Latest changes
Boeing 737 Airworthiness Directive Inspection Required
The FAA proposes to supersede Airworthiness Directive (AD) 2021-02-13 for certain The Boeing Company Model 737-600, -700, -700C, -800, -900, and -900ER series airplanes. The proposal adds airplanes with line numbers 1763 and subsequent to the applicability and requires inspections for an extended inspection area beyond what AD 2021-02-13 mandated, prompted by a report of cracking outside the required inspection area. The unsafe condition involves bear strap cracking at the forward galley door, which could result in uncontrolled decompression and loss of structural integrity. Written comments must be received by June 8, 2026.
FAA Proposes BCU Inspection for Bombardier BD-700 Aircraft
The FAA proposes a new Airworthiness Directive for Bombardier Inc. Model BD-700-1A10 and BD-700-1A11 airplanes prompted by an in-service tire burst event during landing. The proposed AD would require operators to inspect for affected Brake Control Units (BCU) with part number GW415-7125-7 and replace them with BCU part number GW415-7125-9, while prohibiting installation of affected parts. The unsafe condition involves residual current buildup in the brake control valve driver circuit that may cause uncommanded brake pressure during landing, potentially resulting in additional tire bursts, unexpected deceleration, degraded braking performance, directional difficulties, or brake overheating.
Bell 505 Tail Rotor Pitch Link Washer Installation Airworthiness Directive
The FAA proposes to adopt a new airworthiness directive for certain Bell Textron Canada Limited Model 505 helicopters prompted by a quality escape in the production installation of a washer on the tail rotor pitch link assembly. This proposed AD would require a one-time visual inspection for proper washer installation and corrective actions depending on inspection results. The unsafe condition, if not addressed, could result in fracture of the pitch horn stud due to fatigue or when the rotor blade exceeds travel limits, leading to loss of directional control of the helicopter. Comments on this NPRM must be received by June 8, 2026.
FAST Grant Renewal: FAA Requests Comments on OMB Information Collection Renewal
The FAA has published a notice in the Federal Register seeking public comment on its request to renew OMB approval for OMB Control Number 2120-0817, covering the Fueling Aviation's Sustainable Transition (FAST) Grant Program information collection. The collection requires FAST grant recipients to submit quarterly performance reports documenting technical progress, schedule, risks, and costs, reviewed by FAA subject matter experts. The estimated annual burden is 1,876 hours across respondents at 134 hours per grant recipient per year. Comments are due by June 22, 2026.
FDIC Modifies Privacy Act System of Records FDIC-012
The FDIC is modifying its existing system of records FDIC-012, Financial Information Management Records, to update numerous sections including Authority for Maintenance, Purpose(s), Category of Individuals, Category of Records, Record Source Categories, and Routine Uses. The notice proposes three new routine uses (Routine Uses 8, 9, and 16) and two substantially modified routine uses (Routine Uses 13 and 14), expanding disclosure recipients to include the Department of the Treasury, Department of Justice, and General Services Administration for specified purposes. The FDIC is accepting written comments on the modified system through May 26, 2026.
FDIC Requests Public Comments on OMB 3064-0127
The FDIC is requesting public comments on the renewal of OMB Control No. 3064-0127, a generic clearance for qualitative feedback surveys deployed under the Paperwork Reduction Act. The collection, which involves no change in substance or methodology, covers approximately 20 surveys annually with an average of 850 respondents per survey, generating an estimated 17,000 total annual burden hours. Comments must be submitted on or before June 22, 2026.
German Federal Court Decisions Database - 83,255 Searchable Results
The Bundesgerichtshof (German Federal Court) decision database now contains 83,255 searchable results dating from the year 2000 onward. Decisions are available in PDF format, displayed 10 per page with sorting options by Senate, Date, Case Number, and Entry Date. Commercial use of decisions from January 1, 2000 requires a document fee of 1.50 euros per document, payable to the Bundesgerichtshof in Karlsruhe.
