Lead Opinion
*1672When Congress enacted the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, ch. 675,
For that reason, we have previously held that "clear evidence" that the FDA would not have approved a change to the drug's label pre-empts a claim, grounded in state law, that a drug manufacturer failed to warn consumers of the change-related risks associated with using the drug. See Wyeth v. Levine ,
I
The central issue in this case concerns federal pre-emption, which as relevant here, takes place when it is " 'impossible for a private party to comply with both state and federal requirements.' " Mutual Pharmaceutical Co. v. Bartlett ,
A
The FDA regulates the safety information that appears on the labels of prescription drugs that are marketed in the United States.
FDA regulations set out requirements for the content, the format, and the order of the safety information on the drug label. § 201.57(c). Those regulations require drug labels to include, among other things: (1) prominent "boxed" warnings about risks that may lead to death or serious injury; (2) contraindications describing any situation in which the drug should not be used because the risk of use outweighs any therapeutic benefit; (3) warnings and precautions about other potential safety hazards; and (4) any adverse reactions for which there is some basis to believe a causal relationship exists between the drug and the occurrence of the adverse event.
As those requirements make clear, the category in which a particular risk appears on a drug label is an indicator of the likelihood and severity of the risk. The hierarchy of label information is designed to "prevent overwarning" so that less important information does not "overshadow" more important information.
Prospective drug manufacturers work with the FDA to develop an appropriate label when they apply for FDA approval of a new drug.
B
Petitioner Merck Sharp & Dohme manufactures Fosamax, a drug that treats and prevents osteoporosis in postmenopausal women. App. 192; In re Fosamax (Alendronate Sodium) Products Liability Litigation ,
However, the mechanism through which Fosamax decreases the risk of osteoporotic fractures may increase the risk of a different type of fracture. Id ., at 400-444, 661-663. That is because all bones-healthy and osteoporotic alike-sometimes develop microscopic cracks that are not due to any trauma, but are instead caused by the mechanical stress of everyday activity. Id., at 102. Those so-called "stress fractures" ordinarily heal on their own through the bone remodeling process. But, by slowing *1674the breakdown of old bone cells, Fosamax and other bisphosphonates may cause stress fractures to progress to complete breaks that cause great pain and require surgical intervention to repair.Id., at 106-109, 139, 144-145. When that rare type of complete, low-energy fracture affects the thigh bone, it is called an "atypical femoral fracture." Id., at 101.
The Fosamax label that the FDA approved in 1995 did not warn of the risk of atypical femoral fractures.
Evidence connecting Fosamax to atypical femoral fractures developed after 1995. Merck began receiving adverse event reports from the medical community indicating that long-term Fosamax users were suffering atypical femoral fractures. App. 122-125. For example, Merck received a report from a doctor who said that hospital staff had begun calling atypical femoral fractures the " 'Fosamax Fracture' " because " '100% of patients in his practice who have experienced femoral fractures (without being hit by a taxicab), were taking Fosamax... for over 5 years. ' " Id., at 126. Merck performed a statistical analysis of Fosamax adverse event reports, concluding that these reports revealed a statistically significant incidence of femur fractures. 3 App. in No. 14-1900 (CA3), pp. A1272-A1273, A1443. And about the same time, Merck began to see numerous scholarly articles and case studies documenting possible connections between long-term Fosamax use and atypical femoral fractures. App. 106-110, 116-122.
In 2008, Merck applied to the FDA for preapproval to change Fosamax's label to add language to both the "Adverse Reaction[s]" and the "Precaution[s]" sections of the label. Id., at 670. In particular, Merck proposed adding a reference to " 'low-energy femoral shaft fracture ' " in the Adverse Reactions section, and cross-referencing a longer discussion in the Precautions section that focused on the risk of stress fractures associated with Fosamax. Id., at 728. The FDA approved the addition to the Adverse Reactions section, but rejected Merck's proposal to warn of a risk of "stress fractures." Id., at 511-512. The FDA explained that Merck's "justification" for the proposed change to the Precautions section was "inadequate," because "[i]dentification of 'stress fractures ' may not be clearly related to the atypical subtrochanteric fractures that have been reported in the literature." Id., at 511. The FDA invited Merck to "resubmit" its application and to "fully address all the deficiencies listed." Id ., at 512; see
A warning about "atypical femoral fractures" did not appear on the Fosamax label until 2011, when the FDA ordered that change based on its own analyses.
