Frequently asked questions about labeling for prescription drugs (medicines) on this webpage are primarily directed to healthcare professionals (for example, doctors, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, nurses). For information about prescription drug labeling resources primarily directed to industry such as those for the Prescribing Information, FDA-approved patient labeling, carton and container labeling, biological product labeling, generic drug labeling, labeling databases, and product databases visit FDA’s Labeling Resources for Prescription Drugs.
Labeling for prescription medicines is FDA’s primary tool for communicating drug information to healthcare professionals, and patients and their caregivers. Labeling for prescription medicines includes:
Labeling for prescription medicines is required for all FDA-approved prescription medicines. Such labeling is:
All prescription medicines have Prescribing Information and carton and/or container labeling and many, but not all, have labeling for patients or caregivers. For additional background about labeling for prescription medicines see:
The Prescribing Information is for healthcare professionals (e.g., doctors, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, nurses). The Prescribing Information contains a summary of the essential scientific information needed for the safe and effective use of the medicine. The most common type of Prescribing Information format is the Physician Labeling Rule (PLR) format which includes:
Highlights of Prescribing Information (referred to as Highlights) contain a concise summary of crucial prescribing information that the healthcare professional needs to use the medicine safely and effectively (Figure A includes the required and recommended format for Highlights).
Some key features of Highlights include:
The Table of Contents includes the sections (bolded) and subsections (indented in regular font) of the Full Prescribing Information in a two-column format (see Figure B for an example of the Table of Contents). Some formats of labeling include hyperlinks from the sections and subsections in the Table of Contents to the sections and subsections in the Full Prescribing Information.
The Full Prescribing Information includes a summary of the essential scientific information for the healthcare professional for the safe and effective use of the medicine (see Table C for a summary of the information in each of the sections of the Full Prescribing Information). The sections and many subsections in the Full Prescribing Information are consistently ordered and numbered. More commonly referenced information generally appears in the first several sections of the Full Prescribing Information.
Type of Information Included
Boxed Warning (sometimes referred to in lay terms as a “black-box warning”)
1 Indications and Usage
FDA-approved uses that are supported by substantial evidence of effectiveness, with benefits that outweigh risks
2 Dosage and Administration
3 Dosage Forms and Strengths
Approved dosage forms, strengths, and identifying characteristics (e.g., shape, color, scoring, imprinting)
Situations when the risk from use clearly outweighs any possible therapeutic benefit, and the medicine must not be used
5 Warnings and Precautions
Description of clinically significant adverse reactions or risks with the medicine.
6 Adverse Reactions
7 Drug Interactions
Description of clinically significant drug interactions with other medicines, drug classes, or foods.
8 Use in Specific Populations
Information on use of the medicine in:
9 Drug Abuse and Dependence
Information on a medicine’s potential for abuse, misuse, addiction, dependence, and tolerance and about a medicine’s abuse-deterrent properties
Signs, symptoms, laboratory findings, and complications of overdosage and how to treat an overdosage
Brand name, generic name or proper name, dosage form(s), route(s) of administration, and chemistry characteristics of the medicine (e.g., chemical and structural formula, a list of active and inactive ingredients in the medicine)
12 Clinical Pharmacology
13 Nonclinical Toxicology
Information on the propensity of the medicine to cause cancers in animals, for mutagenesis, effects of the medicine on animal fertility, and other animal toxicology/pharmacology findings
14 Clinical Studies
Summary of the trial designs, baseline demographics and important disease characteristics, and results that established substantial evidence of effectiveness for all of the approved indications
Usually omitted, unless there are authoritative reference(s) that contain information not in the labeling that is important for the healthcare professional
16 How Supplied/Storage and Handling
Dosage forms, strengths, quantity of medicine available for prescribing (e.g., bottles of 100 tablets, 60-gram tubes), identifying characteristics including the National Drug Code (NDC) numbers, and special storage and handling conditions (e.g., store in refrigerator, protect from light)
17 Patient Counseling Information
Important information that the healthcare professional should convey to the patient or caregiver when a counseling decision is taking place (e.g., major risks of the medicine, critical administration instructions)
1 If a section or information in a section is not pertinent to the specific medicine that section or information is not included in the Full Prescribing Information.
2 For the purposes of the Prescribing Information, an adverse reaction is an undesirable effect, reasonably associated with the use of a medicine, for which there is some basis to believe that there is a causal relationship between the medicine and the occurrence of the undesirable effect.
When the drug company submits a marketing application for their medicine, they must include data to support the safety and effectiveness of their medicine and their proposed Prescribing Information.
Within 14 days of approval of the application (including the Prescribing Information), the drug company submits Structured Product Labeling to FDA’s electronic listing system. Subsequently electronic labeling is posted to several websites including FDA’s FDALabel and NIH’s DailyMed. See the 2017 presentation on the differences between labeling on Drugs@FDA versus DailyMed.
After initial approval, drug companies are required to update their Prescribing Information when new information becomes available that causes the Prescribing Information to be inaccurate, false, or misleading. Drug companies may submit supplements to their application and propose to include additional:
The FDA may ask the drug company to voluntarily update their Prescribing Information by sending them a letter that asks them to submit a supplement to their application. The letter may ask the drug company to include safety information and/or to improve the communication of how to use the medicine safely and effectively in their Prescribing Information.
The FDA may require the company to update their Prescribing Information with safety labeling changes if the FDA becomes aware of new safety information (about a serious risk or an unexpected serious risk associated with the use of the medicine) that should be included in the Prescribing Information.
See examples of drugs that interact with cytochrome P-450 (CYP) enzymes or transporter systems.