Riders on the Storm Part 2: The Drug Provisions
This is the second in our series analyzing the riders attached to the FY 2026 Labor-HHS Appropriations Bill. This installment examines the drug-related provisions, which cover a wide range of topics from accelerated approval and rare disease therapies to biosimilars and opioid regulation. The Committee’s report reflects ongoing congressional priorities while also addressing persistent industry frustrations and emerging regulatory challenges. Below, we summarize the key drug-related provisions and offer our analysis of what they may mean for sponsors, manufacturers, and the broader pharmaceutical landscape.
Accelerated Approval
The Committee encourages FDA to continue the use of accelerated approval where there is unmet medical need. However, it has identified inconsistencies regarding accelerated approval between CDER and CBER and requests a report within 120 days describing the steps FDA can take to ensure equal treatment is given to an accelerated approval application regardless of Center. While each application is unique, these inconsistencies have been a common frustration for sponsors. We strongly applaud these efforts to ensure the greatest consistency possible to provide much needed predictability for sponsors relying on accelerated approval.
Cell and Gene Therapies
The Committee also encourages FDA to support the development of genetically modified cell-based therapies, including with increased predictability and efficiencies in the IND process as well as scalable delivery on the manufacturing side. These are common obstacles for complex biologic products, and although the language here makes it sound as if this is a simple fix, we hope this leads to progress in an area where these development programs are often stalled.
Genetically Targeted Technologies
The report also contains an interesting rider directing FDA to reconsider product classifications for genetically targeted technologies, including siRNAs and ASOs, which are currently approved under the NDA process under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (“FDCA”). The report suggests that these products share more in common with products approved as BLAs under the Public Health Service Act (“PHS Act”) and that this may be the more appropriate pathway to account for their more complex characteristics, including manufacturing. Although there are many similarities between how these products are regulated, there are some specific distinctions including approaches to characterize and control product quality. Reclassification would also be a shift away from the Hatch-Waxman/generic drug framework, with its 5 years of new chemical entity exclusivity (among other exclusivity periods) and 505(b)(2) applications, to the biosimilar framework with 12 years of reference product exclusivity and no comparable 505(b)(2) pathway. If this reclassification were to occur, it would have a significant impact on the regulation and approval of follow-on products for the product types affected, similar to the shift made in 2020 to approve insulin and other similar products under BLAs.
Rare Diseases
There are a number of provisions aimed to encourage the development of rare diseases. This includes specific provisions to encourage the development of acceptable endpoints for Angelman syndrome, congenital myotonic dystrophy, and hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy. Additionally, the Committee acknowledges the increased challenges of designing clinical trials for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (“DMD”), particularly given the growing number of approved therapies that have improved the natural history. However, the Committee urges FDA to explore ways to continue to use natural history controls for DMD trials rather than requiring placebo controls.
More broadly, the Committee also expresses concern that sponsors of rare disease therapies are often required to conduct traditional clinical trial designs, which can be ethically and practically problematic. The Committee urges FDA to consider these issues and to explore alternatives, including single-arm studies, when randomization to placebo is infeasible or unethical. The report expresses the urgency of the Committee that FDA ensure there are no undue delays in the development and review of rare disease therapies, including cell and gene therapies. Additionally, the report stresses the importance of regulatory consistency that takes into account the inherent challenges of rare disease drug development. The Committee also cites the Rare Disease Innovation Hub as having a positive impact on FDA internal processes regarding rare disease regulation (and we agree)!
