The Good, Bad, and the Ugly at the FDA

It’s been a wild few weeks at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The agency, which spends about $7 billion per year on evaluating new medications, scrutinizing reduced-risk products such as e-cigarettes, and ensuring food safety, has been widely criticized for limiting vaccine availability for millions of Americans. In addition, the FDA drew the ire of thousands of Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients by erratically stopping shipments of a key treatment before suddenly resuming them. But at the same time, the FDA is making strides toward more transparency by giving consumers access to more information on drug denials. It’s hard to keep track of all the goings on at the FDA, but fear not. The Taxpayers Protection Alliance (TPA) has been closely following agency developments, good, bad, and ugly:

The Good

For decades, the FDA has been notoriously tight-lipped about why it rejects drugs. The FDA has remained all-but-silent even when the agency rejects the advice of its advisory committees and refuses to approve life-saving drugs. Fortunately, this unwarranted secrecy is (seemingly) no more. On July 10, the FDA announced it was embracing “radical transparency” by publishing more than 200 complete response letters (CRLs), which typically specify why medications are rejected. On September 4, the agency announced it’s releasing even more CRLs, including doing it in real time (i.e., right after a drug gets rejected). These letters are already offering a glimpse into the often-bizarre decision-making plaguing America’s drug regulator. For example, in 2023, the agency rejected a medication called Legubeti (to treat acetaminophen overdoses) because of “an unpleasant odor that may affect the tolerability of oral ingestion.” While the FDA ultimately approved the medication the following year, the odious regulatory delay very likely cost lives. Acetaminophen (e.g., Tylenol) overdoses result in about 500 deaths annually in the U.S., and delays over trivialities are a reckless exercise in regulatory foot-dragging. The well-known diabetes medication metformin remained on the market even though patients complained that it smells like “dead fish.” With that kind of precedent, surely smell and taste shouldn’t be an issue in approving other life-saving drugs. Hopefully, the FDA continues this increased transparency and tells patients why they can’t have access to new therapies.

The Bad

On September 3, the FDA “introduced the Rare Disease Evidence Principles (RDEP) to provide greater speed and predictability in the review of therapies intended to treat rare diseases with very small patient populations with significant unmet medical need and that are driven by a known genetic defect.” That sounds like it belongs in the “good” section, but the news isn’t as encouraging as it sounds. According to an analysis by Paul Kim, advisor at the National Organization for Rare Disorders, the new RDEP “is all wrapper and no gift.”  Kim explains, “the webpage simply regurgitates what FDA has historically done for very rare and n-of-1 therapies. Nothing is new in the discussion of confirmatory evidence – external controls, natural history studies, non-clinical models, case reports, patient experience data. FDA’s willingness to accept one trial with confirmatory evidence to approve drugs is well documented – and in statute.” Meanwhile, the FDA continues to reject promising therapies. It recently rejected a biologics license application for bevacizumab-vikj (ONS-5010) to treat wet age-related macular degeneration, an affliction that impacts 20 million Americans. The medication was rejected despite promising data from clinical trials, which was sufficient for regulators in the EU and the U.K. The FDA should commit to a more flexible and forward-thinking approval process. 

The Ugly

Recently, the FDA announced that it has approved the latest iteration of COVID-19 vaccines, but with new restrictions. Approval is now limited to seniors and younger Americans with at least one underlying health condition that increases their risk of severe COVID-19 infection. The FDA is also demanding that every new iteration of a Covid shot “use a true placebo control (salt water) so we will learn the side-effect profile.” These changes will drastically limit patient choice, hamper health, and raise costs for taxpayers. Because the FDA has limited vaccine approval, millions of Americans now require prescriptions to get boosters—instead of being able to walk into a CVS and Walgreens and get a booster as they choose. While people can disagree whether zero boosters or five is the “right” number to get, that decision should be for patients, not bureaucrats, to make. These boosters will also be more expensive because of the bolstered testing requirements. Experts such as Northeastern pharmaceutical sciences professor Mansoor Amiji note that “placebo trials can last for months or years” and can therefore be immensely costly. These costs aren’t just a concern for vaccine makers. The history of drug approvals—including vaccines—shows that requirements needlessly imposed by the FDA are ultimately passed along to consumers. It’s no coincidence that drug approvals can cost more than $2 billion per medication, and median list prices for new drugs are high and rising as regulations pile up. Taxpayers also foot this bill through pricey government healthcare programs such as Medicaid, which costs Americans nearly $1 trillion annually. More expensive healthcare directly fuels the $37 trillion national debt. The FDA’s new vaccine policies will increase healthcare costs and make millions of patients’ lives more difficult.

The FDA has promised Americans a new and better approach to healthcare and drug approvals. So far, its track record is far from promising. TPA will continue to call on the FDA to embrace transparency and improve access to lifesaving treatments.

BLOGS:

Monday: CBO Report Finds 340B Program Increases Costs for Taxpayers

Wednesday: TPA Urges Georgia Lawmakers to Avoid Harmful Age Verification Mandates in Social Media and AI Policy

Thursday: ETHIC Act is the Wrong Way to Reform IP 

Friday: Experts Warn of Regulatory Overreach at TPA Webinar on Global Digital Policy

 
MEDIA:
 

September 12, 2025: WBFF Fox45 (Baltimore, Md.) quoted TPA in their story, “Audit reveals SHA 'knowingly charged' $360M in unauthorized expenses to federal projects.”

September 12, 2025: News Channel 8 WJLA (Washington, D.C.) quoted TPA in their story about the Maryland State Highway Administration giving out unauthorized overpayments to employees.

September 12, 2025: WBFF Fox45 (Baltimore, Md.) quoted me in their story, “Judge to rule on unsealing $100k taxpayer-funded settlement tied to ex-county official.”

September 15, 2025: WBFF Fox45 (Baltimore, Md.) mentioned me in their story, “Waste Watch: Threat of a Government Shutdown”

September 15, 2025: WBFF Fox45 (Baltimore, Md.) interviewed me for their story on a potential government shutdown.

September 15, 2025: Asset Securitization Report mentioned TPA in their story, “Deposit insurance bill faces pushback over price tag.”

September 15, 2025: American Banker mentioned TPA in their story, “Deposit insurance bill faces pushback over price tag.”

September 16, 2025: The Daily Economy ran TPA’s op-ed, “Lessons from the Google Search Ruling: Markets Evolve, Bureaucrats Don’t.”

September 17, 2025: Las Vegas Review Journal (Last Vegas, Nev.) ran TPA’s op-ed, “Sin tax crusade a money grab aimed at consumers.”

September 17, 2025: WBFF Fox45 (Baltimore, Md.) quoted me in their story, “Zero students test math proficient in 23 schools, as Maryland boosts funding by $2 billion.”

September 17, 2025: Townhall ran TPA’s op-ed, “Brussels Bureaucrats Use Dirty Tricks Against American Competitors.”

September 18, 2025: WBFF Fox45 (Baltimore, Md.) interviewed me for their story on Maryland State Highway Administration unauthorized expenses.

September 18, 2025: I appeared on WBOB 600AM radio (Jacksonville, Fl.) to talk about social media and Section 230.

 
Have a great weekend!


David Williams
President
Taxpayers Protection Alliance
1101 14th Street, NW
Suite 500
Washington, D.C.
Office:  (202) 930-1716
Mobile:  (202) 258-6527
www.protectingtaxpayers.org

Like Us On Facebook Like Us On Facebook
Follow Us On Twitter Follow Us On Twitter

Our mailing address is:
1101 14th Street NW
Suite 1120
Washington, DC xxxxxx

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list