New Drug Application

The New Drug Application (NDA) is the vehicle used by drug sponsors to formally propose the FDA approval of a new pharmaceutical drug for sale and marketing in the United States. For several decades, every new drug on the U.S. market has been the subject of an approved NDA. Data gathered through animal studies and human clinical trials (for an Investigational New Drug) become part of the NDA.[1]

GOALS OF THE NDA

The NDA should provide sufficient information for the FDA reviewer to determine:

  • Whether a drug is safe and effective, relative to its proposed use, and whether drug benefits outweigh any risks.
  • Whether the drug’s proposed labeling/package insert is appropriate, and what information that insert should contain.
  • Whether the manufacturing methods to make the drug and the controls used for quality assurance purposes are adequate for maintaining the drug’s identity, strength, quality, and purity.

PERTINENT INFORMATION

The documentation for an NDA is intended to tell the story of the drug’s development, from beginning to end. Information required by the FDA may include:

  • What happened during clinical tests and trials
  • List of drug ingredients
  • Results of animal studies
  • Information about how the drug behaves in the body
  • How the drug is manufactured
  • How the drug is processed
  • How the drug is packaged

GUIDANCE DOCUMENTS, LAWS, AND REGULATIONS

There are a number of documents that may be helpful to those looking to prepare and submit an NDA. Applicable laws and regulations include:

The list below includes additional guidance documents that may be useful in the preparation of an NDA:

NDA REVIEW PROCESS

The following graphic provides insight into the NDA review process

Source: CDER, 2014[2]

Updated by Theresa Pipher, November 2020