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Document 52013SC0235
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the fees payable to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for the conduct of pharmacovigilance activities in respect of medicinal products for human use
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the fees payable to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for the conduct of pharmacovigilance activities in respect of medicinal products for human use
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the fees payable to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for the conduct of pharmacovigilance activities in respect of medicinal products for human use
/* SWD/2013/0235 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the fees payable to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for the conduct of pharmacovigilance activities in respect of medicinal products for human use /* SWD/2013/0235 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Regulation of the
European Parliament and of the Council on the fees payable to the European
Medicines Agency (EMA) for the conduct of pharmacovigilance activities in
respect of medicinal products for human use 1. Introduction and Problem
definition The EU pharmacovigilance legislation has
been subject to a major review and an impact assessment that lead to the
adoption of a revised legislation in 2010[1],
which strengthens and rationalises the system for monitoring the safety of
medicines on the European market. This legislation provides for a number of
EU-wide procedures to assess pharmacovigilance data. Some additional
adjustments were introduced in 2012[2]. In order to finance these activities, the
2010 Pharmacovigilance legislation provides for fees to be charged to marketing
authorisation holders (MAH). The impact assessment has evaluated the
various options for charging fees to MAHs for the pharmacovigilance activities performed
at the level of the EU involving the European Medicines Agency (EMA). The specific problems posed by the absence
of fees for pharmacovigilance activities of the EMA can be outlined under the
following areas. 1.1. Inexistence of financial instrument to implement the pharmacovigilance
legislation and inadequate funding for the related activities Prior to the amended pharmacovigilance legislation,
the EMA was only tasked with pharmacovigilance of products with an EU-wide
marketing authorisation. The new legislation has substantially increased the
scope of EMA competence in pharmacovigilance, by including also products which
are authorised via national procedures. The introduction of assessments to be
carried out at EU level in the context of specific pharmacovigilance procedures
laid down in the legislation i.e. for the assessment of PSUR[3]s, the assessment of PASS[4]s and assessment in case of
pharmacovigilance referrals,[5]
leads to a substantial workload with associated costs. Furthermore, the EU-wide
assessments require adequate EU-wide information technology tools. All the fees currently payable to the EMA
are laid down in Council Regulation (EC) No 297/95[6] which at present does not
include any provisions on specific fees for the pharmacovigilance activities
provided for in the legislation. Therefore, the legal instrument that would
enable the EMA to charge fees for these activities is missing. As a
consequence, the existing fee structure of EMA does not reflect the requirements
set out in the legislation and there is no adequate funding for
pharmacovigilance activities at EU level. This has direct consequences as
regards rapporteurs from the Member States (MS) who are currently not
remunerated for their assessment work within the EU procedures. This situation
is unsustainable even in the short term. 1.2. Lack
of transparency and clarity in the current situation of pharmacovigilance fees
across the EU In general, the existing fees for
pharmacovigilance activities in the EU do not reflect the requirements and
parameters set out in the 2010 pharmacovigilance legislation. At the level of the EMA, as described
above, there are no specific fees for the financing of EMA's pharmacovigilance
activities laid down in the 2010 pharmacovigilance legislation. At national level, some MS currently charge
fees for pharmacovigilance. For these MS it would be difficult to adapt, if
appropriate, their fees to the new pharmacovigilance legislation, unless the
fees for pharmacovigilance activities of the EMA are actually introduced. The
EU is not competent with respect to national fees and it is therefore
reasonable to expect that any adaptation of these fees, if considered necessary
by the MS, would only take place after the introduction of pharmacovigilance
fees collected by the EMA for EU-wide pharmacovigilance procedures. This would in particular allow MS to ensure that there is no double charging at national
level for the activities performed at the level of the EU for which a fee is
charged by the EMA. 2. Objectives The general objective of this initiative is
to ensure a high level of human health protection in the EU as well as to
promote the functioning of the internal market. The specific objective is to ensure the
proper implementation of the 2010 pharmacovigilance legislation through
defining the structure and the level of the fees charged to MAHs for
pharmacovigilance activities performed at the level of the EU. In order to ensure
that adequate funding for pharmacovigilance activities of the EMA is available,
such fees should allow the EMA to cover its estimated costs, including
remuneration of rapporteurs from the MS for the work that they provide. The fee
structure should also underpin a transparent, fair, activity-based and cost-based
fee system for pharmacovigilance activities of the EMA. 3. analysis of subsidiarity The EMA is a decentralised Agency of the EU[7] and hence decisions on its
funding, including through charging fees, are taken at the EU level. The pharmacovigilance legislation enables the
EMA to charge fees for pharmacovigilance. Only the Union can act to introduce new
types of fees for the Agency. 4. Policy options It is proposed to introduce a self-standing
legal instrument: Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council. Based on estimated annual costs of
pharmacovigilance at EU level, several policy options to collect
pharmacovigilance fees were considered. Option 1: No change to the current
situation (baseline scenario) No introduction of specific pharmacovigilance-related
fees to be charged by the EMA. Option 2: One annual flat fee covering
all pharmacovigilance activities An annual flat fee for all pharmacovigilance
activities of the EMA would be introduced and would be applicable to all MAHs
having medicinal products authorised in the EU. A decreased annual flat fee for medicinal
products for which the MAH is a small or medium-sized enterprise would be set
at the level of 60 % of the full annual flat fee. No fee would be charged for
medicinal products for which the MAH is a micro-enterprise. A fee reduction of 20% would be applied to
authorised generic, homeopathic and herbal medicinal
products and medicinal products authorised on grounds of well-established use. Option 3: A combination of separate fees
for procedure-based activities and an annual flat fee for all other activities Two types of fees would be charged. (1) Fees
for specific pharmacovigilance procedures that are provided for in the
legislation, i.e. for the assessment of PSURs, the assessment of PASSs and
assessment in case of pharmacovigilance referrals, would be charged to all MAHs
having a medicinal product that is subject to the procedure in question.