Bundesgerichtshof Decisions Until 1999 Require Written Request
The Bundesgerichtshof (BGH) publishes administrative information on obtaining court decisions from 1999 and earlier. Decisions up to and including 1999 are not available online and must be requested in writing through the BGH Decision Distribution Service (Entscheidungsversand). Requesters pay a writing fee of €0.50 per page for the first 50 pages and €0.15 per page for any additional pages, with payment obligation arising upon submission of the request. Requests may be submitted by post, fax (0721 159-5705), or online contact form to the BGH in Karlsruhe.
BGH Cost Complaints Portal Pending Resolved Decisions
The Bundesgerichtshof (BGH) maintains a public database of Rechtsbeschwerden (legal complaints) in Kostensachen (cost matters). When a cost complaint is filed, the relevant legal norms and a brief description of the legal issue are recorded so that all BGH senates have an overview of related pending proceedings. The page also publishes an overview of cost complaints resolved in the last six months. Decisions are available free for non-commercial use; commercial use requires a paid request.
Gulf Fishery Management Council Shrimp Bycatch Methodology Workgroup Meeting May 11-12
The Gulf Fishery Management Council will hold a 2-day virtual meeting of its Workgroup on Shrimp Bycatch Methodology for Finfish Species on May 11-12, 2026, from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. EDT each day. The meeting will include presentations on SEDAR 100 regarding shrimp trawl bycatch of gray triggerfish using SEAMAP data, 2025 observer data for bycatch rate estimation, gear selectivity and efficiency, and species-specific shrimp effort estimates, followed by recommendations to the Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee. The meeting will be held virtually with connection information available at www.gulfcouncil.org.
Monkfish Framework Adjustment 17, 2026-2028 Fishing Specifications
NMFS is proposing Framework Adjustment 17 to the Monkfish Fishery Management Plan, adjusting Northern Fishery Management Area (NFMA) Total Allowable Landings (TAL) down 3 percent and Southern Fishery Management Area (SFMA) TAL up less than 1 percent from 2023-2025 levels for fishing years 2026-2028. The proposed rule also streamlines the Annual Catch Limit (ACL) Overage Accountability Measure trigger by removing the requirement that Councils initiate the AM, transferring that responsibility solely to the Regional Administrator. Public comments are due May 26, 2026.
NIDIS Executive Council Meeting May 7
NOAA's National Integrated Drought Information System Program Office will hold an organizational meeting of the NIDIS Executive Council on Thursday, May 7, 2026, from 9:00 a.m. EST to 3:30 p.m. EST at the Hall of the States, Room 333, 444 North Capitol St. NW, Washington, DC 20001. The meeting is open to the public for in-person attendance on a first-come, first-served basis, with registration required via the provided UCAR link. Topics include NIDIS implementation updates, Executive Council member priorities for 2026, Next Generation Drought Planning and Monitoring resources, the NIDIS Strategic Plan Overview, and Federal Agency Water and Drought Priorities.
Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council Tilefish Monitoring Committee Meeting, May 19
The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council's Tilefish Monitoring Committee will hold a public webinar meeting on Tuesday, May 19, 2026, from 9:30 a.m. until 12 p.m. The committee will review recent stock assessment data, fishery performance, and recommendations from the Advisory Panel, Scientific and Statistical Committee, and staff. Agenda items include recommending commercial and recreational annual catch limits, annual catch targets, and total allowable landing limits for blueline tilefish for 2027-2029, and reviewing previously set limits for golden tilefish for 2027.
Two Webinar Public Hearings on Red Grouper Quota
The Gulf Fishery Management Council will hold two webinar public hearings on May 13 and 14, 2026, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. EDT, to solicit public comments on Reef Fish Amendment 63, which proposes a 3-year pilot program to set aside a portion of the Red Grouper commercial quota for participants in the Grouper/Tilefish Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) program. Written public comments must be received on or before 5 p.m. EDT on May 26, 2026. The hearings are open to all members of the public, and attendees may register through the Gulf Council website.
Gulf Fishery Council Standing SSC Virtual Meeting, May 5
NOAA publishes notice that the Gulf Fishery Management Council will hold a virtual meeting of its Standing Scientific and Statistical Committee on May 5, 2026, from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. EDT. The agenda includes review of February 2026 meeting minutes, a G-FISHER presentation on Gulf Fishery-Independent Survey of Habitat and Ecosystem Resources, and Fisheries Risk/Value Matrix discussions. The meeting is open to public comment and will be broadcast via webinar.
NMFS Proposes Revisions to Recreational Vessel Limits for Gag and Black Grouper
NMFS is seeking public comment on Regulatory Amendment 36 to the Snapper-Grouper Fishery Management Plan, which would revise recreational vessel limits for gag and black grouper in the South Atlantic. The proposed rule would replace separate species-specific limits with an aggregate vessel limit of two gag or black grouper in any combination. Additionally, the rule would revise transit storage requirements for commercial on-demand (ropeless) black sea bass pots to allow more practical vessel transit through gear-restricted areas. Comments must be submitted by May 26, 2026.
Guam Bottomfish ACL Proposed at 34,500 lb, Accountability Measures Revised
NMFS proposes to increase the Guam bottomfish annual catch limit from 31,000 lb to 34,500 lb (15,649 kg), an 11% increase, based on a 2024 stock assessment showing the stock is no longer overfished and is on track to rebuild by 2031. The proposed rule would replace the in-season accountability measure that closes the fishery if catch reaches the ACL with a post-season overage adjustment that reduces future ACL by the overage amount if the 3-year average catch exceeds the limit. The higher performance standard requiring an indefinite federal-waters closure for any ACL exceedance would be removed.
Tariff Adjustment Procedures for Steel and Aluminum Producers Under Section 232
The International Trade Administration has published procedures allowing certain steel and aluminum producers operating in Canada or Mexico to apply for reduced tariffs under Proclamations 9704 and 9705, as authorized by Proclamation 10984. Applications must document newly committed U.S. primary steel or primary aluminum production capacity that supports U.S. automobile or medium- and heavy-duty vehicle manufacturers. Tariff reductions may reach up to 50 percent of the otherwise applicable rate but cannot fall below 25 percent, and are limited to quantities of USMCA-qualifying imports smelted and cast (or melted and poured) in Canada or Mexico. Documentation must be submitted electronically to adjustment@trade.gov. Eligible steel and aluminum producers with new U.S. capacity commitments serving the automotive or commercial vehicle supply chain should assess whether tariff adjustments could reduce their cost of serving U.S. customers.
Microsoft Defender CVE-2026-33825 Local Privilege Escalation
CISA added CVE-2026-33825 to the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog on April 22, 2026. The vulnerability is an insufficient granularity of access control flaw in Microsoft Defender versions 4.0.0.0 through versions before 4.18.26030.3011 that allows a local authorized attacker to elevate privileges. The CVSS 3.1 score is 7.8 (HIGH), exploitation is listed as active with total technical impact, and a vendor patch is available via Microsoft Update Guide.
Batteries Drive 67.3 GW NEM Connection Pipeline
AEMO's March 2026 Connections Scorecard reports 67.3 GW of projects progressing through the NEM connection process, a 33 percent increase from 50.5 GW in Q1 2025. Batteries comprise 49 percent of total pipeline capacity at 33.2 GW (up from 20.5 GW), while grid-scale solar rose to 20.7 GW and wind to 9.75 GW. Five projects reached full output in the quarter including Hunter Power Station (660 MW), Clarke Creek Wind Farm (440 MW), and Swanbank BESS (250 MW/500 MWh). This new capacity is expected to meet 28 percent electricity demand growth by 2035 and offset retirement of 11 GW of coal-fired stations including Eraring, Bayswater, Vales Point, Yallourn, and Callide B.
AEMO On Air Podcast Series on Energy Topics
AEMO has launched AEMO On Air, a podcast series covering various topics related to the Australian energy market, grid operations, and the energy transition. The podcast is presented by the Australian Energy Market Operator and appears intended to share information with industry participants and the public. No compliance obligations or regulatory changes are associated with this announcement.
Supreme Court Hears AT&T, Verizon Privacy Fine Cases
The United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments on April 22, 2026, in consolidated cases where AT&T and Verizon are challenging FCC forfeiture orders fining them USD 57 million and USD 48 million, respectively, for alleged failures to protect consumers' personal location data under the Telecommunications Act. AT&T and Verizon argue the fines violated their Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial, claiming they were misled into paying before seeking judicial review. DOJ argued the companies could have petitioned for declaratory judgment and that the FCC's scheme is consistent with the Seventh Amendment. Justices appeared inclined to rule for the government based on oral argument questioning, with a decision expected in June or early July.
