US News AP Wire (July 1): 'FDA Scientists Warn Against Expanded Peptide Access As Kennedy Reshapes Advisory Panel': Continuing Mainstream-Media Coverage of the FDA Career-Staff Briefing Documents Released Monday-Tuesday Concluding None of the Seven PCAC Peptides Has Sufficient Evidence for 503A Bulks List
US News, syndicating an Associated Press wire story, published a piece Wednesday July 1, 2026 titled 'FDA Scientists Warn Against Expanded Peptide Access As Kennedy Reshapes Advisory Panel,' continuing the mainstream-media coverage of the FDA career-staff briefing documents that landed Monday-Tuesday June 29-30. The AP framing tied together two threads that STAT News, NBC News, NPR, Washington Post, PBS NewsHour, and CNN had covered separately: the substantive staff position that none of the seven peptides (BPC-157, KPV, TB-500, MOTS-c, Emideltide/DSIP, Semax, Epitalon) has sufficient evidence for 503A bulks list eligibility; and the parallel panel-composition story flagging that at least seven of the eight new PCAC panelists named Monday have ties to peptide-related businesses and clinics. The AP wire distribution amplifies the story to hundreds of regional papers and broadcast outlets, extending public awareness well beyond the health-policy audience that read the original STAT scoop. Public Citizen's July 'Outrage of the Month' column, BioCentury's industry-analyst piece, and Personal Care Insights coverage each add to the growing critic chorus three weeks before the July 23-24 PCAC vote.