Stf approves agreement for funding oncology treatments in Sus

The Supreme Federal Court (Stf) unanimously approved an interfederative agreement that redefines the funding of oncology drugs in the Unified Health System (Sus). The decision sets rules for reimbursement by the Union and determines judicial competence for actions related to these treatments. The agreement follows the creation of a new oncology pharmaceutical assistance policy.

The Supreme Federal Court (Stf) endorsed, in a session on Thursday, February 19, the homologation of an agreement between the Union, states, and municipalities regarding the funding of cancer drugs in the Unified Health System (Sus). This measure aims to reorganize the acquisition and dispensation of these drugs, following the issuance of Portaria Gm/Ms 8.477/2025 by the Ministry of Health, which established the Af-Onco, a component of Oncology Pharmaceutical Assistance.

A key aspect is the maintenance of 80% reimbursement by the Union in cases where oncology drugs are provided by judicial order. This proportion applies to lawsuits filed until June 10, 2024, and provisionally to subsequent cases, until a new consensus is reached and approved by the Stf.

The case rapporteur, Minister Gilmar Mendes, included a thesis to regulate jurisdictional competence. Thus, claims involving drugs acquired centrally by the Ministry of Health will fall under Federal Justice. Decentralized acquisitions will be handled by State Justice.

To ensure legal certainty, the Stf modulated the decision's effects: the competence change will apply only to actions started after October 22, 2025, the publication date of the portaria creating Af-Onco. This approach prevents the redistribution of ongoing cases and seeks to balance the public health system with judicial demands.

関連記事

Centrist leaders in Brazil's Congress resist voting on public perks bill without Lula government, amid STF 60-day deadline.
AIによって生成された画像

Centrist bloc resists voting on perks regulation without government

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

Centrist leaders in Brazil's lower house want to avoid voting on a bill regulating extra perks and supersalaries for public servants unless President Lula's government engages directly. The Supreme Federal Court suspended these benefits and ordered Congress to legislate within 60 days, but the deadline is deemed too short in an election year. The STF plenary is judging the decisions this week.

Following Comptroller General approval and publication in the Official Gazette, the nationwide oncology sanitary alert—declared by President José Antonio Kast in late March amid delays affecting thousands on cancer waiting lists—has taken effect. It grants the Ministry of Health extraordinary powers to expedite diagnostics and treatments for 33,000 patients until September 30, 2026, with potential extension.

AIによるレポート

Following Minister Flávio Dino's February monocratic suspension of certain extra payments—which drew support from retirees and entities but opposition from courts like TJ-SP—Brazil's Supreme Federal Court (STF) on March 25 approved Dino's transitional rules capping 'penduricalhos' at 35% of the R$ 46,366.19 constitutional subsidy for judiciary and public prosecutors, until national legislation. The decision bans perks like 'auxílio-peru' and projects R$ 7.3 billion in annual savings.

Minister Dias Toffoli stepped down from the Master case relatoria at the STF after a closed meeting with other ministers, convened by President Edson Fachin due to a Police Federal report arguing his suspicion. The Court issued a joint note stating no impediment exists, and the relatoria was reassigned to André Mendonça. Parties and police delegates' associations reacted in defense of judicial institutionalism.

AIによるレポート

STF Minister André Mendonça ruled on Monday (March 23) that the Court's plenary analyze the endorsement of the preliminary injunction extending the INSS CPMI's work. He ordered Senate President Davi Alcolumbre to read the extension request within 48 hours. The decision responds to lawmakers investigating frauds in pension benefits.

Brazil's Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry (CPI) on Organized Crime rejected Senator Alessandro Vieira's (MDB-SE) final report on Tuesday (April 14), which proposed indicting three Supreme Federal Court (STF) justices and the Attorney General. The report was defeated 6-4 after changes in the commission's composition. The substitutions favored government-aligned members, swaying the vote outcome.

AIによるレポート

A retired judge stated in an STF session that first-instance judges lack cars, health plans, or snacks, but various tribunals across the country denied the claim, confirming aids such as food vouchers, health support, and official vehicles. The statement was made during discussions on restrictions to indemnatory funds for magistrates. The judgment was adjourned to the end of March.

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否