FDA’s Getting its Fix: The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026
As some of you know, tucked inside the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026, was some legislation that FDA has been pushing for quite some time. In addition to the incredibly important renewal of the Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher program (blog on that forthcoming), the Appropriations Act included two provisions that the Agency has been clamoring for and that directly affect drug competition.
First up, as part of the Mikaela Naylon Give Kids a Chance Act is a legislative fix to the Catalyst decision (and its progeny) that FDA has been pushing for since 2021. In Catalyst, the Eleventh Circuit concluded that the “same disease or condition” text in the Orphan Drug Act must mean the designated “rare disease or condition” and could not be interpreted by the Agency to mean the “indication or use.” Accordingly, because the orphan drug exclusivity provisions preclude FDA from approving another application “for the same drug for the same disease or condition,” the Court found that orphan drug exclusivity inherently applies to the entire designated disease or condition rather than the “indication or use.” In other words, the orphan drug exclusivity blocks competition from the same molecule for the entire disease or condition rather than just the indication approved. At the conclusion of the Catalyst case, FDA decided that this decision should apply only narrowly, announcing in the Federal Register that the Agency would “continue to apply its regulations tying the scope of orphan-drug exclusivity to the uses or indications for which a drug is approved . . .” with the exception of the specific product at issue in the Catalyst case. And the Agency did just that. But, of course, that led to additional litigation.
Enter the legislative fix. The newly-enacted legislation replaces “same disease or condition” with “same approved use or indication within such rare disease or condition.” It is now plain, therefore, that orphan drug exclusivity blocks the approval of the same molecule only for the same indication. It applies retroactively, as the legislation states that the amended statutory provision applies “regardless of the date on which the drug was so designated, and regardless of the date on which the drug was approved . . . .” Accordingly, FDA is going to need to go through its database of active orphan drug exclusivities and determine what is actually blocked by the scope of that exclusivity. Given how many drugs have active orphan drug exclusivity, that could take a while. Regardless, FDA must be happy, as the Agency has been trying relentlessly to get Congress to adopt this fix for the last 5 years.
Also included in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026 is a measure addressing requirements for qualitative and quantitative similarity for generic drugs with the objective of “[i]ncreasing transparency in generic drug applications.” That provision amends section 505(j)(3) of the FDC Act to allow FDA to inform potential ANDA applicants whether a drug is qualitatively and/or quantitively the same as its listed drug.
This is important because FDA regulations require that some generic drugs not only have the same active ingredient(s), but quantitatively and qualitatively the same inactive ingredients (with some specified exceptions) as their reference listed drug—or, in other words, are “Q1/Q2 the same” as their reference listed drug. Until now, the only way for an applicant to know if its proposed generic actually is Q1/Q2 to its listed drug is to submit a controlled correspondence guessing as to the amount (and sometimes type) of inactive ingredients. FDA could tell an applicant that the guess is wrong, but it couldn’t say why or give an applicant the correct amount. Applicants continued to submit controlled correspondence on the topic until they happened to guess correctly. Now, this Q1/Q2 provision of the Appropriations Act allows FDA to “identify and disclose” to the applicant why and how a drug is not Q1/Q2 to its listed drug and allows FDA to disclose the amount of deviation. No more guessing!
Equally important is that FDA is now bound by its controlled correspondence Q1/Q2 determination. This addresses a common issue in which ANDA applicants submitted controlled correspondence to FDA and were assured the formulation is Q1/Q2 the same as the listed drug, but FDA ultimately refused to receive the ANDA because it is not, in fact, Q1/Q2 the same as the listed drug. In other words, ANDA applicants were informed of mistakes in FDA’s Q1/Q2 controlled correspondence only after submission, leaving them no choice but to go back to the drawing board. By binding FDA to its previous Q1/Q2 determinations, applicants can now trust Q1/Q2 correspondence from the Agency. We note, however, that there is an exception for changes to the formulation of the listed drug where the previous formulation is withdrawn for reasons of safety or effectiveness. There’s also an exception if FDA issues a written determination that its prior Q1/Q2 determination must be changed due to an identified error. But this means that FDA cannot just pull the rug out from applicants, as it has done in the past.
While these provisions may be a little in the weeds for an appropriations bill, they reflect years of FDA lobbying and effort to bring a little certainty where issues have repeatedly arisen. FDA has finally gotten its fix.