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Supercharging A New FDA: Marty Makary on Science, Power & Patients

January 15, 2026 / 01:29:48

This episode features Marty McCary, commissioner of the FDA, discussing his role and reforms at the agency, particularly in the context of the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco. Key topics include drug approval timelines, vaccine schedules, and the impact of public health policies during the COVID pandemic.

The conversation shifts to the competitive landscape of biotechnology, particularly in relation to China. McCary outlines the urgency for the U.S. to innovate and streamline drug approval processes to maintain its leadership in the biotech sector.

TL;DR

Marty McCary discusses FDA reforms, drug approval timelines, vaccine schedules, and the urgency of U.S. biotech competitiveness against China.

Video

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Marty McCary, commissioner of the FDA.
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Welcome to San Francisco.
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>> Great to be here, Dave. Good to be with
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you.
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>> Yeah, thanks. It's JP Morgan Healthcare
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Conference this week in San Francisco.
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Considered, I think, probably the
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biggest most important biotech
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conference globally. Very important
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week. So, you're visiting this week for
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the conference.
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>> Yeah. 120,000 people, great
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conversations. You hear from everybody.
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Just not enough time to meet with
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everybody you want to meet with, but
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it's a great time.
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>> Well, thanks for sitting down with me.
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You and I have gotten to know each other
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a little bit over the last year or so
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>> and I'm really excited uh to hear a
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little bit about how things are going.
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It's been almost a year since you've
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been in the role. I think maybe for our
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audience you could share a little bit
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about how you got this role. How did you
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get involved with this administration?
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How did you get connected with them? And
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maybe we can go all the way back to your
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very outspoken views uh during the COVID
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pandemic and maybe how that brought
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attention to you and your philosophies
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that that drove this role.
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>> Yeah. So my um interest in academia, I
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um went to graduate school for public
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health and served on the faculty of the
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Johns Hopkins School of Public Health as
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I also had a clinical practice in GI and
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cancer surgery at Johns Hopkins. And my
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interest was always in the root causes
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of our healthcare system problems from
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quality, transparency, and price. And in
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the work on price, uh, I led sort of a
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national effort to try to get more price
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transparency of hospital prices. I wrote
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a book on it that did very well. It took
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me to the White House where they had
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read the book, invited me in, and in
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that first Trump administration, we had
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a lot of great conversations and then
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they implemented the idea and I was so
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impressed. This makes sense. You know,
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we want common sense ideas. And so we
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got the hospital price transparency
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executive order signed by the president.
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That's where I developed some of the
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relationships and got to know the folks.
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And then when uh President Trump got
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reelected, he gave me a call days after
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the election and I was very honored to
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be offered this role. So, it's been
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awesome. Uh co, you mentioned CO, it was
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a crazy time. I mean, the sort of
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sociology of medical dogma is a
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fascinating historical thing and we
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still suffer from it. paternalism, the
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sort of suppressing ideas that are not
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the legacy ideas, the sort of
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sacrificing the basic principles of
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science to question everything to have
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no sacred cows. And you saw the worst of
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that bad behavior during co cloth masks
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on toddlers for 3 years,
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vaccine mandates for young college
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students, recommending COVID boosters
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with such absolutism and young healthy
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children. you the um ignoring natural
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immunity. One of the most uh
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scientifically dishonest things a
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scientist could possibly say about the
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with the virus and the and the immunity
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and um shutting kids out of school for
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nearly two years which I fought tooth
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and nail along with Jay Bachari and
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others starting in the fall of 2020. We
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initially we were okay just doing stuff
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while we didn't understand it but once
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the data emerged we made a strong case
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to reopen the schools and to some degree
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I feel like we lost that battle but
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people now see that the data has caught
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up with public health officials and so
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I'm proud to be in office now to be a
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part of an effort to rebuild public
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trust in our health institutions and you
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must be having a lot of conflict then
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because you really are fundamentally
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trying to rewrite the way these
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institutions operate have operated and
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in some sense you are degrading the
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success and the career and the authority
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that some have vested themselves over
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time in those roles. How has that been
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and and what's the push back been like
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as you've kind of gone through this
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exercise?
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>> So I meet with folks at the FDA and if
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you meet with them with their bosses and
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everybody in the room to get a briefing
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on a topic then they give you one
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glowing story. But if you meet with one
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individual scientific reviewer and give
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them the safety of anonymity and say
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look I want to hear how is it going on
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the ground or what big ideas do you have
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that you've always wanted to do but not
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been able to do four out of five people
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or sometimes more will will not not
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really give you anything interesting but
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then somebody will say you know it makes
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no sense that we do it this way and we
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could do it better and we could do it
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this way something they they wouldn't
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feel comfortable offering if their
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supervisor were in the room. And so
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we've been running with these ideas. We
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have announced 42 major reforms in my 10
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months in office at the FDA
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and it it has challenged the status quo
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of doing things. But we have to I mean
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it why does it take 10 to 12 years for a
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new drug to come to market? We've become
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so lukewarm and passive accepting that
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horrible uh timeline that that has just
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become the status quo. We've got to
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challenge these deeply held assumptions.
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And we're doing it. We are doing it with
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new programs, new priority reviews, new
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pilots, new forms of transparency. We
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made our our rejection letters public so
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that if the FDA does not approve a drug,
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the public deserves to know why. And it
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creates accountability.
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>> And that was not the case before. They
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talked about it for 30 years and we got
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it done. They talked about banning one
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food diet for 35 years. Within weeks of
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coming into office, we took action to
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remove all nine artificial petroleum
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based diet. So, we're getting stuff
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done. We're not afraid to move fast. And
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in that role, some people have left
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the FDA and then they've been outspoken
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critics of yourself. Maybe you can
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respond to some of the criticisms that
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it's chaotic, that there's a lot of
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turmoil. I've worked at many startups. I
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know that when you move fast, things
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feel or they may feel too busy or they
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may feel like there's too much going on.
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It's overwhelming at times, but at the
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end of the day, progress is what
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matters. Maybe you could just comment on
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some of the reports made by employees
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that have quit the FDA, left and and and
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provided some comments on how things are
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going.
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>> There were 2,000 HR people at the FDA
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just before I got there. There were
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1,500
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IT people.
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And so, for a staff of how many total?
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>> 20,000 employees just before I got
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there. And so there was a goal to say,
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hey, we're going to go back to 2019
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staffing levels and the cuts are not
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going to be to scientists or reviewers.
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No scientific reviewer was laid off. But
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there were significant consolidations in
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HR, procurement, IT, and the duplicative
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services that were out there. Now,
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anytime you do something in government,
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you you take headline risk, but we felt
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it was the right thing to do. And so I
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came in right after that uh massive sort
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of change. And since then we've had a
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great culture. We've had more teamwork.
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We have new leaders. And they believe in
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this new vision. The number one priority
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of the commissioner that preceded me, he
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said, was to fight misinformation.
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>> Well, my number one priority is not to
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censor Americans. It's to deliver more
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cures and meaningful treatments faster
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to the American public and healthier
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food for children. And I think every
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employee at the FDA knows that mission.
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We have incredible teamwork. Um our
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turnover rate is at the baseline 5 to 7%
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that has been there for the last 10
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years at the agency. So there's no
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exodus, there's no mass uh departures.
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We are actually hiring 1,50 new
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scientists because we have very
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ambitious goals on our new pathways.
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accelerated type pathways. And so we're
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um building up capacity to have a whole
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new line of pathways so that we can
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deliver faster for the American people.
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>> Great. Well, look, let's start with a
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framing. The framing is the US verse
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China. I want to read this report that
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came from the Congressional National
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Security Commission on Emerging
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Biotechnology. We're here at a at a
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biotech conference. So, I figured we
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could start here because everyone's
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talking about China and the race against
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China. The US, according to this
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commission, has a three-year window to
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act to keep up with Chinese innovation
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and the speed in biotech.
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In 2022, Chinese companies were just 5%
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of licensing deals. 2025, 42%.
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And recently, one of the biggest
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licensing deals ever was 3S Bio 1.25
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billion up front with a $6 billion total
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with Fizer. China had 10 years ago only
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50% of published scientific papers to
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the US. Today they're 50% more than the
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US. So I just want to walk through your
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view on US biioarma
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innovation as it relates to China. Is
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there a race and if so what are the
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priorities for the administration in
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helping American biotech industry remain
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competitive?
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>> There is a race and when we came to
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office we were losing that race. We were
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behind. we were getting clocked by
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China, by Australia and other countries
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that were doing things more efficiently
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with less red tape and um we made it a
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massive priority to say we need to uh
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retain our number one position in life
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sciences and biomedical research and
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we've got to think innovatively so we
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can come up with some protectionist
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strategies but ultimately what we need
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to do is be more competitive with what's
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going on with phase 1's and INDs
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overseas.
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So that means we need to rethink our
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entire phase one uh process. We have to
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convene hospitals uh who are um so part
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of the problem is outside of the walls
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of the FDA. When hospitals have IRBs,
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that is the institutional review review
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boards that approve research that meet
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monthly and you know at at Johns Hopkins
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I had a study took a year and a half to
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go through the IRB. It was a survey.
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What are we worried about? It was a
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survey. It was a nutrition survey and at
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the end of a year and a half it was not
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approved.
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That kind of stuff is intolerable when
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we're competing with uh China where
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they're doing phase ones in 4 weeks with
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uh Australia that's doing phase ones in
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6 weeks. And so we need to uh have more
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centralized IRBs and we need to
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streamline the hospital contracting
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because right now if you want to do a
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trial each hospital wants to negotiate
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their margin of what they want and and
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sure they have to customize the contract
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because every study is different has
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different requirements and resources
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that are needed. But you go to Australia
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and they say sure sign here on the
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dotted line you have access to these 14
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hospitals or so. And so we have got to
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have more centralized contracting and a
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centralized IRB in order to compete.
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Those are big priorities. And we also
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have to reduce the red tape and
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regulation on our own IND's phase ones.
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And the entire process, you know, when
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we came in, it took 60 days for the FDA
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just to tell you whether or not they
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were going to consider a supplemental
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application. I mean, that kind of stuff
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is intolerable in the modern world. It
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took and you know some often still takes
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60 days just for the FDA to tell you
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that your application is complete. We're
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going to get that down to one day. We're
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going to use AI. So we've got to
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modernize the agency and be more
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competitive, not just talk about
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protectionist strategies. As you think
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about those work streams in improving
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the efficiency, turnaround time, how
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much can you do this on your own versus
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how much do you need Congress to act to
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pass legislation to support those
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changes? And are there priorities that
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you're working with Congress on to try
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and accelerate drug approval timelines
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that are necessary?
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>> So, right now we have user fees, which
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means if you submit an application,
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there's a fee associated with it because
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there's an unknown number of
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applications each year. So, it it's a
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system that's been around for a while.
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And so, uh, I'd like to see those user
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fees much higher if your phase one is
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done overseas. And if it's done in the
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United States, it's going to be a lower
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user fee. That's what I'd like to see.
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It's an America first policy. I'd love
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Congress to do a bunch of stuff, but
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we're not going to wait for them.
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Congress is slow. We're moving
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incredibly fast. You know, our number
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one goal was to make sure that the
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morale was good, the culture is good,
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and the and the trains are running on
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time, coming in right after the
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restructuring. I'm proud to report this
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year in 2025, this past year, we hit
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100% of our user feed target dates, that
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is the trains were all running on time,
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that every accept or reject decision by
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the FDA, was consistent with the accept
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or reject decision by the primary review
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team. That is, we're not doing secret
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deals. We're not messing with things. We
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are standing by our scientists. And last
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month we had a record number of drugs
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approved by our center for biologic cell
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and gene therapies and other nine drugs.
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And so we want to keep going hard and
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strong and innovate. But the first goal
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in the first nine months was to make
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sure the trains are running on time and
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that we are strong. And I'm happy to
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report the FDA is strong and is going to
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continue to be strong. And going back to
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this point about cutting down on
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timelines for phase 1 2 3 maybe you can
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just for the audience that may not work
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in this industry very briefly explain
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phase 1 2 3
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>> and then where we think there's the
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biggest kind of uh call it excess
00:13:30
regulatory burden that's causing these
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extended timelines on drug approvals
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just just to kind of frame it up a
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little bit.
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>> Sure. So there's an something called the
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IND investigational new drug
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registration process. That's step one.
