The FDA will create a new independent Drug Safety Oversight
Board to oversee the management of drug safety issues, and will provide emerging
information to health providers and patients about the risks and benefits of
medicines.
Acting FDA Commissioner Crawford announced specific proposals
for immediate and fundamental steps to improve the way the FDA manages drug
safety information. These proposals focus on making FDA's review and decision-making
processes more independent and transparent.
The FDA will enhance the independence of internal deliberations
and decisions regarding risk/ benefit analyses and consumer safety by creating
an independent Drug Safety Oversight Board (DSB). The DSB will oversee the management
of important drug safety issues within the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
(CDER). The DSB will comprise members from the FDA and medical experts from
other HHS agencies and government departments (e.g., Department of Veterans
Affairs) who will be appointed by the FDA Commissioner. The board also will
consult with other medical experts and representatives of patient and consumer
groups.
The FDA will also increase the transparency of the Agency's
decision-making process by establishing new and expanding existing communication
channels to provide targeted drug safety information to the public. These channels
will be used to help ensure that established and emerging drug safety data are
quickly available in an easily accessible form. The increased openness will
enable patients and their healthcare professionals to make better-informed decisions
about individual treatment options. The Agency is proposing a new "Drug
Watch" Web page for emerging data and risk information and increased use
of consumer-friendly information sheets written especially for healthcare professionals
and patients.
As the FDA develops these communications formats, the Agency
will be soliciting public input on how FDA should manage potential concerns
associated with disseminating emerging information prior to regulatory action.
The Agency will issue draft guidance on procedures and criteria for identifying
drugs and information for the Drug Watch Web page. In addition, FDA will actively
seek feedback from healthcare professionals and patients on how best to make
this information available to them.
A cornerstone of all information collection, evaluation, and
communication proposals in an age of increasing electronic health information
must be a strict adherence to maintaining patient privacy. FDA is committed
to maintaining patient privacy as it undertakes these steps.