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Statutory Instrument 2006 No. 2125The Medicines for Human Use (Fees Amendments) Regulations 2006(The document as of February, 2008) STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS2006 No. 2125FEES AND CHARGESMEDICINESThe Medicines for Human Use (Fees Amendments) Regulations 2006
The Secretary of State for Health, the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety and the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, acting jointly, make the following Regulations in exercise of the powers conferred on them by section 1(1) and (2) of the Medicines Act 1971[1]or, as the case may be, the powers conferred by those provisions and now vested in them[2]. In so far as these Regulations are not made under section 1(1) and (2) of the Medicines Act 1971, the Secretary of State makes these Regulations in exercise of the powers conferred on her by section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972[3] and section 56(1) and (2) of the Finance Act 1973[4]. The Secretary of State has been designated for the purposes of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972 in relation to medicinal products[5]. The Treasury has consented to the making of these Regulations as required by section 1(1) of the Medicines Act 1971 and section 56(1) of the Finance Act 1973. In accordance with section 129(6) of the Medicines Act 1968[6], the Secretary of State for Health, the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety and the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development have consulted with such organisations as appear to them to be representative of interests likely to be substantially affected by these Regulations. Citation, commencement and interpretation 1.—(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Medicines for Human Use (Fees Amendments) Regulations 2006 and shall come into force on 1st September 2006. (2) In these Regulations—
Amendment of regulation 2 of the of the General Fees Regulations
Amendment of Schedule 1 to the General Fees Regulations
(ii) in paragraph (b), after "of right)" insert ", a certificate of registration"; and (c) for the definition of "TSE risk excipient from a new source" substitute—
(b) no European Pharmacopoeia certificate of suitability covering the excipient has been submitted with the application;". (3) In Part II (capital fees for applications for authorizations, licences and certificates)—
(b) after paragraph 4, insert the following paragraph—
(2) In connection with any other application for a marketing authorization for a national homoeopathic product, the fee payable under regulation 4(a) shall be the amount set out in Column (3) in the Table below opposite the description in Column (1) appropriate to that application. (3) This paragraph does not apply to an application which is a mutual recognition procedure incoming application or a decentralised procedure application. Table
(4) Each reference in sub-paragraphs (5) to (7) to an amount payable under sub-paragraph (1) or (2) in respect of an application refers to the amount payable under that sub-paragraph in respect of an application of the kind in question. (5) Where an application relates to a national homoeopathic product which is manufactured using a method of sterilisation—
(b) not referred to in the European Pharmacopoeia or any national pharmacopoeia of a member State, an amount of £2,000 shall be payable in addition to the amount payable under sub-paragraph (1) or (2) in respect of that application.
(b) in relation to a homoeopathic stock, identical as regards the source, composition and preparation of the stock and the test which it is required to undergo;
(ii) to which the applicant has, by the holder of the certificate of registration or the homoeopathic marketing authorization which relates to it, been authorised in writing to make reference for the purposes of his application; or (b) where more than one application is made by the same applicant on the same occasion in respect of products of identical formulations, for the purposes of the second and any subsequent of those applications which the licensing authority considers, the formulation of the product to which the first of those applications which is considered by the licensing authority relates; and
(ii) in respect of which another person holds a certificate of registration or a homoeopathic marketing authorization to which, for the purposes of his application, the applicant has been authorised in writing to make reference by the person (or, if more than one, each of the persons) who supplied information to the licensing authority in connection with the application for the marketing authorization which relates to that product.". (4) In Part III (capital fees for applications for variations of authorizations, licences and certificates)[10]—
(b) the replacement of a reagent indirectly associated with the manufacturing process of the product or which disappears from that process with a comparable reagent, (c) a change to the qualitative composition of the container or other form of packaging immediately in contact with the product, (d) a change to the method of manufacture of a homoeopathic stock included in the product, (e) a change to the specification of any reagent of excipient used in the manufacture of the product, (f) a change to the finished product specification of the product, (g) a change to the test procedure for any raw material used in the manufacture of the product, (h) a change to the test procedure for the product, (i) a change to the test procedure for the container or other form of packaging immediately in contact with the product, (j) a change to comply with a supplement to the European Pharmacopoeia or any national pharmacopoeia of a member State, (k) a change to the shape of the container in which the product may be placed on the market, (l) an additional pack size in which the product may be placed on the market, (n) a change to the approved storage conditions for the product, (o) a change to the shelf life of an unopened container of the product after the container has been opened for the first time, (p) a change to the dimensions of an approved dosage form of the product (for example, tablets), or (q) a change following modification to the manufacturing authorization referred to in Article 40 of the 2001 Directive; and". (b) after paragraph 5A, insert the following paragraph—
(b) where the application is a new indication variation application, £350; and (c) for any other application, £110.". Amendment of Schedule 3 to the General Fees Regulations
(b) in column (2), at the end insert the following entry—
Amendment of the Homoeopathic Regulations
(ii) in sub-paragraph (ii), after "certificate of registration" insert "or the homoeopathic marketing authorization"; and (d) in the definition of "repeat stock", in paragraph (a)—
(ii) in sub-paragraph (ii)—
(bb) after "the certificate of registration" insert "or homoeopathic marketing authorization".
