FDA’s lab developed test rule could be first check on agency’s power post-Chevron

The recent landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision to overturn the Chevron doctrine could open the door to more challenges of Food and Drug Administration regulations, including the agency’s controversial rule on lab developed tests. 

In late June, the Supreme Court voted 6-3 to overturn the decades-old Chevron deference principle, meaning that courts no longer must defer to a federal agency’s interpretation of ambiguous statutes passed by Congress. The cases, Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless Inc. v. Department of Commerce, were about monitoring requirements for fisheries, but they could have sweeping effects for all federal agencies.

“This is a broad decision that will come up in all sorts of ways, many of which are not foreseeable,” Jeff Gibbs, director at Washington, D.C.-based law firm Hyman, Phelps & McNamara, said in an interview with MedTech Dive. 

Gibbs added the decision will affect the medical device industry, and that ongoing litigation challenging the FDA’s final rule on LDTs could be “something of a bellwether” for how Chevron’s upheaval could affect the agency.


“This is a broad decision that will come up in all sorts of ways, many of which are not foreseeable.”

Jeff Gibbs

Director at Hyman, Phelps & McNamara


An FDA spokesperson said the agency remains confident in the legal underpinnings for its regulations, guidances and decisions.

“We will continue to take actions that are guided by science and consistent with federal law and our regulatory authorities,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. 

The court’s decision is “very significant for FDA,” former agency Commissioner Scott Gottlieb wrote on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. Courts will still defer to the FDA on product review decisions, Gottlieb wrote, but some areas could be affected immediately, including the agency’s final rule on LDTs.

LDTs an ‘early indication’ for Chevron effect

An early indication of how the Supreme Court’s Chevron ruling will be applied is expected in the regulation of LDTs.

For decades, the FDA treated LDTs with enforcement discretion, meaning it did not require most tests developed in a laboratory to comply with regulations for medical devices such as premarket review, device registration, labeling standards and adverse event reporting.

That all changed on May 6, when the agency published a final rule that greatly expands its oversight of LDTs, bringing the tests under the same framework as other in vitro diagnostics. The FDA forged ahead with the plan, despite strong opposition from the lab industry, because officials believe the risks associated with the increasingly sophisticated and widely used tests have grown since the agency first adopted the less rigorous approach to regulating them.

Critics of the new regulation have accused the agency of overstepping its statutory authority in defining LDTs as medical devices. Less than a month after the final rule was issued, the American Clinical Laboratory Association (ACLA) sued the FDA in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas to have the rule vacated. Congress never granted the FDA the authority to regulate the provision of testing services by clinical laboratories, argued the ACLA, whose members include Labcorp, Quest Diagnostics and other test developers.

The Supreme Court’s decisions in Loper and Relentless overturning the Chevron deference standard will now shape the court’s review of the ACLA’s challenge, legal experts said.

“I certainly expect that Loper and Relentless are going to be a big part of the current litigation,” said attorney Rebecca Wood, a partner at Chicago-based law firm Sidley and former chief counsel at the FDA. “It doesn’t mean that the agency necessarily will lose, but it certainly would get a lot less deference than it would have before those decisions.”

FDA’s positions on scientific, technical and regulatory policy issues will continue to command respect, even with the Chevron precedent overturned, said Wood. However, the ruling could make it harder for the agency to win such court cases.

Whether testing companies and organizations will bring further legal challenges against the LDT regulation in the wake of the Supreme Court’s action remains to be seen. “They may just prefer to allow it to play out in that particular case,” Wood said.


“It doesn’t mean that the agency necessarily will lose, but it certainly would get a lot less deference than it would have before those decisions.”

Rebecca Wood

Partner at Sidley


Some think the FDA will face more pushback on its decisions overall, particularly those that involve interpreting the scope of its authority under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.