Medical Countermeasure Priority Review Voucher
The report also describes the importance of the Material Threat Medical Countermeasure (“MCM”) Priority Review Voucher (“PRV”) program, which provides a transferable voucher on approval to qualifying products intended for use to prevent or treat harm from a biological, chemical, radiological, or nuclear agent identified as a material threat, or harm resulting from the administration of a product against such agent. FDA’s authority to issue new MCM PRVs expired in 2023 with little subsequent movement toward reauthorization (unlike FDA’s authority to issue Rare Pediatric Disease (“RPD”) PRVs, which was ultimately renewed in 2026 following its expiry in 2024). However, the report states that “[t]he Committee anticipates reauthorization of this program,” and directs FDA to continue supporting the MCM PRV framework until then. During the period of time when FDA’s authority to issue RPD PRVs had expired, it continued to grant RPD designations to help ensure a smooth transition when it was reauthorized. As there is no similar MCM designation in the statute, we wonder what FDA’s continued support of the MCM PRV framework will look like until reauthorization. Regardless, we are glad to see some movement toward renewal of this important program after years of quiet, although we will have to wait and see what ultimately happens.
Illegal Import of Unapproved Drugs
The Committee is tackling illegal imports of unapproved new drugs in the rider, expressing “deep concern” about the health risks posed. The Committee indicates it is awaiting a “comprehensive report addressing this issue, including safety risks, verification challenges, enforcement actions, and recommendations for strengthening oversight.”
The Committee’s concerns come after FDA’s recent denial of a Citizen Petition requesting FDA provide a clear position statement on importation activities by alternative funding programs, which are typically employer-sponsored health plans that rely on the import of unapproved, lower cost, foreign-sourced versions of FDA-approved drugs. An investigative news report previously exposed these programs and their risks. FDA has stated that imports of unapproved drugs are generally prohibited, and maintains an Import Alert (IA 66-57) to prevent these importations. FDA has also issued Warning Letters to companies that have facilitated the import of these drugs (see, here and here). That said, these alternative funding programs now leverage FDA’s personal use import policy to help facilitate access to lower cost drugs and rely on FDA’s case-by-case import enforcement discretion. While FDA’s personal use import policy (as articulated on its website and in the Regulatory Procedures Manual Ch 9) does not apply if treatment is otherwise available domestically, and FDA has stated that its policy “does not state that the cost of an FDA-approved prescription drug is a consideration for FDA personnel,” there is clearly a disconnect, as these alternative funding programs have been wildly successful at facilitating the import of unapproved, foreign-sourced versions of FDA-approved drugs.
Perhaps in response to these concerns, on June 15 FDA authorized Colorado’s drug importation program under section 804 of the FDCA, which would permit Colorado’s importation of 20 prescription drugs from Canada. Colorado is the second state to have a section 804 import program authorized by FDA; Florida’s program was authorized in early 2024. Despite authorization, Florida has not been able to successfully import any drugs from Canada through the program and has repeatedly requested (and been granted) authorization extensions. We are interested to see whether the Committee’s interest in illegal imports spurs a greater crackdown by FDA on personal use imports as well as new section 804 import program authorizations.
Electronic Prescribing Information
Two riders address dissemination of electronic prescription drug information: 1) a rider addressing patient prescribing information encourages FDA to finalize the proposed rule for Patient Medication Information (“PMI”)with the option to deliver electronically; and 2) a rider directing FDA to develop an electronic prescribing information (“PI”) framework within 12 months of enactment of the Act. These provisions stand in stark contrast to language included in appropriations bills passed by Congress since 2015 prohibiting FDA from taking any action that would allow or require PIs to be distributed electronically.
The pharmaceutical industry has long advocated for FDA to permit electronic distribution of PI; Pharma companies argue that electronic PIs would allow for more timely updates to safety information, reduce printing and distribution costs, improve accessibility for healthcare providers who increasingly rely on digital resources, and align U.S. practices with those in other major markets that have embraced electronic labeling.
The paper industry has vigorously opposed any move away from paper PIs. This standoff has persisted for nearly a decade, frustrating FDA’s efforts to modernize drug labeling. FDA has expressed interest in electronic labeling solutions, noting that paper inserts are often discarded unread, printed in small font that is difficult to read, and may contain outdated information if labeling has been updated since the batch was manufactured. The agency has pointed to pilot programs and stakeholder feedback supporting electronic alternatives.
