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Pharmacy Compounding Regulation in the German Pharmaceutical Market. Part 1. Basic Regulatory Provisions (Review)

https://doi.org/10.30895/1991-2919-2024-14-1-91-109

Abstract

SCIENTIFIC RELEVANCE. There is a need to move towards an appropriate system of quality assurance in pharmacy compounding. At the same time, the development of a Russian regulatory system for pharmacy compounding requires a broad understanding of international experience.

AIM. This study aimed at analysing the basic principles of pharmacy compounding regulation in the Federal Republic of Germany in order to identify best practices and determine ways to improve the legal and regulatory framework for compounding pharmacies in the Russian Federation.

DISCUSSION. According to German law, pharmacies may dispense compounded medicinal products on an oral request from a patient. The German regulatory framework provides a mechanism delineating medicinal products compounded by pharmacies and those manufactured by pharmaceutical companies. The geographical and quantitative restrictions combined with the neutral pricing policy for pharmacies facilitate the establishment of a highly effective pharmaceutical supply system. In practice, this system helps set uniform prices for medicinal products throughout Germany while preventing pharmacy chains from monopolising the pharmaceutical market. These regulations can be considered regulatory mechanisms operating at the regional (land) level. Moreover, it is of key importance that German legislation divides compounded medicinal products into stock and extemporaneous preparations.

CONCLUSIONS. German pharmaceutical practice features a number of innovations that can be borrowed for Russian pharmaceutical practice. Russian pharmaceutical legislation may benefit from adopting the concept of a “request from an individual” for dispensing compounded medicinal products that do not contain prescription-only active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). In order to improve the efficiency of the use of pharmaceutical-quality raw materials, including APIs, it is necessary to identify cases in which regular pharmacies can receive or purchase compounded medicinal products from compounding pharmacies and cases in which compounding pharmacies can purchase APIs from other compounding pharmacies. The authors recommend considering the possibility of defining the role, functions, and powers of self-regulating professional pharmacy organisations at various levels of governance in this social sphere of activity. Furthermore, the authors recommend creating a Russian mechanism to mitigate the risks of stock shortages and/or limited supply of medicinal products that would be similar to the German “standard authorisation” system and would encompass compounding pharmacies and pharmaceutical companies.

About the Authors

S. E. Erdni-Garyaev
Saint-Petersburg State Chemical and Pharmaceutical University
Russian Federation

Sergey E. Erdni-Garyaev

14A Professor Popov St., St Petersburg 197376



D. D. Mamedov
Saint-Petersburg State Chemical and Pharmaceutical University
Russian Federation

Devi D. Mamedov

14A Professor Popov St., St Petersburg 197376



D. S. Yurochkin
Saint-Petersburg State Chemical and Pharmaceutical University
Russian Federation

Dmitry S. Yurochkin

14A Professor Popov St., St Petersburg 197376



D. D. Zelikova
Saint-Petersburg State Chemical and Pharmaceutical University
Russian Federation

Daria D. Zelikova

14A Professor Popov St., St Petersburg 197376



Z. M. Golant
Saint-Petersburg State Chemical and Pharmaceutical University
Russian Federation

Zakhar M. Golant, Cand. Sci. (Econ.)

14A Professor Popov St., St Petersburg 197376



V. S. Fisenko
Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation
Russian Federation

Victor S. Fisenko, Cand. Sci. (Pharm.)

3 Rakhmanovsky Ln., City Service Post Office-4, Moscow 127994



I. A. Narkevich
Saint-Petersburg State Chemical and Pharmaceutical University
Russian Federation

Igor A. Narkevich, Dr. Sci. (Pharm.), Professor

14A Professor Popov St., St Petersburg 197376, Russian Federation



References

1. Narkevich IA, Fisenko VS, Golant ZM, Yurochkin DS, Mamedov DD, Erdni-Garyaev SE, Leshkevich AA. Basis for forming a unified harmonized system of regulation in the field of compounding pharmacies. St Petersburg: Mediapapier, 2023. EDN: PZEVDF

2. Mamedov DD, Yurochkin DS, Leshkevich AA, ErdniGaryaev SE, Golant ZM, Narkevich IA. Compounding pharmacy regulations: experience of the North American pharmaceutical market. FARMAKOEKONOMIKA. Modern Pharmacoeconomics and Pharmacoepidemiology. 2023;16(1):80–6 (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.17749/2070-4909/farmakoekonomika. 2022.155

3. Mamedov DD, Yurochkin DS, Golant ZM, Fisenko VS, Alekhin AV, Narkevich IA. Past, current and future of legal regulation of drugs compounding in the Russian Federation. Pharmacy & Pharmacology. 2023;11(3):176–92 (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.19163/2307-9266-2023-11-3-176-192


Supplementary files

1. Table 2. Tariffs for compounding according to the Pharmaceutical Price Ordinance (Arzneimittelpreisverordnung) of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy
Subject
Type Исследовательские инструменты
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2. Table 3. Sample calculation of the cost of a compounded ointment
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Type Исследовательские инструменты
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Review

For citations:


Erdni-Garyaev S.E., Mamedov D.D., Yurochkin D.S., Zelikova D.D., Golant Z.M., Fisenko V.S., Narkevich I.A. Pharmacy Compounding Regulation in the German Pharmaceutical Market. Part 1. Basic Regulatory Provisions (Review). Bulletin of the Scientific Centre for Expert Evaluation of Medicinal Products. Regulatory Research and Medicine Evaluation. 2024;14(1):91-109. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.30895/1991-2919-2024-14-1-91-109

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ISSN 3034-3062 (Print)
ISSN 3034-3453 (Online)