Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference of Drug Regulatory Authorities (ICDRA) - Berlin, Germany 25-29 April 1999
(1999; 102 pages) View the PDF document
Table of Contents
Open this folder and view contentsOpening Ceremony
Open this folder and view contentsGood regulatory practice
Open this folder and view contentsGood certification practice
Open this folder and view contentsCounterfeit drugs: challenges and solutions
Open this folder and view contentsCurrent issues in regulation and quality
Open this folder and view contentsInternational Conference on Harmonization: implementation and implications
Open this folder and view contentsDrug utilization studies
Close this folderInternational Conference on Harmonization and the common technical document
View the documentNon-ICH country perspective: Switzerland
View the documentThe ICH common technical document (CTD)
View the documentSummary
Open this folder and view contentsKeynote address
Open this folder and view contentsGlobal and national efforts to reduce tobacco use
Open this folder and view contentsElectronic communication in the regulatory process
Open this folder and view contentsTransparency in monitoring the safety of medicines
Open this folder and view contentsPharmaceutical products for use in special groups
Open this folder and view contentsNeed for Bioequivalence
Open this folder and view contentsAntimicrobial resistance: battling the bugs
Open this folder and view contentsSafety issues of plasma-derived medicinal products
Open this folder and view contentsHerbal medicines
Open this folder and view contentsRegulation and access to essential drugs
View the documentParticipants
View the documentBack cover
 

International Conference on Harmonization and the common technical document

Moderators: Mr P Deboyser European Union, and Mr M. Dauramanzi, Zimbabwe

Based on some thirty-eight available tripartite guidelines dealing with numerous principles of quality, safety and efficacy requirements for new medicinal products, the International Conference on Harmonization (ICH) has now prepared a common technical document (format and content of a new drug application) which harmonizes part of the documentation required for a new drug application.

Due to existing practices, traditions and regulations, many administrative requirements and aspects of product labelling vary between ICH countries. Moreover, there are differences in the overview summaries for scientific documentation, the need for individual clinical case reports, and the data to document findings made in animal studies. These and other special local requirements form a substantive portion of an application for marketing authorization and remain, in principle, outside the current CTD concept.

It is understandable that multinational pharmaceutical companies would also like to use the CTD outside ICH countries. To achieve more extended acceptance of the CTD, WHO has offered assistance to the ICH through its international consultative mechanism and by involving non-ICH countries in discussions on CTD harmonization. Thus, pharmaceutical advisers from each of the six regions of WHO have participated in CTD expert working groups since 1998. Their role has been to assist in distribution of relevant working documents to drug regulatory authorities within their own region for comment to assure wider participation in this exercise.

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Last updated: April 24, 2012