Montana Set to Become a “Wild West” Hub for Experimental Medical Treatments and Therapies

By Vicki G. Norton, Ph.D., and Brandon A. Chan Ph.D.

The Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act generally prohibits access to investigational drugs that have not yet been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration. Patients that have been diagnosed with a life-threatening or seriously debilitating disease may request “expanded access” or compassionate use to gain access to investigational drugs pending FDA’s permission. Right-to-try laws seek to bypass the FDA’s more rigorous requirements for expanded access and permit terminally ill patients to access investigational drugs, biologics and devices that have completed Phase I but have yet to receive FDA approval. Today, most states have enacted some form of a right-to-try law, and a federal Right to Try Act was enacted in 2018. Recently, Montana has sought to further expand access to experimental treatments.

Read the full story on the Duane Morris LLP website.

Year-End Appropriations Bill Overhauls FDA Cosmetics Authority

On December 23, 2022, Congress significantly expanded the FDA’s regulatory authority over cosmetics as part of its year-end Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023, the first major statutory change to the Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act regarding the regulation of cosmetics since 1938. Passed with bipartisan support and garnering industry approval, the Modernization of Cosmetics Regulation Act contains a number of key provisions, requirements and dates for compliance.

To read the full text of this Duane Morris Alert, please visit the firm website.

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