Drug approvals by the U.S. FDA totaled 26 in the first two months of 2026, with eight approvals in January and 18 in February. Compared with 2025, when approvals reached 12 in January and 16 in February (28 total), early 2026 activity is consistent with historical ranges.
The U.S. FDA clearance Feb. 20 of East Windsor, N.J.-based Acrotech Biopharma Inc.’s PDE4 inhibitor Adquey (difamilast ointment 1%) for mild to moderate atopic dermatitis brought renewed focus on the mechanism, where other drugs are already approved and more are stocking developers’ pipelines across indications.
Seeking accelerated approval as a fallback when clinical evidence is not quite strong enough for traditional approval appears destined for the dustbins of history.
From the start of the Nov. 16 Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee meeting, the U.S. FDA made it clear that withdrawing Acrotech Biopharma Inc.’s peripheral T-cell lymphoma drugs, Folotyn (pralatrexate) and Beleodaq (belinostat), from the market until a long-overdue confirmatory trial is completed is not an option given the current treatment landscape.
If everything goes according to the current plan, the U.S. FDA would get the final report of a confirmatory trial for Acrotech Biopharma Inc.’s Folotyn (pralatrexate) and Beleodaq (belinostat) in 2030 – more than two decades after Folotyn received accelerated approval to treat relapsed or refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma and 16 years after Beleodaq was granted accelerated approval for the same indication.
As it continues its crackdown on accelerated approval, the FDA continues to stress that successfully completing confirmatory trials should be the top priority for sponsors of drugs that enter the U.S. market via accelerated approval.