It’s UFA week in Washington
Policy wonks are waiting with bated breath for the Senate HELP committee’s user fee reauthorization draft, which, as I scooped on Friday, will include reforms to the FDA’s regulation of dietary supplements, cosmetics, and lab-based tests. Staffers and lobbyists expected that draft to be released as soon as Monday, though the timeline has slipped a little. HELP is hoping to release the draft this morning, a senior committee staffer told STAT Monday evening.
On the House side, the full Energy & Commerce Committee will also hold their markup of the user fee bill on Wednesday. So far E&C — which loves to plug its bipartisan attitude but often gets bogged down in 12+ hour marathon markups thanks to partisan fights — has had virtually no fireworks during its debate over the bill. It passed its package out of the E&C health subcommittee last week 30-0.
Here’s are two fights you should be watching as the user fee package inches closer to President Biden’s desk:
Dietary supplements: We at STAT will be particularly interested to see how senators tackle this one, which is a priority of the Senate HELP Committee Chair Sen. Patty Murray. And there’s clearly a fight brewing: the five supplement groups in Washington all have very different — and very strong — feelings about the main bill being considered, which would require supplement makers to submit information, like the products they sell and their ingredients, to the FDA.
At the center of the spat are the Council for Responsible Nutrition, which represents industry giants like Nestlé and Bayer and supports the bill, and the vociferously opposed Natural Products Association, which represents both supplement makers and retailers. The latter has rallied nearly 5,000 letters to lawmakers arguing the bill would “allow bioterrorists to introduce contaminants into the food supply" because it would require supplement makers to publicly disclose sensitive details about their supply chains. (Adding to the fun: the two groups share several members.)
A last-minute accelerated approval blitz: Doctors for America, the liberal doctors group co-founded by Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, is in Washington this week pushing lawmakers to go even further in reforming the agency’s so-called accelerated approval pathway.
They want lawmakers to strike a part of the package that would let drug makers complete the follow up studies for accelerated approval drugs using so-called real-world evidence. They’re also calling for language in the bill that would automatically pull a drug’s accelerated approval when the company’s follow-on study doesn’t show a clinical benefit.
By the way, want more info about how the FDA’s accelerated approval pathway and all its other approval pathways work? STAT has a new in-depth report that’ll answer all your questions. Check it out here.
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