[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 148 (Monday, August 3, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46012-46015]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-18909]


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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Food and Drug Administration

[Docket No. FDA-2015-N-0007]


Animal Generic Drug User Fee Rates and Payment Procedures for 
Fiscal Year 2016

AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.

ACTION: Notice.

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SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing the fee 
rates and payment procedures for fiscal year (FY) 2016 generic new 
animal drug user fees. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the 
FD&C Act), as amended by the Animal Generic Drug User Fee Amendments of 
2013 (AGDUFA II), authorizes FDA to collect user fees for certain 
abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs, for certain 
generic new animal drug products, and for certain sponsors of such 
abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs and/or 
investigational submissions for generic new animal drugs. This notice 
establishes the fee rates for FY 2016.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Visit FDA's Web site at http://www.fda.gov/ForIndustry/UserFees/AnimalGenericDrugUserFeeActAGDUFA/default.htm, or contact Lisa Kable, Center for Veterinary Medicine 
(HFV-10), Food and Drug Administration, 7519 Standish Pl., Rockville, 
MD 20855, 240-402-6888. For general questions, you may also email the 
Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) at [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

    Section 741 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 379j-21) establishes three 
different types of user fees: (1) Fees for certain types of abbreviated 
applications for generic new animal drugs; (2) annual fees for certain 
generic new animal drug products; and (3) annual fees for certain 
sponsors of abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs and/
or investigational submissions for generic new animal drugs (21 U.S.C. 
379j-21(a)). When certain conditions are met, FDA will waive or reduce 
fees for generic new animal drugs intended solely to provide for a 
minor use or minor species indication (21 U.S.C. 379j-21(d)).
    For FY 2014 through FY 2018, the FD&C Act establishes aggregate 
yearly base revenue amounts for each of these fee categories. Base 
revenue amounts established for fiscal years after FY 2014 may be 
adjusted for workload. The target revenue amounts for each fee category 
for FY 2016, after the adjustment for workload, are as follows: For 
application fees the target revenue amount is $2,426,000; for product 
fees the target revenue amount is $3,639,000; and for sponsor fees the 
target revenue amount is $3,639,000.
    For FY 2016, the generic new animal drug user fee rates are: 
$233,300 for each abbreviated application for a generic new animal drug 
other than those subject to the criteria in section 512(d)(4) of the 
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360b(d)(4)); $116,650 for each abbreviated 
application for a generic new animal drug subject to the criteria in 
section 512(d)(4); $8,705 for each generic new animal drug product; 
$83,800 for each generic new animal drug sponsor paying 100 percent of 
the sponsor fee; $62,850 for each generic new animal drug sponsor 
paying 75 percent of the sponsor fee; and $41,900 for each generic new 
animal drug sponsor paying 50 percent of the sponsor fee. FDA will 
issue invoices for FY 2016 product and sponsor fees by December 31, 
2015. These fees will be due by January 31, 2016. The application fee 
rates are effective for all abbreviated applications for a generic new 
animal drug submitted on or after October 1, 2015, and will remain in 
effect through September 30, 2016. Applications will not be accepted 
for review until FDA has received full payment of related application 
fees and any other fees owed under the Animal Generic Drug User Fee 
program.

II. Revenue Amount for FY 2016

A. Statutory Fee Revenue Amounts

    AGDUFA II, Title II of Public Law 113-14, specifies that the 
aggregate revenue amount for FY 2016 for abbreviated application fees 
is $1,857,000 and each of the other two generic new animal drug user 
fee categories, annual product fees and annual sponsor fees, is 
$2,786,000 each (see 21 U.S.C. 379j-21(b)).

B. Inflation Adjustment to Fee Revenue Amount

    The amounts established in AGDUFA II for each year for FY 2014 
through FY 2018 include an inflation adjustment; therefore, no further 
inflation adjustment is required.

C. Workload Adjustment Fee Revenue Amount

    For each FY beginning after FY 2014, AGDUFA provides that statutory 
fee revenue amounts shall be further adjusted to reflect changes in 
review workload. (See 21 U.S.C. 379j-21(c)(2).)
    FDA calculated the average number of each of the four types of 
applications and submissions specified in the workload adjustment 
provision (abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs, 
manufacturing supplemental abbreviated applications for generic new 
animal drugs, investigational generic new animal drug study 
submissions, and investigational generic new animal drug protocol 
submissions) received over the 5-year period that ended on September 
30, 2013 (the base years), and the average number of each of these 
types of applications and submissions over the most recent 5-year 
period that ended on June 30, 2015.
    The results of these calculations are presented in the first two 
columns in table 1. Column 3 reflects the percent change in workload 
over the two 5-year periods. Column 4 shows the weighting factor for 
each type of application, reflecting how much of the total FDA generic 
new animal drug review workload was accounted for by each type of 
application or submission in the table during the most recent 5 years. 
Column 5 is the weighted percent change in each category of workload 
and was derived by multiplying the weighting factor in each line in 
column 4 by the percent change from the base years in column 3. At the 
bottom right of table 1, the sum of the values in column 5 is 
calculated, reflecting a total change in workload of 30.6305 percent 
for FY 2016. This is the workload adjuster for FY 2016.

