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J&J praises new FDA guidance to speed development of multiple myeloma drugs Read in browser
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top stories
1. Government funding bill features PBM reforms, rare pediatric voucher reauthorization
2. Makary cites higher FDA user fees as one key to counter China biotech
3. Supreme Court will hear Hikma’s ‘skinny label’ fight against Amarin
4. J&J praises new FDA guidance to speed development of multiple myeloma drugs
5. Trump asks Congress to codify ‘most favored nation’ deals
6. Large drugmakers without a US pricing pact are bracing to make one
7. Drugmakers and investors want US reforms, not to slow down China
8. US childhood vaccine overhaul spurs clinician groups to update lawsuit
Zachary Brennan
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Congress is facing a Jan. 30 deadline to keep the government open, and the bipartisan bill to do so was unveiled earlier this week (see below). It includes some key new provisions around PBM reforms and reauthorizing an FDA voucher program that tries to incentivize new rare pediatric research. Stay tuned as we watch what language makes it to the finish line.

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Zachary Brennan
Senior Editor, Endpoints News
@ZacharyBrennan
1
by Zachary Brennan

The House is set to vote this week on a bi­par­ti­san bill to keep the gov­ern­ment open be­yond Jan. 30, with new pro­pos­als to change how phar­ma­cy ben­e­fit man­agers op­er­ate and to reau­tho­rize a lapsed FDA vouch­er pro­gram for rare pe­di­atric drugs.

The spend­ing bill, which the Sen­ate is ex­pect­ed to vote on next week, fea­tures PBM re­forms that have been float­ed for years, in­clud­ing re­quire­ments that HHS re­view the fees or oth­er forms of com­pen­sa­tion paid to PBMs or their af­fil­i­ates. The bill would al­so re­quire PBMs to give HHS and in­sur­ers a new an­nu­al re­port that in­cludes drug pric­ing and re­bate da­ta, as well as writ­ten jus­ti­fi­ca­tions in sev­er­al ar­eas — such as for pro­vid­ing more fa­vor­able cov­er­age for a ref­er­ence bi­o­log­ic rather than a biosim­i­lar.

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FDA Commissioner Marty Makary (Photo by Aaron Schwartz/Sipa USA)(Sipa via AP Images)
2
by Zachary Brennan

As Chi­na sees in­creased biotech in­vest­ments, li­cens­ing deals and faster ear­ly-phase clin­i­cal tri­al starts, FDA Com­mis­sion­er Mar­ty Makary said his agency is re­work­ing Phase 1 tri­al reg­u­la­tions to speed that en­try process and tweak­ing user fees to en­cour­age R&D in the US.

"We can come up with some pro­tec­tion strate­gies, but ul­ti­mate­ly, what we need to do is be more com­pet­i­tive with what's go­ing on with Phase 1s" and in­ves­ti­ga­tion­al new drug ap­pli­ca­tions, Makary told the "All-In Pod­cast" in a near­ly 90-minute in­ter­view, re­fer­ring to the way Chi­na has in­creas­ing­ly sped up the ac­ti­va­tion of new ear­ly-phase tri­als.

Makary al­so said he's go­ing to help in­cen­tivize US-based drug de­vel­op­ment by charg­ing com­pa­nies high­er fees if they de­vel­op their drugs out­side of the coun­try.

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3
by Alexis Kramer

The US Supreme Court has agreed to re­view a gener­ic drug la­bel rul­ing that Hik­ma Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals says could “ef­fec­tive­ly vi­ti­ate” a com­mon prac­tice for bring­ing low-cost med­ica­tions to mar­ket.

The jus­tices on Fri­day grant­ed Hik­ma’s pe­ti­tion to re­view a de­ci­sion by the US Court of Ap­peals for the Fed­er­al Cir­cuit, which re­vived Amarin’s patent law­suit against Hik­ma. The law­suit claims that Hik­ma en­cour­aged physi­cians to pre­scribe a gener­ic ver­sion of Amarin’s Vas­cepa for an in­fring­ing use, even though Hik­ma left Amarin’s patent­ed in­di­ca­tion off the gener­ic’s la­bel.

The case gives the high court the chance to weigh in on the prac­tice known as “skin­ny la­bel­ing” and clar­i­fy the ex­tent to which gener­ic drug­mak­ers may still be held li­able in court, even when their prod­uct is on­ly la­beled for un-patent­ed us­es. The US so­lic­i­tor gen­er­al in De­cem­ber had urged the jus­tices to take the case.

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4
by Zachary Brennan

John­son & John­son, which has sev­er­al drugs ap­proved for mul­ti­ple myelo­ma, praised the FDA's just-re­leased draft guid­ance on how the agency will al­low the use of min­i­mal resid­ual dis­ease as a pri­ma­ry end­point for ac­cel­er­at­ed ap­provals of treat­ments for the blood can­cer.

The nine-page draft pub­lished Tues­day spells out how drug de­vel­op­ers can use MRD as an end­point in sev­er­al ways, in­clud­ing via a sin­gle-arm tri­al, with the on­go­ing tri­al con­tin­u­ing to eval­u­ate pro­gres­sion-free-sur­vival or over­all sur­vival to sup­port a full ap­proval. An FDA ad­vi­so­ry com­mit­tee in 2024 vot­ed unan­i­mous­ly to al­low the use of MRD as an end­point.

J&J pi­o­neered much of the ev­i­dence be­hind the use of MRD, EVP John Reed said on Wednes­day's earn­ings call, "so we’re ex­cit­ed that that is an op­tion."

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President Donald Trump at the White House on Jan. 9, 2026 (Evan Vucci/AP Images)
5
by Max Bayer

Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump wants new leg­is­la­tion that ce­ments his "most fa­vored na­tion" deals with drug­mak­ers, ask­ing Con­gress to put the drug price dis­counts in­to law that the phar­ma in­dus­try has so far vol­un­tar­i­ly agreed to.

In a video state­ment re­leased Thurs­day, Trump called for a broad set of health­care re­forms that in­clude cod­i­fy­ing MFN pric­ing. He said he want­ed Con­gress to “com­plete the work that we’ve start­ed” and re­it­er­at­ed that he wants Amer­i­cans to pay the low­est drug prices in the world.

It’s not clear what ex­act­ly would be cod­i­fied, giv­en that the pre­cise terms of the deals struck with 16 large phar­mas have not been pub­licly re­leased. The com­pa­nies that have signed deals with the White House so far have agreed to pro­vide sup­ple­men­tal re­bates to Med­ic­aid through a vol­un­tary pi­lot pro­gram and sell se­lect med­i­cines at a dis­count di­rect­ly to cash-pay­ing pa­tients. They've al­so agreed to launch new prod­ucts at MFN prices.

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6
by Max Bayer