Additionally, (2) an annual flat fee would be charged to all MAHs having
medicinal products authorised in the EU. This additional annual flat fee would be
based only on the costs of pharmacovigilance activities of the EMA other that
those related to the specific procedures. Small and medium-sized enterprises would pay
60% of the full fee and no fee would be charged for medicinal products for
which the MAH is a micro-enterprise. A fee reduction of 20% in respect of the
annual flat fee would be applied to authorised generic,
homeopathic and herbal medicinal products and medicinal products authorised on
grounds of well-established medical use. However, where these medicinal
products are included in the pharmacovigilance procedures, the normal
procedure-based fee would apply. Option 4: Procedure-based fees only All costs of EU-level pharmacovigilance
activities would be used as a basis to set fees to be charged only to those MAHs
having a medicinal product involved in one of the three procedures outlined in
option 3. Small and medium-sized enterprises would pay
60 % of the full fee per procedure and no fee would be charged to MAH which are
micro-enterprises. 5. assessment of impacts In view of the operational objectives, the
assessment criteria are: ·
Transparency – a clear relationship between the
type and level of fee and the corresponding work carried out. ·
Fairness – MAHs should contribute to the
financing of pharmacovigilance activities on the basis of potential safety
concerns of their products and double charging should be avoided. ·
Stability – providing for a stable fee system
based on the highest possible degree of financial predictability and avoiding
variable remuneration of similar scientific services. ·
Simplicity – minimum additional administrative
burden. Option 1: No
change to the current situation MAHs would not benefit from the enhanced
and rationalised pharmacovigilance system introduced by the legislation. The
expected public health benefits would not be achieved. Moreover, stakeholders would
lack clarity as regards the sustainability and the funding of pharmacovigilance
activities in the EU. The EMA would not be in a position to
implement its new tasks with regard to the 2010 legislation, due to the absence
of adequate funding for the costs incurred by the performance of these tasks. As a consequence, the rapporteurs from the
Member States would not be remunerated by the EMA for their work within the EU-wide
procedures. Option 2: One annual flat fee covering
all pharmacovigilance activities Each MAH would be charged once per year for
all pharmacovigilance activities performed at EU level, based on the number of
its authorised products, as registered by the Agency. All products on the
market would be thus considered as potentially subject to safety concerns at
the same level and would contribute equally to the financing of the pharmacovigilance
activities at EU level. An annual flat fee is a predictable fee
that MAHs would be able to take account of in their financial planning. In comparison with options 3 and 4, option
2 is less transparent and the MAHs may perceive that they are charged twice for
the same work by EMA and by NCAs. As under options 3 and 4, rapporteurs would
be remunerated according to a fixed scale, which is based on estimated average
costs per evaluation procedure. Such a fee would mean a relatively stable,
predictable income for the Agency. As the collection of the entire fee revenue
for pharmacovigilance would be disconnected time-wise from the actual
pharmacovigilance procedures, the EMA would have to ensure financial management
of the total pharmacovigilance fee income throughout the year. Option 3: A combination of fees for
procedure-based activities and an annual flat fee for all other activities In this scenario, MAHs would be charged as
follows: ·
MAHs having at least one product involved in a
pharmacovigilance procedure would be charged a procedure-based fee. The fee
would be divided between MAH based on the proportion of products held by each
MAH involved. ·
all MAHs in the EU[8] (with
the exception of micro enterprises) would be charged an annual flat fee for their
authorised products. MAHs that are not involved in any EU
procedure would only pay the annual flat fee. As for options 2 and 4, rapporteurs from
NCAs would be remunerated with regards to pharmacovigilance procedures according
to a fixed scale per procedure, based on estimated average costs. In comparison with option 2, the exact
overall fee revenue is not entirely predictable given that the number of
procedures is more difficult to predict (except for PSURs). The procedure-based fees are proportionate
to the average workload. With regards to the annual flat fee component, it
