Scientific EXPERT Act of 2025
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Bill details
Summary
Introduced in House
Scientific External Process for Educated Review of Therapeutics Act of 2025 or the Scientific EXPERT Act of 2025 This bill requires the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to facilitate and participate in externally led, science-focused drug development meetings to discuss the development of treatments for rare diseases and conditions. The FDA must enter into an arrangement with the Reagan-Udall Foundation for the FDA under which the foundation agrees to convene such meetings. Meetings must be held at least four times a year, and each meeting must focus on a different rare disease or condition. The foundation must establish a permanent steering committee to review and recommend topics for each meeting. In evaluating potential topics, the committee must consider unmet therapeutic needs, patient population sizes for different diseases and conditions, and whether a disease or condition would benefit from clarity and alignment on drug development questions, among other factors. In planning each meeting, the foundation must develop a list of medical experts, drug sponsors, scientific organizations, patient organizations, and other entities to be invited to participate. Representatives of the FDA’s review divisions must attend each meeting. After each meeting, the foundation must make available a summary of the meeting noting areas of consensus, areas where additional clarification or information is needed, and next steps agreed upon with the FDA. The bill also requires the FDA to indicate whether it incorporated any input from these meetings when approving a new drug or biologic.
District impact notes
The Scientific EXPERT Act of 2025 requires the FDA to support meetings focused on drug development for rare diseases. • This policy could enhance local collaboration among healthcare providers and researchers involved in rare disease treatment. • Local patients and advocacy groups may benefit from increased attention to rare diseases and improved drug development processes. • There may be questions about how effectively the FDA can incorporate feedback from these meetings into its drug approval processes. AI-generated from official bill summary and plain-English note; verify with official text.
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