Course Description:
This regulatory compliance training will give the participants a detailed presentation on regulatory affairs of human pharmaceuticals (drugs and biologics) in the United States to work with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
This 2-day interactive course on FDA regulatory affairs includes FDA submissions; INDs, NDAs, BLAs, aNDAs, biosimilars and post-approval submissions. Each item of these submissions will be presented, analyzed, and discussed in conjunction with relation to FDA regulations, guidance’s, and precedents. It will also cover some international aspects of regulatory affairs with regards to FDA’s adherence to International Conference on Harmonization (ICH) guidance.
In addition to FDA submissions, this course on regulatory affairs will also include:
- Interactions, and meetings with the FDA
- Technical aspects of regulatory affairs
- Chemistry Manufacturing and Controls (CMC/GMP)
- Nonclinical (animal safety studies, GLP)
- Clinical (human clinical studies, GCP)
- Submission styles of the Common Technical Document (CTD) formatting
- Electronic submissions (eCTD)
Learning Objectives:
- History/evolution of the FDA
- How to develop strategies for drug development with FDA
- Requirements for obtaining clearance to start clinical trials via an Investigational New Drug (IND)
- How to contact and request meetings with FDA
- Non-clinical (animal safety studies) for clinical phase and marketing applications
- Clinical (human clinical trials) for clinical phase and marketing applications
- Chemistry manufacturing and controls (CMC) for clinical phase and marketing applications
- How to compile, publish, and submit a IND, NDA, BLA, aNDA, and Biosimilars
- Electronic submissions
- Acts, Directives, Regulations, Guidances, and Precedents
- FDA regulatory fees
- How and why FDA has different requirements for drugs vs. biologics
- Regulatory expectations during each stage of drug development
- What a regulatory person should know about GMPs, GLPs, and GCPs
- FDA regulatory enforcement
- FDA’s accelerated regulatory review processes
- Fast Track
- Priority Review
- Orphan Drug Status
- Accelerated Approval
- Breakthrough Therapies
- Therapies to Combat Bioterrorism
- How FDA reviews your application
- Generics (including biosimilars)
- Post marketing commitments
- Various FDA specific topics: Drug Master Files (DMF), advertising basics, naming drugs, Freedom of Information Act, National Drug Code Number (NDC number), PDUFA, GDUFA, FDAsia, Special Protocol Assessments, dispute resolution, and more.
Who Will Benefit:
The course will benefit the participants from the following categories:
- Regulatory affairs professionals
- Quality and manufacturing professionals
- Clinical development professionals
- Regulatory authorities
- Business and marketing professionals
- People investing in FDA-regulated product development projects
Course Outline:
Day One (8:30 AM – 4:30 PM) | Day Two (8:30 AM – 4:30 PM) | ||
Registration Process: 8:30 AM – 9:00 AM Session Start Time: 9:00 AM
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Meet Your Instructor
Ronald H. Carlson Regulatory Affairs and Quality Consultant, Carlson Consulting Ronald H. Carlson Ph.D. has more than 25 years of pharmaceutical industry experience in Regulatory Affairs and Quality. His experience is in the areas of both drugs and biologics in both small and large companies. While he was Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Quality at InSite Vision, Mr. Carlson had overall responsibility for the NDA approval of AzaSite. He has contributed to the CMC section of several BLAs (Activase, Raptiva, Actimmune, and Pulmozyme). He has experience with all phases of drug development covering more than 10 INDs as well as regulatory strategy. His background is as a generalist thus has regulatory expertise in clinical, non-clinical, CMC, and regulatory operations (including eCTD). He has interfaced with FDA on regulatory submissions as well as audits (GMP, GCP, and GLP). |
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- Fill this form with attendee details & payment details
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Your Registration for the seminar is subject to following terms and conditions. If you need any clarification before registering for this seminar please call us @ +1-888-717-2436 or email us @ [email protected]
Payment:
Payment is required before 2 days of the date of the conference. We accept American Express, Visa and MasterCard. Make checks payable to MetricStream Inc. ( our parent company)
Cancellations and Substitutions:
Written cancellations through fax or email (from the person who has registered for this conference) received at least 10 calendar days prior to the start date of the event will receive a refund — less a $200 administration fee. No cancellations will be accepted — nor refunds issued — within 10 calendar days from the start date of the event.
On request by email or fax (before the seminar) a credit for the amount paid minus administration fees ($200) will be transferred to any future ComplianceOnline event and a credit note will be issued.
Substitutions may be made at any time. No-shows will be charged the full amount.
We discourage onsite registrations, however if you wish to register onsite payment to happen through credit card immediately or check to be submitted onsite. Conference material will be given on the spot if it is available after distributing to other attendees. In case it is not available we will send the material after the conference is over.
In the event ComplianceOnline cancels the seminar, ComplianceOnline is not responsible for any airfare, hotel, other costs or losses incurred by registrants. Some topics and speakers may be subject to change without notice.
Attendance confirmation and Documents to carry to the seminar venue:
After we receive the payment from the registered attendee an electronic event pass will be sent to the email address associated with the registrant before 5 working days from the seminar date. Please bring the pass to the venue of the event.
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Local Attractions
Windy
One of the more breathtaking scenes on the lake is this tall ship approaching the docks at Navy Pier. The 148-foot four-masted schooner (and its new sister ship, the Windy II ) sets sail for 90-minute cruises two to five times a day, both day and evening. (Because the boats are sometimes booked by groups, the schedule changes each week; call first to confirm sailing times). The boats are at the whims of the wind, so every cruise charts a different course. Passengers are welcome to help raise and trim the sails and occasionally take turns at the ship's helm (with the captain standing close by). The boats are not accessible for people with disabilities.
Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum
The building may be historic (it was the first planetarium in the Western Hemisphere), but some of the attractions here will captivate the most jaded video-game addict.
Your first stop should be the modern Sky Pavilion, where the don't-miss experience is the StarRider Theater. Settle down under the massive dome, and you'll take a half-hour interactive virtual-reality trip through the Milky Way and into deep space, featuring a computer-generated 3-D-graphics projection system and controls in the armrest of each seat. Six high-resolution video projectors form a seamless image above your head -- you'll feel as if you're literally floating in space. If you're looking for more entertainment, the Sky Theater shows movies with an astronomical bent; recent shows have included Secrets of Saturn and Mars Now!
Arlington International Racecourse
With its gleaming-white, palatial, six-story grandstand and lush gardens, this racecourse is one of the most beautiful showcases for thoroughbred horse racing in the world. Its storied history stretches back to 1927, and such equine stars as Citation, Secretariat, and Cigar have graced the track. The annual Arlington Million (the sport's first million-dollar race, held in mid-Aug) attracts top jockeys, trainers, and horses and is part of the World Series Racing Championship, which includes the Breeders Cup races. Arlington's race days are thrilling to behold, with all of racing's time-honored pageantry on display -- from the bugler in traditional dress to the parade of jockeys.
Art Institute of Chicago
You can't -- and shouldn't -- miss the Art Institute. (You really have no excuse, since it's conveniently located right on Michigan Ave. in the heart of downtown.) No matter what medium or century interests you, the Art Institute has something in its collection to fit the bill. Japanese ukiyo-e prints, ancient Egyptian bronzes, Greek vases, 19th-century British photography, masterpieces by most of the greatest names in 20th-century sculpture, and modern American textiles are just some of the works on display, but for a general overview of the museum's collection, take the free "Highlights of the Art Institute" tour Saturday and Sunday.
Auditorium Building and Theatre
A truly grand theater with historic-landmark status, the Auditorium gives visitors a taste of late-19th-century Chicago opulence. Because it's still a working theater -- not a museum -- it's not always open to the public during the day; to make sure you'll get in, schedule a guided tour, which are offered on Mondays at 10am and noon.
Designed and built in 1889 by Louis Sullivan and Dankmar Adler, the 4,000-seat Auditorium was a wonder of the world: the heaviest (110,000 tons) and most massive modern edifice on earth, the most fireproof building ever constructed, and the tallest building in Chicago. It was also the first large-scale building to be lit by electricity, and its theater was the first in the country to install air-conditioning. Originally the home of the Chicago Opera Company, Sullivan and Adler's masterpiece is defined by powerful arches lit by thousands of bulbs and features Sullivan's trademark ornamentation -- in this case, elaborate golden stenciling and gold plaster medallions. It's equally renowned for otherworldly acoustics and unobstructed sightlines.