# The African Medicines Agency: historical perspective of its origins, evolution, institutional structure and future prospects

**Authors:** Alex Juma Ismail, Delese Mimi Darko, Stuart Walker, Sam Salek

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2026.1763261 · Frontiers in Medicine · 2026-02-04

## TL;DR

The African Medicines Agency aims to harmonize drug regulation across Africa to improve access to safe and effective medical products.

## Contribution

This paper provides a comprehensive historical and structural analysis of the African Medicines Agency and its regulatory harmonization efforts.

## Key findings

- The AMA was established in 2019 and has 31 member states as of 2025.
- Pilot projects like the Continental Listing show promise for regulatory reliance mechanisms.
- Challenges remain in legal harmonization, funding, and capacity gaps across member states.

## Abstract

The African continent has long faced fragmented regulatory systems, resulting in delayed access to safe, effective, and quality-assured medical products. To address these challenges, the African Medicines Regulatory Harmonisation (AMRH) Programme was launched in 2009 by the African Union, laying the groundwork for the establishment of the African Medicines Agency (AMA). The AMA represents one of the most significant continental developments to harmonize regulatory practices, improve access to quality-assured medical products, and strengthen public health systems across Africa.

The objectives of this review were to examine the historical development of AMA, its Treaty and proposed institutional framework, as well as operational pilots such as the Continental Listing of Human Medicinal Products implemented by the AMRH since 2023.

A narrative literature review approach was used, sourcing official African Union documents, peer-reviewed publications, and technical reports from African Union Commission, AUDA-NEPAD, WHO, and AMRH stakeholders published between 2005 and 2025.

The AMA was formally established by treaty adopted by the AU heads of states and governments in 2019 and entered into force in November 2021. As of June 2025, 31 AU Member States had ratified the Treaty. The agency’s governance and organizational structure include a Conference of State Parties, Governing Board, Secretariat, and Technical Committees. Pilot projects such as the AMRH Continental Listing demonstrated the feasibility of reliance mechanisms, though challenges remain in national legal harmonization, funding, and capacity disparities.

The AMA represents a transformative step toward regulatory convergence in Africa. While challenges persist, the Treaty framework and pilot outcomes provide a strong foundation for its operationalisation and the long-term success in improving medical product regulation and public health across the continent.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** MUC1 (mucin 1, cell surface associated) [NCBI Gene 4582] {aka ADMCKD, ADMCKD1, ADTKD2, CA 15-3, CD227, Ca15-3}
- **Diseases:** DD (MESH:C536170), eCTD (MESH:D028361), AMA (MESH:D002051), ICH (MESH:D002543), EMP-TC (MESH:D000072861), RIMS (MESH:D015619), Drug Reaction (MESH:D004342), IGAD (MESH:D002658), SADC (MESH:D003147)
- **Chemicals:** AUDA (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]
- **Cell lines:** UMC — Homo sapiens (Human), Induced pluripotent stem cell (CVCL_UG71)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913070/full.md

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913070/full.md

## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913070/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913070