C
The respondents here are more than 500 individuals who took Fosamax and who suffered atypical femoral fractures between 1999 and 2010. Brief for Respondents 7. Respondents, invoking federal diversity jurisdiction, filed separate actions seeking tort damages on the ground that, during the relevant period, state law imposed upon Merck a legal duty to warn them and their doctors about the risk of atypical femoral fractures associated with using Fosamax.
Merck, in defense, argued that respondents' state-law failure-to-warn claims should be dismissed as pre-empted by federal law. Both Merck and the FDA have long been aware that Fosamax could theoretically increase the risk of atypical femoral fractures. But for some period of time between 1995 (when the FDA first approved a drug label for Fosamax ) and 2010 (when the FDA decided to require Merck to add a warning about atypical femoral fractures to Fosamax's label), both Merck and the FDA were unsure whether the developing evidence of a causal link between Fosamax and atypical femoral fractures was strong enough to require adding a warning to the Fosamax drug label. Merck conceded that the FDA's CBE regulation would have permitted Merck to try to change the label to add a warning before 2010, but Merck asserted that the FDA would have rejected that attempt. In particular, Merck pointed to the FDA's rejection of Merck's 2008 attempt to amend the Fosamax label to warn of the risk of "stress fractures" associated with Fosamax. On that basis, Merck claimed that federal law prevented Merck from complying with any state-law duty to warn the respondents of the risk of atypical femoral fractures associated with Fosamax.
The District Court agreed with Merck's pre-emption argument and granted summary judgment to Merck, In re Fosamax (Alendronate Sodium): Products Liability Litigation ,
*1676would not have approved a change to the ... label.' "
In attempting to do so itself, the Court of Appeals held that "the Supreme Court intended to announce a standard of proof when it used the term 'clear evidence' in Wyeth ."
Merck filed a petition for a writ of certiorari. Merck's petition asked the Court to decide whether Merck's case and others like it "must ... go to a jury" to determine whether the FDA, in effect, has disapproved a state-law-required labeling change. In light of differences and uncertainties among the courts of appeals and state supreme courts in respect to the application of Wyeth , we granted certiorari. See, e.g., Mason v. SmithKline Beecham Corp. ,
II
We stated in Wyeth v.Levine that state law failure-to-warn claims are pre-empted by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and related labeling regulations when there is "clear evidence" that the FDA would not have approved the warning that state law requires.
A
We begin by describing Wyeth. In that case, the plaintiff developed gangrene after a physician's assistant injected her with Phenergan, an antinausea drug. The plaintiff brought a state-law failure-to-warn claim against Wyeth, the drug's manufacturer, for failing to provide an adequate warning about the risks that accompany various methods of administering the drug. In particular, the plaintiff claimed that directly injecting Phenergan into a patient's vein (the "IV-push" method of administration) creates a significant risk of catastrophic consequences. And those consequences could be avoided by introducing the drug into a saline solution that slowly descends into a patient's vein (the "IV-drip" method of administration). A jury concluded that Wyeth's warning label was inadequate, and that the label's inadequacy caused the plaintiff's injury. On appeal, Wyeth argued that the plaintiff's state-law failure-to-warn claims were pre-empted because it was impossible for Wyeth to comply with both state law duties and federal labeling obligations. The Vermont *1677Supreme Court rejected Wyeth's pre-emption claim.
We too considered Wyeth's pre-emption argument, and we too rejected it. In rejecting Wyeth's argument, we undertook a careful review of the history of federal regulation of drugs and drug labeling.
Rather, we concluded that Congress enacted the FDCA "to bolster consumer protection against harmful products;" that Congress provided no "federal remedy for consumers harmed by unsafe or ineffective drugs"; that Congress was "awar[e] of the prevalence of state tort litigation;" and that, whether Congress' general purpose was to protect consumers, to provide safety-related incentives to manufacturers, or both, language, history, and purpose all indicate that "Congress did not intend FDA oversight to be the exclusive means of ensuring drug safety and effectiveness."
We also observed that "through many amendments to the FDCA and to FDA regulations, it has remained a central premise of federal drug regulation that the manufacturer bears responsibility for the content of its label at all times."
