Ombudsman calls for more transparency concerning medicines for children
The European Ombudsman, P. Nikiforos
Diamandouros, has called on the European Medicines Agency (EMA) to
increase the transparency of its procedures for ensuring that children can
benefit from new medicines. This follows a complaint from two pharmaceutical
companies which were required by EMA to test the suitability for children of
their heart failure medicine. They alleged unfair treatment because other
pharmaceutical companies had been exempted from the obligation to test similar
products. The Ombudsman concluded that EMA did not properly disclose its
assessments in these cases. He called on the Agency to make its procedures more
transparent in the future.
Testing medicines to treat children suffering from heart
failure
In order to protect better the health of children, the
EU adopted a Paediatric Regulation in 2006. The Regulation includes an
obligation requiring pharmaceutical companies to conduct tests to determine
whether and how their medicines can be used to treat children. EMA, based in
London , is
responsible for ensuring that pharmaceutical companies comply with their
obligations under the Paediatric Regulation.
In October 2009, two pharmaceutical companies lodged a
complaint with the Ombudsman because EMA was obliging them to test how their
heart failure medicine could be used to treat children. They alleged
discrimination, since EMA had exempted two similar medicines from the
requirement to be subjected to such tests.
EMA stated that the limited number of children
suffering from heart failure meant that only one heart failure medicine could be
tested effectively. According to EMA, the complainants' medicine was the most
promising, and thus the most appropriate medicine to test.
The Ombudsman conducted an in-depth investigation into
the assessment procedures for the different medicines. He came to the conclusion
that EMA was indeed entitled to oblige the complainants to conduct the tests.
However, he criticised EMA's failure to ensure adequate transparency in its
decision-making process. He called on EMA to document fully and disclose its
assessments in the future and also to introduce relevant guidelines in this
respect. He asked EMA to reply to his recommendation by 30 September
2012.
The European Ombudsman investigates complaints about
maladministration in the EU institutions and bodies. Any EU citizen, resident,
or an enterprise or association in a Member State , can lodge a complaint with the
Ombudsman. The Ombudsman offers a fast, flexible, and free means of solving
problems with the EU administration.
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