A bill to encourage the manufacture of active pharmaceutical
ingredients in America was introduced in the U.S. Senate Tuesday by
Senators Marsha Blackburn (R- TN) and Bob Menendez (R- NJ). It was read and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
The “Securing America’s Medicine Cabinet Act” (SAM-C), S. 3432,
expands the FDA’s Emerging Technology Program and authorizes $100
million to develop centers of excellence for advanced pharmaceutical
manufacturing to help not only develop, but manufacture, therapeutics in
the U.S.
A statement from Sen. Menendez’s office says the bill will encourage
pharmaceutical innovations similar to those in the automotive, aerospace
and semiconductor industries and “bring drug manufacturing back to the
United States, where ingredients and processes can be more easily
verified.”
The centers of excellence in advanced pharmaceutical manufacturing
will consist of public-private partnerships to develop manufacturing
innovations and to train the workforce.
The bill, if passed, would also create an advanced manufacturing
technologies unit within the FDA to prioritize issues related to
national security and critical drug shortages as well as bring
pharmaceutical manufacturing jobs to the United States.
Speaking on the Senate floor Thursday, Sen. Blackburn elaborated on
the need for the Act. “Pharmaceuticals…are usually manufactured in
pieces – active ingredients in one place and inactive ingredients in
another. Currently, only 28% of the facilities producing active
pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) are in the United States. This means
American consumers rely heavily on foreign-sourced drugs.”
Since
2010, she went on to say, the number of Chinese facilities producing
APIs has more than doubled. “While the U.S. is a world leader in drug
development, we are falling behind in drug manufacturing. The cessation
of American manufacturing of APIs is a key health and security concern
because it created vulnerabilities in the U.S. supply chain.”
Such concern is not new. Benjamin Shobert, founder and managing
director, Rubicon Strategy Group and senior associate of the National
Bureau of Asian Research, outlined similar concerns during his 2017 testimony before
the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. Focusing
specifically on threats to American businesses and consumers, he cited,
among multiple risks, those related to “transparency as to where APIs
are manufactured in China, and robust regulatory mechanisms…to ensure
that quality, safety, and efficacy standards are upheld.”
More recently, in its November 2019 Annual Report to Congress,
the U.S.-China Economic Security Review Commission enumerated serious
concerns associated with outsourcing pharmaceutical manufacturing to
China. Quality was a key issue. It recommended that Congress direct the
FDA to compile a list of “all brand name and generic drugs and APIs that
are not produced in the U.S., are deemed critical to the health and
safety of the U.S. consumers, and are exclusively produced or utilize
APIs and ingredients produced in China.”
The more immediate issue, however, is simply availability. The FDA reports some than two dozen drugs are in short supply for various conditions.
China is not the root of the problem, although many of its factories
halted operations as that nation coped with the coronavirus outbreak.
This resulted in a shortage, announced by the FDA February 28 and cited
by Sen. Blackburn in Congress Thursday, of one drug manufactured in
China and used to treat patients with coronavirus.
India, another leading API manufacturer, halted the export of 26
ingredients commonly used in pharmaceuticals. These situations merely
highlighted a vulnerability in America’s drug supply chain that has been
discussed, but rarely acted upon.
The root of the problem isn’t India or China, however. The problem is closer to home, and is common among many industries.
The pharmaceutical industry is truly global, embracing opportunities
from R&D to manufacturing, in markets throughout the world. It has
seen wonderful innovations as a result. But, by outsourcing such a high
percentage of its manufacturing, and directing that outsourcing to –
largely – one region, the industry became vulnerable to calamities that
affect that region, including, currently, pandemic.
The text of SAM-C is being summarized, prior to publication by the
Government Publishing Office. When it is released, it can expect
widespread scrutiny. BIO, among others, its text. Based upon early
reports of its contents, however, it may be viewed favorably. “I think
we would support it, in light of the current coronavirus outbreak,”
Andrew Segerman, director of communications for health, BIO,
hypothesizes.
https://www.biospace.com/article/senate-bill-supports-u-s-pharma-manufacturing/
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