EC seeks comment on unique medicine identifiers
Phil Taylor, 23-Nov-2011
The European Commission
has published a concept paper on the unique identifier for
medicinal products outlined in the EU's falsified medicines
directive and due to be fleshed out via the delegated acts process
in 2014.
The delegated acts procedure is designed to lay out in practical
terms what the new legislation demands in principle, i.e. the
introduction of obligatory safety features that allow verification
of the authenticity of medicinal products, including the
"characteristics and technical specifications of the unique
identifier."
The directive also requires the Commission to carry out an impact
assessment of the safety feature requirements, along with the
procedures for verification and the information repositories used
to manage the system, to ensure that it is cost effective and does
not have any unwanted socioeconomic consequences.
In its concept paper - available
here - the EC notes that "the only way to uniquely identify a
pack [of medicine] is to give it a number 09'serialisation
number')", held by a carrier such as a barcode.
It notes there are two options on the table - allowing the
manufacturer to decide the technical specification or to achieve a
harmonised system through legislation - and asks for comments on
the benefits and disadvantages of each policy option. The
tamper-evidence requirement of the directive can already be left up
to the discretion of the manufacturer.
The document also asks for comment on the proposed composition of
the serialisation number - which as a minimum should contain the
manufacturer product code and pack number - and whether any
additional information such as batch number or expiry date should
be included.
Information is also sought about whether national reimbursement
numbers for medicines are replaced by the serialisation number or
contained within it, as well as the relative merits of linear
barcodes, 2D barcodes and radiofrequency identification (RFID) tags
in this setting, ideally including an assessment of
cost-benefits.
The second part of the concept paper concerns the systems used to
verify the unique identifiers, and as expected questions whether
this should be carried out only at the point of dispensing - as
favoured by the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries
& Associations (EFPIA) - or at additional (either systematic or
random) points in the supply chain, i.e. at wholesale
distributors.
The document also considers the thorny issue of data ownership and
the "establishment, management and accessibility" of the
repositories against which verification data is checked,
particularly where information of a commercially-sensitive nature
is concerned.
Three policy options are laid out for consideration and comment:
leaving it to the stakeholders (e.g. pharma companies, pharmacists
and distributors) to develop systems; some form of centralised
pan-EU repository; and the establishment of national governance
systems.
Questions are asked about issues of personal data and
confidentiality, and the requirement for replacing safety features
with 'equivalent' features - i.e. another unique identifier - in
cases where a product is re-packaged.
Finally, the paper looks at the scope of the directive, for example
the exclusion of certain categories such as non-prescription
medicines from the requirements on the grounds of being at low risk
of falsification (the 'white list' and 'black list' approach). It
asks for comment on the best way to measure risk in order to
categorise products into the two lists.
Stakeholders are invited to comment on the consultation paper until
April 27, 2012.
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