Prescription drug names are generally invented words that are often easier to spell than they are to pronounce. And, for the most part, they’re meaningless until they’ve been associated with a drug.
Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Aim, Biomind, Eagle, Elevar, Galectin, Merck & Co., Moerna, Pfizer, Regeneron, Sisaf.
Two Medicare administrative contractors are examining a request for expanded Medicare coverage of continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) that would drop the requirement that patients routinely administer insulin at least three times a day. The requestors, Alameda, Calif.-based Abbott Diabetes Care Inc., and a group of stakeholders including the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), assert that such a change is not only endorsed by two medical societies, but is also supported by clinical evidence, and the net effect for industry may be to significantly accelerate sales of these devices.
The question of Medicare coverage for breakthrough devices is still in play at CMS, but managers there penned an Oct. 12 editorial that suggests that existing coverage mechanisms may have to suffice. CMS’s Lee Fleisher and Jonathan Blum said in the JAMA Internal Medicine (JAMA: IM) editorial that the agency might respond to the breakthrough device coverage question by applying the coverage with evidence development (CED) mechanism for breakthrough devices, suggesting that the policy might ultimately resemble the coverage mechanisms already available to industry.
It was a busy day at Moderna Inc. as Merck & Co. Inc. exercised its option to jointly develop and commercialize a personalized cancer vaccine with Moderna in a deal the two companies inked in 2016. Moderna also notched another emergency use authorization (EUA) for its COVID-19 vaccine, this one targeting the omicron variant, for use by those under age 18.
Many industry watchers are looking to 2023’s Humira biosimilar launch in the U.S. as a portent of the future of biosimilars. While it should help raise awareness of biosimilars in general and produce savings in the immunology sector, its distinctness could make it an outlier in the world of current and future biosimilar competition.
Regulatory snapshots, including global submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Etiometry, Neurologica, Osteocentric Technologies, Xact Robotics.
Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: AB Science, Aquestive, Eligo, Gilead, Harm Reduction, Pharming, Rigel, Teraimmune.
The U.S. FDA’s agreement with industry for the fifth device user fee agreement (MDUFA V) included a pilot for the total product life cycle advisory program, or TAP, which is designed to ensure that potential device problems are addressed before production of the finished device design. However, the agency acknowledged that the TAP program will require significant numbers of new hires, which promises to be a significant hurdle given that the agency struggled to meet its hiring goals under the previous device user fee agreement.
The draft rule for the Medicare physician fee schedule (MPFS) for calendar year 2022 included a revised definition of the term “physician-owned distributorship,” or PODs, but the associated data collection requirements do not go into effect until January 2023. However, Amanda Johnston, managing attorney at Gardner Law of Stillwater, Minn., said recently that there is the possibility that this new definition could become a subject for enforcement action under the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), thus elevating the legal risks for device manufacturers who have not updated their compliance practices.