White House Continues To Push For Higher User Fees From Industry

The White House expressed general support for the US House-passed user fee reauthorization bill while also demanding user fees be increased, creating some confusion in industry.

While the current bill reauthorizing US FDA user fees seems to be a done deal in Congress, the Trump White House continues to insist medical products industries pick up the entire tab for reviewing drugs, biosimilars and devices.

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Medtech Insight for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Legislation

Keep An Eye On Landmark Global Pandemic Treaty, Experts Advise

 

Mechanisms in the draft treaty that the more than 190 member states of the World Health Organization have finally agreed to are expected to “materially affect companies,” particularly those that develop, manufacture or distribute pandemic-related health care products.

New Semiconductor Tariffs Could Raise Device Costs

 
• By 

Proposed tariffs on semiconductors from President Donald Trump could significantly raise costs for the US medical device industry. Current domestic production cannot meet demand, spurring concerns about potential price increases for consumers and healthcare systems.

AdvaMed Unveils Its First ‘AI Roadmap’ To Help Lawmakers Navigate Regulating The Technology Through Rocky Times

 

Members of AdvaMed’s digital health tech board of directors discussed the organization’s efforts to aid the Trump administration and Congress in answering AI policy questions, especially as companies deal with mounting regulatory uncertainty.

End Of The Road? Court LDT Decision May Leave FDA With Few Options

 

Now that a federal judge has ruled the US FDA exceeded its authority by unilaterally assuming regulatory oversight of lab-developed tests, what’s the agency’s next move? And does it really have one?

More from Policy & Regulation

Makary Proposes Combined Adverse Event Reporting Systems In Megyn Kelly Interview

 

In discussing FDA’s adverse event monitoring, Makary also seemed to falsely imply the agency did not fully investigate the myocarditis signal with COVID-19 vaccines.

FDA Issues A Pair Of Early Alerts For Intravascular Catheters

 

The US FDA continues to issue early alerts as part of its communications pilot aimed at improving how the agency manages recalls. This time, the agency is notifying users about two separate intravascular catheters.

Upcoming CMS Meetings Address Tremor-Control Devices, Lab Test Reimbursement

 
• By 

The US Medicare agency will hold three public meetings in June and July addressing tremor treatment devices and clinical diagnostic lab tests. The first meeting on June 25 will focus on endpoints for Parkinson’s device trials, while subsequent meetings will address payment rates and codes for laboratory tests.