In light of Congress' reluctance to displace state laws that would penalize drug manufacturers for failing to warn consumers of the risks associated with their drugs, and Congress' insistence on requiring drug manufacturers to bear the responsibility for the content of their drug labels, we were unpersuaded by Wyeth's pre-emption argument. In Wyeth's case, we concluded, "when the risk of gangrene from IV-push injection of Phenergan became apparent, Wyeth had a duty" under state law "to provide a warning that adequately described that risk, and the CBE regulation permitted it to provide such a warning before receiving the FDA's approval."
At the same time, and more directly relevant here, we pointed out that "the FDA retains authority to reject labeling changes made pursuant to the CBE regulation in its review of the manufacturer's supplemental application, just as it retains such authority in reviewing all supplemental applications."
We reviewed the record and concluded that "Wyeth has offered no such evidence." Id ., at 572,
B
The underlying question for this type of impossibility pre-emption defense is whether federal law (including appropriate FDA actions) prohibited the drug manufacturer from adding any and all warnings to the drug label that would satisfy state law. And, of course, in order to succeed with that defense the manufacturer must show that the answer to this question is yes. But in Wyeth , we confronted that question in the context of a particular set of circumstances. Accordingly, for purposes of this case, we assume-but do not decide-that, as was true of the warning at issue in Wyeth , there is sufficient evidence to find that Merck violated state law by failing to add a warning about atypical femoral fractures to the Fosamax label. In a case like Wyeth , showing that federal law prohibited the drug manufacturer from adding a warning that would satisfy state law requires the drug manufacturer to show that it fully informed the FDA of the justifications for the warning required by state law and that the FDA, in turn, informed the drug manufacturer that the FDA would not approve changing the drug's label to include that warning.
These conclusions flow from our precedents on impossibility pre-emption and the statutory and regulatory scheme that we reviewed in Wyeth . See
And, as we explained in Wyeth ,
We do not further define Wyeth 's use of the words "clear evidence" in terms of evidentiary standards, such as "preponderance of the evidence" or "clear and convincing evidence" and so forth, because, as we shall discuss, infra , at 1679 - 1681, courts should treat the critical question not as a matter of fact for a jury but as a matter of law for the judge to decide. And where that is so, the judge must simply ask himself or herself whether the relevant federal and state laws "irreconcilably conflic[t]." Rice v. Norman Williams Co. ,
We do note, however, that the only agency actions that can determine the answer to the pre-emption question, of course, are agency actions taken pursuant to the FDA's congressionally delegated authority. The Supremacy Clause grants "supreme" status only to the "the Laws of the United States." U. S. Const., Art. VI, cl. 2. And pre-emption takes place " 'only when and if [the agency] is acting within the scope of its congressionally delegated authority, ... for an agency literally has no power to act, let alone pre-empt the validly enacted legislation of a sovereign State, unless and until Congress confers power upon it.' " New York v. FERC ,
III
We turn now to what is the determinative question before us: Is the question of agency disapproval primarily one of fact, normally for juries to decide, or is it a question of law, normally for a judge to decide without a jury?
The complexity of the preceding discussion of the law helps to illustrate why we answer this question by concluding that the question is a legal one for the judge, not a jury. The question often involves the *1680use of legal skills to determine whether agency disapproval fits facts that are not in dispute. Moreover, judges, rather than lay juries, are better equipped to evaluate the nature and scope of an agency's determination. Judges are experienced in "[t]he construction of written instruments," such as those normally produced by a federal agency to memorialize its considered judgments. Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc. ,
We understand that sometimes contested brute facts will prove relevant to a court's legal determination about the meaning and effect of an agency decision. For example, if the FDA rejected a drug manufacturer's supplemental application to change a drug label on the ground that the information supporting the application was insufficient to warrant a labeling change, the meaning and scope of that decision might depend on what information the FDA had before it. Yet in litigation between a drug consumer and a drug manufacturer (which will ordinarily lack an official administrative record for an FDA decision), the litigants may dispute whether the drug manufacturer submitted all material information to the FDA.
