The U.S. FDA’s final rule for regulation of lab-developed tests is now a part of regulatory litigation history, but Scott Whitaker, CEO and president of the Advanced Medical Technology Association, said that while Congress is still considering LDT legislation, any new legislation may differ substantially from previous bills.
Sweeping “radical” changes in both the U.S. FDA and China’s drug development landscape are keeping the global life science industry on its toes in assessing what’s temporary and what’s not, speakers said at the Bioplus Interphex (BIX) Korea 2025 conference in Seoul, South Korea, on Oct. 15.
Sweeping “radical” changes in both the U.S. FDA and China’s drug development landscape are keeping the global life science industry on its toes in assessing what’s temporary and what’s not, speakers said at the Bioplus Interphex (BIX) Korea 2025 conference in Seoul, South Korea, on Oct. 15.
While inflation in the U.S. is hovering below 3%, increases in some FDA user fees for fiscal 2026 are tripling that rate. PDUFA fees for branded prescription drugs and biological products will see a 9% hike come Oct. 1, and the increase in MDUFA fees will more than double the inflation rate with a 7% hike across the board.
The next FDA device user fee agreement is formally in negotiations but a recent agency report shows device makers are increasingly keen to interact with FDA reviewers. This is a fact that may make it difficult to keep the next user fee schedule from increasing dramatically over the current agreement.
U.S. FDA commissioner Marty Makary appeared at the May 22 Senate Appropriations Committee with the news the White House proposed an FDA budget for fiscal 2026 of $6.8 billion including user fees. This is a cut of 11.5% that will not likely go over well on Capitol Hill as the FY 2026 budget process unwinds.
Staffing cuts at the FDA’s device center led to speculation that the current user fee program may be fatally damaged, but Mark Leahey, president and CEO of the Medical Device Manufacturers Association, said in a meeting in Columbus, Ohio that there are too many resources for FDA at stake for the user fee program to be ended.
The next major shock wave to hit the U.S. biopharma and med-tech industries could be the fiscal 2026 federal budget. Nearly one-third of the discretionary budget for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) could be wiped out, according to the White House Office of Management and Budget’s “pre-decisional” budget proposal, or passback, for HHS.
What comes down must go up seems to be the rule of thumb these days, even for U.S. FDA fees. The cost of using a priority review voucher (PRV) to shave four months off an FDA standard 10-month drug review has dropped drastically over the past several years. But come Oct. 1, biopharma companies will have to pay nearly 89% more than on the previous day to use a PRV.
Inflation continues to take a toll on U.S. FDA drug and device user fees with some of the fees increasing as much as 44% for fiscal 2025. While most fee increases for generics and innovative drugs and biologics are below 10%, the ANDA fee is jumping 28% to $321,920.