Efficacy of Generics
Sensible and Effective Treatment Options
Generic medications go through a rigorous review process to receive FDA approval. The FDA ensures a generic medication provides the same clinical benefit and is as safe and effective as the brand-name medicine that it duplicates.1
What Are Generic Drugs?2
A generic drug is a medication created to be the same as an already marketed brand-name product in:
- Dosage
- Safety
- Quality
- Performance
- Strength
- A generic FDA-approved drug uses the same active ingredient, has the same intended use, and is taken the same way (oral, injection, patch, etc.) as its brand-name drug or version or product.
- These similarities help to demonstrate that the generic medicine works in the same way and provides the same clinical benefit as the brand-name version. An approved AB generic medicine should be considered substitutable.
- The FDA Generic Drugs Program conducts a thorough review to be sure generic medicines meet the standards mentioned above. In addition, it inspects 3,500 manufacturing plants a year and continues to monitor drug safety after the generic medicine is in the market.
- When any product is mass produced, there can be a certain level of difference between the batches. This is true of both brand drugs and generic medicines. FDA defines how much variability is acceptable.
- Even though generic medicines have the same therapeutic effect as the branded product, they are usually sold at a substantial discount (80-85% less). Generics are not required to invest in the upfront clinical research that the brand did to get approved. This results in a significant savings to consumers.