









GenericsA generic medicine is a medicine which is known by its 'generic' name rather than by its 'brand' name. It contains the same active ingredient and has the same therapeutic effect on patients as the original medicine which is no longer patent protected (patents typically last for 20 years). They can contain different non-active ingredients (e.g. colourings) and may be a different size and shape to the original product but none of these differences will have an impact on the therapeutic effect. To obtain market approval, the generic must be "bioequivalent" to the original product and comply with the same standards of quality, safety and efficacy.
Generic medicines are popular with organisations such as the National Health Service (NHS) because they are significantly cheaper than their brand-name equivalents (costing 20-90% less) and the generic manufacturers avoid the risks and costs associated with the research and development involved in innovative medicines. There are many pharmaceutical companies which focus on the manufacturing and licensing of generic medicines. It is important that generic medicines continue to be provided as currently they are saving Europe about €13 billion per year and without them, the European healthcare systems would become financially unsustainable.
Please refer to our regulatory services for further information or contact us with your specific regulatory compliance requirements. |


Global House, Painters Lane, Sutton, Ely,
Cambridgeshire, CB6 2NS, UK
Telephone: +44(0)1353 774000
E-mail: enquiries@globalregulatoryservices.com
Cambridgeshire, CB6 2NS, UK
Telephone: +44(0)1353 774000
E-mail: enquiries@globalregulatoryservices.com

