PMA Panel Votes: More Than Meets the Eye

PMA Panel Votes: More Than Meets the Eye

By Jeffrey N. Gibbs & David Gibbs & McKenzie E. Cato —

FDA advisory panel meetings to review pre-market applications (PMAs) are high-stakes events.  While FDA is not bound by the vote of the advisory panel, it has been long-accepted that the agency typically follows the recommendation of the panel.

Which got us thinking:  are conventional wisdom and the data on PMA advisory decisions consistent? We previously looked at advisory panel data to see whether some seemingly minor procedural changes in panel voting had affected voting patterns.  The data suggested that these changes had had an effect, but not in the way most people would have predicted.  See our prior post here, and our prior article here.

Thus, we decided to take a closer look at the relationship between panel votes and the ultimate outcomes and time to resolution of PMAs.  Once again, the results were not what might have been expected.  For example, between the change in the panel voting system in 2010, and 2016, our study cut-off, 52 devices were reviewed by panels.  All but four of them were approved, even though roughly 25% of the individual panel votes had been negative. (Panels vote on safety, effectiveness, and benefit-risk.)  Not all of the devices that eventually got approved sailed through the process; for example, a new study might have been required.  Still, it is notable that all but four that got to the panel stage crossed the finish line. (And one of the four failures apparently went out of business after a unanimous, positive panel vote and before approval.)

What about the strength of the vote? Did that lead to shorter times to approval?  Eking out a positive 7-6 win on effectiveness is presumably different than a 13-0 vote. In fact, the data show that time to approval post-meeting tended to be faster with stronger panel support (p < 0.05).  Whether this is due to the influence of the final vote on FDA, or a narrow vote reflects more problematic data is unknowable.  There are findings of interest as well, but we won’t give them away. The full article is linked here.

In case you were wondering, looking at more recent advisory panels wouldn’t have much impact on the data.  In the past 2 ½ years, there have only been 7 PMA advisory panels: 2 in 2017, 5 in 2018, and not one so far in 2019.  (There have, however, been 9 device panel meetings covering other topics in the same time period, including 2 on pending de novo requests.)

PMAs are complicated, and each PMA has its own narrative and story. Moreover, votes are not all that matter. FDA officials always caution that they consider the comments by panel members, and not just their votes.  Nor should one gainsay the significance of panel votes on investors, clinicians, and others.  Furthermore, we looked at two factors – votes and approval, but other variables changed over time, e.g., FDA’s user fee commitment.  Even so, our research suggests that conventional wisdom sometimes needs a good dose of empirical scrutiny.

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Rule to Require Drug Prices in TV Ads Found Invalid

Rule to Require Drug Prices in TV Ads Found Invalid

By Serra J. Schlanger

On July 8, 2019, U.S. District Court Judge Amit P. Mehta struck down a recently finalized Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) rulethat would have required drug pricing disclosures to be included in television advertisements for certain prescription drugs and biological products (the “Price Disclosure Rule”) (see our overview of the Rule here).  Judge Mehta’s decisioncame the day before the Price Disclosure Rule was set to take effect.

As we previously reported (here), three pharmaceutical companies (Merck, Eli Lily, and Amgen) and a trade association (the Association of National Advertisers) filed a lawsuit in June challenging the validity of the Price Disclosure Rule.  The companies argued that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) exceeded its authority in promulgating the Price Disclosure Rule, and that the Price Disclosure Rule is compelled speech that violates the First Amendment.  HHS had argued that two provisions of the Social Security Act (SSA) gave CMS authority to adopt the Price Disclosure Rule.

Though acknowledging that HHS may have a valid motive for issuing the Price Disclosure Rule, Judge Mehta found that HHS lacks the statutory authority to do so.  When the Price Disclosure Rule was issued, HHS acknowledged that the SSA did not expressly grant HHS the authority to “compel the disclosure of list prices to the public.”  As such, the Court analyzed whether Congress implicitly delegated such authority to HHS.  The Court looked to the language of the SSA and concluded that, although the SSA grants HHS general rulemaking authority related to the administration of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, that authority does not extend to regulating the marketing of prescription drugs, particularly because pharmaceutical manufacturers are “market actors that are not direct participants in the Medicare or Medicaid programs.”

