It looks like direct Medicare drug price negotiations are back in the U.S. fiscal 2022 budget bill.
Nearly a week after President Joe Biden dropped drug pricing reforms from his Build Back Better budget framework, congressional Democrats came together on a scaled-back version of the pricing provisions originally included in H.R. 3.
With the U.S. biosimilar pathway clearly developed, industry and the FDA are turning their attention to interchangeables in the third iteration of the biosimilar user fee agreement (BsUFA).
Abbvie Inc.’s FDA clearance of Vuity (pilocarpine HCl ophthalmic solution) 1.25% for the treatment of presbyopia in adults, could bring relief to about 128 million Americans: almost half of the U.S. population, the company said. It’s the first and only eye drop given U.S. regulators’ go-ahead for what’s known as age-related blurry near vision – but plenty more have generated clinical data.
With the FDA approval of Scemblix (asciminib), a STAMP inhibitor for treating chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in adults, Novartis AG has a companion to its longstanding therapy Gleevec (imatinib) as a treatment for the indication.
In an effort to advance a fiscal 2022 spending package through a divided Congress, U.S. President Joe Biden released the framework for his Build Back Better agenda Oct. 28 – minus provisions that would allow Medicare to directly negotiate at least some prescription drug prices.
The push for legislation that would lower prescription drug prices in the U.S. has mounted in recent months, but support for Medicare pricing negotiations has faltered in the past few weeks. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) is the latest Senate Democrat to signal his aversion to giving the government the authority to negotiate prices with drugmakers, breathing new life into hopes that the pharmaceutical industry will yet again escape a mechanism that critics say would suppress innovation at the expense of patients in desperate need of state-of-the-art therapies.
Biotech stocks and the overall market have taken divergent paths in the past month, not unlike what was seen throughout 2020, except this time, they are moving in opposite directions. While BioWorld’s Drug Developers Index (BDDI) appeared to be on the upswing only a month ago, it changed course in the final weeks of September.
Nearly two years after confronting an initial complete response letter, Enzyvant Therapeutics Inc. has won FDA approval for a unique treatment for children born without a thymus, an ultra-rare condition leaving them deeply disadvantaged in fighting infections. The product, to be marketed as Rethymic, is the first thymus tissue product approved in the U.S.
The U.K.’s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) joined the JAK inhibitor pile-on Oct. 6 with new measures to reduce the risk of major heart problems and malignancies in people taking Pfizer Inc.’s Xeljanz (tofacitinib).