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Bexis attended the recent Rolling Stones concert in Philadelphia – the first time he’d seen them live since 1975.  The highlights:  while they’re really old (Jagger just turned 76), they still rock.  Whoever supplied Mick Jagger’s heart valve implant should pay whatever it takes to get a public endorsement.  Defying expectations, Keith Richards is still alive.  Charlie Watts looks like a retired accountant rather than a rock drummer.  The biggest highlight, though, is of course the music.  Here’s a link to the Philadelphia setlist.  The Stones playlist so exceeds any other still-touring group, that they could stage a concert matching the Who, Billy Joel or Fleetwood Mac (Bexis knows) and still not play a single song from the Philadelphia setlist.

Speaking of highlights, in 2006 the FDA overhauled drug labeling and created a new section called “highlights.”  See 21 C.F.R. §201.57(a) (specifying highlights section requirements).  For one thing the highlights must include “[a] concise summary of any boxed warning.”  §201.57(a)(4).  With respect to all other warnings, contraindications, and adverse reactions, the highlights regulation provides:

(9) Contraindications.  A concise statement of each of the product’s contraindications, as required under paragraph (c)(5) of this section, with any appropriate subheadings.

(10) Warnings and precautions.  A concise summary of the most clinically significant information required under paragraph (c)(6) of this section, with any appropriate subheadings, including information that would affect decisions about whether to prescribe a drug, recommendations for patient monitoring that are critical to safe use of the drug, and measures that can be taken to prevent or mitigate harm.

(11) Adverse reactions.

(i) A list of the most frequently occurring adverse reactions, as described in paragraph (c)(7) of this section, along with the criteria used to determine inclusion (e.g., incidence rate).  Adverse reactions important for other reasons . . . must not be repeated under this heading in Highlights if they are included elsewhere in Highlights. . . .

21 C.F.R. §201.57(a)(9-11) (emphasis added).

As the Stones might say, “It’s all right now, in fact, it’s a gas. . . .”

The FDA’s final rule adopting the regulation described the “highlights” section:

[T]he final rule requires that the labeling for new and more recently approved products include introductory information entitled “Highlights of Prescribing Information” (Highlights) (§§201.56(d)(1) and 201.57(a)).

The final rule requires the same headings for Highlights as proposed, except that, in response to comments, FDA moved “Most Common Adverse Reactions” from “Warnings and Precautions” (proposed §201.57(a)(10)) to a new heading entitled “Adverse Reactions” (§§201.56(d)(1) and 201.57(a)(11)).  Like the proposed rule, the final rule requires that Highlights, except for the boxed warning, be limited in length to one-half of the page (§ 201.57(d)(8)) (see comment 104).

The agency is also revising its regulations on supplements and other changes to an approved application in §§314.70 and 601.12 (21 CFR 314.70 and 601.12) to require applicants to obtain prior approval of any labeling changes to Highlights, except for identified minor changes (see comment 5).

“Requirements on Content & Format of Labeling for Human Prescription Drug and Biological Products, 71 Fed. Reg. 3299, 3925 (FDA Jan. 24, 2006) (emphasis added).

“Things are different today. . . .”

Now for preemption.  The Supreme Court just reaffirmed that limits to the preemption of labeling claims for prescription drugs are grounded in the availability of FDA’s changes being effected (“CBE”) regulation, which defeats implied impossibility preemption by allowing certain unilateral label modifications:

[A]n FDA regulation called the “changes being effected” or “CBE” regulation permits drug manufacturers to change a label without prior FDA approval if the change is designed to “add or strengthen a . . . warning” where there is “newly acquired information” about the “evidence of a causal association” between the drug and a risk of harm.  21 C.F.R. §314.70(c)(6)(iii)(A).

Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. v. Albrecht, 139 S. Ct. 1668, 1673 (2019).

[F]ederal law − the FDA’s CBE regulation − permits drug manufacturers to change a label to “reflect newly acquired information” if the changes “add or strengthen a . . . warning” for which there is “evidence of a causal association,” without prior approval from the FDA. 21 C.F.R. §314.70(c)(6)(iii)(A).  Of course, the FDA . . . can reject label changes even after the manufacturer has made them. See §§ 314.70(c)(6), (7). . . .  But in the interim, the CBE regulation permits changes, so a drug manufacturer will not ordinarily be able to show that there is an actual conflict between state and federal law such that it was impossible to comply with both.

Id. at 1679.

“War, children, is just a shot away. . . .”

This CBE regulation relied on in Albrecht − 21 C.F.R. §314.70 − is precisely the same regulation that the FDA stated it was “revising” in 2006 “to require applicants to obtain prior approval of any labeling changes to Highlights.”  71 Fed. Reg. at 3925 (listing “§314.70”).  The CBE regulation thus has excepted all aspects of the “highlights” section from its scope since 2006.

(6) The agency may designate a category of changes for the purpose of providing that, in the case of a change in such category, the holder of an approved NDA may commence distribution of the drug product involved upon receipt by the agency of a supplement for the change. These changes include. . . .

(iii) Changes in the labeling to reflect newly acquired information, except for changes to the information required in §201.57(a) of this chapter (which must be made under paragraph (b)(2)(v)(C) of this section), to accomplish any of the following:

(A) To add or strengthen a contraindication, warning, precaution, or adverse reaction for which the evidence of a causal association satisfies the standard for inclusion in the labeling under §201.57(c) of this chapter. . . .

21 C.F.R. §314.70(c)(6)(iii)(A) (emphasis added).  This is the Albrecht FDA CBE regulation – right down to the last subsection.

“This could be the last time. . . .”

The FDA imposed this limitation on changes to “highlights” information deliberately – through notice and comment rulemaking.  See Albrecht, 139 S. Ct. 1680 (endorsing the preemptive power of “notice-and-comment rulemaking setting forth labeling standards”).  Nor was this some nefarious scheme to benefit manufacturers.  To the contrary, as the FDA pointed out, “[m]anufacturers, with some exceptions, were opposed, or strongly opposed, to the inclusion of Highlights.”  71 Fed. Reg. at 3930.

In response to “comment 5,” the FDA stated, in 2006:

[B]ecause Highlights is a summary of the most important information for prescribing decisions and some comments expressed concerns about the difficulty involved in summarizing the complex and often lengthy information in the FPI, the agency believes that it is essential for FDA to review and approve most proposed changes to the information in Highlights.  Accordingly, the agency is revising its regulations on supplements and other changes to an approved application.  Under §§314.70(b)(2)(v)(C) and (c)(6)(iii) . . ., applicants are required to obtain prior approval of any labeling changes to Highlights, except for editorial or similar minor changes. . . .

71 Fed. Reg. at 3922 (emphasis added).  See Id. at 3922 (“a sponsor may not use a CBE supplement to make most changes to Highlights.”).

“No excuses offered anyway. . . .”

The Federal Register cross-reference for modifications of highlights, 21 C.F.R. §314.70(b)(2)(v)(C), is to “Changes requiring supplement submission and approval prior to distribution of the product made using the change (major changes).”  See also FDA, Guidance for Industry:  Labeling for Human Prescription Drug and Biological Products – Implementing the PLR Content & Format Requirements (Feb. 2013) (containing detailed information about how changes to “highlights” should be made).  Thus, any modification of the language of highlights is a “major change” – and tort actions demanding “major changes” are preempted.

Major changes require approval from the FDA prior to implementation, while moderate and minor changes do not.  Controlling case law is clear − and plaintiffs here concede − that if the change they contend state law requires qualifies as “major,” then federal law preempts plaintiffs’ cause of action because defendants cannot lawfully make such a change without prior FDA approval. Our inquiry thus appears, at first glance, straightforward:  Does the change urged by plaintiffs qualify as “major”?  If so, our work is done.

Gustavsen v. Alcon Laboratories, Inc., 903 F.3d 1, 10 (1st Cir. 2018) (citations omitted).  See Yates v. Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 808 F.3d 281, 298 (6th Cir. 2015) (“[Plaintiff’s] post-approval design defect claim is clearly preempt-ed by federal law.  FDA regulations provide that once a drug . . ., is approved, the manufacturer is prohibited from making any major changes.”); Batoh v. McNeil-PPC, Inc., 167 F. Supp.3d 296, 320-22 (D. Conn. 2016) (“chang[ing] the active ingredient” would have been a “major change” requiring prior FDA approval).

“As heads is tails. . . .”

Preemption cases specifically involving demands to modify “highlights” have been uncommon, but have uniformly resulted in preemption.

In In re Zofran (Ondansetron) Products Liability Litigation, 368 F. Supp.3d 94, 127 (D. Mass. 2019), plaintiffs conceded preemption of any warning claim involving highlights.  The issue was fully litigated in Blackburn v. Shire US, Inc., 2017 WL 1833524, at *5-6 (N.D. Ala. May 8, 2017):

[W]hen sufficient newly acquired information exists in order to support a label change under the CBE process, as has been plausibly pled here, the claim is not preempted.  However, the same cannot be said with respect to Plaintiff’s assertion that a change to the Highlights section would be permitted here.  Where a private party seeks a label change which requires FDA approval, such as a change to the Highlights section, impossibility preemption exists. . . .  The “impossibility” inquiry turns on a private party’s ability to act independently.  It is of no consequence that the FDA may have allowed a change to the Highlights section of [the drug].  Because Defendants could not have independently changed the Highlights section of [the drug] in order to conform to state law, any argument that begins with the theory that Defendants could (or should) have changed the Highlights section of [the drug’s] label ends in preemption.

Id. at *5-6 (citations omitted).

Preemption can “take you places that you’ve never, never seen. . . .”

The same result was reached in Patton v. Forest Laboratories, LLC, 2018 WL 5270476 (C.D. Cal. May 10, 2018), with a Buckman wrinkle:

[Defendant] also argues that Plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claim against it is preempted because: (1) [it] could not have “unilaterally or independently change[d] the Highlights section; all changes to that section require FDA’s pre-approval”. . . .