South Korea Revises Pseudonymization Guidelines for AI
On 31 March 2026, the Personal Information Protection Commission released revised Pseudonymized Information Processing Guidelines, shifting toward a risk-based, contextual approach to pseudonymization rather than fixed technical thresholds. The guidelines explicitly allow AI development and service improvement to qualify as "scientific research" when involving hypothesis-setting, data analysis, validation and iterative refinement, with concrete examples including fraud detection systems, medical imaging analysis, chatbots and intelligent CCTV. This builds on prior 2024 and 2025 regulatory guidance clarifying conditions under which personal data may be used for AI development. A July 2025 South Korean Supreme Court decision reinforced this approach by holding that pseudonymization does not constitute "processing" for the purpose of a data subject's right to request suspension of processing.
AI for HR in Canada and the US: New 2026 Employer Obligations
Ontario employers with 25 or more employees must disclose AI use in job postings effective January 1, 2026, under the Working for Workers Four Act, 2024 — the only Canadian province with AI-specific disclosure requirements for hiring. In the United States, California, Illinois, New York City, and Texas explicitly regulate employer use of AI for hiring, promotion, and performance management, with additional access rights and bias-audit requirements in certain jurisdictions. Class-action litigation challenging AI tools in employment under anti-discrimination and background-check legislation continues to rise.
SECURE Data Act Would Establish Federal Privacy Law
On April 22, 2026, U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee Vice Chairman John Joyce, R-Pa., introduced the SECURE Data Act (HR 8413), the first major attempt in the 119th Congress to establish comprehensive federal consumer privacy rules. The bill would preempt state consumer privacy laws, data broker registries, and possibly some sectoral state laws through a strong preemption regime. If enacted, the bill would grant consumers rights to access, correct and delete personal data, obtain portable copies, and opt out of sales, targeted advertising and profiling. The bill would treat personal data of teens under age 16 as sensitive data requiring parental opt-in consent, expanding COPPA by three years. Enforcement would fall to the FTC and state attorneys general, with no private right of action.
SECURE Data Act: Republicans Propose Federal Privacy Law Preempting State Laws
House Committee on Energy and Commerce Republicans introduced the discussion draft SECURE Data Act on April 22, 2026, proposing a federal comprehensive privacy standard that would preempt state laws including the CCPA and CPRA. The bill omits a private right of action and requirements for data protection impact assessments, data protection officers, or universal opt-out mechanisms. Key new provisions include an FTC-managed data broker registration, a Department of Commerce safe harbor program, and classification of children's data alongside health and geolocation as sensitive data. The bill was introduced jointly with a companion GLBA reform measure.
Zaha Hadid Foundation v Zaha Hadid Limited - Permission to Appeal Application
The UK Supreme Court has registered a permission to appeal application in case UKSC/2026/0051, with The Zaha Hadid Foundation as the appellant and Zaha Hadid Limited as the respondent. The application was lodged on 22 April 2026 and the case originated from the PTA court. This entry reflects the initial case registration stage; no substantive ruling or decision has been issued.
HMRC v Fisher - Section 739 Income Tax Attribution: Individual as Transferor
The UK Supreme Court in HMRC v Fisher (UKSC/2021/0212, [2023] UKSC 44) has clarified the interpretation of section 739 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 concerning offshore income attribution. The Court held that for section 739 to apply, the individual who has the power to enjoy the income must generally be the transferor of the assets; however, an individual may be treated as a transferor where the company making the transfer is one in which that individual has a controlling interest in the relevant shareholding. The appeal by Stephen and Peter Fisher and the cross-appeal by HMRC regarding Anne Fisher were heard over two days in July 2023 before the five-justice panel.
