Riders on the Storm Part 3: Devices, Compounding, GLP-1 Medications, and Food
This third installment of our series analyzing the rider provisions in the fiscal year 2026 appropriations legislation continues our examination of key FDA policy directives embedded in congressional committee reports. This post focuses on provisions related to medical devices, pharmacy compounding, GLP-1 medications, and food-areas where Congress has expressed heightened interest in FDA enforcement, regulatory clarity, and patient safety. As with prior installments, these rider provisions, while non-binding, offer valuable insight into congressional priorities and potential areas of future regulatory focus for FDA-regulated industries.
Devices
Cybersecurity of Diabetes Medical Technologies
The Committee expresses concern about the safety, quality, and cybersecurity of diabetes medical technologies imported from the People’s Republic of China—specifically connected insulin delivery systems, glucose monitors, and related components. The Committee directs FDA to utilize its “full oversight and enforcement authority” over Chinese-manufactured diabetes medical technologies, including through targeted inspections, import alerts where appropriate, and rigorous evaluation of cybersecurity vulnerabilities. FDA is further directed to report back on its activities to monitor, evaluate, and mitigate safety, quality, and cybersecurity risks associated with these products.
Device Remanufacturing Safety and Awareness
The distinction between device remanufacturing and servicing has long been debated and discussed, primarily because remanufacturing “has implications for the regulatory responsibilities of entities performing these activities.” FDA issued a final guidance in May 2024 to provide clarity on the distinction between “servicing” and “remanufacturing” of a device.
The Committee acknowledges FDA’s work on medical device remanufacturing and servicing requirements, including the May 2024 final guidance, and directs FDA to provide a report detailing the agency’s efforts to implement the guidance. The report should outline outreach efforts to inform independent servicers about their responsibilities, cover FDA’s surveillance of servicers and remanufacturers, summarize inspections and enforcement actions taken, report on whether the guidance has increased establishment registrations or 510(k) submissions by remanufacturers, and explain how FDA is addressing concerns that the guidance might be misinterpreted to permit unsupervised device modifications by third parties.
Copper Intrauterine Devices (IUDs)
The Committee notes reports of potential adverse mental health effects associated with copper IUDs, including symptoms linked to elevated copper levels. The Committee encourages FDA to review available clinical evidence and patient safety data and evaluate whether updates to device labeling or patient information are warranted. Based on publicly available information, there does not appear to be any studies that provide a direct, causal link between copper IUDs and mental health concerns, and we would hope that FDA would require such a showing before requiring labeling or other updates.
Laboratory Developed Tests (LDTs)
The rider related to LDTs is perhaps one of the most interesting, as it indicates that Congress is seemingly unaware of significant developments in this area. In May 2024, FDA issued a final rule to explicitly bring LDTs within the definition of medical devices subject to FDA oversight. On March 31, 2025, a U.S. District Judge ordered that the rule be vacated and set aside, which FDA did on August 6, 2025. Notwithstanding this action of nearly one year ago, in its report the Committee notes that FDA’s final rule on LDTs represents a “significant shift” in regulatory expectations for patients, physicians, and laboratories and risks “greatly altering the U.S. laboratory testing infrastructure and reducing patient access to information that informs their healthcare decision making.” The Committee directs FDA to suspend its efforts to implement the rule and continue working with Congress to modernize the regulatory approach for LDTs. Since the rule has already been vacated, this is one directive FDA is free to ignore.
OTC Diagnostic Tests
The Committee notes existing OTC diagnostic tests that would improve accessibility for Americans and encourages more frequent testing of common infections. FDA is directed to provide a briefing no later than 180 days after enactment on efforts to expand access to OTC diagnostics, including an update on the pipeline, with attention to products addressing infections for which no OTC diagnostic is currently authorized. While this aligns with FDA’s growing emphasis on expanding care delivery in the home, it is inconsistent with FDA’s approach to home specimen collection and diagnostic devices, which have been subject to significant evidentiary expectations primarily driven by concerns regarding variable home environments and lay user performance. It will be interesting to see whether FDA provides the briefing in the timeline directed by the Committee and how, if at all, the comments made in that briefing might reduce the regulatory burden on home collection devices.
Compounding
503A Pharmacy and 503B Outsourcing Facility Inspections
The rider states that the Committee is “concerned about FDA inspection delays” for 503A pharmacies and 503B outsourcing facilities. At first read, this wording would suggest that the concern is related to completing 503A/503B inspections. However, the Committee is requesting a report that addresses resolution timelines for inspection observations and warning letters. Ideally, this report will help remedy a known issue, as compounding inspections and warning letters frequently remain open for several years.
