Generic drugs contain the same active ingredients, in the very same strength, as brand-name drugs. When a medicine is first developed, the pharmaceutical company that discovers and markets it receives a patent on its new drug. The patent usually lasts for 20 years, to give the originating company a chance to recoup its research investment. After the patent expires, a generic version of the drug may become available. Generics are marketed under the drug’s chemical, or “generic,” name and meet the same FDA quality and effectiveness standards as the original.
Generic pharmaceutical manufacturers must prove to the FDA that their version of a drug:
Generic medicines have to be safe and effective to be approved by the FDA. The FDA also requires generic drug manufacturers to:
U.S. trademark laws don’t allow generic drugs to look exactly the same as another drug already on the market. For that reason, the color and shape of a generic pill may be different than the brand-name. Sometimes it will have a different coating or flavor. These “inert ingredients” are also carefully considered by the FDA. Differences in taste or appearance do not affect the drug’s safety or effectiveness.
Some brand-name manufacturers charge customers higher prices in the U.S. than they do in other countries, where drug prices are regulated. Drug research is costly, and patent protection gives brand-name manufacturers at least 20 years to recover research & development costs — costs that generic manufacturers do not have to recoup. Brand-name manufacturers collectively spend billions of dollars in marketing new drugs to doctors and the public; they send their representatives to visit with doctors in their offices; and they pay for physicians’ trips to meetings and conferences to talk about their drugs with other doctors. Generic manufacturers rarely spend money on advertising and marketing, another important way they keep their costs down.
In some cases, yes.
The easiest way to find out is simply to ask your doctor or pharmacist or go to Drugs@FDA, a search tool from the Food and Drug Administration to help identify whether your brand-name drug has any “therapeutic equivalent” versions.
Brand and generic medicines can be either prescribed by a physician with a prescription or purchased over the counter without a prescription. FDA oversees the manufacturing quality of all these medicines to ensure safety and efficacy. For brand and generic medicines that require a prescription from a physician, the manufacturing industry pays fees, in the form of user fees, to supplement FDA’s resources from Congress to timely review, inspect and approve drug products.
According to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA): “The U.S. drug supply chain remains one of the safest in the world.” Patients in the United States can be confident that the medicines they take are safe and effective. The process by which manufacturers and FDA assure that generic drugs all meet the same high-quality standards regardless of where they’re manufactured is working for patients.
FDA’s Office of Pharmaceutical Quality (OPQ) employs a staff responsible for regulating the quality of human drugs marketed in the United States. To ensure the American public has access to safe, effective, quality drugs, OPQ conducts assessments, inspections, research and surveillance of pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. The agency’s commitment to quality is rigorous:
Under federal law, prescription drugs in the U.S. must be shown to be both safe and effective prior to marketing. Generic drugs are approved if, among other things, they are shown to be chemically equivalent to the brand-name drug. Some proposals have been made recently in support of drug importation, but the Partnership for Safe Medicines warns, “importing non-FDA-approved medications outside the licensed and secure supply chain endangers patients.”
Brand-name and generic medicines alike are manufactured in countries the world over, including — but not limited to — Australia, Canada, China, India, France, Germany, Japan, Malta, Singapore, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States.
PharmacyChecker.com, a company that credentials international online pharmacies, recently analyzed the labels and packaging of brand-name medicines and found that 70% of top-selling brand-name drugs sold in U.S. pharmacies are manufactured outside the country.
There has been much discussion of onshoring more U.S. pharmaceutical manufacturing, and the generic industry is supportive of expanding its already robust presence in this country.
Since brand-name and generic drug production occurs in facilities in the United States (more than 60 billion doses of generic medicines a year are made in America) as well as around the world, the FDA conducts inspections wherever drugs are made.
Under the newest user fee agreement between the government and the generic industry, a “risk-based” approach has been implemented and now foreign facilities are inspected with greater frequency. Generic drug companies pay FDA approximately half-a-billion dollars per year in user fees, which have helped FDA provide for these inspections (among other things). These which include pre-approval inspections and unannounced surveillance inspections. AAM’s member companies strive to have their facilities “audit ready” 365 days a year.
Unlike FDA-approved generic medicines, fake drugs are potentially dangerous products that could increase resistance to pathogens and cause further illness, disability or even death. Counterfeit drugs are a real problem in many parts of the world, and we need ever-greater vigilance to stop their spread. Here in the United States, AAM supported congressional consideration and presidential signing of the Drug Quality and Security Act of 2013, which protects the U.S. public from fake and contaminated medicines. Read more about this issue from our partner organization Fight the Fakes.
No. FDA’s safety and effectiveness standards are the same for brand-name and generic drugs.
If, for any reason, the manufacturer and/or the FDA determines a medicine should be recalled, your pharmacist will contact you. All medicines, whether brand or generic, can be traced from the manufacturer, through the supply chain and the pharmacist to you, the patient. Trust your pharmacist or physician to reach out in a timely manner by phone, letter or other form of communication and begin working with you to determine alternative prescription options.
In nearly 150 manufacturing sites across the nation, more than 52,000 workers produce over 60 billion doses every year. The generics and biosimilars industry is a strong and expanding presence in the United States.