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Most of those are actually filed by
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academics and I think people forget that
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we still have a lot of great innovation
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in our academic spaces. It's not just
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the pharma labs. Uh then you uh try a
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drug in healthy subjects. That's called
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a phase one trial. Typically a small
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number, a handful. And then you give the
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drug to subjects with the condition and
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that's a phase two. It's a limited
00:14:06
study. And then phase three is a large
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randomized control trial. We call it the
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pivotal trial. We announced just last
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month that we are going to go from a
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baseline default requirement of two
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pivotal trials for a drug to one pivotal
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trial for a drug. It's just math. You
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can achieve the same statistical power
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if you design one good clinical trial
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properly with a good control group. Uh
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and so that by the way that saves like a
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hundred million to $300 million for some
00:14:34
companies. Shortens the time. We're
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reducing animal testing. That's the
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preend or prephase one work. that is how
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does it work in animals? We are
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eliminating a lot of animal testing
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requirements. We have a roadmap. You no
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longer officially have to submit
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chimpanzeee studies for monoconal
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antibodies. That was announced two
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months ago. We said um so typically 144
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chimpanzees are used for a monoconal
00:15:01
antibbody. By the way, it's it's
00:15:04
>> you're making me sick because this has
00:15:05
always been from my point of view one of
00:15:07
the most troubling bioethical concerns
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I've had about the the industry because
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you don't get a lot of statistical power
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or benefit from doing this and it's just
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awful that we do it. But
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>> you you actually get misleading
00:15:18
information sometimes. Some say aspirin
00:15:20
would not have been approved today if we
00:15:22
had the old animal testing requirements
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to species because drugs that are uh
00:15:27
have safety concerns in animals may not
00:15:29
have safety concerns in humans. So we
00:15:31
may miss out on cures and vice versa.
00:15:34
90% of drugs that pass animal studies do
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not pass safety and efficacy in humans.
00:15:39
So what are we doing? We have
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computational modeling now. Computer can
00:15:43
look at a drug and actually make better
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predict predictions and we have
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something called organ on a chip
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technology where you grow say the liver
00:15:49
cells or heart cells in a lab administer
00:15:51
the drug and then look for any enzyme
00:15:53
leaks or disturbances. These are modern
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techniques. We've got to modernize the
00:15:57
agency. It's a massive goal. So
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>> and they're doing it in China. They're
00:16:00
doing it in China. And
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>> if we don't, then we're also putting our
00:16:03
industry at risk.
00:16:04
>> We've got to be more competitive, 100%.
00:16:06
And so what does this do? It compresses
00:16:07
the time for approval. It allows
00:16:11
R&D to be done at a lower price point,
00:16:14
translating into lower drug prices for
00:16:15
everyday Americans. More drugs can be
00:16:18
evaluated. I mean, I had one pharma
00:16:20
executive tell me, "Hey, I love you're
00:16:22
going from 2 to one pivotal trials. That
00:16:24
means we can run twice as many drugs
00:16:27
through large pivotal trials." That's
00:16:28
what we want. We want to see more. Look,
00:16:30
I'm coming in with a bi. We all have our
00:16:32
biases. I have a bias and it's just a
00:16:34
matter of recognizing your biases when
00:16:36
we talk about reforms. My bias is being
00:16:39
at the bedside breaking bad news to
00:16:42
people with incurable conditions or
00:16:44
being at the bedside in the ICU. And
00:16:47
when you do that, it has a profound
00:16:50
impact on your brain and your soul. and
00:16:53
you think about what can we possibly do
00:16:58
to give this individual some hope. And
00:17:00
so when I see a 10 to 12 year time
00:17:03
period of bringing a drug to market, I
00:17:05
think in the modern world it makes no
00:17:07
sense. Just think about the advances in
00:17:09
science and technology. So I'm committed
00:17:12
to that mission. And we've got a new
00:17:13
pilot program now to get decisions out
00:17:15
in weeks.
00:17:17
>> It's unheard of. It's unprecedented. Uh
00:17:20
we have the first uh medication we just
00:17:23
announced after 55 days. Um we we have a
00:17:26
lot to change in the workflow to get
00:17:29
that time frame down. But we have I
00:17:30
think 18 products that have vouchers for
00:17:33
this new pilot program. If you're going
00:17:35
to do something new, you have to pick
00:17:37
criteria.
00:17:38
>> You can either do it randomly or you can
00:17:40
pick criteria. So the criteria we chose
00:17:43
are drugs in line with our national
00:17:45
priorities. a unmet public health need.
00:17:48
Say a a new amazing cure for cancer
00:17:50
where the tumor shrinks in front of your
00:17:52
eyes and you don't need surgery or
00:17:54
chemo. That's a real thing. That's I'm
00:17:56
actually giving you a real example. We
00:17:57
gave those companies a voucher. Um if
00:18:01
you're bringing manufacturing back to
00:18:03
the United States, that's a national
00:18:05
security issue. And if you are going to
00:18:08
make the drug affordable, that's an
00:18:10
access issue. And that's an a massive
00:18:12
priority for this president is lowering
00:18:14
drug prices. So, we have uh this pilot
00:18:17
underway and it's going extremely well.
00:18:19
>> So, the drug company gets a voucher if
00:18:21
they qualify under one of those three
00:18:23
criteria and that gives them a fast
00:18:24
track.
00:18:25
>> That's right.
00:18:25
>> Yeah. And when will we get a readout on
00:18:28
how that program's going and whether it
00:18:29
becomes standard?
00:18:31
>> So, in internally it's going great. I
00:18:33
mean, I've got employees at the FDA tell
00:18:35
me, gosh, I love this. It makes sense.
00:18:38
And the reason we haven't done it before
00:18:40
is that we farm out the application to a
00:18:43
dozen offices and everybody has until
00:18:45
the target date to get their final
00:18:48
reports in. Well, the target date is
00:18:50
about a year.
00:18:51
>> So if you are a expeditious scientist or
00:18:54
you have the ability to uh go do your
00:18:57
work expeditiously and in two weeks you
00:19:00
have your result. Well, it doesn't
00:19:03
matter because the farm talks person or
00:19:05
whoever else is another part of that has
00:19:07
until the day before. Guess when they're
00:19:08
going to submit it? The day before. So,
00:19:10
we are changing the incentives
00:19:12
internally, the bonus structure. We're
00:19:14
changing the alignment. We're changing
00:19:16
the culture. And our goal is to
00:19:18
streamline that process.
00:19:20
>> Going back to the computational point,
00:19:21
we are collecting more data, digitizing
00:19:23
that data on patients than ever before.
00:19:26
That data should generally be
00:19:28
accessible. Is there a world where we
00:19:31
can transition from phase one, phase
00:19:33
two, phase three trials into a phase
00:19:35
one, phase two slash3 by taking into
00:19:38
account all of this additional data?
00:19:40
Some people have talked about the idea
00:19:42
of using AI plus other health data
00:19:45
that's collected and allowing the phase
00:19:47
3 to kind of roll into phase 2 and
00:19:49
create a much more expedited
00:19:51
computationally assisted approval
00:19:53
process. Is that something that's on the
00:19:55
road map or is discussed?
00:19:57
>> Absolutely. There has been tinkering of
00:19:59
combining phase one and two, phase one,
00:20:02
two hybrid trials, phase two and three
00:20:05
hybrid trials, approving something with
00:20:07
sort of a preliminary approval after
00:20:09
phase two if the results are really
00:20:11
promising. And those are all steps in
00:20:13
the right direction, but I think of
00:20:14
something much bigger. Can we move to
00:20:17
continuous trials? Can we use basian uh
00:20:23
statistical evaluation which we
00:20:25
announced this week? We are now going to
00:20:27
allow basian statistics to be used. So
00:20:30
now you can if something works instead
00:20:32
of having a committee meet twice a year
00:20:34
to do a cut of the data and print it out
00:20:37
and everybody looks at it. I mean I was
00:20:39
literally on those committees.
00:20:41
Why can't we in real time with AI tools
00:20:45
figure out when there's a safety signal
00:20:47
or efficacy established and then call it
00:20:51
at that point allowing more people to
00:20:53
get the drug as soon as we know it
00:20:55
works. And is there more continuous
00:20:57
tracking that's also possible to look
00:20:59
for risks and issues that start to
00:21:01
emerge in certain populations? Because
00:21:03
this is something that it's almost like
00:21:04
the approval happens and then you find
00:21:06
out years later that well maybe there
00:21:08
was an issue that we should have caught
00:21:09
sooner. And if you move to a more
00:21:12
datadriven continuous observational
00:21:14
system, can you both have faster
00:21:16
approvals but also faster recognition of
00:21:18
safety concerns for specific population?
00:21:20
>> Yeah, I love the way you're thinking. So
00:21:21
we I want to see continuous trials with
00:21:24
endpoints in the cloud
00:21:25
>> so that the reviewers are looking on to
00:21:28
the endpoint. You don't do your freshman
00:21:30
year of college and then submit a giant
00:21:33
50,000page application to start your
00:21:35
sophomore year and then do your
00:21:37
sophomore year and start another 50 page
00:21:39
to start your but that's what we're
00:21:41
doing at the FDA. Now look, it had good
00:21:42
intentions, but we live in a modern
00:21:44
world. We're using computers now, not
00:21:46
stone tablets. And so we can run more
00:21:49
continuous trials. That's the goal. And
00:21:51
we can use basian statistics, which we
00:21:53
announced this week a a a big uh uh sort
00:21:57
of new milestone with that. And I want
00:22:01
to see um I want to see us continue to
00:22:04
have eyes on a drug after approval. So
00:22:08
approval is sort of a a point where we
00:22:11
say hey the world can use it with a fair
00:22:14
degree of confidence on the safety uh
00:22:17
efficac and efficacy tradeoff but
00:22:21
uh why did we learn 5 years after Vio
00:22:24
was approved that it may have killed
00:22:26
38,000 people well in the modern world
00:22:29
with big data we can have eyes on a drug
00:22:32
as it's being used in real time to call
00:22:36
out that safety signal. immediately and
00:22:38
let people know. It may be a subgroup of
00:22:40
people that are affected. There may be a
00:22:41
drug drug interaction. Um, you know, you
00:22:44
think about the opioid epidemic, 15
00:22:47
years of prescribing it, having no idea.
00:22:50
And I was I'm guilty. I was doing this.
00:22:52
I was prescribing it. My patients were
00:22:54
getting addicted, coming back for
00:22:55
refills. I thought it was kind of a
00:22:57
one-off thing. You know, a lot of people
00:22:59
come back, ask for refills. No, it was a
00:23:01
national pattern we should have
00:23:02
identified in big data. And so we're
00:23:04
going to do postmarket surveillance in a
00:23:07
way like we've never seen before using
00:23:09
big data. And if we get it right, if we
00:23:11
get it right and there's a big priority,
00:23:13
it can actually change the threshold of
00:23:16
approval because you know you're going
00:23:17
to have eyes on a drug immediately for
00:23:19
people in the general audience to
00:23:21
understand this begs the question and I
00:23:24
think people will bring this up as as a
00:23:26
critique of absolute safety. I always
00:23:29
talk about the example of you put the
00:23:32
Whimos or the autonomous cars on the
00:23:33
road, they uh cut down on uh fatalities
00:23:38
by 95%. But as soon as one person gets
00:23:41
killed by a Whimo, the media goes crazy
00:23:44
and says these autonomous cars are
00:23:45
killing people.
00:23:47
You know, and and and this this begs the
00:23:49
question about the the understanding of
00:23:52
safety and risk uh versus the benefit
00:23:55
that can occur. You know, I was sharing
00:23:57
with you about a family member who had
00:24:00
to wait a long time to get a certain
00:24:02
therapeutic and I was thinking about the
00:24:04
thousands of people that that died it in
00:24:07
that same period of time. Fortunately,
00:24:08
he was able to get the therapeutic, but
00:24:09
all the people that that died because
00:24:11
they couldn't get access to this drug.
00:24:14
How do we convey to the general
00:24:15
population the idea that speed matters
00:24:18
in saving lives and this question about
00:24:21
absolute safety and absolute risk around
00:24:24
drug approval? This is really important
00:24:26
when you talk about risk to a general
00:24:29
audience. How do you convey that second
00:24:30
order effect?
00:24:31
>> That's right. So safety is our number
00:24:33
one priority. We are to safeguard the
00:24:35
the public. But having 8 months of 144
00:24:41
chimpanzees go undergoing studies has
00:24:44
risks to the general public. You may be
00:24:46
holding back a curative medication for 8
00:24:49
months. Not identifying the efficacy in
00:24:52
a trial with basian statistics. um early
00:24:56
enough has risks because that extra lag
00:24:59
period is time when patients like the
00:25:02
patients that I treated at John's
00:25:03
Hopkins are told sorry we don't know of
00:25:06
anything out there so time delays that
00:25:10
are unnecessary have risks and I think
00:25:13
that is something we don't think about
00:25:15
in the FD you know enough at the FDA we
00:25:17
think oh we have this concern let's
00:25:19
sleep on it okay well you get a night to
00:25:21
sleep on it not 9 months
00:25:23
>> so I want to give a flip to this. The
00:25:25
right to try law gives patients access
00:25:27
to drugs that uh when they're in a
00:25:29
certain condition, they can access the
00:25:31
drug before it's gone through full
00:25:32
approvals. What's the current state of
00:25:34
right to try? Where do you view that
00:25:36
going? And does the threshold for right
00:25:39
to try change over time, giving patients
00:25:41
and their doctors more rights and more
00:25:44
access sooner or does the FDA still have
00:25:46
to hold firm? How do you think about
00:25:48
that over time?
