Title 21 › Chapter CHAPTER 9— - FEDERAL FOOD, DRUG, AND COSMETIC ACT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - DRUGS AND DEVICES › Part Part A— - Drugs and Devices › § 355c–1
The Secretary must write and send a report no later than four years after July 9, 2012, and then every five years after that. The report must go to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions and the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. The Secretary must also make the report public, including by posting it on the FDA website. Each report must cover 17 specific topics about how pediatric drug and biologic programs are working. This includes assessments of effectiveness (and labeling changes since July 9, 2012), counts of studies that missed deadlines, deferrals, waivers, and letters, how pediatric study plans and written requests are handled, referrals, how biologics and neonates are studied, pediatric cancer drug testing and suggested fixes, rare disease research, the effects of the 2017 Reauthorization Act changes (including compliance with deferral deadlines), timelines for study submission and review, lists of sponsors who got exclusivity after certain letters, required assessments and investigations, counts for molecularly targeted cancer drug requests tied to August 18, 2017, overall impact of section 504 changes and the orphan drug program, and any penalties, settlements, or payments under section 353 (with drug, sponsor, and amount). At least 180 days before each report is sent, the Secretary must consult with patient groups (including pediatric), consumer groups, industry, academia, and others to collect recommendations and information.
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Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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21 U.S.C. § 355c–1
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83