FDA will drop two-study requirement for new drug approvals, aiming to
speed access
[February 19, 2026]
By MATTHEW PERRONE
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration plans to drop its
longtime standard of requiring two rigorous studies to win approval for
new drugs, the latest change from Trump administration officials vowing
to speed up the availability of certain medical products.
Going forward, the FDA's “default position” will be to require one study
for new drugs and other novel health products, FDA Commissioner Dr.
Marty Makary and a top deputy, Dr. Vinay Prasad, wrote in a New England
Journal of Medicine piece published Wednesday.
The announcement is the latest example of Makary and his team changing
longstanding FDA standards and procedures with the stated goal of
slashing bureaucracy and accelerating the availability of new medicines.
Since arriving at the agency last April, Makary has launched a series of
directives that he says will shorten FDA reviews, including mandating
the use of artificial intelligence by staffers and offering one-month
drug assessments for new medications that serve “national interests.”

It contrasts with the FDA’s more restrictive approach to other products,
including vaccines.
In their piece published Wednesday, Makary and Prasad state that
dropping the two-trial requirement reflects modern advances that have
made drug research “increasingly precise and scientific.”
“In this setting, overreliance on two trials no longer makes sense,”
they write. “In 2026 there are powerful alternative ways to feel assured
that our products help people live longer or better than requiring
manufacturers to test them yet again.”
The FDA officials predicted the shift would lead to “a surge in drug
development."
Dr. Janet Woodcock, the FDA's former drug director, said the change
makes sense and reflects the FDA's decades-long move toward relying on
one trial, combined with supporting evidence, for various
life-threatening diseases, including cancer.
“The scientific point is well taken that as we move toward greater
understanding of biology and disease we don’t need to do two trials all
the time,” said Woodcock, who led the FDA's drug center for about 20
years before retiring in 2024.
The two-study standard for drugs dates to the early 1960s, when Congress
passed a law requiring the FDA to review data from “adequate and
well-controlled investigations,” before clearing new medications. For
decades, the agency interpreted that requirement as meaning at least two
studies, preferably with a large number of patients and significant
follow-up time.
[to top of second column]
|
 The reason for requiring the second
study was to confirm that the first trial's results weren’t a fluke
and could be reproduced.
But beginning in the 1990s, the FDA increasingly began accepting
single studies for the approval of treatments for rare or fatal
diseases that companies often struggle to test in large numbers of
patients.
Over the last five years, roughly 60% of first-of-a-kind drugs
approved each year have been cleared based on a single study. The
shift reflects laws passed by Congress that directed regulators to
be more flexible when reviewing drugs for serious or hard-to-treat
conditions.
Woodcock said the new policy announced Wednesday will mainly impact
drugs for common diseases that previously weren't eligible for
reduced testing standards.
“It’s not the cancers and the rare diseases that will be affected by
this,” she noted. “The agency has been approving those on a single
trial already.”
The latest approach from FDA leadership contrasts with the agency's
recent actions on vaccines, gene therapies and other treatments.
Last week, the FDA's vaccine division, headed by Prasad, refused to
accept Moderna’s application for a new mRNA flu shot, saying its
clinical trial was insufficient. Then on Wednesday the agency
reversed course, saying it would review the vaccine after Moderna
agreed to conduct an additional study in older people.
Separately, Prasad has rejected a string of experimental gene
therapies and biotech drugs, citing the need for additional studies
or more definitive evidence. The trend has weighed on the stocks of
many biotech companies and clashed with Makary's public statements
promoting the speed and flexibility of the FDA's reviews.

Woodcock said the drug industry will have to wait and see whether
the FDA's approach to promising experimental therapies changes.
“Implementation will be everything,” she said. “Since the agency's
approach is unclear, and the industry is already baffled, I don't
think this adds any illumination.”
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |