Fifth Circuit Rules To Reinstate Abortion Pill Restrictions

JurisdictionUnited States,Federal
Law FirmSheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton
Subject MatterLitigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Food, Drugs, Healthcare, Life Sciences, Personal Injury, Food and Drugs Law
AuthorMs Elizabeth A. Nevins, Calla Simeone, Amy J. Dilcher, Amanda Zablocki and Danielle Vrabie
Published date21 August 2023

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Nearly three months after hearing oral arguments, a divided Fifth Circuit panel issued its decision in Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA, upholding the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's ("FDA") underlying approval of Mifepristone in 2000, but reinstating the limitations and restrictions under the pre-2016 protocol. Despite rejecting Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk's blanket suspension of the drug's approval, the federal appeals court found that the FDA overstepped its authority in expanding access and loosening restrictions on the drug in 2016 and 2021. Specifically, the Fifth Circuit agreed with the lower court's ruling to invalidate the FDA's modifications that increased the gestational age and relaxed dispensing requirements such as allowing the drug to be dispensed through the mail and ordered by a non-physician. The 96-page ruling issued by the conservative three-judge panel will likely not have any immediate legal effect, and Mifepristone will remain broadly available due to the Supreme Court's stay implemented earlier this year.

In reaching its decision, the Fifth Circuit found that Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine ("Plaintiffs") satisfied the injury requirement to establish standing. The panel reasoned that the injury prong is satisfied because the doctors are forced to provide a treatment that conflicts with their moral beliefs, treating Mifepristone patients diverts time, resources, and energy away from other patients, and Mifepristone patients involve greater risks of complications than the average patient.

However, the panel ruled that Plaintiffs' challenge to FDA's initial approval in 2000 is likely time-barred by the six-year statute of limitations. Moreover, the panel rejected Plaintiffs' argument that the later modifications to the drug protocol invoked the "reopening doctrine"'a D.C. Circuit-created exception that restarts the time for seeking review when an "agency has undertaken a serious, substantive reconsidering of the existing rule."1 Here, the majority panel stated that nothing in the amendments shows that the FDA undertook a serious and substantial reconsideration of its approval nor did the amendments alter the FDA's basic assumption that Mifepristone is safe and effective.

The Fifth Circuit allowed the claims challenging the 2016 and 2021 amendments and ruled that these amendments should be set aside as arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative...

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