Veterinary Pharmacy and Pharmacy Law Flashcards
Fairness to Pet Owners Act
Act that wants to mandate prescription for all medications, including those filled in practice (not passed yet)
Veterinarian-Client-Patient Relationship (VCPR)
Veterinarians must have a valid VCPR prior to prescribing prescription drugs for animal patients (including: agreement, examination, and follow-up)
Food and Drug Act of 1906
Prevention of mislabeling:
- Products must contain what the label says it contains
- No safety testing required
- No efficacy testing required
- Forbade fraudulent curative claims where it could be proved the promoter intended to deceive the purchaser
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938
Requirements for safety testing:
- Sulfanilamide disaster in 1937 (>100 people died of renal failure)
- Many amendments apply directly to animal drugs
Animal Medicinal Drug Use Clarification of 1994 (AMDUCA)
Made extra-label drug use an FDA regulated veterinary medical activity, allowing veterinarians to prescribe extra-label uses of approved animal and human drugs when the health of an animal is threatened, or when suffering or death may result from failure to treat animals (extra-label has been illegal prior to this)
Four reasons for AMDUCA
- Make a careful diagnosis and evaluate the conditions for which the drug is to be used
- Make sure there is not an approved medication that is labeled for such use in that species, or that contains the same active ingredient in the required dosage form and concentration (exception is if drug is clinically ineffective for its intended use for that patient)
- Establish a substantially extended withdrawal period supported by appropriate scientific information prior to marketing milk, meat, eggs, or other edible products from the treated animals
- In non-food producing animals, a drug labeled for use in humans can be administered even if an animal-label drug for that species and medical condition exists
Extra-Label Drug Use (ELDU)
Describes the use of approved drug in a manner that is not in accordance with the approved labeling
- FDA approved if:
- -There is no approved animal drug that is labeled for such use, or that contains the same active ingredient in the required dosage form and concentration
- -An approved animal drug for that species and condition exists, but a veterinarian finds that the drug is clinically ineffective for its labeled use
- FDA can prohibit use if:
- -An acceptable method for residue detection needs to be or cannot be established
- -The extra label use of the drug/class of drugs presents a risk to public health
Approved Labeling
- Information that comes with a medication
- The physical label on the bottle is an abbreviated form of the more extensive package insert included with every medication
- A label is a legal document that defines: indications, species, doses, routes, frequencies, etc.
Animal Drug Availability Act of 1996 (ADAA)
Made it easier for drug sponsors to get animal drugs approved
- Allowed more animal drugs on the market
- New category of drugs (Veterinary Feed Directive Drugs)
Veterinary Feed Directive (VFD)
- Avoid inappropriate or unnecessary use of medically important antimicrobials
- Limit to use in food-producing animals only when necessary for animal health
- Limit to use under veterinary oversight or consultation (“directive”)
- Reduce antimicrobial resistance through collaboration with the public, animal health, public health, and animal agriculture communities
Withdrawal Time (WDT)
Estimated time that tissues can be safely consumed following the last dose of drugs in 99% of animals treated
- Expressed in days for meat and eggs, and hours for milk
- Drugs approved for use in food animals must contain WDT information on their labeling
Food Animal Residue Avoidance Database (FARAD)
A computer based decision support program to provide drug and pesticide WDTs for producers, DVMs, and extension specialists
-Supported by the USDA
Minor Use/Minor Species Act of 2004 (MUMS)
- Minor uses: disease affecting a small percentage of a species
- Minor species: everything that is not a major species (not cats, dogs, cattle, horses, pigs, chickens, or turkeys)
MUMS conditional approval
Allows the sponsor to make the drug available before collecting all necessary effectiveness data, but after proving the drug is safe in accordance with the full FDA approval standard and showing that there is a reasonable expectation of effectiveness
MUMS designation
Sponsors are eligible to apply for grants to support safety and effectiveness testing