[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 4]
[Revised as of April 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR201.200]

[Page 56-58]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                                SERVICES
 
PART 201--LABELING--Table of Contents
 
       Subpart F--Labeling Claims for Drugs in Drug Efficacy Study
 
Sec. 201.200  Disclosure of drug efficacy study evaluations in labeling and advertising.


    (a)(1) The National Academy of Sciences--National Research Council, 
Drug Efficacy Study Group, has completed an exhaustive review of 
labeling claims made for drugs marketed under new-drug and antibiotic 
drug procedures between 1938 and 1962. The results are compiled in 
``Drug Efficacy Study, A Report to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs 
from the National Academy of Sciences (1969).'' As the report notes, 
this review has made ``an audit of the state of the art of drug usage 
that has been uniquely extensive in scope and uniquely intensive in 
time'' and is applicable to more than 80 percent of the currently 
marketed drugs. The report further notes that the quality of the 
evidence of efficacy, as well as the quality of the labeling claims, is 
poor. Labeling and other promotional claims have been evaluated as 
``effective,'' ``probably effective,'' ``possibly effective,'' 
``ineffective,'' ``ineffective as a fixed combination,'' and ``effective 
but,'' and a report for each drug in the study has been submitted to the 
Commissioner.
    (2) The Food and Drug Administration is processing the reports, 
seeking voluntary action on the part of the drug manufacturers and 
distributors in the elimination or modification of unsupported 
promotional claims, and initiating administrative actions as necessary 
to require product and labeling changes.
    (3) Delays have been encountered in bringing to the attention of the 
prescribers of prescription items the conclusions of the expert panels 
that reviewed the promotional claims.
    (b) The Commissioner of Food and Drugs concludes that:
    (1) The failure to disclose in the labeling of a drug and in other 
promotional material the conclusions of the Academy experts that a claim 
is ``ineffective,'' ``possibly effective,'' ``probably effective,'' or 
``ineffective as a fixed combination,'' while labeling and promotional 
material bearing any such claim are being used, is a failure to disclose 
facts that are material in light of the representations made and causes 
the drug to be misbranded.
    (2) The Academy classification of a drug as other than ``effective'' 
for a claim for which such drug is recommended establishes that there is 
a material weight of opinion among qualified experts contrary to the 
representation made or suggested in the labeling, and failure to reveal 
this fact causes such labeling to be misleading.
    (c) Therefore, after publication in the Federal Register of a Drug 
Efficacy Study Implementation notice on a prescription drug, unless 
exempted or otherwise provided for in the notice, all package labeling 
(other than the immediate container or carton label, unless such 
labeling contains information required by Sec. 201.100(c)(1) in lieu of 
a package insert), promotional labeling, and advertisements shall 
include, as part of the information for practitioners under which the 
drug can be safely and effectively used, an appropriate qualification of 
all claims evaluated as other than ``effective'' by a panel of the 
National Academy of Sciences--National Research Council, Drug Efficacy 
Study Group, if such claims continue to be included in either the 
labeling or advertisements. However, this qualifying information will be 
required in advertisements only if promotional material is included 
therein for claims evaluated as less than ``effective'' or if such 
claims are included in the indications section of the portion of the 
advertisement containing the information required in brief summary by 
Sec. 202.1(e)(1) of this chapter. When, however, the Food and Drug 
Administration classification of such claim is ``effective'' (for 
example, on the basis of revision of the language of the claim or 
submission or existence of adequate data), such qualification is not 
necessary. When the Food and Drug Administration classification of the 
claim, as stated in the implementation notice, differs from that of the 
Academy but is other than ``effective,'' the qualifying statement shall 
refer to this classification in lieu of the Academy's classification.
    (d) For new drugs and antibiotics, supplements to provide for 
revised labeling in accord with paragraph (c) of