Gatwick Investment Ltd v Liberty Mutual - Business Interruption Insurance and CJRS Deduction
The UK Supreme Court (Lord Reed, Lord Briggs, Lord Hamblen, Lord Leggatt, Lord Burrows) ruled on 22 April 2026 that Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS) payments received by employers must be taken into account (credited) when calculating amounts payable under 'savings clauses' in business interruption insurance policies. The Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeal's decision, which had upheld the position that CJRS payments should not be deducted. The case concerned whether CJRS wage-reimbursement payments fall within policy provisions that reduce payouts when the policyholder's charges or expenses cease or reduce as a consequence of damage. Hotels and racecourse operators who claimed business interruption losses after Covid-19 and received CJRS funds will now face adjusted insurance settlements.
ISDA Responds to ESMA on PTRR Clearing Exemption
ISDA submitted a response on April 20, 2026 to ESMA's consultation paper on a draft regulatory technical standard (RTS) for the post-trade risk reduction (PTRR) exemption from the derivatives clearing obligation under Article 4b of EMIR. ISDA recommends maintaining principles-based definitions for eligible PTRR services to allow ongoing innovation, argues existing EMIR Article 9 reporting requirements serve as de facto safeguards against clearing obligation circumvention, and suggests that reporting and record-keeping requirements for PTRR service providers should avoid duplication with existing investment firm obligations under MiFID.
Canada Gazette Part I Index: Commissions, Proposed Regulations, Government Notices
The Canada Gazette Part I, Volume 160, Number 14 (April 4, 2026) indexes government commissions, proposed regulations, government notices, miscellaneous notices, and Parliament items. Proposed regulations include amendments to pension regulations (Finance Department) and to General Import Permit No. 83 for aluminum products (Foreign Affairs Department). Government notices cover permanent residence fee increases, chemical release guidelines for the rubber product manufacturing sector, and amendments to the Non-domestic Substances List.
Canada Gazette Part 1, April 11th Index
Canada Gazette Part I index for April 11, 2026 listing regulatory notices from Canadian government agencies including Canada Border Services Agency (import measures decision on forged grinding media), Canada Revenue Agency (charity registration revocation), Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (administrative decisions, applications), Public Service Commission (permission and leave granted under Public Service Employment Act), Transport Canada (interim order on vessel recycling under Canada Shipping Act, 2001), and Chief Electoral Officer (electoral district association deregistrations). Also includes Royal Assent entries from the Senate dated March 26, 2026.
New Life Pharma LLC FDA Warning Letter CGMP Violations
FDA issued Warning Letter 320-26-65 to New Life Pharma LLC at 265 Livingston Street, Northvale, NJ, on April 14, 2026, following an inspection from February 3-13, 2026. The firm was cited for manufacturing and distributing unapproved new drugs (Semaglutide Sterile Multi-Dose Vial and Tirzepatide Sterile Multi-Dose Vial) without FDA-approved applications, for misbranding due to improper firm registration and failure to list drugs with FDA, for CGMP violations including failure to maintain sterility controls for drug products purporting to be sterile, and for delaying, denying, limiting, or refusing to permit an FDA inspection. The products are also adulterated under sections 501(a)(2)(B) and 501(j) of the FD&C Act.
Index of Government Notices, April 18
Canada Gazette Part I Volume 160 Number 16 publishes an index of government notices for April 18, 2026. The index includes applications to export electricity, Canadian International Trade Tribunal appeals and expiry reviews, CRTC decisions and applications, Public Service Employment Act permissions, Canadian Environmental Protection Act notices, Global Affairs Canada EV quota consultations, and Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions banking orders. Individual notices must be accessed via the linked pages for substantive content.
NRC Exceptions From FOCD Under ADVANCE Act for Nuclear Facilities
The NRC has issued a direct final rule amending 10 CFR Parts 50 and 54 to create statutory exceptions from the foreign ownership, control, or domination (FOCD) provision of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. The exceptions are mandated by section 301 of the Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy Act of 2024 (ADVANCE Act). The rule is effective July 7, 2026, unless the NRC receives significant adverse comments by May 26, 2026. Applicants and licensees of nuclear utilization facilities with foreign ownership structures should monitor this rulemaking closely as it may expand permissible ownership pathways.