would only cover non-procedure-related costs of the Agency which would
substantially lower its amount as compared to option 2. Option 4: Only procedure-based fees and
no annual flat fee Under this option, only MAHs whose products
are involved in a pharmacovigilance procedure would be charged a fee in
connection with the procedure. The fee levels per procedure would be higher
than those in option 3, where the total cost is covered by a combination of
procedure-based fees and an annual flat fee. The non-procedure-related EMA costs would
be distributed only amongst those MAHs that are included in a procedure. MAHs
that are not subject to any EU procedure would not contribute to the financing
of the system whilst potentially and indirectly benefiting from it. In this
respect, option 4 is likely to be less transparent, and less fair and
proportionate than option 3. As under options 2 and 3, rapporteurs from
NCAs would be remunerated according to the same fixed scale per procedure based
on average estimated costs. As opposed to option 2 and option 3, the
EMA would only have to charge a fee in relation to an EU procedure. 6. Comparison of the options The criteria for evaluating the options follow
the principles of effectiveness, efficiency and coherence. The specific
criteria against which the options are compared include (1) transparency of the
fee levels and structure, (2) stability and financial predictability, (3)
simplicity of the fee structure and (4) fairness and proportionality of fees. Based on the analysis, the individual
options were assigned scores of how well each option meets the criteria as
compared to the baseline scenario (option 1). Further, each criterion was assigned a relative
weight, to formalise its relative importance. The overall relative hierarchy among
the criteria suggests that 45 % of the objective weight is on fairness and
proportionality, 32 % on transparency, 14 % on stability and predictability and
9 % on simplicity. These values were subsequently used in making the decision
on the preferred option. The relative importance (weighting) of the
four criteria and its application to the analysis of individual options is
summarised in Table 1 below. The absolute score obtained determines the ranking
of the options in terms of achieving the objectives of this initiative. Table 1: Final comparison of options Options / Objectives || transparency || stability / predictability || simplicity || fairness / proportionality || Total Score Option 1 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 Option 2 || 3 || 4 || 3 || 5 || 15 Option 3 || 10 || 3 || 1 || 14 || 27 Option 4 || 6 || 1 || 2 || 9 || 19
Based on this analysis, it follows that option 3, i.e. the combination of
procedure-based fees and an annual flat fee, is the preferred option. This
option has been considered to be the most transparent, cost-based,
activity-based, fair and proportionate way of setting the new fees, in order to
cover the EMA’s costs, including remuneration of rapporteurs from MS. In this
way, the products being part of a pharmacovigilance procedure at EU level would
contribute to the financing of the cost of the procedure. At the same time, the
cost of general pharmacovigilance activities of the EMA, and only that part of
the overall cost, would be used as a basis for the annual flat fee, charged to
MAHs with respect to their authorised products. 7. Monitoring and evaluation The necessary monitoring information will
be provided by the EMA and would be linked to the implementation of its annual
budget. The annual activity report on the performance of the EMA would need to
be adapted to provide reliable performance information and key indicators
related to the activity. Based on this information, the Commission
will consider, if appropriate, whether there is a need to revise the level of fees
for pharmacovigilance. [1] Regulation (EU) No 1235/2010 amending Regulation (EC)
No 726/2004 and Directive 2010/84/EU amending Directive 2001/83/EC. [2] Directive 2012/26/EU, OJ L 299 of 27.10.2012, and
Regulation (EU) No 1027/2012, OJ L 316 of 14.11.2012. [3] Periodic Safety Update Reports. [4] Post-Authorisation Safety Studies. [5] A pharmacovigilance referral is a procedure in which
a safety concern is referred to the EMA and is examined at EU level with
respect to all concerned products authorised in the EU. [6] Council Regulation (EC) No 297/95 of 10 February 1995
on fees payable to the European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal
Products, OJ L 35, 15.2.1995, [7] The founding Regulation of the EMA is Regulation (EC)
No 726/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 March 2004, OJ
L 136, 30.4.2004 [8] as per information recorded by the EMA from the
database set up by Art 57(1)(l) of Regulation (EC) No 726/2004