Kadakia Kushal T, Ross Joseph S, Ramachandran Reshma
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut.
JAMA Health Forum. 2025 Jun 7;6(6):e252233. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.2233.
Laboratory-developed tests (LDTs) refer to in vitro diagnostics developed and used by individual laboratories. LDTs are widely used in modern medicine, with their results informing over 70% of clinical decisions. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has historically claimed regulatory authority over LDTs and, in 2024, finalized new regulations to strengthen oversight of these products. However, the FDA's rulemaking was vacated in the 2025 court case American Clinical Laboratory Association et al v FDA et al, a decision that has carried substantial implications for public health.
The FDA has possessed oversight of in vitro diagnostic tests, including LDTs, since the US Congress passed the Medical Device Amendments Act of 1976. Due to their limited use, the FDA initially exempted LDTs from formal requirements for premarket clinical testing and regulatory review. These regulatory flexibilities enabled substantial innovation in diagnostic technology, enabling the development of LDTs for applications including routine clinical care, complex molecular testing, and rapid response during public health emergencies. However, the exponential growth of LDTs in clinical practice despite little to no clinical evidence of safety and effectiveness has raised public health concerns from the FDA and Congress, with subsequent investigations identifying substantial issues related to test quality and performance. These findings motivated the FDA to issue a new rule expanding its risk-based approach to LDT regulation that was subsequently challenged in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas by the American Clinical Laboratory Association and the Association of Molecular Pathology. The court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and moved to vacate the FDA's LDT rule, asserting that LDTs constituted services, not products, and were therefore beyond the scope of the FDA's medical device authorities. Applying the Supreme Court's recent decision to overturn the Chevron doctrine that deferred to agency interpretation in implementing statute, the court also ruled that the FDA could not regulate LDTs without the express authorization of Congress.
The case of LDTs illustrates the challenges the FDA faces when adapting regulatory frameworks in response to emerging health technologies. The outcomes of recent reforms and litigation carry substantial public health implications for both diagnostic technologies and the FDA's broader regulatory remit.
实验室自建检测方法(LDTs)是指由各个实验室开发和使用的体外诊断方法。LDTs在现代医学中广泛应用,其检测结果为超过70%的临床决策提供依据。美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)历来宣称对LDTs拥有监管权,并于2024年最终确定了新的法规,以加强对这些产品的监管。然而,FDA的规则制定在2025年的“美国临床实验室协会等诉FDA等”一案中被撤销,这一裁决对公共卫生产生了重大影响。
自美国国会通过1976年《医疗器械修正案》以来,FDA一直对包括LDTs在内的体外诊断检测进行监管。由于LDTs的使用有限,FDA最初豁免了LDTs的上市前临床试验和监管审查的正式要求。这些监管灵活性推动了诊断技术的重大创新,使得能够开发用于常规临床护理、复杂分子检测以及公共卫生紧急情况期间快速响应等应用的LDTs。然而,尽管几乎没有安全和有效性的临床证据,LDTs在临床实践中的呈指数级增长引发了FDA和国会对公共卫生的担忧,随后的调查发现了与检测质量和性能相关的重大问题。这些发现促使FDA发布了一项新规则,扩大其基于风险的LDT监管方法,随后该规则受到了美国临床实验室协会和分子病理学协会在美国德克萨斯东区联邦地区法院的质疑。法院做出了有利于原告的裁决,并着手撤销FDA的LDT规则,宣称LDTs构成服务而非产品,因此超出了FDA医疗器械监管权限的范围。应用最高法院最近推翻在执行法规时 defer to agency interpretation(此处原英文有误,推测可能是“Chevron doctrine”即谢弗林原则,该原则要求法院在审查行政机关对法律的解释时给予尊重)的裁决,法院还裁定,未经国会明确授权,FDA无法对LDTs进行监管。
LDTs的案例说明了FDA在调整监管框架以应对新兴健康技术时所面临的挑战。近期改革和诉讼的结果对诊断技术以及FDA更广泛的监管职权范围都具有重大的公共卫生影响。