NRC Proposes FOCD Amendments for Utilization Facilities Under ADVANCE Act
The NRC is proposing amendments to its regulations on foreign ownership, control, or domination (FOCD) of utilization facilities to implement section 301 of the Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy Act of 2024. The proposed rule would establish new statutory exceptions from the FOCD provision in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. Comments must be submitted no later than midnight Eastern Time on May 26, 2026.
Benson v. Warden FCI Edgefield, No. 24-6713 (Vacated, Remanded)
The Fourth Circuit vacated and remanded a district court decision dismissing Rahshjeem Benson's 28 U.S.C. § 2241 habeas petition seeking approximately 150 First Step Act time credits he allegedly earned at Wyatt Detention Center before arriving at FCI Edgefield in March 2022. The appellate court found the district court improperly dismissed the petition without requiring the Government to respond and without conducting discovery. Benson had accumulated 220 BOP-approved FSA credits at FCI Edgefield by the time of filing, with an anticipated release date of November 22, 2027. The case was remanded for additional proceedings consistent with the opinion.
US v. Largent Affirmed - Supervised Release Revocation
The Fourth Circuit affirmed Gregory Largent's supervised release revocation, upholding an 18-month imprisonment sentence followed by lifetime supervised release. The court rejected Largent's argument that modifying his supervised release conditions—requiring court permission rather than probation office approval for contact with minors—required a separate hearing under Fed. R. Crim. P. 32.1(c). The appellate court found no plain error and concluded the revocation sentence was procedurally and substantively reasonable, emphasizing the district court's focus on breach of trust, dishonesty to the probation officer, and repeated violations. Defense counsel handling supervised release revocation matters should note that condition modifications made during revocation hearings, where the defendant is represented by counsel and has opportunity to present mitigating evidence, do not violate Rule 32.1(c) requirements.
White v. Warden of Federal Correctional Institution - Cumberland, Rehearing Denied
The Fourth Circuit denied petitioner William A. White's petition for panel rehearing and rehearing en banc by a 2-1 vote. Judges Niemeyer and Wilkinson voted to deny; Judge King dissented and would have granted rehearing. The Court upheld its prior ruling that White was not entitled to First Step Act time credits for a three-day period at the Federal Transfer Center Oklahoma City because he did not 'participate' in recidivism reduction programming, as required under 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4). White had submitted new evidence, including a declaration and BOP record, claiming he met with a psychologist who provided programming materials.
Nichols v. Bumgarner - Fourth Amendment Excessive Force Claim Vacated and Remanded
The Fourth Circuit vacated the District of Maryland's dismissal of Patrick Nichols's 42 U.S.C. § 1983 excessive force claim against Officers Bumgarner and Schmidt. The appellate court held that the district court erroneously applied too stringent a pleading standard to Nichols's pro se complaint and erred by treating only Officer Bumgarner as a defendant, when the amended complaint adequately put Officer Schmidt on notice as a party. The case was remanded for further proceedings, with the Fourth Circuit directing the district court to consider appointing pro bono counsel on remand.
Baby Doe v. Mast, Fourth Circuit Affirms Protective Order
The Fourth Circuit affirmed the district court's protective order in Baby Doe v. Mast (No. 24-1900), ruling that the order prohibiting Defendants from disclosing the Does' identities passes strict scrutiny as a permissible content-based prior restraint. The court held the order is narrowly tailored to the compelling government interest in protecting foreign nationals who ally with U.S. military and diplomatic efforts abroad and that it is the least restrictive means to safeguard that interest. Judge Richardson wrote the majority opinion; Chief Judge Diaz joined; Judge King dissented.
EPSF 20th Anniversary Railway Safety Conference, 450+ Professionals
Over 450 railway professionals and institutional stakeholders attended EPSF's 20th anniversary conference on railway safety and interoperability, held on 12 March 2026 in France. Morning sessions addressed the cost of railway safety and regulatory simplification, with afternoon discussions covering AI applications in railway safety alongside a dedicated retrospective on the EPSF's two decades of operation. Speakers included representatives from FENVAC, Getlink, Siemens, Groupe SNCF, the European Commission, and CER, with a replay available on YouTube.