[[Page 46013]]



                                                         Table 1--Workload Adjuster Calculation
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                                                            Column 1  5-year                                                                Column 5
                     Application type                        average  (base    Column 2  latest  Column 3  percent       Column 4       weighted percent
                                                                 years)         5-year average         change        weighting factor        change
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Abbreviated New Animal Drug Applications (ANADAs)........               25.0               29.2                 17             0.3741             6.2855
Manufacturing Supplements ANADAs.........................              128.0              143.2                 12             0.2780             3.3015
Generic Investigational Study Submissions................               23.0               39.2                 70             0.2217            15.6183
Generic Investigational Protocol Submissions.............               17.2               24.6                 43             0.1261             5.4252
FY 2016 AGDUFA Workload Adjuster.........................  .................  .................  .................  .................            30.6305
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Over the last year FDA has continued to see more sponsors getting 
involved in the generic animal drug approval process including pioneer 
sponsors. This has contributed to small sustained increases in the 
number of ANADAs, manufacturing supplements, and protocols submitted. 
Additionally, more sponsors continue to pursue drug approvals that do 
not qualify for a waiver of the requirement to conduct an in vivo 
bioequivalence study. For this reason we are seeing a large sustained 
increase in the number of generic investigational new animal drug study 
submissions.
    As a result, the statutory revenue amount for each category of fees 
for FY 2016 ($1,857,000 for application fees and $2,786,000 for both 
product and sponsor fees) must now be increased by 30.6305 percent, for 
a total fee revenue target in FY 2016 of $9,705,000 (rounded to the 
nearest thousand dollars) for fees from all three categories. The 
target for application fee revenue is $1,857,000 times 30.6305 percent, 
for a total of $2,426,000, rounded to the nearest thousand. The target 
for product fee revenue is $2,786,000 times 30.6305 percent, for a 
total of $3,639,000, rounded to the nearest thousand dollars, and the 
target for sponsor fee revenue is the same as for product fees 
($3,639,000, rounded to the nearest thousand dollars).

III. Abbreviated Application Fee Calculations for FY 2016

    The term ``abbreviated application for a generic new animal drug'' 
is defined in 21 U.S.C. 379j-21(k)(1).