00:25:48
>> So, I believe in both the letter and the
00:25:51
spirit of right to try. It's an amazing
00:25:53
achievement of U. President Trump in the
00:25:55
his first term and I have signed 100% of
00:26:00
right to try requests that come across
00:26:01
my desk. Of course, the companies have
00:26:03
to agree to make the medication
00:26:05
available, but it's a great program and
00:26:08
like we don't want people getting spun
00:26:10
up on snake oil that doesn't work,
00:26:12
that's cost $3 million where their
00:26:14
churches are doing GoFundMe campaigns
00:26:16
when we know a drug does not work. So,
00:26:19
we do have a responsibility and we do we
00:26:22
we have to be good stewards of the
00:26:23
Medicare program. They're using taxpayer
00:26:25
dollars to fund things. But if there's a
00:26:28
signal that something works and somebody
00:26:31
wants to try a drug, who are we to say
00:26:33
you can't? So, we look at safety, but
00:26:36
beyond safety, we are, you know, have to
00:26:39
be as flexible as possible with our uh
00:26:43
regulation. And we announced just this
00:26:44
week that we are getting rid of the some
00:26:47
of the regulatory requirements for cell
00:26:49
and gene therapy. Now those are used for
00:26:51
a lot of rare diseases, but we had
00:26:53
requirements uh what we call PPQ runs
00:26:56
for batches of um it's part of the
00:26:59
manufacturing requirements for cell and
00:27:01
gene therapies. We were holding them to
00:27:03
the same standards we were for say mass
00:27:05
manufacturing of a pill. Well, a cellar
00:27:07
gene therapy can be developed in a lab
00:27:09
at UCSF or Stanford. And are we going to
00:27:12
require that they use the same
00:27:14
manufacturing broad standards to do
00:27:17
multiple batches when you've got a
00:27:20
scientific platform that works, a vector
00:27:22
platform that works and you're basically
00:27:24
doing surgery on the human genome just
00:27:27
in different locations? So, we made that
00:27:29
announcement earlier this week.
00:27:31
>> So, let me just understand that one.
00:27:33
I've I've spent a little time in the
00:27:34
space. Does this mean that I will not
00:27:37
need to go through a GMP or good
00:27:38
manufacturing practice facility to bring
00:27:40
those therapeutics to a broader set of
00:27:42
patients? And does it also mean that
00:27:44
once I've got a system that works, I can
00:27:46
use it for different indications? And
00:27:48
maybe help understand a little bit about
00:27:49
where this goes because there's many
00:27:50
patients that today are looking at
00:27:53
papers on cell and gene therapies, early
00:27:55
data, and they're saying, "When can I
00:27:56
get access? I'm at risk." This matters a
00:27:59
lot to patients. and maybe you can help
00:28:01
contextualize how this translates into
00:28:03
speed and and access.
00:28:05
>> Yeah. So, the announcement that we made
00:28:06
on Sunday was that we're going to
00:28:09
customize the manufacturing requirements
00:28:12
to the drug and the population being
00:28:14
treated. So, there's a number of
00:28:15
flexibilities including the ones you
00:28:17
mentioned, but it's no longer going to
00:28:19
be this hard and fast. You have to do it
00:28:21
this way. For example, the three batch
00:28:24
runs that have been required, those
00:28:26
ingredients are expensive. I mean, those
00:28:27
ingredients could cost $100,000 for just
00:28:29
one ingredient. And so, we have to use
00:28:33
common sense. I mean, when you see
00:28:35
something uh perform, you know,
00:28:38
something magical to a kid with no help
00:28:41
right in front of your eyes, you've got
00:28:44
to say like, what are we doing getting
00:28:45
in the way? We just um had early in u
00:28:49
our time there, baby KJ go from go home
00:28:52
from the hospital, right? So this infant
00:28:54
got gene editing therapy. You can't do a
00:28:57
randomized trial on that. There's not
00:28:59
enough kids who have it. So we these
00:29:02
bespoke therapies. We created
00:29:04
essentially a novel pathway for them. Uh
00:29:07
Dr. Vani Prasad uh described it in the
00:29:09
New England Journal of Medicine. It's
00:29:11
called the plausible mechanism pathway
00:29:13
and it's basically combining gold
00:29:15
standard science with common sense.
00:29:17
>> Right. And what about for CARTT therapy?
00:29:19
So there's this blossoming class of
00:29:21
therapeutics in CARTT that's
00:29:23
historically been used exclusively for
00:29:25
oncology for cancer. Um increasing
00:29:28
discussion about using it for autoimmune
00:29:30
conditions. Does this help with the
00:29:32
CARTT therapy pathway and enabling
00:29:35
faster routes to market and more access
00:29:37
and lower cost?
00:29:38
>> It can. And by the way, CARTT is
00:29:40
amazing. Carti is amazing. I'm not here
00:29:42
to pro promote any one class of drugs
00:29:45
but I mean it the stuff that we have
00:29:47
seen um is mindboggling.
00:29:50
>> So yes
00:29:50
>> and just for folks to understand when
00:29:52
they take tea cells edit them and put
00:29:54
them back in the body and those tea
00:29:56
cells go after targets in the body and
00:29:58
destroy those targets and many blood
00:30:00
cancers uh are now seeing extraordinary
00:30:02
results with these CARTT therapies and
00:30:05
now they're going after autoimmune
00:30:06
conditions. But it definitely seems to
00:30:08
be that there there needs to be a faster
00:30:10
path to market, lower cost because the
00:30:12
pricing is half a million to a million
00:30:14
dollars still.
00:30:14
>> Yeah. It's amazing. We're essentially
00:30:16
activating your own immune cells to to
00:30:19
have a a very clear path and target
00:30:22
something in your body that needs to be
00:30:24
targeted. So it's now we did find um
00:30:28
that there was in the Biden
00:30:30
administration approval to have the
00:30:33
cells of Americans for CARTT therapy
00:30:36
shipped to China where the Chinese did
00:30:38
the gene editing and then ship back to
00:30:39
the United States to infuse in
00:30:41
Americans. When I found out about that,
00:30:42
we shut that thing down so fast. Yeah.
00:30:45
So, uh we have to do things carefully.
00:30:47
>> What else have you discovered since
00:30:48
you've been in the FDA that shocked
00:30:50
>> you? Just go on a side for a second. I'm
00:30:53
I'm curious to know what are the biggest
00:30:55
shocks that you've uncovered. I mean,
00:30:57
you've now been there for some time, you
00:30:59
mentioned before we sat down that you're
00:31:02
actively digitizing millions of files
00:31:05
>> that historically have not been
00:31:06
digitized, and I'm I'm assuming you can
00:31:08
now use AI and other tools to go read
00:31:10
through them very quickly. What's been
00:31:12
shocking to you?
00:31:13
>> Where do I start? I mean, somebody was
00:31:16
carrying a box from one building to
00:31:18
another building with uh with a um drug
00:31:22
file in it. And um it turns out that the
00:31:25
lawyers said they couldn't email the
00:31:27
information to the other center because,
00:31:30
you know, each center was like their own
00:31:32
secret government before we got there.
00:31:35
>> Each center of the FDA.
00:31:37
>> Each center of the FDA.
00:31:38
>> Same agency.
00:31:38
>> Yeah. Same agency. Seven centers. It was
00:31:40
like, you know, they had their own
00:31:42
boundaries and territories and, you
00:31:44
know, lawyers. They had their own
00:31:45
communication staff put out their own
00:31:47
releases, uh, their own press releases,
00:31:49
did their own legislative affairs with,
00:31:52
had scheduled their own hearings.
00:31:53
>> And the commissioner was out of the loop
00:31:55
sometimes. And so, we restructured the
00:31:57
entire agency. Now, we centralized those
00:32:00
services. But in the days of this sort
00:32:02
of siloed world of the agency, by the
00:32:04
way, it was a nightmare for uh
00:32:07
developers that had a drug device
00:32:08
combination. Um, right.
00:32:11
>> I mean, it was like gerrymandered lines
00:32:12
of what was included in one center
00:32:14
versus another center based on
00:32:16
infighting. And, uh, you know, people
00:32:18
had served long terms there. You know,
00:32:20
they'd serve terms like, uh, President
00:32:23
Mugab of Zimbabwe who'd been there, you
00:32:25
know, forever. These people just were
00:32:27
there forever, right? It was just their
00:32:29
way. And, uh, anytime there was an
00:32:32
opening in leadership, 19 times out of
00:32:34
20 it went to an internal candidate. So,
00:32:36
you didn't have a lot of fresh new
00:32:38
ideas. We have a lot of a lot of fresh
00:32:39
scientists coming in there. I mentioned
00:32:41
the 1,000 new scientists. We're we're on
00:32:43
boarding right now um 450 of them. 50 of
00:32:47
them already just started. But um I've
00:32:50
met a guy who
00:32:52
uh his job was to change the ink
00:32:54
cartridge on a fax machine on one fax
00:32:58
machine. Uh like healthc care has
00:33:01
single-handedly kept the fax industry
00:33:03
alive.
00:33:03
>> Wow.
00:33:04
>> Um the guy's job was the ink guy on the
00:33:06
fax machine. to swap out the
00:33:09
>> machine.
00:33:11
>> There's a lot of that. There's a lot of
00:33:12
that.
00:33:12
>> Well, let's shift over to food. Maybe
00:33:15
I'll just give you a moment to share
00:33:17
what you changed in the food pyramid in
00:33:18
the announcement last week. Why you made
00:33:21
those changes and why weren't they made
00:33:24
before?
00:33:27
Yeah. So, we have had decades of medical
00:33:31
dogma and corruption putting together
00:33:34
food pyramids that make no sense. people
00:33:36
can tell. I mean, the open secret was
00:33:38
that they make no sense. They're
00:33:40
scientifically inaccurate and they were
00:33:43
often times curated by the food industry
00:33:45
or the food industry's influence on
00:33:47
academia. Nutrition science may be one
00:33:50
of the most corrupted fields in all of
00:33:53
science. And it gave us the dogma that
00:33:57
we had to focus on saturated fat and
00:33:59
just eradicating natural healthy fats
00:34:02
from the US food supply. Ignoring that
00:34:05
you replace fats with healthy with
00:34:08
refined carbohydrates which are not
00:34:10
healthy. And we have this carbohydrate
00:34:14
heavy diet now for American children.
00:34:16
And guess what? 38% of kids have
00:34:18
pre-diabetes or diabetes. Is that a
00:34:21
surprise? The rise has paralleled the
00:34:24
shift from saturated fat or regular food
00:34:27
to pumping refined carbohydrates and
00:34:30
added sugar. 60 to 70% of the calories
00:34:33
of a child in America today are refined
00:34:35
carbohydrates.
00:34:37
No one has talked about it. It's been in
00:34:39
a blind spot as the medical
00:34:42
establishment has had this myopic focus
00:34:46
on the boogeyman of saturated fat. And
00:34:49
so we had a food pyramid that was
00:34:52
entirely backwards. And so we flipped it
00:34:55
upside down using good science talking
00:34:58
about a an previously ignored area of
00:35:02
nutrition. And that is the importance of
00:35:03
protein. We've been getting about half
00:35:06
the protein that we need. The protein
00:35:08
levels in the previous dietary guidance
00:35:10
was really just to prevent withering
00:35:12
away.
00:35:14
We want our American kids to thrive,
00:35:16
>> right? and and look at the status of
00:35:18
kids today.
00:35:20
Low in protein,
00:35:23
muscle wasting, weakness,
00:35:25
um underperforming in school, high in uh
00:35:28
refined carbohydrates and added sugar,
00:35:30
giving them that kind of uh sugar um
00:35:34
sort of coma, food coma after a refined
00:35:37
carbohydrate
00:35:39
uh breakfast. Again, we hit them hard in
00:35:41
the afternoon. They get very little or
00:35:43
no natural light exposure. They're told
00:35:46
to sit at a desk still for 7 hours a
00:35:48
day. They can't do it. And what do we
00:35:50
do? Tragically,
00:35:52
we have drugged our nation's kids at
00:35:54
scale. It's wrong. It needs to stop. We
00:35:56
have to reexamine the root causes. And
00:35:58
so, flipping this food pyramid upside
00:36:00
down, focusing on protein is the first
00:36:02
step. And so, I'm very proud of what we
00:36:04
were able to do. What have you uncovered
00:36:07
now that you've been inside the
00:36:08
organization and you can see paperwork
00:36:11
related to the legacy of how the old
00:36:13
food pyramid was constructed and
00:36:15
maintained for so long about the
00:36:17
motivations who was involved in setting
00:36:19
that food pyramid when you mentioned the
00:36:21
corruption of nutrition science. Help us
00:36:23
understand the root of that. So, I wrote
00:36:26
a book um just before coming into office
00:36:29
where I had a chance to do a deep dive
00:36:31
and do some investigative journalism, if
00:36:34
you will, to learn how this dogma of
00:36:38
what to eat got we got so wrong. And I
00:36:43
think it was a lot of group think just
00:36:45
like we saw with opioids are not
00:36:48
addictive. Medical establishment got
00:36:51
that wrong for 15 years.