French State and EPSF Sign 2026-2030 Performance Contract
Philippe TABAROT, Minister of Transport, and Laurent CÉBULSKI, Director General of EPSF (Établissement public de sécurité ferrovaire), signed the 2026-2030 Objectives and Performance Contract (COP) on March 27, 2026. The five-year contract establishes the strategic roadmap for railway safety in France, organized around four axes: ensuring a safe railway system guaranteed by all sector actors, an interoperable network open to territories and international traffic, an innovative and developing sector, and an evolutive, responsible, and human organization. The contract aims to guarantee a very high level of safety on the national railway network in the context of evolving railway landscape.
RATP DEV CAEN NORMANDIE Safety Certificate Valid Until 30 March 2031
EPSF issued a safety certificate to RATP DEV CAEN NORMANDIE on 31 March 2026, authorising the operator to provide passenger transport services, excluding high-speed services, on a defined portion of the railway system. The certificate is valid until 30 March 2031. This certification is issued pursuant to Article 1 of Decree No. 2019-525 of 27 May 2019 relating to railway safety and interoperability.
RANKL Inhibition Study for Female Infertility Treatment
This ClinicalTrials.gov registry entry (NCT07546552) documents a translational research study investigating receptor activator of NF-κB ligand (RANKL) inhibition as a novel treatment target for female infertility during assisted reproductive techniques. The study will examine whether denosumab, an antibody already used clinically for osteoporosis, can reduce the impact of aging on ovarian function by promoting follicle maturation and oocyte development in mice, monkeys, and human subjects undergoing in vitro fertilization.
PEEP Titration Effects on VExUS and Renal Outcomes in ARDS Patients
A prospective observational cohort study has been registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT07545252) to evaluate the effect of different levels of PEEP titration on VExUS score and renal outcomes in 40 patients diagnosed with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. The study uses VExUS score as the intervention and observational endpoint, with an anticipated enrollment of 40 participants. This registry entry documents the study design, condition, and interventions without imposing any compliance obligation.
RPH-030 vs Vectibix Phase 1 mCRC Trial Pharmacokinetics Study
NIH registered a Phase 1 clinical trial (NCT07543744) comparing the pharmacokinetics, safety, and immunogenicity of RPH-030 versus Vectibix® in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer harboring wild-type RAS genes, administered as first-line therapy alongside FOLFIRI. The single-center trial targets a population with an unmet therapeutic need given the established efficacy of anti-EGFR agents in RAS wild-type mCRC. Trial details are publicly accessible via ClinicalTrials.gov.
Investigating Barriers and Possibilities for Improving Healthcare Service of Female Survivors of Gender-based Violence in Upper Egypt
NCT07544316 is an observational study registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NIH) on April 22, 2026, investigating barriers and possibilities for improving healthcare services for female survivors of gender-based violence in Upper Egypt. The study addresses the condition of Gender-Based Violence and aims to shape effective recommendations for a better healthcare system targeting survivors. This is a study registration entry providing the abstract and study parameters without imposing compliance obligations.
HeartLogic Remote Monitoring Trial Heart Failure Apr 22
A randomized, multicenter clinical trial has been registered on ClinicalTrials.gov under NCT07544771 to evaluate whether HeartLogicâ„¢ algorithm-guided remote management improves outcomes versus traditional face-to-face follow-up in adult heart failure patients recently implanted with a HeartLogicâ„¢-enabled ICD or CRT-D device. The primary endpoint at 12 months is a composite of death, unscheduled hospitalization for heart failure, or quality-of-life deterioration. Secondary endpoints include hospitalization, mortality, quality of life, safety, and cost-effectiveness. This is an interventional study with alert-guided remote follow-up as the active intervention and traditional follow-up as the comparator.
Transdiagnostic Dimensional Profiling of Neurodevelopmental Disorders - NCT07544199
A new observational study (NCT07544199) was registered April 22, 2026, investigating cognitive function profiles in children ages 3-11 with neurodevelopmental disorders. The study employs the CRAB (Computerized Reading-related Assessment Battery) digital platform developed by SUPSI and the Université de Genève to assess both domain-general cognitive functions (attention, working memory, executive control) and domain-specific functions (phonological awareness, rapid naming, vocabulary, reading). Participating families receive a coded email link to access the platform, with game-like tasks administered remotely under the supervision of IRCCS Medea in Italy.
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