A. Application Fee Revenues and Numbers of Fee-Paying Applications

    The application fee must be paid for abbreviated applications for a 
generic new animal drug that is subject to fees under AGDUFA and that 
is submitted on or after July 1, 2008. The application fees are to be 
set so that they will generate $2,426,000 in fee revenue for FY 2016. 
This is the amount set out in the statute (21 U.S.C. 379j-21(b)(1)) 
after applying the workload adjuster.
    To set fees for abbreviated applications for generic new animal 
drugs to realize $2,426,000, FDA must first make some assumptions about 
the number of fee-paying abbreviated applications it will receive 
during FY 2016.
    The Agency knows the number of applications that have been 
submitted in previous years. That number fluctuates from year to year. 
FDA is making estimates and applying different assumptions for two 
types of full fee submissions: Original submissions of abbreviated 
applications for generic new animal drugs and ``reactivated'' 
submissions of abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs. 
Any original submissions of abbreviated applications for generic new 
animal drugs that were received by FDA before July 1, 2008, were not 
assessed fees (21 U.S.C. 379j-21(a)(1)(A)). Some of these non-fee-
paying submissions were later resubmitted on or after July 1 because 
the initial submission was not approved by FDA (i.e., FDA marked the 
submission as incomplete and requested additional non-administrative 
information) or because the original submission was withdrawn by the 
sponsor. Abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs 
resubmitted on or after July 1, 2008, are subject to user fees. In this 
notice, FDA refers to these resubmitted applications as ``reactivated'' 
applications.
    Also, under AGDUFA II, an abbreviated application for an animal 
generic drug subject to the criteria in section 512(d)(4) of the FD&C 
Act and submitted on or after October 1, 2013, shall be subject to 50 
percent of the fee applicable to all other abbreviated applications for 
a generic new animal drug.
    Regarding original submissions of abbreviated applications for 
generic new animal drugs, FDA is assuming that the number of 
applications that will pay fees in FY 2016 will equal the average 
number of submissions over the 5 most recent completed years of AGDUFA 
(FY 2010-FY 2014). FDA believes that this is a reasonable approach 
after 6 complete years of experience with this program.
    The average number of original submissions of abbreviated 
applications for generic new animal drugs over the 5 most recently 
completed years is 8.6 applications not subject to the criteria in 
section 512(d)(4) of the FD&C Act and 3.6 submissions subject to the 
criteria in section 512(d)(4). Each of the submissions described under 
section 512(d)(4) of the FD&C Act pays 50 percent of the fee paid by 
the other applications and will be counted as one half of a fee. Adding 
all of the applications not subject to the criteria in section 
512(d)(4) of the FD&C Act and 50 percent of the number which are 
subject to such criteria results in a total of 10.4 anticipated full 
fees.
    Under AGDUFA I, FDA estimated the number of reactivations of 
abbreviated applications for generic new animal drugs which had been 
originally submitted prior to July 1, 2008. That number has decreased 
over the years to the point that FDA no longer expects to receive any 
reactivations of applications initially submitted prior to July 1, 
2008, and will include no provision for them in its fee estimates. 
Should such a submission be made, the submitter will be expected to pay 
the appropriate fee.
    Based on the previous assumptions, FDA is estimating that it will 
receive a total of 10.4 fee-paying generic new animal drug applications 
in FY 2016 (8.6 original applications paying a full fee and 3.6 
applications paying a half fee).

B. Application Fee Rates for FY 2016

    FDA must set the fee rates for FY 2016 so that the estimated 10.4 
abbreviated applications that pay the fee will generate a total of 
$2,426,000. To generate this amount, the fee for a generic new animal 
drug application, rounded to the nearest hundred dollars, will have to 
be $233,300, and for those applications that are subject to the

[[Page 46014]]

criteria set forth in section 512(d)(4) of the FD&C Act 50 percent of 
that amount, or $116,650.

IV. Generic New Animal Drug Product Fee Calculations for FY 2016

A. Product Fee Revenues and Numbers of Fee-Paying Products

    The generic new animal drug product fee (also referred to as the 
product fee) must be paid annually by the person named as the applicant 
in an abbreviated application or supplemental abbreviated application 
for a generic new animal drug product submitted for listing under 
section 510 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360), and who had an abbreviated 
application or supplemental abbreviated application for a generic new 
animal drug product pending at FDA after September 1, 2008 (see 21 
U.S.C. 379j-21(a)(2)). The term ``generic new animal drug product'' 
means each specific strength or potency of a particular active 
ingredient or ingredients in final dosage form marketed by a particular 
manufacturer or distributor, which is uniquely identified by the 
labeler code and product code portions of the national drug code, and 
for which an abbreviated application for a generic new animal drug or 
supplemental abbreviated application for a generic new animal drug has 
been approved (21 U.S.C. 379j-21(k)(6)). The product fees are to be set 
so that they will generate $3,639,000 in fee revenue for FY 2016, after 
workload adjustment ($2,786,000 times 1.306305, rounded to the nearest 
thousand dollars).
    To set generic new animal drug product fees to realize $3,639,000, 
FDA must make some assumptions about the number of products for which 
these fees will be paid in FY 2016. FDA gathered data on all generic 
new animal drug products that have been submitted for listing under 
section 510 of the FD&C Act and matched this to the list of all persons 
who FDA estimated would have an abbreviated new animal drug application 
or supplemental abbreviated application pending after September 1, 
2008. As of June 2015, FDA estimates a total of 418 products submitted 
for listing by persons who had an abbreviated application for a generic 
new animal drug or supplemental abbreviated application for a generic 
new animal drug pending after September 1, 2008. Based on this, FDA 
believes that a total of 418 products will be subject to this fee in FY 
2016.
    In estimating the fee revenue to be generated by generic new animal 
drug product fees in FY 2016, FDA is assuming that no products invoiced 
will qualify for minor use/minor species fee waiver (see 21 U.S.C. 
379j-21(d)). FDA has changed the estimate of the percentage of products 
that will not pay fees to zero percent this year, based on historical 
data over the past 5 completed years of the AGDUFA program.
    Accordingly, the Agency estimates that a total of 418 products will 
be subject to product fees in FY 2016.

