African Medicines Agency and US FDA sign cooperation agreement

Date: 2026-06-20
news-banner

By:   Nana Appiah Acquaye

The African Medicines Agency (AMA) and the United States Food and Drug Administration (US FDA) have signed a Statement of Cooperation aimed at strengthening regulatory collaboration, information exchange and harmonisation of medical product oversight between Africa and the United States.

The agreement, signed in June 2026, establishes a formal framework for cooperation between the two regulatory institutions, focusing on improving the safety, quality and efficacy of medical products through science-based regulatory approaches.

The Statement of Cooperation was signed by H.E. Dr. Delese Mimi Darko, Director-General of the African Medicines Agency, and Mark Abdoo, Associate Commissioner for Global Policy and Strategy at the US FDA.

Under the agreement, the two agencies will work to facilitate structured exchange of regulatory information, strengthen existing collaboration mechanisms and support participation in international regulatory initiatives.

The framework also provides for coordination of stakeholder engagement activities relevant to medical product regulation, in line with the mandates of both institutions.

Both agencies indicated that the cooperation will contribute to advancing regulatory convergence across jurisdictions, supporting more efficient oversight of medicines and health products globally.

The agreement builds on the establishment of the FDA African Medicines Agency Liaison Office (AMALO) at the US Embassy in Kigali, which is intended to enhance ongoing engagement between the US FDA, the AMA and national regulatory authorities across Africa.

The AMA noted that the partnership comes at a time when Africa’s pharmaceutical market is projected to exceed 50 billion dollars by 2030, underscoring the need for strong and coordinated regulatory systems to ensure timely access to quality-assured medical products for the continent’s population.

Officials said the cooperation reflects a shared commitment to strengthening regulatory capacity across Africa while improving public health outcomes through enhanced global collaboration.

 

Leave Your Comments