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Tuesday, 04/18/2017 2:52:30 PM

Tuesday, April 18, 2017 2:52:30 PM

Post# of 73597
From Q&A on FDA Website.

https://www.fda.gov/drugs/resourcesforyou/specialfeatures/ucm279676.htm#4[/url][tag]insert-text-here

Q: Do over-the-counter (OTC) medications go through the same approval process as prescription drugs?

A: No. Because there are over 300,000 marketed OTC drug products, instead of individual drug products, FDA reviews the active ingredients and the labeling of over 80 therapeutic classes of drugs, for example analgesics or antacids. For each class, an OTC drug monograph is developed and published in the Federal Register. OTC drug monographs are a kind of "recipe book" covering acceptable ingredients, doses, formulations, and labeling. Once a final monograph is implemented, companies can make and market an OTC product without the need for FDA pre-approval. These monographs define the safety, effectiveness, and labeling of all marketing OTC active ingredients. New products that conform to a final monograph may be marketed without further FDA review. Those that do not conform must be reviewed by the New Drug Application process. A drug company may also petition to change a final monograph to include additional ingredients or to modify labeling.