Skip to main content

Govt. Shutdown A Threat To Drug & Device Approval Process

Govt. Shutdown A Threat To Drug & Device Approval Process

Govt. Shutdown A Threat To Drug & Device Approval Process

Introduction

The government shutdown in the U.S. which started on December 22, 2018, has largely affected the drug and medical device approval process due to a shortage of staff at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Madris Tomes, CEO of Device Events, told due to the shutdown, there is little or no resources to monitor death and serious injury reports coming into the FDA. The FDA receives approximately 65,000 reports per month just for device adverse events. Also, there has been no warning letters posted by the FDA ever since the shutdown started. Those letters are published after the agency determines a manufacturer significantly violated FDA regulations and are crucial in informing the general public and health care centers about the harmful nature of a drug or device. The FDA posted 19 warning letter in November 2018, but only one in December before the shutdown. Though new drug approvals would take a pause, drug companies are proceeding with the clinical trials.

A letter to the FDA by a group of 34 Democratic senators implied that as soon as the shutdown ends, the agency would be flooded with applications for new drug and device approvals. They wrote this would complicate and slow down the approval process more as there will be a degree of urgency in reviewing a large number of applications. The senators asked the FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb to respond to about eight questions about how the agency was planning to handle the financial demands of the shutdown while taking care of the safety and oversight.

Comments

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

Latest News

Court Approves $700M Opioid Settlement for Acute Hospitals

Categories: Opioids

A federal court has approved a $700 million class-action settlement that will compensate over 1,000 acute care hospitals for costs related to the opioid crisis.

The settlement consolidates four separate agreements involving major drug…

Philips Settles CPAP Lawsuits Over Toxic Foam for $1.1B

Philips has been embroiled in legal battles following the recall of millions of CPAP, BiPAP, and ventilator devices due to toxic foam degradation.

The breakdown of the foam in these machines may release harmful chemicals, raising serious…

Texas Trial to Decide J&J’s $10B Talcum Powder Settlement

Categories: Talcum

A high-stakes trial in Texas will determine whether Johnson & Johnson (J&J) can resolve tens of thousands of talcum powder cancer lawsuits through a…

🎁 March VIP Medical Record Review Offer – Get 300 Pages Free!         
Includes a Free Life Care Plan Report + 10% Off Future Reviews!

Only 15 Firms Accepted.