13分

505b2 Pathway: Ghost Generics VerifiedRx

    • 医学

The 1984 Hatch-Waxman Act codified the 505(b)(2) drug approval pathway and allowed the use of studies from a previously approved drug. To be clear, medications approved via this pathway are not generic molecules of the reference listed drug. They may have similar clinical effects and roles in therapy, but they also bring challenges. Dr. Tyler Wood, System Director of Pharmacy Oncology and Biosimilars, and Pharmacy Executive Director, Carolyn Liptak at Vizient, join Gretchen Brummel, Pharmacy Executive Director in the Vizient Center for Pharmacy Practice Excellence and your program host to give an early look.
 
Guest speakers: Tyler Wood, PharmD, BCBBSSystem Director, Pharmacy Oncology and Biosimilars Providence St. Joseph Health
 
Carolyn Liptak, MBA, BSPharmPharmacy Executive Director Vizient 
 
Host: Gretchen Brummel, PharmD, BCPS Pharmacy Executive Director Vizient Center for Pharmacy Practice Excellence
 
Show Notes: 
[00:55-01:34] Dr. Tyler Wood background information 
[01:35-03:09] How the 505(b)(2) pathway is intended to work
[03:10-04:32] Comparisons can we draw from the biologics approval process
[04:33-05:53] What the FDA says about which pathway to use
[05:54-07:05] What's changed recently in the approval process
[07:06-08:09] Can a 505(b)(2) product be rated as a generic equivalent?
[08:10 -09:07] How CMS changes are impacting management
[09:08-11:23] What our providers can do to plan and act to address these issues
[11:24-12:27] What’s most concerning moving forward
 
Links | Resources: 
Applications Covered by 505(b)(2)
Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System: January 2024 Update
MLN Matters® Articles Sign-up
CMS.gov ASP Pricing Files
CMS.gov What's a MAC
Drugs@FDA: FDA-Approved Drugs
FDA: Overview of the 505(b)(2) Regulatory Pathway for New Drug Applications
HCPCS Level II Coding for 505(b)(2)-Approved Drugs or Biologicals – Frequently Asked Questions
 
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The 1984 Hatch-Waxman Act codified the 505(b)(2) drug approval pathway and allowed the use of studies from a previously approved drug. To be clear, medications approved via this pathway are not generic molecules of the reference listed drug. They may have similar clinical effects and roles in therapy, but they also bring challenges. Dr. Tyler Wood, System Director of Pharmacy Oncology and Biosimilars, and Pharmacy Executive Director, Carolyn Liptak at Vizient, join Gretchen Brummel, Pharmacy Executive Director in the Vizient Center for Pharmacy Practice Excellence and your program host to give an early look.
 
Guest speakers: Tyler Wood, PharmD, BCBBSSystem Director, Pharmacy Oncology and Biosimilars Providence St. Joseph Health
 
Carolyn Liptak, MBA, BSPharmPharmacy Executive Director Vizient 
 
Host: Gretchen Brummel, PharmD, BCPS Pharmacy Executive Director Vizient Center for Pharmacy Practice Excellence
 
Show Notes: 
[00:55-01:34] Dr. Tyler Wood background information 
[01:35-03:09] How the 505(b)(2) pathway is intended to work
[03:10-04:32] Comparisons can we draw from the biologics approval process
[04:33-05:53] What the FDA says about which pathway to use
[05:54-07:05] What's changed recently in the approval process
[07:06-08:09] Can a 505(b)(2) product be rated as a generic equivalent?
[08:10 -09:07] How CMS changes are impacting management
[09:08-11:23] What our providers can do to plan and act to address these issues
[11:24-12:27] What’s most concerning moving forward
 
Links | Resources: 
Applications Covered by 505(b)(2)
Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System: January 2024 Update
MLN Matters® Articles Sign-up
CMS.gov ASP Pricing Files
CMS.gov What's a MAC
Drugs@FDA: FDA-Approved Drugs
FDA: Overview of the 505(b)(2) Regulatory Pathway for New Drug Applications
HCPCS Level II Coding for 505(b)(2)-Approved Drugs or Biologicals – Frequently Asked Questions
 
Subscribe Today!
Apple Podcasts
Amazon Podcasts
Google Podcasts
Spotify
Android
RSS Feed
 

13分