The Court explained that HHS has never previously attempted to use the SSA to directly regulate the market for pharmaceuticals.  The Court recognized that Congress has previously legislated on the advertising of pharmaceutical products under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA).  The Court also pointed to HHS’ “Blueprint to Lower Drug Prices and Reduce Out-of-Pocket Costs”, which stated that HHS may “[c]all on the FDA to evaluate the inclusion of list prices in direct-to-consumer advertising.”  The Court reasoned that “HHS at first believed that the FDA, presumably under the FDCA, would be the proper sub-agency through which to promulgate the [Price] Disclosure Rule, as opposed to CMS under the SSA.”  The Court ultimately determined that the Price Disclosure Rule was “far afield” of HHS’ rulemaking authority under the SSA.  As such, the Court concluded that HHS had exceeded its authority and the Price Disclosure Rule was deemed invalid and set aside.  Due to this disposition, the Court did not address the First Amendment argument.

We will continue to monitor this case and other efforts to address drug pricing.

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A Round Up of New State Laws to Control Drug Prices

A Round Up of New State Laws to Control Drug Prices

By Serra J. Schlanger & Alan M. Kirschenbaum

While the federal government continues to debate the hot topic of drug prices, states continue to pass new laws designed to tackle drug pricing, price reporting, and discounting.  We’ve previously reported on the laws passed in California, Connecticut, Louisiana, Maryland, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Vermont (see here, here, and here).  We’ve also reported on the laws passed in Colorado, Florida, and Vermont to establish programs for importing drugs from Canada (see here and here).  To help our readers stay informed about state obligations, we’ve summarized below new laws in five states, all of which have been enacted during the past two months.

Colorado

HB 19-1131, which focuses on “Prescription Drug Cost Education,” was signed by Governor Jared Polis on May 16, 2019.  To address concerns that prescribers are unaware of drug costs, this new law requires drug manufacturers to provide information about drug prices and generic availability to prescribers.  More specifically, drug manufacturers (or their representatives) that share information about a product with prescribers must provide the prescribers with the drug’s wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) in writing.  Drug manufacturers (or their representatives) must also provide prescribers with the names of at least three generic prescription drugs from the same therapeutic class.  If three generic drugs are not available, the manufacturer or its representative must provide the names for as many as are available.  This law will take effect on August 2, 2019, unless a petition for referendum is filed.

Maine

Governor Janet Mills signed a package of four prescription drug related bills on June 24, 2019.

  1. LD 1162 seeks to “further expand drug price transparency” by authorizing the collection of prescription drug price data from payors, providers, prescription drug manufacturers, wholesale drug distributors, and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). Previously, only payors and providers needed to report clinical, financial, and quality data.  In addition, beginning January 30, 2020, the new law requires drug manufacturers to provide notice to the state if (A) the WAC of a brand-name drug increased by more than 20% in the prior calendar year; (B) the WAC of a generic drug that costs more than $10 increased by more than 20% in the prior calendar year; or (C) a new drug was introduced with a WAC greater than the amount that would cause the drug to be considered a specialty drug under Medicare Part D (i.e., $670 per month).  Although the new law provides that information provided by a drug manufacturer, wholesale drug distributor, or PBM is confidential, this information will be used by the state to produce an annual report available on a publicly accessible website.  The report may not disclose information attributable to any particular manufacturer, distributor, or PBM, but will include trends in the cost of prescription drugs, analysis of manufacturer prices and price increases, the major components of prescription drug pricing along the supply chain, the impacts on insurance premiums and cost sharing, and other relevant information to provide greater consumer awareness of the factors contributing to the cost of prescription drugs.  The first report will be published on November 1, 2020.
  2. LD 1272 seeks to “increase access to low-cost prescription drugs” by establishing a program to import prescription drugs from Canada. As with the three other states that have enacted similar laws (see here and here), Maine must obtain approval and certification for the proposed wholesale drug importation program from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.  The state’s request for approval and certification must be submitted no later than May 1, 2020.
  3. LD 1499 establishes the new Maine Prescription Drug Affordability Board. The Board is tasked with (A) determining annual spending targets for prescription drugs purchased by public payors (e.g., health plans for state, county, or municipal government employees); (B) determining spending targets on prescription drugs that may cause affordability challenges to enrollees in a public payor health plan; and (C) determining which public payors are likely to exceed the spending targets.  The Board shall work with each public payor to determine methods for the public payor to meet the spending targets, including negotiating rebates for the prescription drugs that contribute most to excess spending, revising formularies, establishing a common prescription drug formulary for all public payors, purchasing prescription drugs in bulk or through a single purchasing agreement for use among public payors, and collaborating with other states and state prescription drug purchasing consortia.  The Board shall begin holding public meetings no later than March 1, 2020.  The Board’s first report, including its prescription drug spending targets and recommendations, is due by October 1, 2020.
  4. LD 1504 seeks to protect consumers from unfair practices related to PBMs by replacing the current registration requirements for PBMs beginning on January 1, 2020. PBMs must obtain a license, which will be valid for three years.  Under the new rules, PBMs may not retain rebates paid by manufacturers and must pass those rebates along to the consumer or health plan.  In addition, a PBM may not require a patient to make “excess payments” at the point of sale for a covered prescription drug.  Excess payments include: (A) the applicable cost-sharing amount for the prescription drug; (B) the amount the patient would pay for the prescription drug if she purchased the prescription drug without using a health plan or any other source of prescription drug benefits or discounts; and (C) the total amount the pharmacy will be reimbursed for the prescription drug from the PBM or carrier, including the cost-sharing amount paid by a patient.

