To introduce a new drug to the market, it needs to undergo an approval process. This process also covers content. And we’re speaking about a lot of content pharma companies have to produce:

  1. Investigational New Drug (IND) Application
  2. Chemistry, Manufacturing, and Controls (CMC) Information
  3. Clinical Trial Protocols
  4. Clinical Study Reports (CSRs)
  5. Nonclinical Study Reports
  6. Integrated Summary of Safety (ISS) and Integrated Summary of Efficacy (ISE)
  7. Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) Plan
  8. Labeling
  9. Pharmacovigilance Plan
  10. Marketing Materials

The good thing is: The FDA offers content guidance. “Guidance documents […] do not create or confer any rights for or on any person and do not operate to bind FDA or the public. You can use an alternative approach if the approach satisfies the requirements of the applicable statutes and regulations.”

But they provide pharma companies a framework for successful approval of new drugs or medical devices. 

What to consider for FDA’s pharma content approval?

Clarity is essential

Always keep in mind that some of the documents you write target non-experts. Your target audience is extremely diverse. Make sure to talk to everybody with your content. Thus, you need to make sure you’re as clear as possible, without making any compromises on scientific correctness. Clearer content reduces the need for FDA reviewers to send clarification requests or worse, misinterpret information.

To write clearer content, it’s important to follow clarity style guidelines like using short sentences, but also by aspects like scannability or terminological consistency.

Structure and scannability

Here are some exemplary aspects touching upon content, cited from “Guidance for Industry Labeling OTC Human Drug Products”, “V. CONTENT REQUIREMENTS (21 CFR 201.66(c))5” section. This section defines content components and order, and also touches on content structure and style.

  • Use bulleted lists to “make the presentation of the information clearer and easier to read.” (p. 7)
  • “Listing too many alternative ingredients could be misleading and could cause consumer confusion. To avoid such confusion, manufacturers, packers, and distributors may wish to consider using a second set of labels for drug products with a lengthy list of different inactive ingredients.” (p. 13 )

Consistent, compliant terminology and sentences

You have to make sure you use the correct medical terminology and binding phrases or sentences. 

Correctness is mandatory

In addition to other things to consider, make sure your copy is absolutely error-free. A trivial typo is enough to mess up the approval process by causing additional review rounds.

Being responsible for those language-related aspects is basically a full-time job. Assuming that you work in the Product or R&D department: Is there a way to expedite FDA approval without content compliance headaches?

One common approach to at least minimize content compliance headaches is reusing “pre-approved content modules” wherever applicable. There are multiple benefits, for instance, more content is approved in only one review cycle, which influences time to market and costs positively (source).

You can input Acrolinx your approved messaging – it reminds you to use it while you create content. That alone boosts both efficiency and compliance, but our platform also helps:

  • Improving clarity, scannability and other aspects of language that resonates with your audience
  • Making sure you use the correct medical terminology

That might sound like a lot, but it’s no rocket science. Let’s discover what Acrolinx exactly does to make work in the pharma industry easier.

How to use Acrolinx to benefit your pharma content approval process

Step 1: Feed Acrolinx

Before the magic happens, feed Acrolinx by providing it everything it needs to consider. First, identify the following and configure them in your Acrolinx instance:

  • industry terms
  • unit measurement representations
  • Acronyms
  • Proper spelling and representation of:
    • Symptoms
    • Side effects
    • Elements
    • Chemical structure

Then, define any terminology that shouldn’t be used. Once defined, Acrolinx alerts writers if it finds a non-compliant term and provides a prefe

Image shows terminology management in Acrolinx.

Step 2: Provide Approved Messaging

Then we’re leaving the word level. Identify disclaimers, disclosures, statements, and paragraphs that must be used verbatim because of regulatory requirements. 

In the Acrolinx Dashboard, you can add this Approved Messaging. When writers create similar but different content, Acrolinx offers the approved disclaimers, statements, or paragraphs to be inserted on-click.

Image shows the setup of Approved Messaging.

Step 3: Set structure and consistency guidelines 

Well-structured, consistent content helps both consumers and FDA reviewers with improved clarity and predictability. Set guidelines that you’re using later to configure Acrolinx. These guidelines may contain the following:

  • Proper capitalization
  • Unit measurement and other labeling
  • Sentence, paragraph, and list lengths
  • Headings, content, and structural formatting

Step 4: Create an audience target

Now it’s time to combine all parts into an audience target. In the Acrolinx Dashboard, create an audience target and do the following:

  • Set ideal clarity, scannability, and consistency, see step 3.
  • Connect your target to the terminology, acronyms, and Approved Messaging you configured in step 1 and 2.
Image shows Acrolinx Target configuration. Under "Clarity", the preset "Average" is selected.

Step 5: Scan your content

Now it’s time to make sure your content is compliant with the goals you set before – and thus with the FDA’s guidelines and legal regulations. Acrolinx lets you:

  • Scan content for quality issues and focus on terminology or approved messaging for compliance issues.
  • Measure reading ease scores to understand expected comprehension reading levels.
  • View detail types of content issues, where they are in content and recommended fixes in Acrolinx Scorecards.

If Acrolinx is used during content creation, the Acrolinx Sidebar gives writers timely feedback on compliance issues related to improper terminology or inappropriately written disclosures.

Step 6: Share content issues with writers based on severity

Content editing is crucial for content that is mandatory for FDA approval. So this step is all about checking your writer’s output, making sure to detect remaining content issues. There’s 90% less content issues if Acrolinx is used during content creation, but in case your editors find something nevertheless, it’s their turn to approach writers and share the content issues with them, based on severity. 

An image of content cube configuring content quality prioritization.

Step 7: Writers update and publish corrections improving overall clarity, brand issues, and Acrolinx Score

With the feedback they got from their content editors, the final step is for the writers to update and publish the corrected content. The result is improved overall clarity, less brand issues, and a higher Acrolinx score that stands for great content that’s likely to pass FDA review.

Image shows how the Acrolinx Sidebar handles reuse issues. Instead of the non approved version of the sentence, the sidebar proposes using the approved version of the sentence.

Conclusion

Once set up for your company, Acrolinx helps you write clear, consistent, and compliant content faster.

Not only does the writing process become faster and more efficient. It’s also possible to reduce FDA application time: Clearer content can be reviewed faster – with fewer queries from the FDA review team.

So, what are you waiting for? Connect with us and discover Acrolinx as your solution to expedite FDA approval.

An image with a laptop running Acrolinx with a button to schedule a call.