The HIMSS conference is being held this week in Chicago. The HIMSS organization is providing the publich with morning and afternoon session updates.
From the regulatory front, the Department of Health and Human Services released the final 2024 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters which is applicable to qualified health plans in the marketplaces.
From the US healthcare business front
- Healthcare Dive reports
- Hospital and health system merger and acquisition activity remained consistent in the first quarter of 2023 with 15 healthcare industry transactions, a slight drop from 17 in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to a new report from hospital consultancy Kaufman Hall. The 15 transactions comprised $12.4 billion in total transacted revenue, down from the high of $12.7 billion in 2018.
- Mergers and acquisitions are trending toward cross-regional partnerships, and the size of the smaller party in mergers is increasing to between $250 million and $750 million in annual revenue, according to the report.
- Realignment of for-profit health system portfolios continued in the first quarter of 2023, particularly for high financial and operational performing health systems.
- AHIP issued a report finding that hospital markups on specialty drugs cost patients thousands of dollars.
- Beckers Hospital CFO Reports identifies 22 US hospitals that are cutting care.
- Beckers Payer Issues informs us that
- UnitedHealthcare’s plans to implement a gold-card program in 2024 might cut another 10 percent of its prior authorization volumes on top of a 20 percent reduction that will roll out this summer, UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson said during UnitedHealth Group’s April 14 earnings call, which was transcribed by Seeking Alpha.
- The payer plans to implement the national gold-card program in early 2024 for care provider groups that meet eligibility requirements, according to a March 29 company news release. The gold-card status applies for most UnitedHealthcare members across commercial, Medicare Advantage and Medicaid.
- Qualifying care provider groups “will follow a simple notification process for most procedure codes rather than the prior authorization process,” according to the release.
From the public health front, Medpage Today reports
- Chronic pain continued to affect more than one in five U.S. adults, new CDC survey data showed.
- During 2021, an estimated 51.6 million adults (20.9%) had chronic pain lasting 3 months or longer, and 17.1 million (6.9%) had high-impact chronic pain — pain severe enough to restrict daily activities — reported S. Michaela Rikard, PhD, of the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and co-authors.
- Pain prevalence was higher in adults who were American Indian or Alaska Native, who identified as bisexual, or who were divorced or separated, the researchers said in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
From the Rx coverage front, the Institute for Clincical and Economic Research released a Final Evidence Report on Lecanemab for Alzheimer’s Disease.
- — Independent appraisal committee voted that currently available evidence is not adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for lecanemab when compared to supportive care —
- — Using best estimates from current data, ICER analyses suggest lecanemab would achieve common thresholds for cost-effectiveness if priced between $8,900 – $21,500 per year —
- — Manufacturers should release all patient-level data to help patients, clinicians, researchers, and regulators understand more about the link between amyloid reduction and cognitive outcomes
Lecanemab is an FDA approved drug that the CDC is considering for Medicare coverage beyond clinical testing. The VA has agreed to cover FDA marketing label uses for the drug in its patient population which overlaps with FEHBP.
From the medical research front, a National Institutes of Health study outlines “opportunities to achieve President Biden’s Cancer Moonshot goal of reducing cancer death rates in the United States. Accelerated progress is needed to achieve Cancer Moonshot goal of cutting the age-adjusted cancer death rate by at least 50% over 25 years, NIH study says.”
- The study was conducted by researchers in NCI’s Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, the Center for Cancer Research, and their collaborators, using data from NCI’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. The researchers examined trends in age-standardized cancer incidence, survival, and mortality rates from 2000 to 2019 for all cancers combined, as well as for the six cancers that together account for 57% of cancer deaths: lung, colorectal, pancreatic, breast, prostate, and liver. They then projected the overall cancer death rate in 2047 based on the assumption that current trends would continue.
- According to their analysis, because of decreasing cancer incidence and improvements in survival, age-adjusted death rates from all cancers combined declined by 1.4% per year from 2000 to 2015 and by 2.3% per year from 2016 to 2019. These declines reflect substantial reductions in deaths from lung cancer (-4.7% per year during 2014–2019), as well as colorectal cancer (-2.0% per year during 2010–2019) and breast cancer (-1.2% per year during 2013–2019).
- Trends in prostate, pancreatic, and liver cancer death rates have been less promising. Death rates from prostate cancer had declined strongly (-3.4% per year during 2000–2013), but the decline has slowed (to -0.6% per year during 2013–2019). Death rates from pancreatic cancer have been increasing (0.2% per year during 2006–2019). Death rates from liver cancer, which had been increasing for decades, recently began to decline (-0.5% per year during 2016–2019). Death rates from all other cancer types combined have declined (-1.7% per year during 2016–2019).