Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
  • STAT News adds
    • “Previous treatments for Alzheimer’s targeted the disease’s symptoms and not the underlying cause of worsening dementia. The debate among physicians is whether that 27% slowing seen with Leqembi is clinically meaningful enough to make the drug, which carries a list price of $26,500 per year, suitable for every patient who might want it.
    • “My general argument is that ‘clinically meaningful’ is personal and specific to a patient and their families, and it’s not something I or any provider can paternalistically determine,” said James Galvin, a neurologist who leads the Comprehensive Center for Brain Health at the University of Miami. “I can’t tell you what’s clinically meaningful to you.”
    • “Eisai’s trial enrolled patients with mild cognitive impairment or early-stage Alzheimer’s who also have evidence of amyloid buildup in the brain, confirmed by an imaging scan. The drug’s label reflects the same narrowed patient population, estimated to encompass approximately 1 million people in the U.S., or just under 20% of those currently living with Alzheimer’s.
    • “In the drug’s prescribing label, the FDA recommends doctors test for a genetic mutation, affecting about 15% of people with Alzheimer’s, that increases the risks of ARIA and reduces the efficacy of Leqembi. The agency also warns doctors to take “additional caution” when considering prescribing to people who are taking blood thinners, which could increase the risk of serious brain bleeds.”
  • Here is a link to the FDA’s press release.
  • In closing, the Wall Street Journal points out
    • Drugmakers and researchers are working on dozens of potential [Alzheimer’s Disease] drugs. Next up for approval is another amyloid-reducing antibody drug, called donanemab, from Eli Lilly. In a small, mid-stage trial, donanemab also modestly slowed the cognitive decline of study subjects compared with placebo.
    • “As of early 2022, there were 143 drugs in clinical trials for Alzheimer’s disease, including 31 drugs in Phase 3, typically the last stage of testing before a drug can be approved, according to a report in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research and Clinical Interventions.”
  • Federal News Network reports on OPM’s diminishing yet still excessive backlog of federal retirement claims.
  • Govexec tells us
    • “The Office of Personnel Management last week reminded agencies of the array of workplace flexibilities at their disposal such as leave and telework to help federal workers who have been impacted by natural disasters.
    • “The memo, distributed by OPM Director Kiran Ahuja to heads of federal agencies, corresponds with the start of the annual hurricane season and comes shortly after Typhoon Mawar caused disruptions in Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, both of which are under U.S. jurisdiction.”

From the public health front —

  • The Associated Press reports
    • “Drinking water from nearly half of U.S. faucets likely contains “forever chemicals” that may cause cancer and other health problems, according to a government study released Wednesday.
    • “The synthetic compounds known collectively as PFAS are contaminating drinking water to varying extents in large cities and small towns — and in private wells and public systems, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
    • “Researchers described the study as the first nationwide effort to test for PFAS in tap water from private sources in addition to regulated ones. It builds on previous scientific findings that the chemicals are widespread, showing up in consumer products as diverse as nonstick pans, food packaging and water-resistant clothing and making their way into water supplies. * * *
    • “The heaviest exposures were in cities and near potential sources of the compounds, particularly in the Eastern Seaboard; Great Lakes and Great Plains urban centers; and Central and Southern California. Many of the tests, mostly in rural areas, found no PFAS.
    • “Based on the data, researchers estimated that at least one form of PFAS could be found in about 45% of tap water samples nationwide.
    • “The study underscores that private well users should have their water tested for PFAS and consider installing filters, said Faber of the Environmental Working Group. Filters containing activated carbon or reverse osmosis membranes can remove the compounds.”
  • The Wall Street Journal informs us
    • A new longitudinal study has examined the medical records of all citizens of Denmark over the age of 16, some 6.5 million people in all, for patterns of diagnosis, hospitalization and treatment for substance use between 1995 and 2021. In the paper, published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry in May, Dr. Oskar Hougaard Jefsen of Aarhus University and colleagues showed that people who had previously been diagnosed with cannabis use disorder were almost twice as likely to be diagnosed later with clinical depression. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, cannabis use disorder is characterized by craving marijuana, using it more often than intended, spending a lot of time using it, and having it interfere with friends, family and work.
    • Even more dramatically, the paper also found that people with cannabis use disorder were up to four times as likely to be diagnosed later with bipolar disorder with psychotic symptoms. As is true of many psychological disorders, the increased risk was higher in men than in women, and the more a person consumed, the greater the risk. The study did not distinguish between different forms and concentrations of cannabis.
    • Though the association was strong, the authors note that they can’t say for certain whether chronic and heavy cannabis use induces psychosis, or whether people prone to mental illness are more likely to be heavy users. It makes sense that people who feel the symptoms of incapacitating depression or mania, or who sense apparitions or voices only they can hear, might try to self-medicate with cannabis. Without a randomized controlled trial, which would be unethical in the extreme, it’s hard to untangle these strands definitively.
    • But the study is still eye-opening due to its sheer magnitude. With so many people over so many years, there is very little statistical “noise.” And because the information was gathered from the national Danish Health Registry, there were few dropouts—often a big problem in longitudinal studies. As much as possible, the researchers confirmed that the symptoms of a person’s psychiatric disorder emerged after their chronic cannabis use and diagnosis, not before, and that they compared people who were alike in all ways except the frequency of their use.
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes that “In an effort to prevent a repeat of last winter’s “tripledemic” of respiratory illnesses, public health officials are encouraging Americans to get not only a flu shot but also a COVID-19 vaccine and a new vaccine against the respiratory syncytial virus, The New York Times reported July 5.” The FEHBlog thinks that immunity created by the tripledemic will tamp down the viruses this year. Nevertheless, the FEHB plans to get all three vaccines.