Shortages
As has been expressed in other riders, the Committee is concerned about drug shortages, which it considers a patient safety issue, and urges FDA to continue to utilize the regulatory flexibility provided by Congress to quickly respond to drug shortages by allowing 503A pharmacies and 503B outsourcing facilities to compound those products. FDA has communicated its expectations for Compounding when Drugs are on FDA’s Drug Shortages List, which is also addressed by statute, so the Committee is presumably not looking for anything “new” here.
Hormones
FDA should engage with compounders and other stakeholders as it reviews recommendations from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) report on the Clinical Utility of Compounded Hormones to “help ensure access to compounded drugs for patients who need them.” The report does not define what level of “access” to compounded hormones FDA should preserve, or how FDA should balance access concerns against any safety, efficacy, or evidence gaps identified in the NASEM review. This is notable because the NASEM report found there is insufficient evidence to support the overall clinical utility of compounded bioidentical hormone therapy (cBHT) as treatment for menopause and male hypogonadism symptoms and recommended restricting the use of cBHT preparations.
Animal drug compounding
The Committee focuses on FDA’s implementation of Guidance for Industry #256, Compounding Animal Drugs from Bulk Drug Substances and encourages FDA to collaborate with State boards of pharmacy, pharmacy organizations, and accreditation bodies to develop inspectional guidelines that are shared with inspected pharmacies and applied consistently. The Committee also encourages FDA to consult practicing veterinarians and adequately consider their concerns when evaluating nominations and making decisions for the List of Bulk Drug Substances for Compounding Office Stock Drugs for Use in Nonfood-Producing Animals.
GLP-1s
Counterfeit Medicines
While the rider provision is titled generally, the Committee’s concern is specific to import of counterfeit GLP-1 API and finished dosage forms from China or “other foreign countries.” Earlier this week FDA posted a statement on its Concerns with Unapproved GLP-1 Drugs Used for Weight Loss which reiterates some of the same concerns and also references its prior alert on counterfeit Ozempic (semaglutide) found in U.S. drug supply chain.
Safe and Effective GLP-1 Products
This provision reiterates the same concerns noted above about imported GLP-1 API and also calls out the “mass marketing” of compounded GLP-1 products—a topic that has garnered much FDA attention over the past year. FDA posted a communication earlier this week on this topic (FDA to Telehealth Companies: What to Know When Promoting Compounded Drugs), along with another tranche of warning letters to telehealth marketers of compounded GLP-1 products. FDA also published similar telehealth warning letters in September 2025 and early March 2026. The Committee also communicated a clear expectation that it expects FDA to refer “egregious cases” related to the mass marketing of compounding GLP-1 to DOJ for civil and criminal enforcement. The provision closes with a direction for a briefing from FDA on the agency’s coordinated strategy for addressing these concerns within 60 days.
Food and Feed
The report includes many provisions related to food, ranging from infant formula to standards of identity, to cell-cultured meat products, certified food color additives, state bans of food ingredients and food chemical safety. Too many to discuss. Below are some provisions that caught our eye.
Infant Formula
Infant formula safety and supply chain integrity seem to be on top of the Committee’s mind. FDA regulates infant formula more strictly than other food, as it often is an infant’s only source of nutrition at a critical stage of life. Not surprisingly, the law and regulations for infant formula require strict pre-market scientific review, set mandatory nutrient minimums, and direct FDA oversight. However, the 2022 national shortage, caused by unsanitary conditions at a formula plant that led to a voluntary recall and temporary production stop, showed gaps in FDA oversight, and a fragile supply chain. FDA has taken several actions to address these issues. Among other things, it implemented a long-term strategy to increase market resiliency by encouraging international harmonization and streamlining the pre-market review for foreign formulas. However, despite FDA’s efforts, confidence in infant formula safety remains an issue; earlier this year, there was yet another recall related to infant formula.
The report includes several provisions regarding infant formula requiring reports on FDA initiatives and directing FDA to take additional actions. It directs FDA to report on its efforts to streamline the approval of domestic manufacturers and increase and diversify the domestic supply of infant formula. It further requests a report showing that FDA’s oversight of foreign infant formula manufacturers is on par with domestic manufacturers. As for biotechnology and clinical research mentioned in Part 1, the Committee appears to be concerned about possible overreliance on manufacturers in countries of concern, such as China. Specifically, the Committee orders FDA to report, within 90 days of enactment of the law, on rates of infant formula importation for the last decade and, in consultation with USDA, an assessment of various issues including “what national security risks are associated with rising importation levels of a critical food like infant formula, . . . particularly from countries of concern such as the People’s Republic of China, and increased U.S. reliance on this; . . . and what guidelines or caps, if any, Congress should consider for foreign infant formula imports.”