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this section shall be submitted under the provisions of Sec. 314.70 and 
Sec. 514.8 of this chapter within 90 days after publication of the 
implementation notice in the Federal Register or by May 15, 1972, for 
those drugs for which notices have been published and such labeling 
shall be put into use as soon as possible but not later than the end of 
the time period allowed for submitting supplements to provide for 
revised labeling.
    (e) Qualifying information required in drug labeling by paragraph 
(c) of this section in order to advise prescribers of a drug of the 
findings made by a panel of the Academy in evaluating a claim as other 
than ``effective'' shall be at least of the same size and color and 
degree of prominence as other printing in the labeling and shall be 
presented in a prominent box using one of the following formats and 
procedures:
    (1) In drug labeling the box statement may entirely replace the 
indications section and be in the following format:

   ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                Indications
         Based on a review of this drug by the National Academy of 
      Sciences--National Research Council and/or other 
      information, FDA has classified the indication(s) as 
      follows:
         Effective: (list or state in paragraph form).
         ``Probably'' effective: (list or state in paragraph 
      form).
         ``Possibly'' effective: (list or state in paragraph 
      form).
         Final classification of the less-than-effective 
      indications requires further investigation.

   ------------------------------------------------------------------
    (2) Or the indication(s) for which the drug has been found effective 
may appear outside the boxed statement and be followed immediately by 
the following boxed statement:

   ------------------------------------------------------------------
         Based on a review of this drug by the National Academy of 
      Sciences--National Research Council and/or other 
      information, FDA has classified the other indication(s) as 
      follows:
         ``Probably'' effective: (list or state in paragraph 
      form).
         ``Possibly'' effective: (list or state in paragraph 
      form).
         Final classification of the less-than-effective 
      indications requires further investigation.

   ------------------------------------------------------------------
    (3) In drug labeling (other than that which is required by 
Sec. 201.100(c)(1)) which may contain a promotional message, the 
promotional message shall be keyed to the boxed statement by the same 
means as those provided for advertisements in paragraph (f)(2) of this 
section.
    (f) Qualifying information required in prescription drug advertising 
by paragraph (c) of this section shall contain a prominent boxed 
statement of the advertised indication(s) and of the limitations of 
effectiveness using the same format, language, and emphasis as that 
required in labeling by paragraph (e) of this section.
    (1) The boxed statement shall appear in (or next to) the information 
required in brief summary by Sec. 202.1(e)(1) of this chapter and shall 
have prominence at least equal to that provided for other information 
presented in the brief summary and shall have type size, captions, 
color, and other physical characteristics comparable to the information 
required in the brief summary.
    (2) Less-than-effective indication(s) in the promotional message of 
an advertisement which is a single page or less shall be keyed to the 
boxed statement by asterisk, by an appropriate statement, or by other 
suitable means providing adequate emphasis on the boxed statement. On 
each page where less-than-effective indication(s) appear in a mutiple 
page advertisement, an asterisk shall be placed after the most prominent 
mention of the indi- cation(s); if the degree of prominence

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does not vary, an asterisk shall be placed after the first mention of 
the indication. The asterisk shall refer to a notation at the bottom of 
the page which shall state ``This drug has been evaluated as probably 
effective (or possibly effective whichever is appropriate) for this 
indication'' and ``See Brief Summary'' or ``See Prescribing 
Information,'' the latter legend to be used only if the advertisement 
carries the required information for professional use as set forth in 
Sec. 201.100(c)(1).
    (3) For less-than-effective indications which are included in the 
advertisement only as a part of the information required in brief 
summary, the disclosure information shall appear in this portion of the 
advertisement in the same manner as is specified for labeling in 
paragraph (e) of this section.
    (g) The Commissioner may find circumstances are such that, while the 
elimination of claims evaluated as other than effective will generally 
eliminate the need for disclosure about such claims, there will be 
instances in which the change in the prescribing or promotional profile 
of the drug is so substantial as to require a disclosure of the reason 
for the change so that the purchaser or prescriber is not misled by 
being left unaware through the sponsor's silence that a basic change has 
taken place. The Food and Drug Administration will identify these 
situations in direct correspondence with the drug promoters, after which 
the failure to make the disclosure will be regarded as misleading and 
appropriate action will be taken.

[40 FR 13998, Mar. 27, 1975, as amended at 55 FR 11576, Mar. 29, 1990]