Maryland

After having its drug price gouging prohibition struck down by federal courts as unconstitutional (see our coverage here), Maryland enacted HB 768 on May 25, 2019.  This law creates a new Prescription Drug Affordability Board to protect state residents from the high costs of prescription drugs.  The Board will work with a new Prescription Drug Stakeholder Council consisting of 26 members from various groups, including generic and brand-name drug manufacturers, insurance carriers, PBMs, advocacy organizations, labor unions, and healthcare providers (e.g., pharmacists, physicians, nurses, dentists, and hospitals).  The Board plans to enter into Memoranda of Understanding with states that require reporting on the cost of prescription drugs in order to “aid in the collection of transparency data for prescription drug products.”

The new Board is tasked with identifying drugs that may create affordability challenges, including: brand name drugs or biologics that have a WAC of $30,000 or more per year or course of treatment at launch; brand name drugs or biologics that have a WAC increase of $3,000 or more in any 12-month period, or course of treatment if less than 12 months; biosimilar drugs that have a WAC that is not at least 15% lower than the reference brand biologic at launch; generic drugs that have a WAC of $100 or more for a supply lasting 30-days or fewer, or for one unit of the drug; and generic drugs whose WAC increased by 200% or more during the immediately preceding 12-month period.  After identifying these drugs, the Board will determine whether to conduct a cost review of the drugs.  If publicly available information is not available for the cost review, the Board may request information from the manufacturer, PBMs, health insurance carriers and managed care organizations.  Information and data obtained by the Board that is not publicly available is considered confidential and proprietary information.  If the Board determines that spending on a drug leads to an affordability challenge, the Board may set an upper payment limit for that drug.  The Board’s first reports are due by December 31, 2020.

Texas

HB 2536 was signed by Governor Greg Abbott on June 14, 2019.  It will become effective on September 1, 2019, but the affected drug manufacturers, PBMs, and health benefit plans are not required to submit reports before January 1, 2020.

Under this new law, drug manufacturers are required to disclose when a drug’s WAC increases 15% or more compared to the previous year or 40% or more over the past three calendar years.  The new law applies to drugs with a WAC of at least $100 for a 30-day supply.  Manufacturers must report, among other things, the aggregate, company-level research and development costs for the most recent year for which final audit data is available, and a statement regarding the factor(s) that caused the increase in WAC and an explanation of the role of each factor’s impact on cost.  The information submitted to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) shall be made public.

HB 2536 also contains annual reporting requirements for PBMs and health benefit plans.

Washington

HB 1224 was signed by Governor Jay Inslee on May 9, 2019.  This new law requires drug manufacturers to report and provide justification for certain launch prices and price increases.  Beginning October 1, 2019, for each covered drug, manufacturers must report, among other things:

  • A description of the specific financial and nonfinancial factors used to make the decision to set or increase the WAC. For a WAC increase, the manufacturer must provide the amount of the increase and an explanation of how these factors explain the increase.
  • Itemized cost for production and sales, including manufacturing costs, annual marketing and advertising costs, total research and development costs, total costs of clinical trials, and total cost for acquisition of the drug;
  • Total financial assistance given through assistance programs, rebates, and coupons;
  • A schedule of WAC increases for the past 5 years, if applicable.