00:36:54
Uh, young kids should avoid peanut
00:36:55
butter until they turn three. We got
00:36:57
that wrong for 16 years. Tragically
00:37:00
wrong. Igniting the modern-day peanut
00:37:03
allergy epidemic because peanut butter
00:37:05
exposure in infancy
00:37:08
reduces there's something called immune
00:37:10
tolerance, right? And it reduces the
00:37:12
risk of peanut allergies. We're the only
00:37:14
country in the world that has high rates
00:37:16
of peanut allergies along with UK and a
00:37:18
few other European countries that fell
00:37:21
for our dogma based recommendation to
00:37:23
avoid peanut butter till the kid turns
00:37:25
three. And so we got that 180 degrees
00:37:29
wrong. And so there are dogmas in the
00:37:32
medical field that take on a life of
00:37:34
their own and you're not allowed to
00:37:35
question them. And we saw a little bit
00:37:38
of it during COVID if you recognized
00:37:40
natural immunity and may not need to be
00:37:42
fired from your job because you have
00:37:44
circulating antibodies to COVID, but
00:37:46
they were just antibodies that the
00:37:49
government did not recognize.
00:37:51
This dogma can take on a life of its
00:37:53
own. And so we're trying to get back to
00:37:55
gold standard objective science. It is
00:37:57
crazy that the fundamental premise of
00:38:00
science is you ask a question and then
00:38:03
you test whether there's one answer or
00:38:06
another. And the idea that you can't ask
00:38:09
questions indicates that it's not
00:38:11
science from my point of view. All
00:38:13
standards should be challengeable. That
00:38:15
you should be able to ask the questions
00:38:16
and fundamentally if they they hold
00:38:19
truth or they hold ground then great.
00:38:21
Let's maintain them. And if they don't
00:38:24
we should be able to change. And then
00:38:26
they use the word science or
00:38:27
historically the word science has been
00:38:29
then used to justify not testing
00:38:30
something.
00:38:31
>> That's right.
00:38:31
>> It's it's crazy to me. What are the
00:38:33
roles that food companies have played?
00:38:35
What are the roles that folks that might
00:38:38
have an economic incentive in keeping
00:38:41
the food pyramid as it was played
00:38:44
historically in this? And is that
00:38:46
permanently changed at this point or is
00:38:48
it changed while this administration is
00:38:49
here and it's going to change again next
00:38:51
cycle? help us understand a little bit
00:38:53
about you know the the the role that
00:38:56
industry has in influencing some of this
00:38:59
regulatory process.
00:39:01
>> Well, I think the industry did what the
00:39:04
medical field told them to do and that
00:39:07
is to address the risk of mass
00:39:10
starvation and deal with food insecurity
00:39:13
and that calories in equals calories out
00:39:15
regardless of where those calories come
00:39:17
from. That was the dogma and sort of the
00:39:19
the mandate to the food industry. So um
00:39:22
they did what they were told to do and
00:39:25
so they moved to refined carbohydrates.
00:39:27
They stripped the grains of fiber to
00:39:29
mass-produce them. They would even chop
00:39:31
them up which made them increase your
00:39:34
glycemic index. That is it basically
00:39:37
function like sugar. So you have
00:39:40
cereals, breads, pastas functioning like
00:39:43
sugar. And so we ushered in a generation
00:39:47
of kids and you and I were the first
00:39:49
gener who were part of this the first
00:39:51
generation in human history with massive
00:39:53
insulin spikes daytoday in our normal
00:39:56
everyday life. We've never seen insulin
00:39:58
spikes to that degree. And of course
00:40:00
that drives something called insulin
00:40:02
resistance. That is the the organs in
00:40:05
your body that do important functions
00:40:07
are trying to block out all this extra
00:40:09
glucose. And so they kind of um uh
00:40:14
change the configuration of the insulin
00:40:15
receptor to just try to resist all this
00:40:18
sugar coming in. And it is at the root
00:40:21
of almost every chronic disease. Insulin
00:40:23
resistance, general body inflammation.
00:40:27
And we never talk about these things.
00:40:29
Never. So we talked about them front and
00:40:31
center in our new uh guidance. The types
00:40:34
of grains matter. It's not calories in
00:40:36
equals calories out. It's not you can
00:40:37
have this if you sit on the treadmill
00:40:39
for this amount of minutes. We've got to
00:40:42
talk about the soil that food comes from
00:40:45
and the farming techniques that animal
00:40:48
products come from and the cleanliness
00:40:51
and chemical-free waters that seafood
00:40:54
comes from and the importance of protein
00:40:56
and the value of whole grains and what
00:40:59
we call real food. And so the website is
00:41:01
realfood.gov. My only criticism is the
00:41:03
lack of vegetarian protein in the top of
00:41:05
the pyramid where as a vegetarian I eat
00:41:08
eggs and dairy. It could use a few more
00:41:10
nuts and beans up top, but you know,
00:41:12
I'll talk to Joe Gibbia about it.
00:41:13
>> It could. No, it could. I think the New
00:41:15
York Times had a conception about blue
00:41:17
the blueberries.
00:41:18
>> The blueberries.
00:41:19
>> I think it was uh uh disproportionately
00:41:24
uh disturbingly large
00:41:25
>> disturbingly large blueberries. That was
00:41:27
the criticism. Okay, that wasn't one
00:41:29
that bothered me. Let's talk about the
00:41:30
the adult population. I think 40 to 60%
00:41:33
depending on how you measure it are
00:41:34
obese clinically obese in this country
00:41:36
and these incretin mimedics GLP1 drugs
00:41:38
and others have really taken the market
00:41:41
by storm taken our population by storm.
00:41:42
So I realize that much of this is in
00:41:44
response to an obesity epidemic that
00:41:46
we're facing in this country. But it
00:41:48
turns out that these incretin mimedics
00:41:50
may actually have other systemic
00:41:52
benefits and they're now I think there's
00:41:54
60 indications that they're being tested
00:41:56
against including kidney neurological
00:42:00
cardiac. I mean there's there seems to
00:42:01
be a lot of benefit potentially in uh
00:42:04
using them for other disease
00:42:06
indications. Can you speak a little bit
00:42:07
about your view on where this market
00:42:10
where this class of therapeutics is
00:42:12
headed? Is this something that some
00:42:14
people have estimated or 60% of
00:42:15
Americans are going to be on? And if it
00:42:18
is the case, does that mean we failed
00:42:19
with our food system?
00:42:20
>> Well, first of all, we have failed with
00:42:22
our food system. Look at the fact that
00:42:24
40% of American kids have a chronic
00:42:27
disease.
00:42:28
Between the lines in the medical
00:42:30
textbooks in medical school was kind of
00:42:33
a blaming of children for not having the
00:42:36
discipline. And it's not a willpower
00:42:39
problem. This is highly addictive uh
00:42:42
chemicalized foods that are
00:42:44
ultrarocessed that are put in front of
00:42:46
kids and they want more and you you put
00:42:48
these vibrant colors in them from the
00:42:50
petroleum based dyes. And so this is
00:42:52
something adults have done to kids. And
00:42:54
so I think that we have failed. We've
00:42:57
given people the wrong information. The
00:43:00
calories in equals calories out, this
00:43:02
demonization of fat and all that stuff
00:43:03
we talked about. um GLP-1s are mimicking
00:43:07
a natural hormone in the body. And so
00:43:11
when you get a supplementation of that,
00:43:13
it's doing the job of increasing
00:43:15
satiety, slowing down GI motility, and
00:43:18
it has a profound impact on a number of
00:43:21
conditions because you are also reducing
00:43:25
insulin resistance and general body
00:43:27
inflammation. And so that's why we're
00:43:29
seeing so many other benefits. Plus, you
00:43:31
feel better. When you feel better,
00:43:33
you're going to have benefits you don't
00:43:34
even we haven't even appreciated yet
00:43:37
because there's an incredible value this
00:43:40
sort of positive thinking. We've seen it
00:43:41
in a breast in a lung cancer study from
00:43:45
Mass General. They randomize people to
00:43:48
palative support versus chemotherapy and
00:43:51
the palative support did better even
00:43:52
though chemo drug is is more effective
00:43:55
than standard of care. So, um, you see
00:43:58
this incredible value to sort of
00:44:00
positive thinking and maybe that's one
00:44:02
of the reasons we're seeing reductions
00:44:04
in addiction. Maybe we're, you know,
00:44:06
we're seeing cardiac benefits. So, we'll
00:44:08
see. I mean, we're, you know, as a
00:44:10
regulator, we're a referee and we want
00:44:12
to see products come to market quickly
00:44:15
and safely, but I think we're we're
00:44:17
we're at a pretty interesting time.
00:44:19
>> Yeah. Just to go back on the China point
00:44:21
because we did talk about
00:44:22
competitiveness with respect to speed,
00:44:24
but the other piece I wanted to address
00:44:26
was
00:44:27
>> uh funding of research. So that uh that
00:44:30
bioh technology council I mentioned
00:44:33
recommended a $15 billion kind of rushed
00:44:36
investment in in research. When I meet
00:44:38
with scientists, there's a view that the
00:44:41
Trump administration is anti-science, is
00:44:44
defunding a lot of research institutions
00:44:46
in the United States that are going to
00:44:48
save people's lives and develop amazing
00:44:50
cures. Why are they doing this? There's
00:44:53
this council that recommends that even
00:44:54
in the face of China, they're putting
00:44:56
out tremendous funding to support
00:44:58
research scientists coming up with those
00:45:00
next set of molecules or therapeutic
00:45:02
modalities that are going to change
00:45:04
lives and improve lives. Maybe you can
00:45:06
comment a little bit on are we funding
00:45:09
through the government enough scientific
00:45:12
research? What's the right steady state
00:45:14
for us? And how do we address the the
00:45:16
points about the Trump administration
00:45:17
being anti-science?
00:45:18
>> Yeah. Well, look, we live in uh partisan
00:45:21
times now where people get spun up and
00:45:23
they're in sort of a toxic polarization.
00:45:26
And the truth is, if we want to know the
00:45:28
facts, is that in the Trump
00:45:30
administration, we have not cut $1 of
00:45:33
NIH funding. We have not cut $1 to the
00:45:37
general Medicaid budget. That is the
00:45:40
overall Medicaid fund. And the proposal
00:45:42
for the future is to increase Medicaid
00:45:45
by $200 billion. So you hear all the
00:45:47
time, oh, Trump cut Medicaid, Trump cut
00:45:49
the NIH. No, what we want to see is
00:45:52
reallocating money at the NIH from just
00:45:55
chemotherapy and proton beam therapy
00:45:58
work to study food as medicine and
00:46:02
school lunch programs. and the
00:46:04
microbiome and gut health. We've got to
00:46:07
start talking about school lunch
00:46:09
programs, not just putting every
00:46:10
six-year-old on ompic. We've got to talk
00:46:12
about the quality of sleep as it as it
00:46:16
is a cause of high blood pressure when
00:46:18
you sleep poorly instead of just
00:46:19
throwing people on anti-hypertensive
00:46:21
medications. We've got to talk about
00:46:23
environmental exposures that cause
00:46:25
cancer, not just the chemo to treat it.
00:46:28
And so, we want to see funding go to
00:46:30
root causes of diseases. And that is
00:46:33
something that that has been
00:46:35
unfortunately in a blind spot because
00:46:38
the culture of the NIH is the culture of
00:46:42
Francis Collins and Tony Fouchy and the
00:46:45
group for the last 50 years that and I'm
00:46:48
going to oversimplify it. The gene is
00:46:50
responsible for our health problems and
00:46:53
the gene can solve all of our health
00:46:55
problems. Well, look, I believe in gene
00:46:57
therapy and we're doing amazing stuff
00:46:58
with that. But where's the research on
00:47:01
why one in six girls today will develop
00:47:04
an autoimmune disease? What's triggering
00:47:07
that antibbody response? What of the
00:47:10
many exposures in the life of a child is
00:47:12
causing their bodies to be triggered?
00:47:15
These studies can be done. It's not that
00:47:17
difficult to model the antibbody
00:47:21
that's involved in type 1 diabetes or MS
00:47:25
and exposures in the environment to see
00:47:28
if it is triggering that same
00:47:30
configuration that the antibbody binds
00:47:32
to. But no one's been interested in it
00:47:34
because everything has been about coming
00:47:36
up with a, you know, treatment when we
00:47:39
have to look at causes,
00:47:40
>> right? And the scientists on the ground
00:47:44
see their funding go away. They
00:47:46
complain. They get media attention.
00:47:48
There's a lot of amplification of those
00:47:51
stories. So is that not the fundamental
00:47:53
truth because the money is being
00:47:55
reallocated to other scientists and
00:47:56
other research institutions?
00:47:58
>> Correct. So um 14% of NIH funding went
00:48:02
to DEI research. 14%
00:48:05
>> 14% of NI NIH grants went to DEI
00:48:09
research
00:48:09
>> and NIH grants are about 40 billion a
00:48:11
year. Does that sound
00:48:12
>> uh it's it's a little over 20 billion in
00:48:14
terms of grants that go out the door but
00:48:17
about 47 billion for the entire NIH
00:48:19
budget because they run their own
00:48:21
hospital and clinical center and others.
00:48:23
>> So um so if you think and and by the way
00:48:26
I'm all for anything that reduces health
00:48:29
disparities.
00:48:30
>> Yeah. and increases access. But these
00:48:32
grants were not doing it. It was just
00:48:35
describing health disparities. Well,
00:48:37
it's it's we already know there are
00:48:39
health disparities. Simply describing
00:48:41
them with another 50 studies in JAMAMA
00:48:44
does not help people who are suffering
00:48:46
from these health disparities. So, um
00:48:50
we've seen money shifted to root causes
00:48:53
and areas of research that we need to
00:48:54
study that we've not studied. At the
00:48:57
FDA, we have put a big emphasis on the
00:48:59
value of hormone replacement therapy for
00:49:01
post-menopausal women. Something the NIH
00:49:05
demonized for the last 22 years, saying
00:49:07
that women shouldn't take it because it
00:49:09
causes cancer. Um, when we came in, the
00:49:12
NIH was a mess. Almost all the money was
00:49:16
going to genetic research, which then
00:49:18
becomes the priority of every academic
00:49:20
institution. They're not studying causes
00:49:23
and food and the microbiome and cutting
00:49:25
edge areas of of of science. And they
00:49:28
just had this myopic focus on one area.
00:49:30
It's an important area, but it's one
00:49:31
area. They were funding the Wuhan lab
00:49:34
to, you know, get bat corona viruses and
00:49:37
insert a furine cleavage site so it
00:49:39
could infect humans. What are you doing?
00:49:41
It's a bunch of mad scientists. Um, and
00:49:44
14% of grants were going to DEI. So the
00:49:47
NIH when we came in was a mess. And
00:49:50
under President Trump, it is massively
00:49:52
being reformed. And Jay Bodyario is
00:49:53
doing a great job.
00:49:54
>> Okay, let's shift over to vaccines. Our
00:49:56
wives had kids around the same time.
00:49:58
Hope yours is doing well.
00:50:00
>> Great. He's great. Thanks for asking.
00:50:01
>> Yeah. And we talked about the HEP
00:50:03
vaccine, which we declined on the day he
00:50:06
was born.
00:50:08
>> Cuz I started going very deep on what's
00:50:11
the origin of the HEP vaccine the day
00:50:13
that the child is born. Why why is this
00:50:16
being given to them? We have no HEP B
00:50:18
exposure in our household. We don't need
00:50:20
it. Doesn't protect anyone else. What
00:50:23
are we doing this for? You end up going
00:50:25
down these rabbit holes and a lot of
00:50:26
again what you mentioned earlier, you
00:50:28
take for dogma and you recognize, wait a
00:50:30
second, there may be some unfounded
00:50:31
principles at play here. I should not be
00:50:34
doing this. And we make a a difficult
00:50:36
decision against the tide and the
00:50:37
recommendations and suddenly you're in
00:50:39
the social conflict with people around
00:50:40
you, right? And it was very hard.
00:50:43
>> You guys recently made some big changes
00:50:44
to the vaccine schedule.
00:50:47
I'd love to hear a little bit about how
00:50:48
those changes were made, what were the
00:50:50
big changes, and then, you know, kind of
00:50:52
what got us to this point where when you
00:50:55
look at the data, you're like, "Wait a
00:50:56
second, right?
00:50:57
>> That may not make as much sense." Yeah.
00:50:59
>> I'm just laughing as you talk, Dave, cuz
00:51:01
you do, you know, you just ask some good
00:51:03
questions like, "Does does my newborn on
00:51:07
the in the first hour of life need to be
00:51:10
injected with a hepatitis B vaccine when
00:51:13
the mom is hep negative?" And within a
00:51:16
matter of weeks of having broader
00:51:17
conversations, you feel like you're a
00:51:19
fugitive of the law, like you've done
00:51:21
something, you know, terribly wrong for
00:51:23
choosing not to vaccinate. We went
00:51:25
through the same thing and and and you
00:51:28
know, being a part of having a kid is so
00:51:30
special. You know, we were talking about
00:51:31
that. So, yeah, we just went through
00:51:33
this. Our son was born about 6 months
00:51:35
ago and, you know, the uh we were
00:51:39
offered the hepatitis B shot. Now, maybe
00:51:41
they figured out who I was and didn't
00:51:43
push it as hard as some of my friends
00:51:45
have had that it pushed on them and we
00:51:47
declined. Um, you're preventing with
00:51:50
hepatitis B an infection that is a
00:51:53
sexually transmitted infection or can be
00:51:55
uh get it from a uh bloodborne pathogen
00:51:59
exposure. Uh, so that's not going to
00:52:01
happen until they're a teenager at least
00:52:03
or further down the road. But when you
00:52:06
ask the question immediately you get
00:52:09
this sort of antivax label or um
00:52:13
>> or you have to qualify that's right
00:52:15
>> I'm not an antivaxer but I'm asking this
00:52:18
what what right what's going on here
00:52:20
this sort of McCarthyism around this uh
00:52:23
schedule which by the way the United
00:52:25
States vaccine schedule was an
00:52:26
international outlier with 72 doses
00:52:28
recommended between the ages of zero and
00:52:30
18. So, President Trump asked us to
00:52:33
review the um international
00:52:37
landscape of vaccine recommendations and
00:52:39
we looked at 20 other developed
00:52:41
countries and found that not only are we
00:52:43
the international outlier in in how high
00:52:46
the number of doses we recommend is but
00:52:48
that there's a consensus of a group of
00:52:50
core essential vaccines and we wanted to
00:52:52
put that in front of the American people
00:52:54
to say look all vaccines are still
00:52:56
recommended by the CDC but here are a
00:52:59
list of core essential vaccines. So we
00:53:01
gave them a list that constitutes about
00:53:03
38 doses from age 0 to 18. And the idea
00:53:06
is to increase vaccination rates among
00:53:11
children that have been dropping because
00:53:13
of a loss in public trust by saying
00:53:15
here's a hierarchy of what we believe to
00:53:18
be a list of core essential vaccines. I
00:53:21
don't want to see someone because you
00:53:23
know a um a doctor's pushing the sixth
00:53:26
COVID booster in a young healthy
00:53:28
12-year-old girl. I don't want to see
00:53:30
the mom say, "Well, I'm not going to get
00:53:32
the measel shot in my next with for my
00:53:34
next child because I am something's not
00:53:37
right about this." 38 is better than
00:53:40
zero. You can still get them all.
00:53:42
They're all paid for, but we have a hard
00:53:44
time in the medical culture, and this is
00:53:47
part of the sort of the sociology of
00:53:49
medicine, meeting people where they're
00:53:51
at. For example, as a cancer surgeon, I
00:53:55
would see women tell me they don't want
00:53:57
to get a mammogram.
00:54:00
I I disagree. I think they're safe, but
00:54:02
a woman may have be concerned about the
00:54:04
radiation, the discomfort, the
00:54:07
inconvenience. 40% of women who are
00:54:10
candidates for a mammog are not getting
00:54:12
a mammogram in the United States today.
00:54:14
Showing you the massive disconnect
00:54:15
between the medical field and where
00:54:18
people are at. Now, you know what we
00:54:20
should be doing is we should tell those
00:54:22
40% of women, how about an ultrasound?
00:54:26
It picks up 90 to 95% of the lesions
00:54:29
that a mammogram would pick up. But
00:54:31
doctors don't recommend an ultrasound
00:54:33
because
00:54:34
you're violating the gold standard and
00:54:36
there's liability and there's, you know,
00:54:38
and you're you're practicing substandard
00:54:41
care and women may tell other women that
00:54:43
they can also get an ultrasound and we
00:54:44
don't want women getting an ultrasound
00:54:46
instead of the paternalism that results
00:54:49
in this disconnect is hurting people in
00:54:53
the United States today. And so with
00:54:55
identifying the list of core essential
00:54:57
vaccines, we are trying to meet people
00:54:59
where they are at to see more
00:55:01
vaccinations because childhood vaccines
00:55:03
have declined over the last four years
00:55:06
of co because people have lost trust in
00:55:09
the dogma of the cloth masks for
00:55:12
toddlers and vaccine boosters in
00:55:14
perpetuity and you have to fire a
00:55:16
teacher if if she already had CO. Ignore
00:55:19
natural beauty. You have they have to be
00:55:21
fired from their job. that um absolutism
00:55:25
has caused tremendous damage and we're
00:55:27
trying to rebuild public trust. What's
00:55:29
frustrating to me to observe is there
00:55:32
are now states like California and the
00:55:34
California DPH that are saying we're
00:55:36
going to set our own vaccine schedule.
00:55:37
We're not going to listen to the FDA, to
00:55:39
the HHS anymore because they don't know
00:55:41
what they're doing because they're Trump
00:55:43
admin. They're not doctors. They're not
00:55:45
scientists. Clearly, this is all
00:55:46
political. And is there a process of
00:55:49
engagement that you and your
00:55:51
organization go through to try and bring
00:55:53
some of these other folks along with
00:55:55
you? Because I think the point you just
00:55:56
made can't be a point that they can
00:55:59
fundamentally disagree with. What is
00:56:02
what is the process by which we can
00:56:03
break the political ranker around things
00:56:07
like vaccines and just take a very
00:56:10
clear-cut scientific approach and get
00:56:12
people aligned around this? Do you do
00:56:14
engagement on this stuff?
00:56:16
>> I don't. Look, I I think it's sad we
00:56:18
have this toxic polarization that's
00:56:20
crept in. It's it's in society, but it's
00:56:23
now crept into medicine
00:56:25
>> and it's a lot of character attacks. I
00:56:28
mean, it was put together by doctors
00:56:30
with impeccable credentials. Tracy Beth
00:56:33
Hogue, MDPhD,
00:56:35
phenomenal epidemiologist who is deep on
00:56:37
the science on this stuff. you know all
00:56:40
of us Jay Badacharia MDPhD memed Oz vice
00:56:43
chair of surgery at Columbia University
00:56:46
I mean these impeccable credentials 400
00:56:48
scientific publications I've published
00:56:51
350 scientific peer-reviewed
00:56:53
publications in my career at the Harvard
00:56:55
School of Public Health at Georgetown at
00:56:57
John's Hopkins on the faculty tenure
00:56:59
national academy of medicine didn't
00:57:01
matter all the impeccable credentials
00:57:02
you can put in front of people there's
00:57:05
this sense of we just have to uh say the
00:57:09
contrarian thing to whatever they are
00:57:11
saying because of this sort of mantra of
00:57:15
all vaccines are good regardless and you
00:57:17
cannot have an honest conversation. I
00:57:19
talked to doctors and they they've never
00:57:21
heard of a vaccine they didn't love.
00:57:23
Anthrax vaccine was a disaster. H3N N3
00:57:27
killed people. It was a disaster taken
00:57:29
off the market. Rotovirus vaccine in
00:57:31
1999 taken off the market because kids
00:57:34
were dying from interception. Roto virus
00:57:38
is not in our core essential vaccine
00:57:40
schedule in the United States. Overseas
00:57:42
it's a little different but in in what
00:57:44
we put out it's not in there. After mass
00:57:47
vaccination with roto virus the number
00:57:49
of deaths per year went from 3 to 1.6
00:57:54
>> or round it up let's say two went from
00:57:56
three to two with mass vaccination
00:57:58
>> and the vaccine that was used up until
00:58:01
1999 was taken off the market for safety
00:58:03
concerns. So when you have a parent ask
00:58:06
a question about the necessity or we
00:58:10
cannot respond with absolutism, American
00:58:12
medicine needs to show some humility.
00:58:16
When I had a patient asked me a question
00:58:18
I didn't know the right answer, I don't
00:58:20
know. Maybe I'll look into that. Maybe
00:58:22
one of my colleagues knows in co during
00:58:25
COVID, the right answer many times was
00:58:28
we don't know.
00:58:30
>> Do you find that there's a path forward?
00:58:33
>> I hope so. So, I mean, we're hoping to
00:58:34
restore gold standard science and just
00:58:37
talk objectively about it. We've had
00:58:39
universities uh cancel uh crush censor
00:58:44
railroad doctors that, you know, pose
00:58:47
different ideas about things. And I'm
00:58:49
not I'm not talking about the political
00:58:50
hot button issues. I'm talking about the
00:58:53
fact that ulcers were not caused by
00:58:55
stress. They were caused by a bacteria
00:58:56
called H. pylori. Well, that guy was,
00:59:00
you know, railroaded. his research was
00:59:02
rejected from the national uh meetings
00:59:05
and then he gets the Nobel Prize because
00:59:06
he ends up being correct. So it's it's
00:59:09
not good for science.
