Artículos de revistas
Regulamentação sanitária de medicamentos
Fecha
2011-06-28Registro en:
Revista de Ciencias Farmaceuticas Basica e Aplicada, v. 32, n. 1, p. 127-132, 2011.
1808-4532
2-s2.0-79959522412
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
Institución
Resumen
The health regulation of drugs is one of eight guidelines issued within the National Drug Policy. It refers to the supervision and regulation of drug registration and the approval of operations, from the manufacturers to the retailers of medicines, as well as the restrictions that apply to drugs under special control. The health regulation of medicines is aimed at controlling the effectiveness, safety, quality and cost of pharmaceutical products. Clinical studies of brand-name (innovator) medicines, bioequivalence or relative bioavailability and the equivalence tests of generic and 'similar' brand-name drugs are means used to assess efficacy and safety. Quality is assured on a batch-to-batch basis by compliance with the Good Manufacturing Practices and Control of pharmaceutical products and by the certification of companies offered by ANVISA. The cost of a medicine is assessed by the Technical Chamber of Medicine (CMED), which establishes the criteria for setting and adjusting the prices of pharmaceutical products. After registration, the effectiveness, safety and quality of products are monitored by means of the tests required on renewal of registration and especially by the pharmacovigilance program.