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MODDERN Cures Act

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H.R. 3116 (113th Congress)[edit]

The MODDERN Cures (Modernizing Our Drug and Diagnostics Evaluation and Regulatory Network) Cures Act was reintroduced in the U.S. House of Representatives on September 17, 2013 by Representative Leonard Lance of the seventh district of New Jersey with 15 original cosponsors.

This legislation is intended to promote the development of meaningful treatments for people living with chronic diseases and disabilities.

Two elements of the MODDERN Cures Act were approved by Congress and signed into law as part of H.R. 4302: the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014. Section 216 of the law

  • Creates a temporary Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code that can be assigned to newly approved advanced diagnostics, giving patients immediate access to these diagnostic tests.
  • Creates an expert advisory panel that will use a thorough approach to determine the payment rate for diagnostics, taking into consideration factors to determine a rate that reflects the value of the test, such as the improvement of patient care.

H.R.3497 (112th Congress)[edit]

The [1] MODDERN Cures Act was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives on November 18, 2011. The bill was introduced during the second session of the 112th Congress by Representative Leonard Lance of the seventh district of New Jersey. Representative Jay Inslee was the lead Democratic cosponsor.

Background[edit]

A Modern Regulatory System

This legislation is intended to affect all people with chronic diseases. A truly modern regulatory system would benefit patients with a range of conditions and people diagnosed with more than one chronic disease by encouraging the development of new, more targeted treatments. It is also critical to ensure that the limited research dollars available are spent in the most effective manner to meet the needs of patients. The legislation will transform the development process for drugs that slow or stop disease progression for degenerative conditions, such as Alzheimer's and ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease), and for autoimmune diseases, such as lupus, and for cancer.

Key Issues[edit]

Dormant Therapies

This legislation would create a new class of drugs named dormant therapies. The term dormant therapy refers to a new drug or a new biological product that was made the subject of a request for designation in compliance with the legislation, the MODDERN Cures Act. The assignment of dormant therapy is giving to a drug or new biological product that has been determined to have insufficient patent protection and meets an unmet medical need, improves outcomes, or reduces risk compared to an existing treatment.[2]

In its request for designation of a Dormant Therapy, the manufacturer must provide a list of all patents and applications for patents to which the manufacturer has rights, and must agree to waive those rights in order to receive the designation. This legislation would provide data exclusivity to encourage manufacturers to investigate a dormant therapy to determine if it can prevent, slow the progression of, or cure diseases. The Secretary of Health and Human Services is required to make its determinations available to the public and may not approve a generic for a drug or biosimilar for a biological product that has the same active ingredient as a drug that has been designated a dormant therapy.

Sponsors that receive protection under this section of the MODDERN Cures Act would be ineligible for other incentives.

Diagnostic Tests

This legislation would require the establishment of consistent definitions allowing both diagnostic manufacturers and regulatory authorities to work from a common lexicon for diagnostic tests. This legislation puts forth the factors that should be considered in setting payment for a new diagnostic test. In addition, it requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to seek the advice of an independent advisory panel of individuals with expertise in diagnostic tests. This legislation also requires the Secretary to assign a temporary Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) reimbursement code to a new test after approval from the FDA.

This legislation would create incentives through data exclusivity to encourage the development of diagnostic tests that help predict the appropriate patient population and determine the most appropriate treatment options.

Guidance Documents[edit]

This legislation would require the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to clarify certain aspects of the approval pathway in order to establish consistency and predictability in the process.

External links

Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

Centers for Medicare & Medicare(CMS), Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System

• BioCentury discussing the MODDERN Cures Act— BioCentury

Benefits Communication, Personalized Medicine and MODDERN Cures

Draft Bill Seeks Personalized Rx Incentives via Exclusivity Extension, Improved Reimbursement

References[edit]

  1. "MODDERN Cures Act". U.S. House. 112th Congress. Retrieved January 2012. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  2. "Guidance for IndustryFast Track Drug Development Programs" (PDF). Department of Health and Human Services. Retrieved July 2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)


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