Covered drugs include (A) a new prescription drug that will be introduced to the market at a WAC of $10,000 or more for a course of treatment lasting less than one month or a 30-day supply, whichever is longer; or (B) a prescription drug that is currently on the market, has a WAC of more than $100 for a course of treatment lasting less than one month or a 30-day supply, and the WAC increased at least 20% over the prior calendar year, or 50% over the prior three calendar years.  Reports must be submitted 60-days in advance of a price increase or within 30-days after release of a new covered drug to the market.  The law specifies that information submitted by manufacturers is not subject to public disclosure.

Drug manufacturers are also required to submit written notice within 60-days after receiving FDA approval for a new drug application or biologics license application.  The state may request additional information from the manufacturer if it expects the drug to have a significant impact on state expenditures.

Finally, beginning October 1, 2019, a manufacturer of a covered drug must notify the state of a price increase in writing at least 60-days prior to the planned effective date of the increase.  The notice must include the date of the increase, the current WAC, the dollar amount of the future increase in WAC, and a statement regarding whether a change or improvement in the drug necessitates the price increase.  The state will provide recommendations on how manufacturers should provide advance notice of price increases by December 1, 2020.

HB 1224 also contains reporting requirements for health carriers and PBMs.

We can expect further new federal and state laws addressing drug pricing, and we will continue to report on these new laws.

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Cybersecurity Fears Lead to Insulin Pump Recall

Cybersecurity Fears Lead to Insulin Pump Recall

By McKenzie E. Cato —

On June 27, Medtronic announced that it was recalling certain MiniMed insulin pumps due to “potential security vulnerabilities.”  On the same day, FDA issued a Safety Communication and the Department of Homeland Security issued a Cybersecurity Infrastructure Security Advisory about the same issue.

FDA’s Safety Communication states that “FDA has become aware that an unauthorized person (someone other than a patient, caregiver, or health care provider) could potentially wirelessly connect to a nearby MiniMed insulin pump with cybersecurity vulnerabilities.”  FDA explains that the potential risk of a hacking attempt is that the hacker “could change the pump’s settings to either over-deliver insulin to a patient, leading to low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), or stop insulin delivery, leading to high blood sugar and diabetic ketoacidosis.”  FDA notes that it is not aware of any actual hacking incidents.

FDA has been increasingly focused on cybersecurity.  In recent years, FDA has released guidance on premarket cybersecurity considerations (see our past blog posts here, here, and here) and postmarket cybersecurity considerations (see our past blog posts here and here).  The Safety Communication from FDA about MiniMed is also not the first of its kind.  FDA has issued at least six other Safety Communications since 2015 about specific medical device cybersecurity issues, including issues related to other Medtronic devices, listed on its webpage on cybersecurity.

Though Medtronic’s recent recall, as described in its Security Bulletin, was due to “work performed by external researchers” that identified the potential cybersecurity vulnerability, it is possible that FDA will identify these types of vulnerabilities more often in both the premarket and postmarket context.  As we have reported in past blog posts (here and here), we are aware of FDA requesting additional information about device cybersecurity while reviewing pending premarket submissions.

If we start to see more cybersecurity-related recalls, particularly as wireless and cloud-based medical device software becomes more common, we may see more attention from FDA to cybersecurity issues in the postmarket context, including through inspectional observations.

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Device Manufacturer’s Criminal and Civil Penalties Deserve Closer Attention

Device Manufacturer’s Criminal and Civil Penalties Deserve Closer Attention

By Anne K. Walsh & Adrienne R. Lenz, Senior Medical Device Regulation Expert

Today’s blog post illustrates how a company’s problems can escalate rapidly from an administrative warning letter to the full weight of the criminal system.  The unfortunate subject is ACell, a manufacturer of medical devices derived from porcine urinary bladder material.  ACell received a Warning Letter in 2013 related to the Quality System and Medical Device Reporting for its MatriStem® Surgical Matrix Thick device.  Little did it know, that same year, a whistleblower filed a qui tam action alleging, among other things, off-label promotion of another one of its devices, MicroMatrix Powder Wound Dressing.  A second whistleblower filed a case in 2016 making similar allegations.  The government lawyers investigating the whistleblowers’ allegations coordinated with criminal prosecutors, culminating in ACell agreeing to pay $15 million, plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge, implement extensive compliance activities, and be subject to a five year Corporate Integrity Agreement.