00:59:10
>> Most great scientists start out as
00:59:12
heretics just to be clear by the way.
00:59:13
That's right. Yeah. So Marty, one of the
00:59:15
other big challenges that we talk a lot
00:59:17
about in this country is the cost of
00:59:19
drugs. Healthcare today costs roughly
00:59:23
15% of our GDP. That's an insane
00:59:26
statistic and it is rising year after
00:59:29
year in the United States and it's such
00:59:31
a complex issue. By some measurements
00:59:34
though, the price of drugs in the United
00:59:36
States is almost three times what it is
00:59:39
outside the United States. So I'd love
00:59:41
to hear a little bit about the specific
00:59:43
role of pricing drugs. What sort of
00:59:46
actions have you guys taken and can you
00:59:48
take to help bring down the price of
00:59:50
drugs for patients, for for care
00:59:52
providers, for insurance companies, and
00:59:54
ultimately for the economy?
00:59:56
>> It's been the great American ripoff. You
00:59:58
could buy a GLP-1 drug for $1,300 in the
01:00:02
United States and go to London, it sells
01:00:03
for $88. Or you go to Germany or France
01:00:06
and buy any of the drugs that are cost a
01:00:09
lot of money in the United States and
01:00:10
they're half a third or a quarter the
01:00:13
price. And so, President Trump has given
01:00:16
us a clear charge and he says, "Look,
01:00:17
we're the largest purchasers of drugs.
01:00:19
We want the best price in the developed
01:00:22
world. It's called most favored nation
01:00:24
status pricing. And thanks to Dr. Oz and
01:00:28
and Chris Clamp and others at CMS, we
01:00:30
did our part at the FDA to be a part of
01:00:32
this. Uh we've gotten drug companies to
01:00:34
the table and we've got them to agree to
01:00:36
most favoration status pricing. That's
01:00:38
going to radically lower the price of
01:00:40
drugs. With the GLP1 example, for
01:00:42
example, it's going to come down to $149
01:00:47
for the first three months. Um, other
01:00:49
countries are going to pay more. We have
01:00:51
been financing 60% of the R&D cost to
01:00:54
pharma companies. Other countries need
01:00:56
to pay their fair share. And when it
01:00:58
comes to this president, would be it
01:00:59
NATO membership fees or whatever, he
01:01:01
wants to see other countries paying
01:01:02
their fair share. And so, we're getting
01:01:04
that delivered. Another big way in which
01:01:07
we are going to lower drug prices
01:01:10
is by cutting the red tape at the FDA
01:01:12
for bio biologic drugs. So most 51% of
01:01:18
the So let me back up for a second. The
01:01:21
fastest area of healthc care spending
01:01:23
growth is drug price spending growth.
01:01:27
And the fastest area of drug price
01:01:29
spending growth are a class of medic
01:01:31
medications called biologics. which
01:01:33
means you need a cell line to
01:01:35
manufacture them. And so these are
01:01:37
typically the 60,000 $100,000 $150,000
01:01:41
medications. They have generic versions
01:01:44
called bioimilars.
01:01:47
But the FDA red tape to get a bioimilar
01:01:50
approved has been so long and arduous it
01:01:52
takes 5 to 8 years and $300 million or
01:01:56
so. We have changed the requirements so
01:01:59
that we use the same principles we use
01:02:01
for small molecules. If you are
01:02:04
structurally the same as a small
01:02:07
molecule branded drug, we're going to
01:02:09
approve you with some other
01:02:10
stipulations. And so we are reducing the
01:02:14
cost of R&D of biosimilars by a hundred
01:02:16
million plus dollars and we are
01:02:19
shortening the time frame from 5 to 8
01:02:21
years to 2 and 1/2 years or more. And so
01:02:24
we're going to see a whole new class of
01:02:26
biosimilars come out in this
01:02:28
administration that are going to finally
01:02:30
compete
01:02:31
>> with the biologics. Now humumera is one
01:02:33
of the most famous biologics. It took
01:02:35
years after that patent market
01:02:37
exclusivity for a bio similar to come
01:02:39
out and when one did come out you didn't
01:02:42
see the price of hum come down that much
01:02:45
almost sort of an an implied price
01:02:47
collusion. We need a lot of biosimilars
01:02:50
to come out and we're going to see the
01:02:51
floodgates open up on biosimilars. And
01:02:54
then a final point, why are a lot of
01:02:57
drugs requiring a prescription in the
01:03:00
United States?
01:03:01
>> What are we worried about? Somebody
01:03:04
overdosing on anti-nausea medication or
01:03:07
somebody picking up a prostate
01:03:10
medication without a a prescription. And
01:03:12
we've got this is the the paternalism in
01:03:15
medicine again coming out. the same
01:03:16
paternalism that blocked women from
01:03:19
having home pregnancy tests because you
01:03:22
know women can't handle that
01:03:23
information. They have to come in and we
01:03:25
have to share it with them. It's this
01:03:26
paternalism you see and by the way it
01:03:28
happened again with COVID testing. We
01:03:30
saw it well home COVID testing. We
01:03:32
fought this battle. We wanted home COVID
01:03:34
testing and the establishment was like
01:03:36
no no we have to tell them they can't
01:03:38
have this information.
01:03:41
What are why are drugs not over-
01:03:43
theounter? And we're going to so we are
01:03:46
going to get more drugs over the
01:03:47
counter. And let me tell you why that
01:03:49
lowers drug prices. Because when a drug
01:03:52
is on the shelf in a store, there's a
01:03:55
price underneath of it. And there is
01:03:58
something magical with competition and
01:04:00
people who shop. Even if a small segment
01:04:03
of the consumer market is shopping on
01:04:04
price, it keeps prices in check for
01:04:07
everybody. And so you will enable price
01:04:10
transparency
01:04:12
and you will bypass the crazy money
01:04:15
games of PBMs, pharmacy benefit
01:04:17
managers. When you pick up something
01:04:19
behind the counter, they ring you up.
01:04:22
You have no idea the shell game that's
01:04:24
going on behind the scenes. Your with
01:04:26
your employer is getting ripped off and
01:04:27
your PBM is is making money on this and
01:04:30
the broker who sold the PBM to the
01:04:33
employer group could be making $6.50 50
01:04:36
cents on every prescription set for
01:04:39
what? For the for the PBM just to tell
01:04:41
you what your co-ay is going to be and
01:04:43
set the co-pays. All of those money
01:04:45
games disappear with the with the
01:04:48
disinfectant of sunlight and a price on
01:04:50
the shelf. We want to see a mass
01:04:52
transition to more nonprescription
01:04:55
drugs. We have new leadership that I
01:04:57
brought in at the office of
01:04:59
non-prescription drugs at the FDA. We
01:05:01
want to see companies request to to be
01:05:04
non-prescription
01:05:06
and it it's going to have very simple
01:05:08
criteria. If your drug does not have
01:05:11
abuse potential, if your drug is safe,
01:05:15
if your drug does not require laboratory
01:05:17
testing, which doctors, you know, we
01:05:19
often need to check your liver function
01:05:21
tests. It does not need to be closely
01:05:23
tracked. It should be able to be over
01:05:26
the counter. If you're not going to use
01:05:27
the drug in some meth lab to make some
01:05:30
dangerous street drug,
01:05:32
if you meet those basic criteria, the
01:05:35
drug should be nonprescription. Think
01:05:37
about the number of useless ER visits
01:05:40
out there. Uh the whole medical
01:05:42
industrial complex ch-ing every time you
01:05:46
need a refill. Like I got pink eye from
01:05:48
my kids and it was such a headache to
01:05:50
get the drops to get my pink eye to go
01:05:52
away. Like I mean I can't I spent so
01:05:55
much money just getting a few drops of
01:05:57
antibiotics to put in my eye. But if I
01:05:59
were able to buy that medicine the
01:06:00
antibiotic drops over the the counter or
01:06:02
and I could just pick it up the shelf.
01:06:03
How do I get my insurance to pay for it?
01:06:05
How does that process work? Just explain
01:06:06
to the everyday consumer what that's
01:06:08
going to look like.
01:06:09
>> So we need insurance companies to to um
01:06:12
modernize how they reimburse for
01:06:15
medications. And we're having these
01:06:16
conversations internally as well because
01:06:19
they had this old construct of here's
01:06:21
our reimbursement scheme for
01:06:22
prescription drugs and here's our
01:06:24
reimbursement scheme for
01:06:25
non-prescription drugs. Well, they got
01:06:26
to modernize. We've got to come up to
01:06:28
the 21st century. And remember, the
01:06:30
insurance companies own the PBMs a lot
01:06:33
of times. So, we've got to be honest. We
01:06:35
got to all come to the table.
01:06:36
President's bringing them all to the
01:06:38
table and having very frank
01:06:39
conversations. And he's been successful.
01:06:41
I've got to imagine at 15% of GDP, this
01:06:44
is a giant ship you're trying to reset
01:06:46
and redirect. Can you get this done in
01:06:49
this administration? Can you make the
01:06:51
changes of moving many of these
01:06:52
medications over the counter and get
01:06:54
them to fit under insurance uh
01:06:56
reimbursement plans?
01:06:57
>> It's a massive priority this year for
01:06:59
me. My one of my big 2026 goals is that
01:07:02
we want to see more drugs move to
01:07:04
nonprescription. I if writing a
01:07:07
prescription by a physician like myself
01:07:09
is supposed to regulate and serve as a
01:07:13
way to administer drugs judiciously,
01:07:17
then history would show we failed.
01:07:19
Opioids and Oxycontton
01:07:22
uh 60% of antibiotics prescribed in the
01:07:25
United States are unnecessary. That
01:07:27
study has been done over and over again
01:07:29
10 different ways. Most antibiotics
01:07:32
people take they should not be
01:07:33
prescribed. Um, so we have to talk about
01:07:38
educating people, trusting people, and
01:07:40
get away from the paternalistic model of
01:07:42
medicine.
01:07:43
>> Yeah. And well, I mean, look, if you
01:07:44
guys get it done, I think it'll be a
01:07:46
profound change for America for the the
01:07:49
price of healthcare, which I think is
01:07:50
really challenging a lot of people
01:07:52
dayto-day. One of the other things
01:07:54
that's been a little bit of a hot button
01:07:55
is pharmaceutical advertising on TV.
01:07:58
Yeah,
01:07:59
>> some people have claimed that the
01:08:00
pharmaceutical companies have
01:08:02
significant influence over media because
01:08:03
of the money they spend. They're one of
01:08:05
the biggest spenders. I spoke to a
01:08:06
pharmaceutical CEO about advertising. He
01:08:08
said the ROI is incredible. We've never
01:08:10
been able to influence media, so it
01:08:12
doesn't make a difference to us in that
01:08:13
sense, but fundamentally the reason we
01:08:15
do it is because it gets awareness out
01:08:17
there for therapies that uh patients
01:08:20
might not know are available to them.
01:08:22
and he said this interesting statistic
01:08:23
to me which is that half of US
01:08:26
physicians never see a representative to
01:08:28
learn about new uh drugs that are coming
01:08:29
to market and uh twothirds of physicians
01:08:33
report never reading a journal article
01:08:36
or going to a conference in the past
01:08:37
year. So they're not aware of some of
01:08:39
the new medicines that have come to
01:08:40
market or coming to market. You've been
01:08:42
a physician, you are a physician, you
01:08:43
understand how this might go. You're
01:08:45
busy. You're treating patients. You have
01:08:46
a lot going on. Maybe you're not up to
01:08:48
speed on on the newest medicines coming
01:08:50
to market. What's the administration?
01:08:52
What's your view on advertising,
01:08:53
pharmaceutical advertising on TV? Where
01:08:55
are things headed?
01:08:56
>> Well, raising awareness, as your uh
01:08:59
friend mentioned, is a good thing, but
01:09:02
creating a misleading impression and
01:09:04
creating a massive storm of demand where
01:09:07
patients come knocking on our door,
01:09:09
insisting and begging that they get
01:09:10
certain medications that are not
01:09:12
indicated for them is a problem. and the
01:09:14
drugs that they are advertising non-stop
01:09:16
on TV and and they're always singing and
01:09:19
dancing, right? Always singing and
01:09:22
dancing or marching from some fake town
01:09:25
to another. I don't know where they're
01:09:26
going, but it's always this sort of idea
01:09:28
that life is great once you take this
01:09:31
medication. Um, it's the biologics that
01:09:35
they're advertising. And because they
01:09:37
charge so much on the biologics, and
01:09:40
look, they do cost a lot more to make,
01:09:42
but because some of these biologics have
01:09:44
been so expensive, that's where they're
01:09:47
seeing this big ROI. So, we are lowering
01:09:49
drug prices, and I think that's going to
01:09:51
affect um whether or not it's worth it
01:09:54
for them to advertise. We have a duty at
01:09:56
the FDA to enforce two regulations that
01:09:59
were not enforced in the Biden
01:10:01
administration and that is that ads
01:10:03
cannot create a misleading impression
01:10:06
and that there has to be a quote unquote
01:10:08
fair balance of information. There's
01:10:10
also a loophole called the um
01:10:14
uh adequate provision loophole which
01:10:17
says you don't have to list all the
01:10:19
risks or side effects. You can put it
01:10:21
somewhere else like on a website. We're
01:10:23
closing that loop. We're changing the
01:10:25
regulation to close that loop. The Biden
01:10:27
folks in the year before I came to the
01:10:30
FDA sent out zero enforcement letters. A
01:10:33
department of about 35 people in charge
01:10:36
of sending out enforcement letters sent
01:10:39
out zero enforcement letters. I sent out
01:10:42
1,500
01:10:44
enforcement letters, including over a
01:10:46
100 cease and desist letters for ads
01:10:48
that were creating a misleading
01:10:50
impression, including onlineies that are
01:10:52
advertising drugs without the same uh um
01:10:56
side effects that pharma companies list
01:10:58
when they do the ads. And so we are
01:11:01
cracking down on it. We want free
01:11:04
speech, but we also want fair speech.