But we consider these factual questions to be subsumed within an already tightly circumscribed legal analysis. And we do not believe that they warrant submission alone or together with the larger pre-emption question to a jury. Rather, in those contexts where we have determined that the question is "for the judge and not the jury," we have also held that "courts may have to resolve subsidiary factual disputes" that are part and parcel of the broader legal question. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc.v.Sandoz, Inc. , 574 U. S. ----, ---- - ----,
IV
Because the Court of Appeals treated the pre-emption question as one of fact, not law, and because it did not have an opportunity to consider fully the standards we have described in Part II of our opinion, we vacate its judgment and remand *1681the case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
I join the Court's opinion and write separately to explain my understanding of the relevant pre-emption principles and how they apply to this case.
The Supremacy Clause of the Constitution provides:
"This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding." Art. VI, cl. 2.
Under this Clause, "[w]here state and federal law 'directly conflict,' state law must give way." PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing ,
I
As I have explained before, it is not obvious that the " 'physical impossibility' standard is the best proxy for determining when state and federal laws 'directly conflict' for purposes of the Supremacy Clause." Wyeth v. Levine ,
Merck does not advance this logical-contradiction standard, and it is doubtful that a pre-emption defense along these lines would succeed here. "To say, as the statute does, that [Merck] may not market a drug without federal approval (i.e. , without [a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ] approved label) is not to say that federal approval gives [Merck] the unfettered right, for all time, to market its drug with the specific label that was federally approved."
II
Applying the Court's impossibility precedents leads to the same conclusion. The question for impossibility is whether it was "lawful under federal law for [Merck] to do what state law required of" it. Mensing ,
Here, Merck's impossibility pre-emption defense fails because it does not identify any federal law that "prohibited [it] from adding any and all warnings ... that would satisfy state law." Ante, at 1678. By its reference to "the Laws of the United States," the Supremacy Clause "requires that pre-emptive effect be given only to those federal standards and policies that are set forth in, or necessarily follow from, the statutory text that was produced through the constitutionally required bicameral and presentment procedures." Wyeth ,
As the Court describes, in 2008 Merck submitted PAS applications to add certain language regarding fractures to the Adverse Reactions and the Warnings and Precautions sections of Fosamax's label. Ante , at 1674 - 1675. In 2009, the FDA sent Merck a "complete response" letter "agree[ing] that atypical and subtrochanteric fractures should be added" to the Adverse Reactions section. App. 510-511. But the letter said that Merck's proposed Warnings and Precautions language, which focused on "the risk factors for stress fractures," was "inadequate" because "[i]dentification of 'stress fractures ' may not be clearly related to the atypical subtrochanteric *1683fractures that have been reported in the literature." Id ., at 511. In accord with FDA regulations, the letter required Merck to take one of three actions: (1) "[r]esubmit the application ..., addressing all deficiencies identified in the complete response letter"; (2) "[w]ithdraw the application ... without prejudice to a subsequent submission"; or (3) "[a]sk the agency to provide ... an opportunity for a hearing," after which "the agency will either approve" or "refuse to approve the application."
Merck's argument that the 2009 letter and other agency communications suggest that the FDA would have denied a future labeling change fares no better: hypothetical agency action is not "Law." As Merck acknowledges, it could have resubmitted its PAS applications, sought a hearing, or changed its label at any time through the CBE process. See Reply Brief 13. Indeed, when Merck instead decided to withdraw its PAS applications, it added atypical femoral fractures to the Adverse Reactions section through the CBE process. That process also enabled Merck to add language to the Warnings and Precautions section, but Merck did not do so. If it had, it could have satisfied its federal and alleged state-law duties-meaning that it was possible for Merck to independently satisfy both sets of duties. Merck's belief that the FDA would have eventually rejected a CBE application does not make an earlier CBE change impossible. As the Court correctly explains, " 'the possibility of impossibility [is] not enough.' " Ante, at 1678 - 1679. The very point of the CBE process is that a manufacturer can "unilaterally" make a labeling change that does not violate other federal law, Wyeth ,
Because Merck points to no statute, regulation, or other agency action with the force of law that would have prohibited it from complying with its alleged state-law *1684duties, its pre-emption defense should fail as a matter of law.
Justice ALITO, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and Justice KAVANAUGH join, concurring in the judgment.
I concur in the judgment because I agree with the Court's decision on the only question that it actually decides, namely, that whether federal law allowed Merck to include in the Fosamax label the warning alleged to be required by state law is a question of law to be decided by the courts, not a question of fact. I do not, however, join the opinion of the Court because I am concerned that its discussion of the law and the facts may be misleading on remand.