Although the Committee is supportive of FDA’s efforts through Operation Stork Speed it wants FDA to conduct a study that expands on activities under Operation Stork Speed and “evaluate[s] the need for additional testing of microorganisms and pathogens, heavy metals, chemical contaminants, and microbial hazards, as well as the adequacy, frequency, transparency, and reporting requirements to FDA and Congress of current testing practices throughout the supply chain, . . . .” In addition, it directs FDA to work with others, including academia, “to better understand the toxic element levels in different foods” and identify or develop “grower-led solutions to further reduce toxic element levels at the source.”
Food Chemical Safety
Food chemical safety is another hot topic. The report includes provisions related to state bans of food ingredients, food additive safety, and color additives.
On the topic of certified color additives (or as the Committee calls them “harmful food dyes”), the Committee mandates that FDA prepare “a report on any actions taken by the agency to phase out, or to assist states in phasing out, . . . from the nation’s food supply: (1) Red No. 40. (CAS 25956-17-6). (2) Yellow No. 5. (CAS 1934-21-0). (3) Yellow No. 6. (CAS 2783-94-0). (4) Blue No. 1. (CAS 3844-45-9). (5) Blue No. 2. (CAS 860-22-0). (6) Green No. 3. (CAS 2353-45-9). (7) Orange B. (CAS 15139-76-1). (8) Citrus Red 2. (CAS 6358-53-8).”
As we previously reported, several states have introduced laws banning certain ingredients and laws requiring certain warning statements. The Committee is concerned that the resulting patchwork “threaten[s] FDA’s unified Federal food safety system and the interstate commerce of food and beverage.” It reaffirms “FDA’s role in determining the safety of food and the nation’s food and beverage supply.”
The committee is supportive of FDA’s actions regarding food chemical safety such as new (proactive) post-market review of food ingredients that it previously approved or were determined to be safety for their intended use(s) “to complement FDA’s existing food chemical safety programs.” https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-finalizes-food-chemical-safety-post-market-assessment-program-launches-reassessment-bht-ada.
Ultraprocessed Foods
The “Make America Healthy Again” movement has targeted ultra-processed foods (UPFs) as a leading cause of chronic disease. However, there is no clarity on what exactly constitutes a UPF. The committee acknowledges that FDA has issued a request for information but cautions against rushing the process. It encourages FDA to conduct additional research on UPFs to assure that any definition is evidence-based and does not inadvertently misclassify nutrient-dense foods.
Standards of Identity
Somewhat surprisingly, sprinkled throughout the report are several provisions related to standard of identity for certain foods, including the standard of identity for canned tuna which has been lagging (the proposed rule dates from 2023), standards of identity for dairy products (a continuing issue notably because of the prevalence of plant-based dairy alternatives), a standard of identity for natural cheese, a standard of identity for olive oil requested by petition in 2022, an update to the standard for Brix value and percentage of allowable C. reticula for pasteurized orange juice, FDA’s draft guidance for plant-based product labeling, and compliance policy regarding labeling of blended seafood products made primarily with fish protein.
Animal Food
HR 8646 amends the FDC Act to include a provision declaring food ingredients used in animal food safe for use if they are in included in AAFCO’s 2024 Publication for that use and FDA has not raised any safety concerns. This provision is similar to the provision in the Pet Food Uniform Regulatory Reform Act (PURR Act) of 2025. However, it is no longer limited to ingredients for pet food (originally defined as cats and dogs). The amendment essentially codifies FDA’s current enforcement policy regarding AAFCO-defined animal feed ingredients. HR 8646 also includes a preemption provision barring states from directly or indirectly establishing, maintaining, implementing, or enforcing any authority or requirement relating to the labels, labeling, or advertising of animal food as it relates to “natural” claims. Whereas for human food ingredients there is a push to require a notification to FDA for any ingredient that is GRAS (i.e. self-GRAS is disfavored as “secret-GRAS”), the amendment specifies that animal food manufactures will not be required to notify FDA about their determination that an ingredient is GRAS for use in animal foods.
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As with the provisions discussed in Parts 1 and 2 of this series, the device, compounding, GLP-1, and food riders examined above are non-binding, and their ultimate effect will depend on whether they survive conference negotiations and how FDA chooses to respond. Taken together, however, they reflect heightened congressional interest in enforcement, import safety, cybersecurity, and patient access across the device and compounding landscapes, and a particular focus on the counterfeiting and mass marketing of GLP-1 products. Like the drug and cross-product riders we covered earlier in the series, these directives offer a meaningful window into congressional priorities and the likely future areas of FDA regulatory focus that stakeholders across the FDA-regulated industries would be well advised to continue to monitor. This concludes our three-part look at the FY 2026 appropriations riders, and we will be watching closely to see which of these priorities ultimately translate into concrete agency action.