As FDA’s wheels almost entirely come off, NCI remains sturdy—a cancer moonshot may even be on the horizon
While every agency under HHS, particularly FDA, has seen historic leadership shakeups and massive cuts to personnel and funding over the course of the second Trump administration—NCI has been spared, even getting a small raise, under the direction of NCI Director Anthony Letai.
“For some reason the wheels have not come off NCI, the wheels are very much on and it's kind of moving forward,” said Paul Goldberg, editor and publisher of The Cancer Letter.
Is it luck?
This has happened in previous administrations. Some agencies have done very well, some have not, Paul said.
But at a recent Senate hearing with the typical contentious moments between Democrats and Republican agency heads, Letai was spared the drama. He wasn’t asked about vapes—a hot button topic of the last few weeks that led to the resignation of FDA Commissioner Marty Makary—and he wasn’t asked about payout rates.
Meanwhile, the word “moonshot” was thrown around at a City of Hope-convened symposium on the microbiome. HHS Secretary Kennedy called for a “moonshot” targeted on the role of the microbiome in cancer, which was unexpected.
“When people say, ‘Oh, we're going to do a moonshot,’ what they really want to be saying is something like, ‘We are going to project manage this beast, and we're going to emphasize certain kinds of scientific research,'" said Paul.
In this episode of In the Headlines, Paul and Jacquelyn Cobb, associate editor of The Cancer Letter, discuss why NCI seems beyond reproach, the microbiome symposium, and the implications of a new cancer “moonshot.”
“To me, the microbiome has been this MAHA-adjacent wellness topic that happens to have a really strong scientific foundation,” Jacquelyn said. “So, to me, this moonshot, whatever you want to call it, but this push for microbiome research feels to me like, ‘Oh, there happens to be this … overlap where this is something that the MAHA, RFK people find interesting and find important and it's preventative. It's almost, not holistic, but it's less pharmaceutical, which is, I think, an important point that you talked about, why NCI has to be involved is that there's not necessarily going to be pharmaceutical products that promise profits afterwards, like the typical cancer drug pipeline.”
The overlap between the MAHA agenda and cancer research could be impactful.
“So, it's just interesting to me where it almost feels like the field is seeing, "Okay, we have this MAHA leader who wants to focus on this type of stuff, what's the highest return subtopic that will actually help cancer patients?" Jacquelyn said.
Stories mentioned in this podcast include:
* Kennedy calls for a “moonshot” targeted on the role of the microbiome in cancer [https://cancerletter.com/the-cancer-letter/20260522_1/]
* Marcel van den Brink: Microbiome research is now in “critical phase” where evidence points to therapeutic use [https://cancerletter.com/conversation-with-the-cancer-letter/20260522_2/]
* NCI’s Letai gets softball questions from Senate appropriators at an otherwise contentious hearing [https://cancerletter.com/nci/20260522_3/]
* USPSTF leaders John Wong and Esa Davis fired by Kennedy, leaving the panel rudderless [https://cancerletter.com/capitol-hill/20260522_4/]
* UMGCCC neuro-oncologist navigates the reality of his father’s pancreatic cancer [https://cancerletter.com/guest-editorial/20260522_5/]
* FDA’s acting drug chief, acting vaccines chief, and chief of staff ousted in the wake of Makary departure [https://cancerletter.com/cancer-policy/20260522_6a/]
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