What criteria must be met if a study can be exempted from requiring an IND?
A study can be deemed IND Exempt if all of the following criteria are met:
A study can be deemed IND Exempt if all of the following criteria are met:
An IND is not needed for studies involving marketed drugs such as:
“Off-label use” is any difference in use, including indication, dose, route of administration, patient populations, and drug formulation from what is approved on the FDA label.
“On-label use” means the drug is being used in the same indication, dose, route of administration, patient populations, and drug formulation. There is no deviation from the approved FDA label. Studies involving the on-label use drug do not require an IND, as long as data will not be used in a marketing application.
Drug labeling refers to all the printed material that accompanies a drug, including the label, the wrapping, and the package insert.
Yes, an IND application is a request to the FDA for authorization to administer an investigational drug (or biologic) to human or a marketed drug in a new indication and/or patient population. However, there are IND Exemptions. Please refer to the section on IND Exemptions for more information.
An investigational drug is defined as:
The term includes drugs (including botanicals, biologicals, and gene therapy, and genetically derived products that meet the definition of a “drug”), and medical devices for human use. The FDA has statutory authority to regulate the development and marketing of these products.