B. Product Fee Rates for FY 2016

    FDA must set the fee rates for FY 2016 so that the estimated 418 
products that pay fees will generate a total of $3,639,000. To generate 
this amount will require the fee for a generic new animal drug product, 
rounded to the nearest $5, to be $8,705.

V. Generic New Animal Drug Sponsor Fee Calculations for FY 2016

A. Sponsor Fee Revenues and Numbers of Fee-Paying Sponsors

    The generic new animal drug sponsor fee (also referred to as the 
sponsor fee) must be paid annually by each person who: (1) Is named as 
the applicant in an abbreviated application for a generic new animal 
drug, except for an approved application for which all subject products 
have been removed from listing under section 510 of the FD&C Act, or 
has submitted an investigational submission for a generic new animal 
drug that has not been terminated or otherwise rendered inactive and 
(2) had an abbreviated application for a generic new animal drug, 
supplemental abbreviated application for a generic new animal drug, or 
investigational submission for a generic new animal drug pending at FDA 
after September 1, 2008 (see 21 U.S.C. 379j-21(k)(7) and 379j-
21(a)(3)). A generic new animal drug sponsor is subject to only one 
such fee each fiscal year (see 21 U.S.C. 379j-21(a)(3)(C)). Applicants 
with more than six approved abbreviated applications will pay 100 
percent of the sponsor fee; applicants with more than one and fewer 
than seven approved abbreviated applications will pay 75 percent of the 
sponsor fee; and applicants with one or fewer approved abbreviated 
applications will pay 50 percent of the sponsor fee (see 21 U.S.C. 
379j-21(a)(3)(C)). The sponsor fees are to be set so that they will 
generate $3,639,000 in fee revenue for FY 2016, after workload 
adjustment ($2,786,000 times 1.306305, rounded to the nearest thousand 
dollars).
    To set generic new animal drug sponsor fees to realize $3,639,000, 
FDA must make some assumptions about the number of sponsors who will 
pay these fees in FY 2016. FDA now has 6 complete years of experience 
collecting these sponsor fees. Based on the number of firms that meet 
this definition and the average number of firms paying fees at each 
level over the 5 most recent completed years of AGDUFA (FY 2010 through 
FY 2014), FDA estimates that in FY 2016, 12 sponsors will pay 100 
percent fees, 17 sponsors will pay 75 percent fees, and 41 sponsors 
will pay 50 percent fees. That totals the equivalent of 45.25 full 
sponsor fees (12 times 100 percent or 12, plus 17 times 75 percent or 
12.75, plus 41 times 50 percent or 20.5).
    FDA estimates that about 4 percent of all of these sponsors, or 
1.81, may qualify for a minor use/minor species fee waiver (see 21 
U.S.C. 379j-21(d)). FDA has changed the estimate of the percentage of 
sponsors that will not pay fees to 4 percent this year, based on 
historical data over the past 5 completed years of the AGDUFA program.
    Accordingly, the Agency estimates that the equivalent of 43.44 full 
sponsor fees (45.25 minus 1.81) are likely to be paid in FY 2016.

B. Sponsor Fee Rates for FY 2016

    FDA must set the fee rates for FY 2016 so that the estimated 
equivalent of 43.44 full sponsor fees will generate a total of 
$3,639,000. To generate this amount will require the 100 percent fee 
for a generic new animal drug sponsor, rounded to the nearest $50, to 
be $83,800. Accordingly, the fee for those paying 75 percent of the 
full sponsor fee will be $62,850, and the fee for those paying 50 
percent of the full sponsor fee will be $41,900.

VI. Fee Schedule for FY 2016

    The fee rates for FY 2016 are summarized in table 2 of this 
document.

                       Table 2--FY 2016 Fee Rates
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                                                           Fee rate for
        Generic new animal drug user fee category             FY 2016
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Abbreviated Application Fee for Generic New Animal Drug         $233,300
 except those subject to the criteria in section
 512(d)(4)..............................................

[[Page 46015]]

 
Abbreviated Application Fee for Generic New Animal Drug          116,650
 subject to the criteria in section 512(d)(4)...........
Generic New Animal Drug Product Fee.....................           8,705
100 Percent Generic New Animal Drug Sponsor Fee \1\.....          83,800
75 Percent Generic New Animal Drug Sponsor Fee \1\......          62,850
50 Percent Generic New Animal Drug Sponsor Fee \1\......          41,900
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ An animal drug sponsor is subject to only one fee each fiscal year.