01:11:06
And this is part of our jurisdiction.
01:11:08
So, uh, so we are taking this very
01:11:10
seriously. I I'd personally love to see
01:11:12
pharmaceutical companies spend that 20
01:11:15
to 25% of their money that they spend on
01:11:17
marketing, take some of that and use it
01:11:19
to lower drug prices for everyday
01:11:21
Americans.
01:11:22
>> Okay, great. Well, sounds like there's
01:11:25
some balance and change that's required.
01:11:28
One of the other things that we talk a
01:11:29
lot about in Silicon Valley is this
01:11:32
shift in AI and using AI to diagnose
01:11:35
your condition. And so many stories have
01:11:36
come out where people upload their lab
01:11:39
data or an MRI image and they're getting
01:11:43
readouts that they weren't getting from
01:11:45
the doctor or more accurate readouts or
01:11:47
they're able to find care that they
01:11:49
weren't finding through the traditional
01:11:51
physician process. What's this
01:11:53
administration's view on these AI tools?
01:11:56
Are they a supplement, a replacement?
01:11:59
And then how do we allow them to
01:12:01
proliferate if they're they're good? And
01:12:03
do they need to be regulated? or are we
01:12:04
going to end up regulating these AI
01:12:06
doctors, these AI medical systems?
01:12:08
>> Well, first of all, AI is producing
01:12:11
information at a rate that no one can
01:12:14
keep up with. And so, if we use the
01:12:16
traditional regulatory mindset to say we
01:12:18
have to make sure the information is
01:12:20
accurate, then you wouldn't be able to
01:12:22
do a Google search because you're going
01:12:23
to get a hit that's going to give you
01:12:25
something that's not accurate. And so,
01:12:26
what are we doing? What road are we
01:12:28
going down? We can't outrun this lion.
01:12:30
We have to use common sense and
01:12:32
demarcate information that you're
01:12:35
getting from AI that automatically
01:12:39
triggers some health intervention that
01:12:41
is sort of automated AI. And so last
01:12:44
week at the Consumer Electronic Show, I
01:12:46
outlined new guidances on AI decision
01:12:49
support and wearables. And it creates a
01:12:52
a clear consumer lane. But if you're
01:12:54
making medical claims of a uh medicalra
01:12:59
blank, then that's something we're going
01:13:01
to want to take a look at and that's
01:13:02
something you're going to want the FDA's
01:13:04
seal about. So, it creates
01:13:05
predictability because developers tell
01:13:07
me all the time they just want
01:13:09
predictability from the FDA. Markets
01:13:11
want predictability, developers want
01:13:13
predictability, and investors want
01:13:14
predictability. So wearables meaning
01:13:16
heart rate, blood pressure, that's
01:13:18
right. Glucose monitors, those sorts of
01:13:20
things get deregulated, more accessible,
01:13:23
lower price, and so on.
01:13:24
>> That's right. They're going to be
01:13:25
deregulated. So you can give those
01:13:27
results of any physiologic parameter.
01:13:30
But if you say that it's a quote unquote
01:13:33
medical grade blood pressure, then we
01:13:35
are going to want to see the data to
01:13:37
make sure that it's validated with the
01:13:39
gold standard blood pressure readings.
01:13:40
We don't want people redosing their
01:13:43
blood pressure medications on something
01:13:46
that claims to be medical grade when it
01:13:48
it is not medical grade.
01:13:49
>> Got it. Okay. One other area I've spent
01:13:51
some time in in my career is in
01:13:54
alternative proteins. And this is
01:13:56
something that your agency regulates. So
01:14:00
making animal proteins, eggs and cheese
01:14:02
and milk and so on using bacterial or
01:14:04
yeast cells rather than making them from
01:14:06
the animal. You get the same protein.
01:14:08
and you just use a different mechanism
01:14:09
of making that protein or cellular meat
01:14:12
where they're actually growing the
01:14:13
chicken breast or growing the the beef.
01:14:16
Um there's historically been a system
01:14:19
called grass are generally recognized as
01:14:21
safe that a lot of the companies have
01:14:24
relied on as they've developed these
01:14:26
techniques and these protocols. You've
01:14:28
made a few changes. Maybe you can kind
01:14:29
of highlight the balance between
01:14:31
innovation because the benefit of these
01:14:33
systems, lower cost, less energy, and
01:14:36
you take the animal out, less cruelty.
01:14:38
There's an ethical driver for some of
01:14:40
us.
01:14:40
>> Yes.
01:14:41
>> But I'd love to hear the view on
01:14:43
balancing those benefits against the the
01:14:45
risks to consumer health. And there's an
01:14:47
incredible amount of lobbying pressure
01:14:49
from ranchers and animal agriculture
01:14:50
against these systems that I'm assuming
01:14:52
is starting to kind of make its way into
01:14:54
DC. we've seen it make its way into
01:14:56
states where they've banned it outright
01:14:58
banned cellular meat in some states. So,
01:15:00
I'd love to hear your view on this kind
01:15:02
of alternative protein market and the
01:15:04
changes you've made in grass and and
01:15:06
looking out for consumers against the
01:15:07
benefits.
01:15:08
>> Um, you're making me hungry because I
01:15:10
love eggs and I didn't get my egg
01:15:13
breakfast this morning because we're out
01:15:14
here at a bunch of meetings.
01:15:16
>> But, um,
01:15:16
>> I'll get you some eggs afterwards.
01:15:18
>> Great. And not egg white only. I I do
01:15:21
not believe in egg white only. I mean
01:15:23
that is what are we doing? Egg white
01:15:25
only eggs. I mean that's sort of the
01:15:27
ultimate epitome of the old dogma. Um
01:15:30
and and by the way my uncle um he came
01:15:33
to the United States. He had eaten eggs
01:15:35
every morning and he loved eggs. It was
01:15:38
his livelihood is the morning eggs. And
01:15:41
he came to the United States in his 30s
01:15:43
and his doctor said no eggs. You know
01:15:46
found out he was eating eggs and just
01:15:48
you know wagged the finger and you know
01:15:50
stopped. And so for 30ome years, he had
01:15:54
this miserable life without eggs until
01:15:56
we finally got to him and said, "It's
01:15:58
okay. Two eggs in the morning is okay.
01:16:00
It's a good source of protein. Don't
01:16:02
worry about the saturated fat." He's now
01:16:04
95 years old, I believe, in Florida.
01:16:06
>> A happy man.
01:16:07
>> Happy man eating his eggs every morning.
01:16:09
>> I'm a two to three egg a guy as well. So
01:16:11
>> Oh, you are? Okay. It's a great source
01:16:12
of protein. Yeah. So um on grass, so
01:16:16
grass uh for those who may not know is a
01:16:20
way in which companies have created
01:16:22
chemicals or brought in chemicals from
01:16:25
the environment, added it to food and
01:16:27
they could self-declare them as safe.
01:16:30
And so u it's kind of a unique thing in
01:16:32
the United States and it was started
01:16:33
with good intentions so that the FDA
01:16:36
wouldn't regulate you know salt and
01:16:38
butter. You know what are we doing
01:16:40
regulating salt? I'm sure some people
01:16:42
want may want to, but we're, you know,
01:16:44
we're not going to regulate salt. So,
01:16:45
grass was created for for those sort of
01:16:48
things like salt, but then over time it
01:16:50
got abused. So, all the of these
01:16:52
engineered chemicals
01:16:54
would just get a free pass. And we've
01:16:57
said, look at where we are today. Uh,
01:17:00
you turn over the packaging of some of
01:17:01
these ultrarocessed foods and there's 40
01:17:03
ingredients. Nobody knows what they are.
01:17:06
And uh in Europe they have basic
01:17:10
principles of introducing chemicals.
01:17:12
Basically it's it's sort of if you will
01:17:14
uh guilty until proven innocent that is
01:17:17
you have to demonstrate safety to be
01:17:18
introduced. In the United States we have
01:17:20
this you know uh innocent till proven
01:17:23
guilty. So we have basically said we
01:17:26
have a thousand chemicals plus in the US
01:17:29
food supply that do are not allowed in
01:17:32
other food supplies.
01:17:34
Froot Loops was making cereal for Canada
01:17:38
where the petroleum based diets were
01:17:40
banned and a different Froot Loops for
01:17:42
the United States for American kids. And
01:17:45
so we've said we have to close the
01:17:47
loophole on grass. We started the
01:17:48
regulatory process to do that. And then
01:17:51
we have to think about creatively those
01:17:53
situations you mentioned where there may
01:17:56
be ways to get more amino acids in some
01:17:59
of these foods. And we know that kids
01:18:01
are low in amino acids and protein
01:18:03
because of this myopic focus on fat as
01:18:05
the boogeyman. We have not gotten the
01:18:07
protein that we need. And and part of
01:18:09
that was also flawed studies
01:18:11
approximating how much protein your body
01:18:13
needed that used ura nitrogen levels
01:18:16
that massively underestimated the amount
01:18:18
of protein metabolism in your body. And
01:18:21
every food has different levels of
01:18:23
protein bioavailability and amino acid
01:18:26
bioavailability. So that's why you said
01:18:27
you're vegetarian. you have to think a
01:18:29
little differently about the protein
01:18:31
requirements. Uh so all fun top
01:18:33
>> but the cellular meat industry you don't
01:18:35
think is doomed. There's a potential for
01:18:37
the industry and
01:18:38
>> it's going to continue to evolve.
01:18:39
>> We've seen under my time at FDA we've
01:18:41
seen new cellular uh food products come
01:18:44
not just beef but seafood.
01:18:46
>> Yeah.
01:18:46
>> And it happens at the state level and
01:18:48
the FDA actually does not have
01:18:50
jurisdiction over what somebody creates
01:18:52
but we do ask for a registration in a
01:18:55
sense to be in the loop.
01:18:57
>> Okay. So what is causing autism in the
01:18:59
United States?
01:19:00
>> Yeah,
01:19:00
>> there was a conference a few weeks ago.
01:19:03
You and um Secretary Kennedy talked
01:19:05
about Luca Vorin as a new line of
01:19:08
treatment for autism patients, but some
01:19:11
people have since debated the merits of
01:19:12
the data. Are we seeing rising autism
01:19:15
rates in the United States? And what are
01:19:16
the core drivers? What have you learned?
01:19:17
And is this an ongoing process?
01:19:19
>> Well, there is more diagnosis for sure.
01:19:22
Um, but one in 12 boys in California now
01:19:25
being diagnosed with autism. I mean,
01:19:27
that you you didn't see that two
01:19:29
generations ago. You didn't see the
01:19:31
repetitive ticks and the self harm and
01:19:34
the you didn't see that. You still don't
01:19:36
see people in their 60s and 70s with
01:19:40
those uh symptoms at the rates that you
01:19:42
do in young kids today. So, something's
01:19:45
going on for sure. Now, what's causing
01:19:47
it? I don't know, but there's some
01:19:48
interesting hypotheses. One is that for
01:19:51
some kids it may be an autoimmune
01:19:53
phenomena triggered by something where
01:19:56
the antibodies are binding to the folate
01:19:58
receptors preventing folate from
01:20:00
entering the bloodb brain barrier.
01:20:02
Folate is necessary for neural
01:20:03
development. And so some doctors report
01:20:06
and they're I mean these are experts in
01:20:08
the field been studying this their whole
01:20:10
lives and see a lot of patients. They
01:20:12
have observed that if you give
01:20:15
f um lucavorin as an example which
01:20:18
bypasses the blocked receptor allowing
01:20:20
methylated folate to get into the bloodb
01:20:22
brain barrier they have seen clinical
01:20:24
improvement. There's one study that's
01:20:26
looked at the microbiome which we now
01:20:29
know produces a lot of molecules
01:20:31
involved in brain health. 90% of your
01:20:34
body's serotonin which is involved in
01:20:37
mood is made by your gut. And we're just
01:20:41
recognizing this giant frontier of the
01:20:43
microbiome. And so when we in the modern
01:20:46
world, we we just torture the
01:20:49
microbiome. I mean, so many things.