(This note is not part of the Regulations) These Regulations make further amendments to the Medicines (Products for Human Use—Fees) Regulations 1995 ("the principal Regulations") and the Medicines (Homoeopathic Medicinal Products for Human Use) Regulations 1994 ("the Homoeopathic Regulations"). The principal Regulations make provision for the fees payable under the Medicines Act 1971, and other fees payable in respect of Community obligations, relating to marketing authorizations, licences and certificates in respect of medicinal products for human use. Regulations 2 to 4 amend the principal Regulations so as to provide for the capital fees payable in connection with an application for the grant or variation of a marketing authorization for a "national homoeopathic medicinal product", and the periodic fee payable in connection with the holding of such an authorization. A national homoeopathic product is homoeopathic medicinal product which is not eligible for the procedure for registration under the Homoeopathic Regulations and is indicated only for the treatment of minor symptoms or conditions. The Homoeopathic Regulations implemented in part Council Directive 92/73/EEC[12] (now repealed and re-enacted in Directive 2001/83/EC[13]) by introducing a new registration procedure for the marketing of certain homoeopathic medicinal products for human use. The Homoeopathic Regulations also make provision for capital fees payable for applications for the grant and variation of certificates of registration. Regulation 5 amends Schedule 2 to the Regulations (fees for application for the grant of certificates of inspection) so that reduced fees are payable in respect of applications for certificates of registration in respect of products that have an identical formulation to, or are prepared from a homoeopathic stock identical to another homoeopathic stock used in the preparation of, a national homoeopathic product in respect of which a marketing authorization has been granted. A full Regulatory Impact Assessment of the effect that this instrument will have on the costs of business has been placed in the libraries of both Houses of Parliament and copies may be obtained from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, Market Towers, 1 Nine Elms Lane, London SW8 5NQ. Notes: [1]1971 c.69; as amended by section 21 of the Health and Medicines Act 1988 (c.49). By virtue of section 1(3) of the 1971 Act, expressions used in that section have the same meaning as in the Medicines Act 1968 (c.67); see therefore section 1(1) of the 1968 Act, as amended by article 2(2) of, and Schedule 1 to, S.I. 1969/388, by article 5 of, and the Schedule to, S.I. 1999/3142, and by article 5(1) of, and paragraph 15 of Schedule 1 to, S.I. 2002/794, which contains a definition of "the Ministers" which is relevant to the powers being exercised in the making of these Regulations. See also regulation 9(12) of the Medicines for Human Use (Marketing Authorisations Etc.) Regulations 1994 (S.I. 1994/3144), by virtue of which the references in section 1(1) and (2)(b) of the 1971 Act to a licence under Part II of the 1968 Act include reference to a marketing authorization under the 1994 Regulations.back [2]In the case of the Secretary of State, by virtue of article 2(1) of, and paragraph 1 of the Schedule to, S.I. 1999/3142 and article 3(1)(c) and (7) of, and paragraph 15 of Schedule 1 to, S.I. 2002/794; and in the case of the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety and the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, by virtue of the powers vested in the Ministers in charge of those Departments by virtue of section 95(5) of, and paragraph 10 of Schedule 12 to, the Northern Ireland Act 1998 (c.47), which may now be exercised by the Departments by virtue of section 1(8) of, and paragraph 4(1)(b) of the Schedule to, the Northern Ireland Act 2000 (c.1); the Departments were renamed by virtue of Article 3(4) and (6) of S.I. 1999/283 (N.I. 1).back [3]1972 c.68.back [4]1973 c.51.back [5]S.I. 1972/181.back [6]1968 c.67; section 129(6) was extended by section 1(3)(b) of the Medicines Act 1971.back [7]S.I. 1995/1116, as amended by S.I. 1996/683, 1998/574, 1999/566, 2000/592 and 3031, 2001/795, 2002/236 and 542, 2003/625 and 2321, 2004/666 and 1157, 2005/1124 and 2979, and 2006/494.back [8]S.I. 1994/105; relevant amending instruments are S.I. 1996/482, 2005/2753 and 2006/494.back [9]()S.I. 1994/3144; see the definition of "the 1994 Regulations" in regulation 2(1) of the General Fees Regulations. Regulation 4(1B) was inserted by S.I. 2006/1952.back [10]Part III of Schedule 1 was amended by S.I.1996/683, 1998/574, 1999/566, 2000/592, 2001/795, 2002/236 and 542, 2003/625 and 2321, 2004/666 and 1157 and 2005/2979.back [11]See the definition of "Marketing Authorisation Regulations" in section 132(1) of the Medicines Act 1968 (c.67), as inserted by S.I. 2005/1094.back [12]OJ No. L 297, 13.10.1992, p.8.back [13]See articles 1(5), 13 to 16, 53, 68, 69, 85, 100, 119 and 124.back ISBN0 11 074964 2 -- Back --
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