VII. Procedures for Paying FY 2016 Generic New Animal Drug User Fees

A. Abbreviated Application Fees and Payment Instructions

    The FY 2016 fee established in the new fee schedule must be paid 
for an abbreviated new animal drug application subject to fees under 
AGDUFA that is submitted on or after October 1, 2015. Payment must be 
made in U.S. currency from a U.S. bank by check, bank draft, or U.S. 
postal money order payable to the order of the Food and Drug 
Administration, by wire transfer, or by automatic clearing house using 
Pay.gov. (The Pay.gov payment option is available to you after you 
submit a cover sheet. Click the ``Pay Now'' button). On your check, 
bank draft, U.S. or postal money order, please write your application's 
unique Payment Identification Number, beginning with the letters 
``AG'', from the upper right-hand corner of your completed Animal 
Generic Drug User Fee Cover Sheet. Also write the FDA post office box 
number (P.O. Box 953877) on the enclosed check, bank draft, or money 
order. Your payment and a copy of the completed Animal Generic Drug 
User Fee Cover Sheet can be mailed to: Food and Drug Administration, 
P.O. Box 979033, St. Louis, MO 63197-9000.
    If payment is made via wire transfer, send payment to U. S. 
Department of the Treasury, TREAS NYC, 33 Liberty St., New York, NY 
10045, Account Name: Food and Drug Administration, Account No.: 
75060099, Routing No.: 021030004, Swift No.: FRNYUS33, Beneficiary: 
FDA, 8455 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002. You are 
responsible for any administrative costs associated with the processing 
of a wire transfer. Contact your bank or financial institution about 
the fee and add it to your payment to ensure that your fee is fully 
paid.
    If you prefer to send a check by a courier, the courier may deliver 
the check and printed copy of the cover sheet to: U.S. Bank, Attn: 
Government Lockbox 979033, 1005 Convention Plaza, St. Louis, MO 63101. 
(Note: This address is for courier delivery only. If you have any 
questions concerning courier delivery contact the U.S. Bank at 314-418-
4013. This phone number is only for questions about courier delivery.)
    The tax identification number of FDA is 53-0196965. (Note: In no 
case should the payment for the fee be submitted to FDA with the 
application.)
    It is helpful if the fee arrives at the bank at least a day or two 
before the abbreviated application arrives at FDA's Center for 
Veterinary Medicine (CVM). FDA records the official abbreviated 
application receipt date as the later of the following: The date the 
application was received by CVM, or the date U.S. Bank notifies FDA 
that your payment in the full amount has been received, or when the 
U.S. Department of the Treasury notifies FDA of payment. U.S. Bank and 
the United States Treasury are required to notify FDA within 1 working 
day, using the Payment Identification Number described previously.

B. Application Cover Sheet Procedures

    Step One--Create a user account and password. Log onto the AGDUFA 
Web site at http://www.fda.gov/ForIndustry/UserFees/AnimalGenericDrugUserFeeActAGDUFA/ucm137049.htm and scroll down the 
page until you find the link ``Create AGDUFA User Fee Cover Sheet.'' 
Click on that link and follow the directions. For security reasons, 
each firm submitting an application will be assigned an organization 
identification number, and each user will also be required to set up a 
user account and password the first time you use this site. Online 
instructions will walk you through this process.
    Step Two--Create an Animal Generic Drug User Fee Cover Sheet, 
transmit it to FDA, and print a copy. After logging into your account 
with your user name and password, complete the steps required to create 
an Animal Generic Drug User Fee Cover Sheet. One cover sheet is needed 
for each abbreviated animal drug application. Once you are satisfied 
that the data on the cover sheet is accurate and you have finalized the 
cover sheet, you will be able to transmit it electronically to FDA and 
you will be able to print a copy of your cover sheet showing your 
unique Payment Identification Number.
    Step Three--Send the payment for your application as described in 
Section VII.A of this document.
    Step Four--Please submit your application and a copy of the 
completed Animal Generic Drug User Fee Cover Sheet to the following 
address: Food and Drug Administration, Center for Veterinary Medicine, 
Document Control Unit (HFV-199), 7500 Standish Pl., Rockville, MD 
20855.

C. Product and Sponsor Fees

    By December 31, 2015, FDA will issue invoices and payment 
instructions for product and sponsor fees for FY 2016 using this fee 
schedule. Fees will be due by January 31, 2016. FDA will issue invoices 
in November 2016 for any products and sponsors subject to fees for FY 
2016 that qualify for fees after the December 2015 billing.

    Dated: July 28, 2015.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015-18909 Filed 7-31-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164-01-P