Anmelden

Drug regulation encompasses the management of drug usage by evaluating its safety and efficacy through assessments conducted by regulatory authorities. Regrettably, the history of drug regulation is marred by several catastrophic events. One such incident is the Elixir Sulfanilamide tragedy, in which the toxic compound diethyl glycol was included in a sweet-tasting medication, leading to numerous fatalities. This event prompted the enactment of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act in 1938. Under this legislation, pharmaceutical companies were obligated to establish the safety of their products via toxicity studies and accurate labeling. However, demonstrating efficacy was not a requirement. The thalidomide catastrophe subsequently led to the adoption of the Kefauver-Harris Amendments in 1962. These amendments mandated manufacturers to present evidence supporting a drug's efficacy and safety by evaluating the risk-to-benefit ratio. Furthermore, animal research was made compulsory before initiating human trials. The resulting data would be submitted to the FDA as an application for an investigational new drug (IND). In order to speed up the drug approval process, the FDA implemented measures such as hastening the review of drugs intended for life-threatening diseases and taking a more proactive role in drug development.

Tags
Drug RegulationSafety And EfficacyRegulatory AuthoritiesElixir Sulfanilamide TragedyFood Drug And Cosmetic ActPharmaceutical CompaniesToxicity StudiesKefauver Harris AmendmentsRisk to benefit RatioAnimal ResearchHuman TrialsFDAInvestigational New Drug INDDrug Approval Process

Aus Kapitel 1:

article

Now Playing

1.5 : Drug Regulation

General Pharmacological Principles

1.1K Ansichten

article

1.1 : Drug Discovery: Überblick

General Pharmacological Principles

6.8K Ansichten

article

1.2 : Präklinische Entwicklung: Überblick

General Pharmacological Principles

3.7K Ansichten

article

1.3 : Klinische Studien: Überblick

General Pharmacological Principles

2.2K Ansichten

article

1.4 : Nomenklatur des Arzneimittels

General Pharmacological Principles

1.3K Ansichten

article

1.6 : Medikamentenklassen und -kategorien

General Pharmacological Principles

1.7K Ansichten

article

1.7 : Wirkstoff-Rezeptor-Bindungen

General Pharmacological Principles

2.4K Ansichten

article

1.8 : Wechselwirkungen zwischen Arzneimitteln und Rezeptoren

General Pharmacological Principles

4.5K Ansichten

article

1.9 : Wege der Arzneimittelverabreichung: Überblick

General Pharmacological Principles

4.3K Ansichten

article

1.10 : Wege der Arzneimittelverabreichung: Enteral

General Pharmacological Principles

2.9K Ansichten

article

1.11 : Wege der Arzneimittelverabreichung: Parenteral

General Pharmacological Principles

1.7K Ansichten

article

1.12 : Zusätzliche Wege der Arzneimittelverabreichung

General Pharmacological Principles

2.1K Ansichten

article

1.13 : Verschreibungspflichtige, nicht verschreibungspflichtige und Orphan Drugs

General Pharmacological Principles

597 Ansichten

article

1.14 : Faktoren, die das Ansprechen auf Medikamente beeinflussen: Überblick

General Pharmacological Principles

1.6K Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten