Abstract

PurposeRegulatory convergence and cooperation among medical product regulatory authorities are essential to delivering safe and efficacious products quickly to patients. The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the urgent need for streamlined regulatory approval processes—which can be achieved in part through regulatory convergence and cooperation—both to accelerate availability of COVID-19 vaccines, treatments and diagnostics and to maintain the availability of the existing medical products unrelated to COVID-19.MethodsThe Asia–Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Life Sciences Innovation Forum (LSIF) established the Regulatory Harmonization Steering Committee (RHSC) in 2008 to advance regulatory convergence among APEC’s 21 member economies. Key performance indicators (KPIs) were developed in 2018 to measure convergence.ResultsThis paper reports survey results collected from KPI tracking in March 2020 from medical product regulatory authorities in all 21 APEC economies concerning areas of regulatory practice in which they could converge and cooperate. For example, from 2008 to 2020, there was a 14.3% increase in the number of APEC member economy regulatory authorities sharing Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) Certificates and a 28% increase in the number of regulatory authorities accepting multisite licenses in that same period. In addition, this paper explores how APEC economies could realize a maximum level of regulatory convergence and cooperation.ConclusionsConvergence efforts within APEC can accelerate availability of medical products including that related to COVID-19 vaccines, treatments and diagnostics, while maintaining the availability of the existing medical products unrelated to COVID-19 vaccines and treatment. New KPIs and capability building are to be considered to enable a new era of innovation ushered in by COVID-19.

Highlights

  • The Asia–Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Life Sciences Innovation Forum (LSIF) established the Regulatory Harmonization Steering Committee (RHSC) in 2008 to advance regulatory convergence among APEC’s 21 member economies1

  • In February 2018, RHSC representatives from medical product regulatory authorities (RAs) and the biopharmaceutical industry proposed a number of key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure the progress of regulatory convergence in the APEC region across four areas of best practice [8, 12]: 1. The removal of the Certificate of Pharmaceutical Product (CPP) when CPP is no longer used to replace full or partial review of importing economies to grant marketing authorization; 2

  • The results reported and collated are based on the responses provided by the official representatives of the member economies’ RAs

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Summary

Introduction

The Asia–Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Life Sciences Innovation Forum (LSIF) established the Regulatory Harmonization Steering Committee (RHSC) in 2008 to advance regulatory convergence among APEC’s 21 member economies. In February 2018, RHSC representatives from medical product regulatory authorities (RAs) and the biopharmaceutical industry proposed a number of key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure the progress of regulatory convergence in the APEC region across four areas of best practice [8, 12]: 1. The removal of the Certificate of Pharmaceutical Product (CPP) when CPP is no longer used to replace full or partial review of importing economies to grant marketing authorization; 2. The use of the Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) certificate issued by the Pharmaceutical Inspection Cooperation Scheme (PIC/S) network to reduce inspection burden among RAs and industry; 3. The use of risk-based evaluation based on the reliance practices

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