The criminal plea was based on the company’s failure to report to FDA its decision to remove its MicroMatrix Powder Wound Dressing from the marketplace, a reporting requirement under 21 C.F.R. Part 806.  In 2012, ACell learned that approximately 30,000 units of its MicroMatrix powder were contaminated with endotoxin levels that posed a risk to health.  ACell removed the affected devices but concealed the reason for the removal from health care providers and did not submit an 806 Report to FDA.  On June 11, 2019, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland announced that it had charged ACell with a criminal misdemeanor, imposed a fine of $3 million, and required the company to enact extensive compliance reforms.

A few notable points about the criminal portion of this case.

  • No individuals are named in the plea. The failure to include an officer of ACell seems inconsistent with DOJ’s mantra about holding individuals accountable.
  • The Statement of Facts accompanying the criminal plea, which the parties agreed the government could prove beyond a reasonable doubt at trial, extends to activities well beyond the single 806 reporting violation, and paints a picture of a much more culpable defendant than the single misdemeanor count reveals.
  • Despite the five year statute of limitations contained in the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, the criminal plea related to conduct that occurred seven years ago, when the reporting obligation was triggered in 2012.
  • The Compliance Program contains many of the typical elements in a Corporate Integrity Agreement, but extends to include monitoring for potential violations of FDA reporting obligations.

Each of these points is worth closer examination, and perhaps even its own blog post, but for now, medical device companies simply need to recognize the potential ramifications of the government’s  enforcement of the 806 reporting obligations.

The civil settlement turned on entirely different conduct: the company’s marketing of the MicroMatrix product.  According to the settlement agreement, FDA cleared MicroMatrix only for the management of topical wounds, but ACell marketed MicroMatrix for non-topical or internal uses.  The government alleged that “ACell’s promotion was false and misleading because, at the direction of management, ACell sales representatives stated to physicians that the use of powder non-topically and internally was safe and effective, when the sales representatives knew that no such clinical data existed.”  The government also alleged the company provided incorrect coding recommendations for reimbursement of its devices and provided prescribers with “improper inducements” to encourage use of its devices.  The civil settlement requires ACell to pay $12 million over five years, which includes an initial payment of $500,000, and quarterly payments in amounts ranging from $475,000 to $675,000 (plus interest).  The qui tamrelator will receive $2,366,004 of the settlement.

We have seen the number of straight “off-label” prosecutions diminish as the government has struggled with First Amendment considerations for distributing truthful, non-misleading information.  This case, however, turned on the “false and misleading” nature of the promotion because no clinical data existed.  Thus, industry should not get too confident that off-label promotion investigations are by-gone relics, and as always, should focus on ensuring there is proper substantiation for all product claims, whether on- or off-label.

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HP&M’s James Valentine Named a 2019 RARE Champion of Hope; Moderates Global Rare Disease Town Hall with FDA and EMA

HP&M’s James Valentine Named a 2019 RARE Champion of Hope; Moderates Global Rare Disease Town Hall with FDA and EMA

By Frank J. Sasinowski

Last week, Global Genes, a global rare disease patient advocacy organization, announced the 2019 RARE Champion of Hope Awardees, which included Hyman, Phelps & McNamara, P.C.’s very own, James Valentine.  This is a great honor, bestowed upon “true champions for rare disease”, “people who inspire us all through innovation, research, compassion and a relentless spirit to affect positive change.”  It is no surprise to me, someone who works with James on a daily basis, that he would be selected for such an honor.

James has been a relentless advocate for rare disease patients from the day he started his career, as a patient liaison at FDA, over 11 years ago.  At FDA, James worked across the Agency’s three medical product centers to help incorporate the patient voice into regulatory decision-making.  He helped administer the FDA Patient Representative Program, facilitated stakeholder consultations during the reauthorization of PDUFA and MDUFA, helped launch the Patient-Focused Drug Development (PFDD) program, and developed the FDA Patient Network.

Since joining HP&M 5 years ago, James brought his advocacy skills to private practice, representing over two dozen rare disease patient advocacy groups, assisting them in engaging with drug developers and regulators.  He’s been central to the transition of the PFDD program to externally-led meetings, having helped plan and moderated the majority of these, and is also working on novel methodologies for capturing patient experience data.  He has helped ensure thousands of patients have a seat at the table with decision-makers. And his patient advocacy work is only the beginning.  James has also been critical in advising orphan drug and gene therapy sponsors in development and approval issues, having helped secure FDA approval for several new molecular entities in this relatively short period of time.

