H.R. 1262119th CongressHouse Bill

Mikaela Naylon Give Kids a Chance Act

Passed the House

This bill expands the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) authority with respect to research on rare pediatric diseases, including by permitting the FDA to take enforcement action against drug sponsors that fail to satisfy pediatric study requirements and by reauthorizing programs that support pediatric research. Specifically, the bill modifies requirements relating to molecularly targeted pediatric cancer investigations to permit research on new drugs in combination with active ingredients that have already been approved, provided certain conditions are met; permits the FDA to take enforcement action against drug sponsors that fail to comply with pediatric study requirements, if such sponsors demonstrated a lack of due diligence in satisfying the requirement; renews the FDA’s authority to award priority review vouchers to sponsors of new products intended to treat rare pediatric diseases through September 30, 2029; and reauthorizes through FY2027 certain funding for the National Institutes of Health to support priority pediatric research. The bill also provides statutory authority for the FDA’s interpretation of the orphan drug exclusivity period. The bill specifies, consistent with FDA regulations, that the seven-year market exclusivity period for drugs for rare diseases or conditions (i.e., orphan drugs) prohibits the approval of the same drug for the same approved use or indication with respect to the disease or condition. (In Catalyst Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Becerra , a court rejected the FDA’s interpretation and held that orphan drug exclusivity extends to all uses or indications for the disease or condition.)

Introduced Feb 12, 2025Last action Dec 1, 2025
Introduced in HouseFeb 12, 2025
Reported by CommitteeSep 17, 2025
Passed HouseDec 1, 2025
Show change summary

The bill's title was changed to add "Mikaela Naylon" before "Give Kids a Chance Act." In Section 8 about organ transplants, the sunset date for registration fees was updated to reference the new bill title. Most significantly, Section 11 about Medicare funding was completely rewritten: instead of changing the effective year from 2026 to 2027 and increasing the amount to 3.047 billion dollars, the new version keeps 2026 as the year but increases the amount to 2.622 billion dollars.

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Senate consideration

Being considered by the Senate

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Become Law

This house bill has been approved by the House of Representatives and is now before the Senate.

What changed in the latest version · AI-generated

The bill's title was changed to add "Mikaela Naylon" before "Give Kids a Chance Act." In Section 8 about organ transplants, the sunset date for registration fees was updated to reference the new bill title.…

Summary compares to previous version · Engrossed in House on Dec 1, 2025

Who introduced this

Michael McCaul

Michael McCaul

Republican

U.S. Representative · TX-10

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