Despite significant layoffs and leadership changes early in the year that caused delays, the FDA dramatically increased its output, approving nearly twice as many drugs in the second half of 2025 as the first. This suggests the agency adapted and found a new, more efficient footing after an initial period of disruption.
The FDA is creating a transparency paradox. It is increasingly publishing complete response letters (CRLs), giving insight into why drugs are rejected. Simultaneously, it has drastically cut the number of public advisory committee (AdCom) meetings held before approval decisions, reducing public input and pre-decision transparency.
The pharmaceutical industry's focus on rare diseases has intensified, with 57% of all novel drugs approved in 2025 designated as orphan treatments. This is a continued increase from prior years, indicating a strategic shift towards smaller patient populations with high unmet needs, as exemplified by three different drugs for Hereditary Angioedema (HAE) being approved within ten weeks.
In a striking reversal from 2024, large European pharmaceutical companies secured 13 FDA approvals while their eight largest US counterparts received only four. No single US company had more than one new drug approval, highlighting a significant performance gap and a potential shift in R&D pipeline productivity between the two regions.