In fact, the Global Genes announcement came just one day before James moderated the Global Rare Disease Town Hall at the DIA Annual Meeting.  As pictured, James led a discussion with FDA’s Dr. Peter Stein (Director, Office of New Drugs & Acting Associate Director for Rare Disease, OND, CDER), Dr. Janet Maynard (Director, Office of Orphan Products Development), and Dr. Ilan Irony (Deputy Director, Division of Clinical Evaluation and Pharmacology/Toxicology, OTAT, CBER), as well as EMA’s Dr. Agnès Saint-Raymond (Head of International Affairs, Head of Portfolio Board).  The panel discussed important topics in the regulation of products for rare diseases, including new targeted technologies, the utility of expedited programs, patient engagement and collaboration, new Agency organizational proposals, and more.

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FDA Issues Final Guidance on Declaration of Added Sugars for Single Ingredient Products and Certain Cranberry Products

FDA Issues Final Guidance on Declaration of Added Sugars for Single Ingredient Products and Certain Cranberry Products

By Riëtte van Laack

As we discussed previously, FDA’s 2016 final regulation updating nutrition labeling requirements included a requirement to declare added sugars.  This requirement created quite a stir among several segments of the industry.  Among others, the honey and maple syrup manufacturers pushed back on the requirement to include, on single-ingredient packages for these products, a statement (in the nutrition facts box), “includes x g sugars;” the inclusion of this statement was expected to confuse consumers into thinking the honey or maple syrup were adulterated by the addition of sugar.

In March 2018, FDA issued a draft guidance allowing a disclaimer explaining the statement.  However, FDA’s proposed solution was not well received by industry.  In June, FDA announced that FDA was working with stakeholders to devise a (more) sensible solution.  Subsequently, on Sept. 6, 2018, then-Commissioner Gottlieb announced that FDA was drafting the “final guidance, which [FDA] anticipate[s] issuing by early next year.”  Then in December 2018, the President signed the Farm Bill including a provision prohibiting FDA from requiring a statement “includes x g sugar” on single ingredient packages or containers of pure honey, maple syrup and other single ingredient sugars and syrups.  Last week, about six months after the Farm Bill was enacted, FDA issued final guidance advising industry what, according to FDA, this means for the nutrition facts box for these products.

Consistent with the Farm Bill, the single-ingredient products are not required to declare the number of grams of added sugars in a serving of the product on the Nutrition Facts box but must still include the percent Daily Value (DV) for added sugars. In other words, FDA believes that it can require declaration of %DV for an undeclared nutrient.  FDA further states that it intends to exercise enforcement discretion for the use of the “†” symbol immediately following the %DV declaration, which leads to a footnote inside the Nutrition Facts label which explains the amount of added sugars that one serving of the product contributes to the diet as well as the contribution of one serving of the product toward the percent DV for added sugars or a similar non-misleading statement.  The inclusion of the footnote is not mandatory.  The guidance as well as a fact sheet include an example.

The honey and maple industries were not the only ones objecting to FDA’s final rule.  The cranberry industry also raised objections .  Cranberry juice naturally contains little sugar but is so tart that making it palatable for the consumer demands the addition of sugar (or another sweetener).  The added sugars must be declared as added sugars.  A juice, such as grape juice, that is naturally sweet, need not be sweetened to be palatable.  As a result, consumers comparing the nutrition information of a cranberry juice and grape juice, may avoid cranberry juice; even though the total sugar content of the two juices is similar, the amount of added sugar in cranberry juice is significantly higher than the amount of added sugar in grape juice (which will be 0 g).

Consistent with the draft guidance, FDA maintains its position that cranberry beverage products and certain dried cranberry products must declare added sugars in grams as well as the %DV for added sugars.  However, FDA will exercise enforcement discretion by allowing the use of a symbol immediately following the %DV for added sugars.  This symbol will link to a statement outside the Nutrition Facts label explaining that sugars are added to improve the palatability of naturally tart cranberries.  FDA provides examples of several possible statements none of which appear to address the total sugar content of the cranberry product vs. the naturally sweeter product.

In the Federal Register notice, FDA notes that it may consider the same type of enforcement discretion discussed with respect to certain cranberry products for other naturally tart fruits for which the amount of total sugars per serving is at a level that does not exceed the amount of total sugars in a comparable product with no added sugars.  Acai berry juice products do not fall in that category.

Overall, FDA is giving manufacturers of single ingredient packages/containers of pure honey, maple syrup, other pure sugars and syrups, and certain cranberry products enforcement discretion until July 1, 2021 to comply with the new nutrition labeling requirements, i.e., approximately two years after publication of the final guidance.  This will give these manufacturers additional time to make label changes consistent with the final regulations, the Farm Bill and FDA’s guidance.

