Generic drugs, medications, prescriptions
History of Generic Drugs
Generic drugs are
nothing new. Back in the 1920s, the company that made Bayer aspirin fought
bitterly to keep generic versions off the shelves. The company lost in court,
and consumers suddenly had an array of choices in generic aspirin. Today,
generic drugs are both widely available and carefully regulated.
This wasn't always
the case. As recently as 40 years ago, drug companies could release new
products with far less testing that is required today. The real test of a
drug's safety and effectiveness came after it went to market. If too many
patients had bad reactions, the drug could be pulled off the shelves. The
danger of this approach became tragically clear when the sedative
thalidomidecaused thousands of devastating birth defects in Europe and Canada.
New
regulations
Those days
effectively ended in 1962 when the Food and Drug Administration dramatically
revamped the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, originally passed in 1938.
It strengthened the drug testing laws already on the books, and for the first
time, companies were required to prove that a drug was both safe and effective
before it reached the market place. All new drugs had to go through a lengthy
and expensive process that included large-scale human trials.
The new regulations
applied to both brand name and generic drugs, a fact that slowed the release of
new generics to a trickle. Any new generic drug had to go through the same
investigational trials as any other drug, even if its ingredients were
identical to an already established brand name drug. Companies also had to wait
for the brand name patent to expire before they could even do the testing
require to produce a generic. Most companies didn't bother. By 1983, only 35
percent of the top-selling drugs with expired patents had a generic competitor,
according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Stiff
competition
Today, the rate of
competition is closer to 100 percent. Generic versions crop up almost
immediately after the patent on a brand name drug expires. The floodgates
opened in 1984 with the passage of the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term
Restoration Act, commonly known as the Hatch-Waxman Act. The FDA calls it
"one of the most successful pieces of legislation ever passed."
The new law made it
much easier and cheaper to bring a new generic drug to market. Instead of going
through lengthy human trials, companies merely had to prove that their drug had
the same active ingredients and that they were absorbed into the body at a rate
within 20 percent of the rate of the brand drug. The act also increased the
amount oftime a company could hold an exclusive patent on a new drug. Within a
year, the FDA received more than 1,000 applications for new generic drugs, and
an industry was born.
The act dramatically
changed the face of medicine. Generic drugs now account for about 50 percent of
all prescriptions, saving consumers $8 billion to $10 billion every year. We've
come a long way since the time when generic aspirin first hit the shelves. And
for consumers worried about the high cost of medications, that's a real relief.
References
A
Primer: Generic Drugs, Patents, and the Pharmaceutical Marketplace. The
National Institute for Health Care Management, Research and Educational
Foundation, June 2002.
U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. Generic Drugs: Questions and answers. July, 2002.
Food and Drug Administration. Consumer
Education: Generic Drugs. April 2006. FDA information on Generic Drugs
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