FDA Advisory Committee Votes Unanimously that FC2 Female Condom(R) is Approvable
12 Dezember 2008 - 5:17PM
PR Newswire (US)
CHICAGO, Dec. 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Female Health
Company (NYSE Alternext: FHC) has announced that the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration's (FDA) Obstetrics and Gynecology Devices
Advisory Committee has unanimously voted that the company's
second-generation female condom, the FC2 Female Condom(R), is
approvable with a single condition. The Advisory Committee voted
15-0 that the product is approvable with the condition that the FC2
Female Condom's instructions for use continue to follow use
instructions for the FC Female Condom(R) (FC1 Female Condom) and
appropriately identify the study that was performed to establish
the comparable safety and effectiveness of FC2 with FC1. The FDA is
not bound by the committee's recommendation, but it takes its
advice into consideration when reviewing obstetric and gynecologic
devices. "We are very pleased with today's outcome and look forward
to working with the FDA as it continues to review our application
for the FC2 Female Condom," said Dr. Mary Ann Leeper, FHC's Senior
Strategic Advisor. "We believe that FHC's second-generation female
condom can strengthen the fight against AIDS by expanding
affordable access to a woman-initiated HIV prevention method." The
company filed the FC2 Female Condom Pre-market Approval Application
(PMA) with the FDA on January 7, 2008 and has been working with FDA
as it reviewed the application. The company's first-generation FC1
Female Condom received FDA approval for distribution in the United
States in 1993. The FC1 Female Condom is also included in the World
Health Organization's (WHO) essential products list for
distribution by United Nations (UN) agencies. Since its approval,
165 million FC1 Female Condoms have been distributed in 142
countries. The FC2 Female Condom data has been reviewed by other
public agencies, including the European Union, India, Brazil and
the World Health Organization (WHO). In 2006, the WHO agreed that
the FC2 Female Condom does perform in the same manner as the FC1
Female Condom and recommended that the FC2 Female Condom can be
purchased by UN agencies. Since then, over 22 million FC2 female
condoms have been distributed in 77 countries. Performance of FC2
Female Condom in Clinical Trial FHC presented data from a
randomized, double-blind, crossover, comparative trial with the FC1
Female Condom. The FC1 Female Condom is currently distributed in
over 100 countries, including the U.S. The FC2 Female Condom, which
looks very similar to the FC1 Female Condom, was developed to
expand access to women at risk of HIV and STIs by lowering the cost
of the product through the introduction of a more efficient
manufacturing process. The clinical trial was conducted in 2004 by
the Reproductive Health and HIV Research Unit of the University of
Witwatersrand in South Africa. Over 200 women participated in the
study. The results of the study showed that the FC2 Female Condom
is safe and that the risk of failure during use was equivalent to
FC1. Results from the study were originally published in the
journal Contraception. (See Contraception 73 (2006) 386- 393.)
Unintended Pregnancy and HIV/STI Transmission in the U.S.
Unintended pregnancy and the transmission of HIV and other STIs
remain significant public health challenges in the U.S. According
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
approximately one-half of pregnancies in the U.S. were unintended
in 2001, and contraception methods provided by federally funded
family planning programs (male condoms, female condoms, the Pill,
and IUDs) prevent an estimated 1.3 million unintended pregnancies
each year. Over the past two decades, the proportion of women among
all people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV) in the U.S. has more than
tripled -- from 8 percent of PLHIV in 1985 to 26 percent in 2007.
HIV infection has emerged as the leading cause of death for African
American women aged 25-34, high-risk heterosexual contact is
responsible for 80 percent of new HIV infections among American
women, and one in four young adults aged 15-20 years contracts a
sexually transmitted infection each year. In this context, expanded
access to the female condom -- the only safe, effective, and
available woman-initiated prevention method currently available --
can provide women and men with more options to practice safer sex
and prevent unintended pregnancy. About The Female Health Company
The Female Health Company (FHC), headquartered in Chicago, IL, is
the maker of the FC1 Female Condom and the FC2 Female Condom,
woman-initiated prevention methods offering dual protection against
sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, and unintended
pregnancy. FHC was created as a worldwide company in February 1996
with the purchase of Chartex Resources, Ltd., the holder of
exclusive worldwide rights to the FC1 Female Condom. The Company
holds exclusive product and technology patents for the FC1 Female
Condom in the U.S., Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, the People's Republic of China,
South Korea and Japan. Patents are pending for the FC2 Female
Condom. FHC is the sole worldwide manufacturer and marketer of the
FC1 Female Condom and the FC2 Female Condom. The Female Health
Company and its partners currently market the Female Condom under
FC Female Condom(R), FC2 Female Condom(R), Reality(R), Femidom(R),
Femy(R), and Care(R) in the rest of the world. For more information
about the Female Health Company, visit the Company's website at
http://www.femalehealth.com/ and http://www.femalecondom.org/. If
you would like to be added to the Company's e-mail alert list,
please send an email to . "Safe Harbor" Statement under the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 The statements in this
release which are not historical fact are "forward-looking
statements" as that term is defined in the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements in this
release may be identified by the use of forward-looking words or
phrases such as "anticipate," "believe," "could," "expect,"
"intend," "may," "planned," "potential," "should," "will," "would"
or the negative of those terms or other words of similar meaning.
These statements are based upon the Company's current plans and
strategies, and reflect the Company's current assessment of the
risks and uncertainties related to its business, and are made as of
the date of this release. The Company assumes no obligation to
update any forward-looking statements contained in this release as
a result of new information or future events, developments or
circumstances. Such forward-looking statements are inherently
subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties. The Company's
actual results and future developments could differ materially from
the results or developments expressed in, or implied by, these
forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause actual results
to differ materially from those contemplated by such
forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, the
following: product demand and market acceptance; competition in the
Company's markets and the risk of new competitors and new
competitive product introductions; the Company's reliance on its
international partners in the consumer sector and on the level of
spending on the female condom by country governments, global donors
and other public health organizations in the global public sector;
the economic and business environment and the impact of government
pressures; risks involved in doing business on an international
level, including currency risks, regulatory requirements, political
risks, export restrictions and other trade barriers; the Company's
production capacity; efficiency and supply constraints; and other
risks detailed in the Company's press releases, shareholder
communication and Securities and Exchange Commission filings,
including the Company's Form 10-KSB for the fiscal year ended
September 30, 2007. Actual events affecting the Company and the
impact of such events on the Company's operations may vary from
those currently anticipated. DATASOURCE: Female Health Company
CONTACT: Media: Bryan Callahan, +1-202-729-4255, or Ashley Smith,
+1-202-729-4269, both for Female Health Company; Investors: William
R. Gargiulo, Jr., +1-231-526-1244, or Donna Felch, +1-312-595-9123,
or Product Information: Mary Ann Leeper, +1-312-595-9118, all of
Female Health Company Web Site: http://www.femalehealth.com/
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