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Not Dead Yet – Far from It: OTC Monograph Reform Back on Congress’ Radar

Not Dead Yet – Far from It: OTC Monograph Reform Back on Congress’ Radar

By Deborah L. Livornese

We knew it would be back.

It was never dead, though perhaps forgotten by some (never us), but OTC Monograph Reform is back in the public eye again.  Lawmakers appear to be taking to heart CDER Director Janet Woodcock’s remarks last week in which she urged the adoption of reforms to the monograph system.  On June 24, 2019, a bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced H.R. 3443 to enact the Over-the-Counter Monograph Safety, Innovation, and Reform Act of 2019, and it was referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.  The text of the bill can be found here.

As readers of this blog may recall, FDA has been exploring OTC Monograph Reform and its associated user fees for several years, formally beginning with a public meeting on the subject in June of 2016, which we blogged about here.  Remarkable in its bipartisan appeal and support, legislation emerged that seemed destined for passage.  However, it stalled over differences in the House and Senate bills on the proposed length of time for marketing exclusivity afforded for certain innovations.  That issue was resolved, but it wasn’t the right time for this legislation.  Due, at least in part, to complications caused by the federal government shut down, it was still not (yet) to be at the end of 2018.  Earlier this year, monograph reform was included in H.R. 269 (the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness and Advancing Innovation Act of 2019) which was passed by the House.  Senate leadership concluded a separate bill was not necessary because the provisions had been agreed to by both chambers and it placed the bill on the Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders where it remains.

The newly introduced H.R. 3443 contains the same language as the monograph section of the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness and Advancing Innovation Act of 2019 introduced as H.R. 269.  Among other things, it:

  • changes the rulemaking process currently used to establish and modify monographs to what is hoped to be a more efficient order process
  • addresses the status of products currently marketed under tentative final monographs
  • allows for innovation beyond the constraints of the current system
  • provides for marketing exclusivity for certain innovations
  • provides FDA with more tools in the event of an emerging safety issue
  • provides for user fees which will come with timeline goals for FDA actions.

There’s much more to the OTC Monograph Reform, and we will cover the details as it gets closer to becoming law.  The new bill may be added to drug pricing legislation under consideration. We will continue to follow and report on its progress.

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SCOTUS Makes it Easier for Government to Withhold Commercial or Financial Information

SCOTUS Makes it Easier for Government to Withhold Commercial or Financial Information

By Anne K. Walsh & Ricardo Carvajal

In a 6-3 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed and remanded the lower courts’ decision to publicly disclose commercial information that previously had been submitted to the government.  Given that FDA-regulated entities often submit to FDA commercial or financial information that those entities regard as privileged or confidential, this decision is notable because it upends FDA’s interpretation and application of Exemption 4 of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).  Exemption 4 permits the government to withhold from disclosure “trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential.”  5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4).

In this case, a South Dakota newspaper (Argus Leader) filed a FOIA request with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) for data related to the national food-stamp program (called SNAP).  The newspaper asked for annual redemption data from each of the stores, and USDA invoked FOIA Exemption 4 in declining to disclose the data.  The lower court applied the generally accepted “substantial competitive harm” test to determine whether the commercial information is “confidential.”  That test, first adopted by the D.C. Circuit in 1974 in National Parks & Conservation Association v. Morton, provides that Exemption 4 prevents disclosure of information required to be submitted to the government only if disclosure is likely “(1) to impair the Government’s ability to obtain necessary information in the future; or (2) to cause substantial harm to the competitive position of the person from whom the information was obtained.”   Although the court agreed that “revealing store-level SNAP data could work some competitive harm, the court could not say that disclosure would rise to the level of causing ‘substantial competitive harm,’ and thus ordered disclosure.”

Although USDA declined to appeal, the Food Marketing Institute (FMI) (a grocery retailers’ trade association) appealed the decision to the Eighth Circuit, which rejected FMI’s argument to discard the National Parks “substantial competitive harm” test and affirmed.  FMI then appealed to the Supreme Court.

