FDA Antibiotic Resistance Strategy

Similar documents
Medically Important Antibiotics in Animal Agriculture

Veterinary Feed Directive

Guidance for Industry

The Future of Antibiotic Alternatives

California Senate Bill 27 Livestock: Use of Antimicrobial Drugs (An Interesting Journey)

Guidance for Industry

1 January 2017, It is Coming Preparation for VFD Changes Beginning 1 January 2017

The Veterinary Feed Directive. Dr. Dave Pyburn National Pork Board

Changes in Antibiotic Labeling Veterinary Feed Directive

Changes to Antibiotic Labeling & Veterinary Feed Directive. Craig A. Payne, DVM, MS Director, Veterinary Extension & CE University of Missouri

Outline Changes to Antibiotic Labeling & Veterinary Feed Directive

American Veterinary Medical Association

Beef Producers. The Judicious Use of Antimicrobials for

RESPONSIBLE ANTIMICROBIAL USE

SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is amending its animal drug

Opening Remarks. Presenters. What Did FDA Say About Antibiotics in Food Animals? Jim Larry Hans Pettigrew Firkins Stein. How to Respond?

Antimicrobial Use and Antimicrobial Resistance in Relation to the Canadian Pork Sector Presented by Jorge Correa Pork Committee Banff May 2013

Veterinary Feed Directive Information

Changes in Antibiotic Labeling Veterinary Feed Directive. Changes in Antibiotic Regulations. Concerns with Antibiotic Use 2/29/2016

Dr Elisabeth Erlacher Vindel Head of Science and New Technologies Departement OIE AMR strategy and activities related to animal health

Antimicrobial Stewardship in Food Animals in Canada AMU/AMR WG Update Forum 2016

Multisector Collaboration One Health Approach to Addressing Antibiotic Resistance Nov. 5, 2015

Human Food Safety of Veterinary Drugs. Bettye K. Walters, DVM

Some Thoughts about Antibiotic Stewardship and Choices of Antibiotic Use in Beef Cattle. Syracuse, NY January 22-23, 2016

Medicated feeds. Overview of the use of medicated feeds in production animal agriculture

Responsible Antimicrobial Use

COMPOUNDING REGULATORY PERSPECTIVE

The VFD s Are Coming Soon

Speaking notes submitted by Dr. Duane Landals. on behalf of the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association (CVMA)

ANTIMICROBIAL USE IN POULTRY PRODUCTION

The VFDs Are Coming!

Antibiotics use and Considerations: Calves and Heifers CLASSIFICATION OF CALVES. Danielle A. Mzyk TITLE 24 PT. ARIAL BOLD ALL CAPS

International Activities In Antimicrobial Resistance

Action and Experience of Containment of AMR in Veterinary Sector JAPAN

Medically Important Antimicrobials in Animal Agriculture. Sheep

The Changing Veterinary Pharmaceutical Landscape

Veterinary Feed Directive: What You Need to Know

The Judicious Use of Medically Important Antimicrobial Drugs in Food-Producing Animals

EXPERIENCE ON ANTIMICROBIAL USE AND RESISTANCE IN KENYA

Strategy to Address the Problem of Agricultural Antimicrobial Use and the Emergence of Resistance

USA ACTION PLAN FOR COMBATING ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANT BACTERIA

Mitigating Pain in Livestock: What Options are Available

Strategy 2020 Final Report March 2017

Center for Veterinary

OIE Strategy on Antimicrobial Resistance and the Prudent Use of Antimicrobials in Animals Part I

Combating Antimicrobial Resistance: The Way Forward

Antimicrobial stewardship in Canadian agriculture and veterinary medicine. Perspectives from the Ad-Hoc Committee

Veterinary Drugs Stakeholder Forum Meeting 1 - Summary

The Judicious Use of Medically Important Antimicrobial Drugs in Food-Producing Animals

REPORT ON THE ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE (AMR) SUMMIT

Antimicrobial Use & Antimicrobial Resistance

Resistance and New Rules on Antibiotic Use in Agriculture

Pork Production: A Nexus of Farming, Food and Public Health

Complying with California Senate Bill 27 Livestock: Use of Antimicrobial Drugs

Do I Need a Veterinarian for My Bees?