01:20:52
>> Some things are necessary like
01:20:53
C-sections, not good for the microbiome.
01:20:56
Uh infant formula instead of breast
01:20:58
milk, not good for the microbiome. Um
01:21:01
antibiotics used like candy. The average
01:21:04
2-year-old has already received over 2.5
01:21:07
courses of antibiotics. It's carpet
01:21:10
bombing your microbiome in certain
01:21:12
places. And what results is bacterial
01:21:13
overgrowth, less biodiversity, and you
01:21:16
have more inflammation later in life.
01:21:18
And when you have inflammation of the
01:21:20
gut, most the most painful thing in
01:21:22
medicine is when a tubular structure
01:21:26
stretches.
01:21:28
A kidney stone supposedly is the most
01:21:30
painful thing. I've never had one.
01:21:31
Patients say it is. It's not it's not
01:21:34
the stone scraping along the lumen. It
01:21:37
is the blockage causing distension
01:21:40
proximally stretching the urer that's
01:21:43
what hurts gallbladder pain stretching
01:21:46
the gallbladder that's what hurts like
01:21:47
crazy and the GI tract with low levels
01:21:51
of inflammation is irritating that lumen
01:21:55
and also causing this sort of um
01:21:58
discomfort at a low level and and for a
01:22:00
kid it may manifest as feeling sad or
01:22:03
depressed and so we give kids all these
01:22:07
chemicals and ultrarocessed foods. We
01:22:09
alter their microbiome
01:22:11
and we change the production of what
01:22:14
comes out of the microbiome cells
01:22:17
normally. That is certain vitamins, um,
01:22:20
hormone regulation, serotonin. And what
01:22:24
are we doing? We're ignoring this
01:22:25
physiologic cause and we're drugging our
01:22:27
nation's kids at scale.
01:22:29
>> So, we've got to talk about the value of
01:22:31
mic the microbiome. And I would not be
01:22:34
surprised if we had the research on that
01:22:36
instead of just the DEI stuff we talked
01:22:38
about and study the microbiome the same
01:22:41
way we were funding the Wuhan lab to
01:22:44
study corona virus you know
01:22:45
manipulation. I think we could finally
01:22:48
understand
01:22:50
this great frontier of medicine that may
01:22:52
be involved in autism. One study has
01:22:55
found that if you give a certain
01:22:56
protease
01:22:58
it can it's a randomized trial. I
01:23:00
couldn't believe it when I saw it
01:23:01
because and you know sometimes the
01:23:04
studies are not reproducible in JAMAMA
01:23:07
our most widely circulated medical
01:23:09
journal a randomized trial giving a
01:23:12
protease to kids with autism and
01:23:14
noticing a an improvement now again it
01:23:18
needs to be replicated I don't know if
01:23:19
it's real but maybe there's something to
01:23:21
the microbiome so I don't know what
01:23:23
causes autism but we have some clues and
01:23:26
this is something worth studying not
01:23:28
just is there a genetic cure for autism.
01:23:32
>> Yeah. And the underlying environmental
01:23:35
contributors, there's just so much going
01:23:37
on that's different in our environment,
01:23:38
in our food system that are also being
01:23:41
addressed that over time hopefully will
01:23:43
result in maybe less of the general
01:23:46
health effects caused by call it an
01:23:48
adverse environment.
01:23:50
>> Yeah. Yeah, I mean there the number of
01:23:51
proteins that we ingest that are
01:23:53
denatured in some way. The number of
01:23:55
chemicals or molecules that do not
01:23:57
appear in nature that go down the GI
01:24:00
tract. What's happening is you're
01:24:01
getting an inflammatory response, but
01:24:04
it's not a sudden acute inflammatory
01:24:06
response. It's a low-grade response and
01:24:08
it may be causing general body
01:24:10
inflammation. And the one thing I wish I
01:24:13
would have learned in medical school is
01:24:15
that most chronic diseases are from
01:24:17
general body inflammation and insulin
01:24:20
resistance. Heart disease, for example,
01:24:21
most common cause of death in the United
01:24:22
States. We thought it was just saturated
01:24:25
fat. Three large studies failed to show
01:24:28
that association. The Minnesota heart
01:24:30
study was supposed to be the endall
01:24:32
randomized trial in the 1960s.
01:24:35
It showed the opposite of what they
01:24:37
thought. The low-fat diet group, this
01:24:39
these are 9,000 motans randomized.
01:24:42
Low-fat group had more heart attacks,
01:24:44
not less.
01:24:46
>> They suppressed the results for 16
01:24:48
years. When Gary Tobs asked the uh the
01:24:52
senior author before he died, why didn't
01:24:54
you publish this for 16 years? He said,
01:24:57
we just the results just didn't turn out
01:24:59
the way we expected.
01:25:01
>> Well, other large studies failed to find
01:25:03
this clear association between saturated
01:25:06
fat. We're talking about normal
01:25:07
saturated fat intake, not massive
01:25:08
overdosing. Normal saturated fat and
01:25:11
heart disease. And so um uh so anyway,
01:25:16
so there are these things that we have
01:25:17
to re-evaluate.
01:25:19
>> Okay, last question. What's most
01:25:21
exciting to you in the frontiers of
01:25:22
science in human health?
01:25:24
>> You know, we at the FDA try to be
01:25:26
referees. So we see um different
01:25:29
technologies competing. For example,
01:25:31
cickle cell disease. There are monoconal
01:25:33
antibbody treatments and there are gene
01:25:35
therapy treatments. Now, we tend to get
01:25:37
excited about one over another, but the
01:25:39
reality is we we don't know which horse
01:25:41
is going to win that race and so we want
01:25:43
to be the referees. I would like to see
01:25:46
in the Trump administration during our
01:25:49
term a cure for type 1 diabetes or some
01:25:52
meaningful treatment for type 1
01:25:54
diabetes. Uh a powerful treatment for
01:25:57
ALS.
01:25:59
um treatments for certain kinds of
01:26:01
cancer where we've seen now PD1 blockers
01:26:04
and K Rass inhibitors melt the tumors
01:26:06
away so you don't need surgery or chemo.
01:26:10
You talk about a health reform, that's
01:26:12
that's more powerful than a lot of the
01:26:14
health reform ideas we have out there.
01:26:16
You don't need surgery or chemo or
01:26:18
radiation. I mean, think about the
01:26:19
reduction in expenditures. Um we'd like
01:26:22
to see a universal flu shot so we're not
01:26:24
guessing every year. something that
01:26:26
gives you lifelong protection against
01:26:28
future strains because it targets a
01:26:30
different part of the influenza virus.
01:26:32
And I would like to see something
01:26:34
powerful for PTSD. Um, a lot of
01:26:37
Americans are still suffering from PTSD,
01:26:41
some from having served in a war. Uh,
01:26:43
these are young people oftentimes who
01:26:46
stood up to serve their country and, uh,
01:26:49
they are suffering. uh we are still
01:26:51
losing 7,000 plus uh veterans a year to
01:26:56
suicide. So the wars are over, but our
01:26:58
men and women keep dying and many of
01:27:00
these wars were unnecessary.
01:27:02
>> I think we owe it to them to deliver a
01:27:05
powerful treatment for PTSD if the data
01:27:08
supports that there's something out
01:27:09
there. So that's one of my personal
01:27:10
goals.
01:27:11
>> You're optimistic about the pipeline
01:27:12
you're seeing there?
01:27:13
>> Very optimistic. I mean, we're just
01:27:14
seeing really interesting stuff. It's
01:27:16
been published in part, so I'm not
01:27:18
sharing anything here that's not public,
01:27:19
but we've seen phase two trial results
01:27:22
that are promising. And I go, you know,
01:27:24
I go Dave to the re scientific reviewers
01:27:27
at the FDA.
01:27:28
>> Yeah.
01:27:29
>> Without their bosses, just one-on-one,
01:27:31
and I ask them, are you seeing anything
01:27:34
early on that looks amazing? Are you
01:27:37
seeing anything in the pipeline,
01:27:38
anything in animal studies that's
01:27:40
actually working in animals that could
01:27:43
extrapolate to humans in a way that
01:27:44
could be a gamecher?
01:27:46
And I'd say 90% of the time they say
01:27:49
nothing really that much of a leap. We
01:27:53
do a lot of non-inferiority studies, for
01:27:55
example, but every now and then somebody
01:27:57
will tell me, "Yeah, there's this
01:27:58
mechanism. It's creative. It's
01:28:01
different. And if it works, it'll be
01:28:03
amazing." and we'll often issue that
01:28:06
company a priority voucher.
01:28:08
>> Um, a treatment came out for a certain
01:28:12
type of congenital deafness. It's a gene
01:28:15
therapy device combination. It came out
01:28:17
in the New England Journal of Medicine.
01:28:18
We read the article because we love to
01:28:20
read these articles. That's our nature.
01:28:22
And we called the company and we
01:28:25
confirmed about a dozen kids got it. A
01:28:28
couple had normal hearing. I mean,
01:28:30
that's amazing. And so we immediately
01:28:33
issued them a voucher. a new treatment
01:28:34
for multiple myoma that was a gamecher.
01:28:37
Three times better than anything out
01:28:39
there now. Uh 80% remission free
01:28:41
survival I believe it was uh at a couple
01:28:44
years out. There's nothing like that on
01:28:47
the market. We called that company. We
01:28:49
had internal discussions within 24 hours
01:28:52
of that abstract being printed in the
01:28:55
pre-conference materials for the
01:28:56
American Society of Hematology. We had
01:28:58
been in touch with that company and
01:29:00
issued them a voucher. What are we
01:29:02
waiting for? Right? What are we worried
01:29:03
about? We have got to move at the speed
01:29:06
that my patients demanded, not at
01:29:09
government speed. So, we are
01:29:11
streamlining and modernizing the FDA.
01:29:13
And we are not wasting time. We're
01:29:15
getting stuff done.
01:29:15
>> Well, for that, I don't know how anyone
01:29:17
could disagree with the sentiment, the
01:29:19
intent. Thanks for the service. Thanks
01:29:21
for the work, Marty. It's been great
01:29:23
chatting today and thanks for being with
01:29:25
me.
01:29:25
>> Great to be with you, Dave. Thanks so
01:29:26
much.
01:29:43
I'm going all in.

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  • 60
    Best performance

Episode Highlights

  • Continuous Trials and AI
    Exploring the potential of continuous trials and AI in drug approval processes.
    “Can we move to continuous trials?”
    @ 20m 14s
    January 15, 2026
  • Flipping the Food Pyramid
    A new approach to nutrition emphasizes protein over refined carbohydrates for children's health.
    “Flipping this food pyramid upside down, focusing on protein is the first step.”
    @ 36m 02s
    January 15, 2026
  • The Role of Science
    Science should be about asking questions and challenging standards.
    “It's crazy that the fundamental premise of science is you ask a question.”
    @ 37m 55s
    January 15, 2026
  • Insulin Resistance Epidemic
    Refined carbohydrates have led to unprecedented insulin spikes in children.
    “We ushered in a generation with massive insulin spikes in everyday life.”
    @ 39m 47s
    January 15, 2026
  • Food System Failures
    The current food system has failed, leading to chronic diseases in children.
    “We have failed with our food system.”
    @ 42m 20s
    January 15, 2026
  • Addictive Food Practices
    Modern food is often ultraprocessed and highly addictive, impacting health.
    “This is highly addictive chemicalized foods that are ultraprocessed.”
    @ 42m 42s
    January 15, 2026
  • Research Funding Priorities
    A call for funding to focus on the root causes of diseases.
    “We want to see funding go to root causes of diseases.”
    @ 46m 35s
    January 15, 2026
  • Rebuilding Trust in Vaccines
    Efforts are underway to restore public trust in vaccination practices.
    “We are trying to rebuild public trust.”
    @ 55m 27s
    January 15, 2026
  • Paternalism in Medicine
    The discussion highlights the need for more over-the-counter medications to reduce unnecessary ER visits and empower patients.
    “We want to see a mass transition to more nonprescription drugs.”
    @ 01h 04m 52s
    January 15, 2026
  • AI in Healthcare
    AI tools are emerging as a supplement to traditional healthcare, raising questions about regulation and accuracy.
    “AI is producing information at a rate that no one can keep up with.”
    @ 01h 12m 11s
    January 15, 2026
  • The Microbiome's Role
    Exploring how the microbiome affects mental health and overall well-being.
    “We just torture the microbiome.”
    @ 01h 20m 46s
    January 15, 2026
  • Hope for Autism Treatments
    Discussing potential treatments for autism linked to the microbiome and autoimmune responses.
    “We have some clues and this is something worth studying.”
    @ 01h 23m 26s
    January 15, 2026

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Continuous Trials21:41
  • Nutrition Science Corruption33:53
  • Food System Failure42:20
  • Addictive Foods42:42
  • Drug Pricing Issues59:23
  • Microbiome Insights1:20:46
  • Autism Research1:23:26
  • FDA Modernization1:29:11

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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