In their Opposition, Plaintiffs do not address [defendant’s] arguments concerning the permissible scope of label changes made by a NDA holder under the CBE process.  Instead, Plaintiffs argue that their failure-to-warn claim is not preempted because “Plaintiffs’ contentions are that the Defendants did not comply with their obligations under Federal law regarding the labeling of [the drug]. . . .’

While it is obvious that the FDA, in approving the relevant [drug’s] labeling, disagreed with Plaintiffs’ contention that the labeling violates “federal law” at the time it approved that labeling, even if the FDA were wrong, only the government (i.e., not Plaintiffs) may bring a lawsuit to enforce the FDCA and the FDA’s regulations.  Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claim, as presently constituted, is preempted.

Id. at *16-17 (citations omitted).  See Id. at *4 (“NDA holders may not make any changes to the Highlights section of a drug’s labeling without prior FDA approval”).  See also Patton v. Forest Laboratories, Inc., 2018 WL 5269239, at *11 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 19, 2018) (plaintiffs conceded preemption of claims affecting highlights).

“But it’s all over now. . . .”

“Highlights summarizes the information from the FPI [full prescribing information] that is most important for prescribing the drug safely and effectively.”  71 Fed. Reg. at 3922.  “[I]t is critical to ensure accuracy and consistency in the information included in Highlights because it contains a summary of the most important information for prescribing the drug safely and effectively.”  Id.  Thus, it would be impossible to maintain “Highlights [as] a concise extract of the most important information,” id., if plaintiffs could demand different or additional warnings in the full labeling that diverge from what is contained in unmodified, FDA-approved highlights.  So plaintiffs should not be able to evade preemption by ignoring “highlights” and demanding only changes to the rest of a drug’s labeling.  There’s an analogy here to the “sameness” that drives preemption in generic drug cases – for highlights to serve their intended function, they must convey the same information (in abbreviated form) as is found in the rest of a drug’s label.

“Now you’ve decided to show me the same. . . .”

Given preemption of warning claims involving all claims affecting “highlights”, defense counsel should consider, when deposing prescribers and treaters, inquiring into whether – assuming they consulted a given drug’s labeling at all – they read the entire package insert, or instead they only read the highlights.  Alternatively, a physician might only review portions of the full package insert based on material that s/he first saw in the highlights section.  Indeed, this is how the FDA anticipated that physicians would use highlights.  71 Fed. Reg. at 3930 (“because Highlights contains pointers to the location of more detailed information in the FPI, the pointers will increase the likelihood that health care practitioners will refer to the FPI”).  Favorable testimony along either of these lines would result in causation principles reinforcing the preemption arguments made above.

Preemption exists “when a party cannot satisfy its state duties without the Federal Government’s special permission and assistance, which is dependent on the exercise of judgment by a federal agency.”  PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S. 604, 623-34 (2011).  Thus, the preemptive effect of this “independence principle” extends to any product liability claim demanding a change to a black box warning, contraindication, warning, adverse event (or anything else, for that matter) that would require a corresponding modification to the drug’s highlights section.  As demonstrated above, the FDA’s current regulatory regime concerning highlights meets Albrecht’s requirement that “whatever the means the FDA uses to exercise its authority, those means must lie within the scope of the authority Congress has lawfully delegated.”  139 S. Ct. at 1679.

“I don’t give you a hoot of warning. . . .”

Simply stated, “to state a claim for failure-to-warn that is not preempted by the FDCA, a plaintiff must plead a labeling deficiency that Defendants could have corrected using the CBE regulation.”  Gibbons v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., 919 F.3d 699, 708 (2d Cir. 2019) (quoting Celexa, 779 F.3d at 41).  That regulation explicitly excludes any label change to the substance of the highlights section.  Potentially, that’s a lot of preemption, much more than suggested in Wyeth v. Levine, 555 U.S. 555 (2009) – which involved an older drug used in 2000, long before “highlights” existed.  Such older drugs are not subject to the “highlights” requirement at all.  21 C.F.R. §201.56(b) (new “labeling content and format requirements” apply only to post-2006 drugs).  But the amended CBE provision says what it says, and the Supreme Court has put that sort of objection to rest:

We acknowledge the unfortunate hand that federal drug regulation has dealt [these plaintiffs], and others similarly situated.  But it is not this Court’s task to decide whether the statutory scheme established by Congress is unusual or even bizarre. . . .  But different federal statutes and regulations may, as here, lead to different pre-emption results.  We will not distort the Supremacy Clause in order to create similar pre-emption across a dissimilar statutory scheme.  As always, Congress and the FDA retain the authority to change the law and regulations if they so desire.

Mensing, 564 U.S. at 625-26 (citation, quotation, and footnote marks omitted).

“If you try some time, you get what you need. . . .”

Get some Satisfaction – go forth and preempt.