Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2477847 Annales Pharmaceutiques Françaises 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The transplantation of gut microbiota addresses a critical gap in the treatment of recurrent severe Clostridium difficile infection, and clinical trials are ongoing throughout the world for other potential broader clinical indications. As the fecal flora inoculum has currently no legal status under European law, we consider it provisionally a sui generis biological drug rather than a human tissue transplantation, with major implications in terms of legal liability in France. The inoculum obeys a derogation to the pharmaceutical preparation rules, is processed under microbiological control, and therefore should carry a special obligation for informed consent from recipients. Failing industrializable solutions to date, this practice for the modulation of human microbiome suggests that the current legal definition of the biologic drug as well as the rules for donation and use of human-originated substances should be complemented. A new category of therapeutic products could be considered in European law, unless a rapid technological progress (the French Agency ASNM classified FMT as a drug in March 2014).
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Health Sciences Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science Drug Discovery
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