Rather than appeal an April decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the FDA is changing how it regulates imaging agents. That means the agency will transition at least some approved imaging agents from drug status to device status and, going forward, it will regulate products that meet both the device and drug definition as devices – unless Congress specifies otherwise.
Canada’s Federal Court of Appeal took the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board to task for ordering Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. to “forfeit excess revenues” generated by Soliris (eculizumab) between 2009 and 2017.
Three of the largest biopharma distributors in the U.S. agreed to a settlement of $1.179 billion with New York, bowing out of the state’s ongoing opioid lawsuit.
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to take up one piece of the 340B conundrum that’s pitting biopharma against hospitals and catching the Department of Health and Human Services in between. The case the court agreed to hear, the American Hospital Association (AHA) v. Becerra, focuses on whether HHS has the authority to cut Medicare reimbursement rates to reflect the steep discounts 340B hospitals get on certain prescription drugs.
Johnson & Johnson (J&J) and its U.S.-based Janssen Pharmaceutical Cos. bowed out of an opioid trial set for June 28 in New York by reaching a last-minute settlement with the state.
Holly Hand, a New York-based senior project manager overseeing a clinical trial for Neuralstem Inc. (now Seneca Biopharma Inc.), agreed to pay $103,875 to resolve an SEC complaint of insider trading.
A lawsuit filed last year challenging a federal rule and certification allowing certain drugs to be imported from Canada should be dismissed because no drug companies have been harmed yet, nor are they likely to be any time soon, the Biden administration said in a motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Claiming that convicted felon Martin Shkreli continues to exert control over Vyera Pharmaceuticals LLC from prison, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is seeking sanctions against the former hedge fund manager for intentionally destroying text and WhatsApp messages on his company-issued phone and a contraband phone years after he was instructed to preserve all documents potentially relevant to an ongoing antitrust investigation and litigation.
Song Guo Zheng, a rheumatology professor and researcher at Ohio State University (OSU), was sentenced May 14 to 37 months in prison for lying on U.S. NIH grant applications about his ties to at least five Chinese research institutes.