Joining the Raised-without-Antibiotics Production Movement Joseph Krebs, Ph.D.

The VCPR and What Makes it Valid

Comments from The Pew Charitable Trusts re: Consultation on a draft global action plan to address antimicrobial resistance September 1, 2014

Antibiotics in the future tense: The Application of Antibiotic Stewardship in Veterinary Medicine. Mike Apley Kansas State University

Antimicrobial Resistance, FDA Draft Guidance 209 and Producer Planning. James D. McKean, DVM, JD Associate Director, Iowa Pork Industry Center

Understanding the Veterinary Feed Directive

SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is proposing to amend its animal drug

Prudent use of antimicrobial agents Dairy Sector Initiatives. Robin Condron Dairy Australia

National Action Plan development support tools

The role of veterinarians in animal welfare and intersectoral collaboration

Antimicrobial resistance: the challenges for animal health

VFD : On Farm Changes Chris J. Rademacher, DVM

FDA S ANTIPARASITIC RESISTANCE MANAGEMENT STRATEGY (ARMS)

Animal Health and Antibiotics Looking Ahead with Science

TIMELY TOPICS Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources July 2015 Volume 35 Issue 7

Action Plan Goal 2 Surveillance and Monitoring Strategies:

Global Overview on Antibiotic Use Policies in Veterinary Medicine

Antibiotic Use in Animal Health

& chicken. Antibiotic Resistance

Perspective on AnA Global timicrobial Resistance

Beekeeping for the Future Duane Landals B.Sc.Ag. DVM Senior Advisor Alberta Veterinary Medical Association

Implications for Registration and Approval of Innovative Technologies

328 A Russell Senate Office Building United States Senate

Youth Pork Quality Assurance Plus

OIE Resolution and activities related to the Global Action Plan. Regional Seminar for OIE National Focal Points for Veterinary Products 4 th Cycle

ANTIBIOTICS IN AQUACULTURE: A (FISH) VETERINARIAN S PERSPECTIVE

Antimicrobial Stewardship: Health Canada's Efforts to Strengthen Canada's Regulatory Framework for Veterinary Antimicrobials

The Future of Antimicrobials An Industry Perspective. Dr. Richard Carnevale Animal Health Institute NIAA conference November 15, 2012

Antimicrobial Use and Antimicrobial Resistance a strategy for animal agriculture Forum 2014

January 23, 2014 Anna O Brien, DVM Veterinary Medical Officer Office of New Animal Drug Evaluation Center for Veterinary Medicine-FDA

The Role of Academic Veterinary Medicine in Combating Antimicrobial Resistance

THIS ARTICLE IS SPONSORED BY THE MINNESOTA DAIRY HEALTH CONFERENCE.

NAP on AMR: Singapore

For Alberta broiler producers, the biggest impacts will be:

The Role of Academic Veterinary Medicine in Combating Antimicrobial Resistance

VFD Preparation: Beyond the veterinary feed directive paperwork Beef production with less antibiotics

Managing AMR at the Human-Animal Interface. OIE Contributions to the AMR Global Action Plan

Canada s Activities in Combatting Antimicrobial Resistance. Presentation to the JPIAMR Management Board March 29, 2017

Actions for combatting Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)

Veterinary Feed Directives

EU strategy to fight against Antimicrobial Resistance

VFD Where it is today

Responsible Use of Veterinary Products. Bettye K. Walters, DVM

BEST PRACTICE POLICY ON ANTIBIOTICS STEWARDSHIP

June 12, For animal antibiotics, the safety assessment is more stringent than that for human antibiotics in three ways:

Transcription:

FDA Antibiotic Resistance Strategy NIAA Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Symposium November 14, 2014 William T. Flynn, DVM, MS Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 1

Outline Background CVM s Judicious Use Strategy Goals Components Next Steps 2

Current AR Understanding Complex, multi-factorial issue Naturally occurring vs. acquired Use (exposure) as a driver of acquired resistance All uses (human, animal, horticultural, other) can contribute Gaps in our understanding of the issue remain the science continues to evolve But, these complexities and uncertainties don t mean that steps can t be identified to mitigate risk 3

