will sign the Step 1 Experts sign off sheet The Step 1 Experts Technical Document is then submitted to the Assembly to request adoption under Step 2 of the ICH process Step 2a Confirmation of consensus on the Technical Document edit Step 2a is reached when the Assembly agrees based on the report of the WG that there is sufficient scientific consensus on the technical issues for the Technical Document to proceed to the next stage of regulatory consultation The Assembly then endorses the Step 2a Technical Document Step 2b Endorsement of draft Guideline by Regulatory Members edit Step 2b is reached when the Regulatory Members of the Assembly further endorse the draft Guideline 10 Step 3 Regulatory consultation and discussion edit Step 3 occurs in three distinct stages regulatory consultation discussion and finalisation of the Step 3 Expert Draft Guideline Stage I Regional regulatory consultation The Guideline embodying the scientific consensus leaves the ICH process and becomes the subject of normal wide ranging regulatory consultation in the ICH regions Regulatory authorities and industry associations in other regions may also comment on the draft consultation documents by providing their comments to the ICH Secretariat Stage II Discussion of regional consultation comments After obtaining all comments from the consultation process the EWG works to address the comments received and reach consensus on what is called the Step 3 Experts Draft Guideline Stage III Finalisation of Step 3 Experts Draft Guideline If after due consideration of the consultation results by the WG consensus is reached amongst the experts on a revised version of the Step 2b draft Guideline the Step 3 Expert Draft Guideline is signed by the experts of the ICH Regulatory Members The Step 3 Expert Draft Guideline with regulatory EWG signatures is submitted to the Regulatory Members of the Assembly to request adoption at Step 4 of the ICH process Step 4 Adoption of an ICH Harmonised Guideline edit Step 4 is reached when the Regulatory Members of the Assembly agree that there is sufficient scientific consensus on the draft Guideline and adopt the ICH Harmonised Guideline Step 5 Implementation edit The ICH Harmonised Guideline moves immediately to the final step of the process that is the regulatory implementation This step is carried out according to the same national regional procedures that apply to other regional regulatory guidelines and requirements in the ICH regions Information on the regulatory action taken and implementation dates are reported back to the Assembly and published by the ICH Secretariat on the ICH website 11 Work products editGuidelines edit The ICH topics are divided into four categories and ICH topic codes are assigned according to these categories 11 Q Quality Guidelines S Safety Guidelines E Efficacy Guidelines M Multidisciplinary GuidelinesICH Guidelines are lack binding force instead implemented by regulatory members through national and regional governance 12 MedDRA edit MedDRA is a rich and highly specific standardised medical terminology developed by ICH to facilitate sharing of regulatory information internationally for medical products used by humans It is used for registration documentation and safety monitoring of medical products both before and after a product has been authorised for sale Products covered by the scope of MedDRA include pharmaceuticals vaccines and drug device combination products 13 See also editBrazilian Health Regulatory Agency Australia New Zealand Therapeutic Products Authority Biotechnology Innovation Organization Clinical study report Clinical trial Common Technical Document Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations Food and Drug Administration US Good clinical practice GCP Health Canada HSA Singapore International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers amp Associations International Pharmaceutical Federation Japan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association Ministry of Food and Drug Safety Republic of Korea Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare Japan National pharmaceuticals policy Pharmaceutical policy Pharmacopoeia Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency Japan Regulation of therapeutic goods Swissmedic Switzerland Food and Drug Administration Taiwan Uppsala Monitoring CentreNotes edit Mullin Theresa 17 Nov 2017 International Regulation of Drugs and Biological Products In Gallin John I Ognibene Frederick P Lee Johnson Laura eds Principles and Practice of Clinical Research Academic Press p 88 Junod Valerie 2005 Clinical drug trials Studying the safety and efficacy of new pharmaceuticals thesis for Faculte de droit de Geneve Bruxelles Bruylant p 107 Teasdale Andrew Elder David Nims Raymond W 9 Oct 2017 ICH Quality Guidelines An Implementation Guide John Wiley amp Sons p 1 ICH Makes Organizational Changes Zachary Brennan 26 October 2015 Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society a b ICH is now International Council for Harmonisation a Legal Swiss Entity James Lind Institute International Council on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use ICH European Medicines Agency 2018 09 17 Lourenco C Orphanos N Parker C 2016 The International Council for Harmonisation Positioning of the future with its recent reform and over 25 years of harmonisation work Pharmaceuticals Policy and Law 18 1 4 82 doi 10 3233 PPL 160434 Mullin Theresa 17 Nov 2017 International Regulation of Drugs and Biological Products In Gallin John I Ognibene Frederick P Lee Johnson Laura eds Principles and Practice of Clinical Research Academic Press p 92 Van der Laan Jan Willem DeGeorge Joseph 11 Feb 2013 Global Approach in Safety Testing ICH Guidelines Explained Springer Science amp Business Media p 3 Lourenco C Orphanos N Parker C 2016 The International Council for Harmonisation Positioning of the future with its recent reform and over 25 years of harmonisation work Pharmaceuticals Policy and Law 18 1 4 86 doi 10 3233 PPL 160434 a b Welcome to the ICH Official Website International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use ICH 2022 van Boxtel Chris J Santoso Budiono Edwards Ralph 2008 Drug Benefits and Risks International Textbook of Clinical Pharmacology IOS Press p 70 MedDRA Work Products Content is copied from this source which is c ICH Content may be used reproduced incorporated into other works adapted modified translated or distributed under a public license provided that ICH s copyright in the information and material is acknowledged at all times External links editICH website Analysis New ICH M2 Requirements into eCTD NMV RPS ANVISA Brazil BIO EC Europe EFPIA FDA US Health Canada Canada HSA Singapore IGBA JPMA MedDRA website MFDS Republic of Korea MHLW PMDA Japan PhRMA Swissmedic Switzerland TFDA Chinese Taipei WSMI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use amp oldid 1198209043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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