Communications between pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers and physicians are highly regulated by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but the agency, as much as it may want to be, does not have the final say in all regulation. These companies have First Amendment commercial free speech rights (though they’re not as broad as the free speech rights individuals have) and there’s a tension between what the FDA wants companies to say, what these companies want to say, and what the courts say the companies can say.
The agency in late August published a notice of public hearing and request for comments concerning manufacturer communications regarding unapproved uses of approved or cleared medical products. The hearing will be held on November 9-10, 2016 in Silver Spring, Maryland, and in case you want to present information you must register by October 19. You could also send in written comments by January 9.
Off-Label Drug Use
To be approved for a particular use a drug manufacturer must go through a long and expensive process to show the FDA the drug is safe and effective. The danger to patients is that if they take a drug for an unapproved use it may not be safe or effective. It may be a waste of money, it may harm them directly, or the time wasted taking this ineffective drug may allow the disease or condition to worsen, possibly making treatment more difficult or impossible.
On the flip side patients may be suffering from a disease or condition that may be very difficult to treat or is untreatable. A drug approved for one purpose may show promise in clinical trials to battle this hard-to-treat or impossible-to-treat disease. Instead of potentially waiting years for formal approval, these patients may be able to benefit in the present instead of waiting to use it in the future (if they live that long).
FDA Public Hearing
The FDA poses a number of questions on which it would like input from a number of interested parties including manufacturers, health care providers, patient advocates, payors, academics and public interest groups. The topics generally cover:
- How off-label communications impact public health,
- How changes in the health care system result in data on new uses of approved products,
- How to preserve incentives for manufacturers to seek approval for new uses,
- Standards for truthful and non-misleading information provided by manufacturers,
- What the FDA should consider when it monitors and enforces the law on off-label communications by manufacturers, and
- Changes FDA should consider to regulations covering manufacturers’ communications about their products.
Can Congress Help?
Add Congress to the mix. In May the House Committee on Energy and Commerce sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell:
- Showing concern that FDA hadn’t clarified its position on permissible manufacturer communications about uses of drugs and devices beyond their approved labeling; and
- Voicing displeasure that HHS apparently was stopping the FDA from issuing guidance or new regulations after a number of court victories for companies and individuals prosecuted for off-label communications about drug and medical devices.
First Amendment commercial speech protections have been interpreted by the courts to allow manufacturers’ truthful and non-misleading speech concerning their products even if that speech includes uses of their products that have not been approved by the FDA. Companies and groups impacted by the issue have encouraged FDA to issue new guidance or change its regulations so its oversight and enforcement actions reflect these court decisions. This announcement and these public hearings are a possible step in that direction.