The current appropriations riders represent a potential turning point. Whether these provisions survive conference and final enactment—and whether the paper industry mounts another lobbying effort to reinstate the prohibition—remains to be seen.
OTC Drug Monographs
The Committee calls out FDA for the continued lack of weight-based dosing instructions for children 6 months to 2 years in OTC single-ingredient acetaminophen despite the recommendations of the Advisory Committee in 2011. One of our bloggers had this on her bingo card for an early action following OTC Monograph Reform but it still has not happened. Noting that action on this issue is listed on FDA’s nonbinding annual forecast of planned monograph activities, the Committee directs FDA to provide an update within 90 days of enactment on timing on amending this monograph.
With respect to the sunscreen monograph, the Committee urges FDA to expeditiously finalize the proposed order issued earlier this month for the first new sunscreen ingredient in decades and also directs FDA to update its data requirements for sunscreen ingredients to allow for consideration of “modern testing methodologies,” such as real world evidence and nonanimal testing alternatives. These are issues that industry has struggled with FDA about for more than 15 years.
Homeopathy
FDA is directed to provide a briefing within 120 days of enactment on its enforcement policies and statutory interpretation related to homeopathic products. Although homeopathic drugs do not appear to have been a priority for FDA for quite some time, and the language of the FDCA seems to us straightforward, the Committee takes issue with FDA’s position that all homeopathic medicines are drugs subject to drug-specific requirements.
Opioid Abuse Generally
The Committee continues to support FDA’s role in addressing opioid abuse through the Opioids Action Plan, the Opioid Policy Steering Committee, and significant regulatory actions. The Committee expects FDA to support development of alternative and non-addictive alternatives to opioid analgesics and, where opioids are medically necessary, to continue incentivizing abuse-deterrent formulations. The Committee also broadly states that the federal government should promote the full suite of treatment options, including abstinence-based models and non-opioid medications, and continue to support naloxone distribution among trained, licensed healthcare professionals and emergency responders.
OA REMS
For the Opioid Analgesic (“OA”) REMS, the Committee directs FDA to study and evaluate data to develop appropriate specifications for in-home disposal systems that may be required under the OA REMS. If FDA determines that the OA REMS should be modified to add in-home disposal system requirements, the Committee expects FDA to communicate that determination promptly to opioid analgesic manufacturers. This does not come as any surprise, as FDA stated it was “continuing to explore other innovative in-home drug disposal methods” when it approved a modification to the OA REMS to provide for prepaid drug mail-back envelopes in October 2024.
Biosimilar Interchangeability
FDA, in June 2024, issued a draft guidance proposing that switching studies may no longer be necessary to demonstrate interchangeability of biosimilars, as comparative analytical and clinical data may be sufficient when applicants can provide adequate justification. Because that guidance remains in draft form, the Committee directs FDA to finalize the recommendations in the guidance to allow for an interchangeability designation without switching studies. The hope in implementing this approach to interchangeability is to increase patient access to medications, to bolster innovation by reducing development costs, and to encourage manufacturer investment in biosimilar production.
Biosimilar Single, Shared System REMS
The FDCA has required the exploration of a Single, Shared System Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (“SSS REMS”) for small molecules for years to increase efficiencies for stakeholders and applicants through shared development and implementation costs; however, there is no corresponding provision in the PHS Act requiring biosimilar manufacturers to attempt to negotiate a SSS REMS with their reference product sponsors. The Committee urges FDA to consider implementing SSS REMS for biosimilars and their reference products to drive increased biosimilar development, expanded patient access, and savings for patients and the healthcare system.
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As with all appropriations riders, the real impact will depend on whether these provisions survive conference negotiations and whether FDA follows through on the Committee’s directives.
Stay tuned for Part 3 of our series, which will address additional provisions affecting devices, food, and compounding.