Citing the need to protect the public interest, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ordered an immediate government-wide funding suspension May 15 of Ecohealth Alliance Inc. while formal debarment proceedings are pending against the New York-based nongovernmental organization.
Zai Lab Ltd., of Shanghai and Cambridge, Mass., has been on a regulatory roll in China, gaining approval of Bristol Myers Squibb Co.’s Augtyro (repotrectinib) for lung cancer on May 12 and NMPA acceptance of subcutaneous Vyvgart‘s (efgartigimod alfa SC) supplemental BLA with priority review on May 14.
South Korea’s HLB Co. Ltd. saw its stock (KOSDAQ:028300) drop nearly 30% on May 17 as CEO Jin Yang-gon announced the U.S. FDA’s complete response letter (CRL) to its NDA seeking approval of its rivoceranib and camrelizumab (Airtuika, Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd.) combo for liver cancer.
The Cleveland Clinic Foundation (CCF) has found itself on the wrong end of an enforcement action by a federal attorney’s office, which had alleged that CCF had made false statements to the government regarding three grant awards.
A renewed focus on telehealth and telemedicine may be pumping new life into remote patient monitoring for heart failure, which seems to be the case for the Cardiomems device by Abbott Inc.
The major players in electrophysiology – Boston Scientific Corp., Johnson & Johnson, Medtronic plc, Abbot Laboratories – showed up in force at the 2024 Heart Rhythm Society annual meeting in Boston May 16-19 to tout their pulsed field ablation devices and study results.
The FDA has cleared an IND application for GC-1130A, a treatment for mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (MPS IIIA, Sanfilippo syndrome type A) being jointly developed by GC Biopharma Corp. and Novel Pharma Inc.
Ultrasound cyclodestruction may not be the darling of American ophthalmologists and their patients dealing with glaucoma, but that may soon change thanks to a recent move by the U.S. FDA. The agency has down-classified these devices from class III to class II in a move that may prompt competition for current device-based methods of treating glaucoma, including widely used laser-based treatments.
U.S. Medicare coverage of transcatheter aortic valve replacement devices requires the use of team medicine for patient selection purposes, which seems to have served as a tripwire for Cape Cod Hospital (CCH) in Hyannis, Mass. Federal agencies forged an agreement with CCH that included a $24 million fine for failure to appropriately screen patients for the procedure, an event that serves as a reminder that non-compliance with Medicare rules can trigger enforcement actions by other agencies.
The U.S. FDA has several methods for signaling its enforcement intentions regarding medical devices and drugs, but there are times when warning letters are the vectors for communicating the agency’s current thinking.