Justice Gorsuch, in the Supreme Court opinion, noted that the statute does not define the term “confidential,” and thus focused on the term’s “ordinary, contemporary, common meaning” when Congress enacted FOIA.  The Court noted that contemporary dictionary definitions of “confidential” established that at least one condition has to be met for information to qualify as “confidential” – namely, the information “must be at customarily kept private, or at least closely held, by the person imparting it.”  An additional condition might also have to be met – namely, the party receiving the information must provide “some assurance that it will remain secret.”  The Court declined to resolve that question because both conditions were met in the instant case.  The grocery stores clearly treated the SNAP data as private, and USDA had provided the stores with an assurance that the agency would treat the information as such.  The Court firmly rejected the application of the “substantial competitive harm” requirement set forth in National Parks, characterizing the approach taken in that decision as “a relic from a ‘bygone era of statutory construction,’” and other courts’ subsequent application of this standard as a “casual disregard of the rules of statutory interpretation.”

Thus, the Court greatly expanded the ability of the government to withhold information from the public:

At least where commercial or financial information is both customarily and actually treated as private by its owner and provided to the government under an assurance of privacy, the information is “confidential” within the meaning of Exemption 4.

(Emphasis ours.)  In an accompanying opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, Justice Breyer maintained that the Court’s reading of Exemption 4 is at odds with the “whole point” of FOIA: “to give the public access to information it cannot otherwise obtain.” Otherwise FOIA would be unnecessary, because Google searches could suffice to obtain information that is already publicly available.  He warned that the Court’s reading will “deprive the public of information for reasons no better than convenience, skittishness, or bureaucratic inertia.”

The importance of this decision to FDA-regulated entities cannot be overstated.  Now, an FDA-regulated company that is required to submit commercial or financial information to FDA only needs to show its efforts to keep the information private, and the assurances from FDA that it would treat the information as such (and, as noted above, even the latter criterion might not apply).  There is no requirement for showing any harm from the disclosure of that information, whether substantial or negligible.  Although FDA regulation largely tracks the broad definition of confidential commercial or financial information (“valuable data or information which is used in one’s business and is of a type customarily held in strict confidence or regarded as privileged and not disclosed to any member of the public by the person to whom it belongs”), 21 C.F.R. § 20.61, FDA may need to scrub the reference to “competitive harm” in discussing its assessment of whether to provide notice to the submitter of commercial or financial information about a request for that information.

Further, the Court’s decision points toward adoption of a single standard for determining whether information qualifies as confidential, thereby eradicating the esoteric distinction between information that is required to be submitted (which was governed by the “substantial competitive harm” standard elucidated in National Parks) and information that is voluntarily submitted (which was governed by the less demanding standard elucidated in Critical Mass Energy Project v. NRC, i.e., “information qualifies as confidential ‘if it is of a kind that would customarily not be released to the public by the person from whom it was obtained’”).  While declining to articulate that single standard, the Court noted that it could not “discern a persuasive reason to afford the same statutory term to two such radically different constructions.”

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FDA Updates MDR Program in an Effort to Increase Transparency

FDA Updates MDR Program in an Effort to Increase Transparency

By Adrienne R. Lenz, Senior Medical Device Regulation Expert

FDA recently announced new changes it is making to the Medical Device Reporting (MDR) program as part of its ongoing efforts to increase transparency on device performance, and detection of device-related safety concerns. FDA is formally discontinuing the Alternative Summary Reporting (ASR) Program, which permitted certain device manufacturers to file quarterly reports rather than individual reports.  All data submitted under the program are available on the MDR Data Files web page.

The ASR data is available only in compressed files containing data for one year.  Starting in 2017, the ASR Program also required manufacturers to submit a “companion” medical device report for visibility through the Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience (MAUDE) database so the most recent files are searchable.  For the years 1999 to 2016, the data are available, but not easy to navigate.

Files from CDRH’s Device Experience Network (DEN) also are available on the MDR Data Files page.  These include files from the database that pre-dates the MAUDE database.  Like the ASR data, DEN data are available in compressed, downloadable files containing data by year, but the DEN files also can be searched by product description, product code, manufacturer and report type.

FDA also provided an update on its plans to make the MAUDE database more user friendly and for active surveillance using the National Evaluation System for health Technology (NEST).  While improving the user interface for MAUDE will be helpful, the MDR system is a passive system and has limitations in its use for identifying emerging signals to improve patient safety.  Therefore, FDA claims it is moving to an active surveillance system, leveraging Unique Device Identifiers (UDI) and NEST.  Both the MAUDE updates and NEST received funding for development in FY2019 so we look forward to seeing progress in the near future.

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