Antibiotic Use in Animal Agriculture Has been the subject of scientific and policy debate for decades Consumers, public health advocates, Congress, and others continue to be concerned about public health impacts Goal: while debate continues, identify measures that address public health concern and that continue to assure animal health needs are met 4

Previous Measures to Address AR Risks Since late 1980 s All new antibiotics have required veterinary oversight 1996 National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) established 1997 Extralabel use of fluoroquinolones and glycopeptides prohibited 2003 FDA established framework for assessing antimicrobial resistance risks as part of drug approval (Guidance #152) 2005 Withdrawal of enrofloxacin in poultry 2010 initiated judicious use effort with issuance of draft Guidance #209 2012 prohibited certain extralabel uses of cephalosporins 5

Remaining Concerns With implementation of Guidance #152 in 2003, a process is in place that evaluates the safety of antimicrobial new animal drugs with regard to their microbiological effects on bacteria of human health concern However, concerns remain about products that pre-date current assessment process Focus of recent efforts is on taking steps to ensure that existing antibiotics (particularly those that predate 2003 assessment process) are used as judiciously as possible 6

CVM s Judicious Use Strategy Guidance 209 Describes overall policy direction Two key principles: 1. Limit use of medically important antimicrobial drugs to those uses considered necessary for assuring animal health (i.e., therapeutic purposes). 2. Increase veterinary involvement/consultation. Calls for a voluntary/collaborative approach 7

Judicious Use Strategy: Goal Focus is on initiating steps to assure that medically important antimicrobial drugs are used as judiciously as possible While maintaining their availability to combat disease in animals, including treatment, control, and prevention Goal: preserve availability of effective drugs for both humans and animals 8

Judicious Use Strategy: Components I. Implementing Changes II. III. Reporting Progress Assessing Impacts IV. Reinforcing Stewardship 9

Implementing Changes: Guidance 213 Published December 2013 Provides more detailed guidance on implementation of key principles in Guidance 209 Target for implementing changes to use conditions of affected products within 3 years (by December 12, 2016) 283 affected applications All 26 affected sponsors confirmed their intent to voluntarily engage in Guidance #213 Once these changes are complete it will be illegal to use medically important antimicrobials in the feed or water of food animals for production purposes or without veterinary oversight 10

Implementing Changes: VFD Veterinary Feed Directive is the legal framework for veterinary oversight of medicated feeds Corollary to prescription status for non-feed products CVM is updating the existing VFD regulation to facilitate transition to increased veterinary oversight of medicated feeds Intent is to implement revised VFD regulation within 3-year timeframe Current target Spring 2015 11

Reporting Progress List of Affected Products Periodic progress reports every 6 months Evaluation at end of 3-year period December 2016 Continuing assessment reports 2017 and beyond 12

Assessing Impacts Continue collecting, reporting, and enhancing existing data NARMS Annual sales/distribution data Other data (NAHMS, ARMS, National Residue Program, etc.) Collecting additional data On-farm use and resistance 13

Reinforcing Stewardship Perform training/outreach to support new VFD rule Veterinarians, producers, feed distributors, FDA/state compliance officers Promote judicious use principles Particular focus on ensuring prevention use is appropriate/judicious 14

A Collaborative Approach The changes outlined in Guidance #213 represent major changes to way antibiotics have been used in animal agriculture for decades CVM believes that a collaborative approach is the fastest way to implement these changes We have worked with stakeholders, including animal pharmaceutical companies, to encourage their cooperation on this important public health issue, and we are confident in their support 15

Guidance #213: Next Steps I. Implement Changes II. III. IV. Change labels (remove production claims, require vet oversight) Finalize VFD rule (Spring 2015) Apprise public of progress Periodic progress reports (every 6 months) Evaluation at end of 3-year implementation period (December 2016) Assess Impacts Continue collecting data (sales and resistance) Collect additional data (on-farm use and resistance) Reinforce Stewardship Perform training/outreach to support new VFD rule Promote judicious use principles 16

CVM AR Websites Judicious Use of Antimicrobials: http://www.fda.gov/antimicrobialjudicioususe NARMS http://www.fda.gov/narms ADUFA 105 Reports: http://www.fda.gov/animalantimicrobialsales 17

Thank You 18