I
I begin with the law. The Court correctly notes that a drug manufacturer may prove impossibility pre-emption by showing that "federal law (including appropriate [Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ] actions) prohibited the drug manufacturer from adding any and all warnings to the drug label that would satisfy state law." Ante, at 1678. But in expounding further on the pre-emption analysis, the Court provides a skewed summary. While dwelling on our decision in Wyeth v. Levine ,
Under
*1685Section 355(o )(4)(A) is thus highly relevant to the pre-emption analysis, which turns on whether "federal law (including appropriate FDA actions ) prohibited the drug manufacturer from adding any and all warnings to the drug label that would satisfy state law." Ante, at 1678 (emphasis added). On remand, I assume that the Court of Appeals will consider the effect of § 355(o )(4)(A) on the pre-emption issue in this case.
Two other aspects of the Court's discussion of the legal background must also be mentioned. First, although the Court's discussion of the point is a bit opaque, the Court holds-correctly, in my view-that Wyeth 's use of the phrase "clear evidence" was merely a rhetorical flourish. As the Court explains, a judge, in determining whether federal law would permit a label change allegedly required by state law, "must simply ask himself or herself whether the relevant federal and state laws 'irreconcilably conflic[t].' " Ante, at 1679 (quoting Rice v. Norman Williams Co. ,
Second, for reasons that entirely escape me, the Court refuses to acknowledge that there are two ways in which a drug manufacturer may attempt to alter a drug's label. The Court notes that a manufacturer may proceed under the FDA's " 'changes being effected' " or " 'CBE' " regulation, which permits a manufacturer to change a label without prior FDA approval under some circumstances. See ante, at 1673 - 1674, 1679. But the Court refuses to note that a manufacturer may (and, in many circumstances, must) submit a Prior Approval Supplement (PAS).
II
I now turn to the facts. Resolution of the legal question that the Court decides does not require much discussion of the facts, but if the Court wishes to include such a summary, its presentation should be balanced. Instead, the Court provides a one-sided account. For example, it highlights historical accounts dating back to the 1990s that purportedly linked atypical femoral fractures with Fosamax use, see ante, at 1674, 1675, but it omits any mention of the extensive communication between Merck and the FDA during the relevant period.
A reader of the Court's opinion will inevitably be left with the impression that, once the FDA rejected Merck's proposed warning in 2009, neither the FDA nor Merck took any other actions related to atypical femoral fractures"until 2011," ante, at 1674 - 1675. But that is simply not true.
While Merck's 2008 proposal was pending, the FDA remained in contact with Merck about the issue of atypical femoral fractures, which Merck, at the time, labeled as a type of stress fracture. See, e.g., App. 707, 746-748. An internal Merck memorandum describes a phone call in which an FDA official allegedly told Merck that "[t]he conflicting nature of the literature does not provide a clear path forward, and more time will be need[ed] for FDA to formulate a formal opinion on the issue of a precaution around these data."
Then, months after the FDA rejected Merck's proposed warning, the FDA issued a Safety Announcement regarding its "[o]ngoing safety review of oral bisphosphonates and atypical subtrochanteric femur fractures."
In September 2010, the task force published its report, which concluded that, although there was no established "causal association" between bisphosphonates and atypical femoral fractures, "recent observations suggest that the risk rises with increasing duration of exposure, and there is concern that lack of awareness and underreporting may mask the true incidence of the problem."
Thus, for years the FDA was: aware of this issue, communicating with drug manufacturers, studying all relevant information, and instructing healthcare professionals and patients alike to continue to use Fosamax as directed. For this reason, the FDA itself, speaking through the Solicitor General, takes the position that the FDA's decision not to require a label change prior to October 2010 reflected the FDA's "determin[ation]" that a new warning "should [not] be included in the labeling of the drug," § 355(o )(4)(A). See Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 30, 33-34.
For these reasons, I concur in the judgment only.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co. ,
In 2007, Congress "granted the FDA statutory authority to require a manufacturer to change its drug label based on safety information that becomes available after a drug's initial approval," but even after this amendment, brand-name-drug "manufacturers remain responsible for updating their labels." Wyeth ,
Prior to October 2018, § 355(o )(4)(A) 's language contained slight differences not relevant here. See Substance Use-Disorder Prevention That Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment for Patients and Communities Act, Pub. L. 115-271, § 3041(b),