From the telehealth and artificial intelligence fronts, we learn from

  • Healthcare Dive that
    • “Nearly one-third of American adults and 40% of adults under 34 report that they would be comfortable with an artificial intelligence-led primary care appointment, according to a new survey released by Outbreaks Near Me and SurveyMonkey.
    • “But the option isn’t their preference. Although survey respondents reported believing that AI in healthcare could reduce medical bias and improve diagnostic accuracy, over 80% of respondents would prefer seeing a human medical professional for prescribing pain medications, deciding when to go to the emergency room and other services.
    • “The latest survey suggests that, while AI hype may be on the upswing, entrenched patient attitudes and preferences for care could be slow to shift.”
  • and
    • “Mental healthcare led telehealth utilization for the sixth straight month in April, representing 68.4% of telehealth claim lines among privately insured patients, according to Fair Health’s April telehealth report.
    • “Although nationwide demand for telehealth services dipped by 5.4% from March to April this year, the percentage of telehealth claims related to mental health services grew for the fourth consecutive month.
  • and
    • “Telehealth patients across most medical specialties are less likely to attend follow-up appointments 90 days after a visit compared to in-person appointments, according to new research from Epic.
    • “The analysis of follow-up visits comes after a December report from Epic found most telehealth patients did not require a follow-up appointment in the three months after an initial visit. Mental health, physical medicine, and rehabilitation and pain medicine had the highest in-person follow-up rates compared to telehealth visits, according to the latest research.
    • “The[se] new telehealth stud[ies] come as federal lawmakers debate whether to make pandemic-era virtual care flexibilities permanent before they expire in 2024.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front

  • Beckers Payer Issues relates
    • “Eli Lilly is now the largest healthcare company in the world by market value, surpassing UnitedHealth Group, Bloomberg reported July 5. 
    • “The pharmaceutical company’s market capitalization surpassed UnitedHealth Group’s July 5 — the first time Eli Lilly has closed above UnitedHealth Group since 2013, according to Bloomberg. 
    • “Eli Lilly’s success is driven by Monjauro, its drug approved for diabetes treatment and expected to receive FDA approval for weight loss, analysts told Bloomberg. The drug is expected to net between $25 and $48 billion in sales once approved.”
  • STAT News tips its cap to Lilly’s leadership David Ricks, 55, Lilly’s CEO, and Daniel Skovronsky, 50, its chief scientific officer.
  • The American Hospital Association offers its two cents on the recent Wall Street Journal article about the state of hospital finances.
  • Fierce Healthcare tells us
    • “Baylor Scott & White Health (BSW) is adding dozens of Texas urgent care clinics to its network thanks to a newly announced deal with NextCare Urgent Care.
    • “Forty-one facilities in “fast-growing areas” such as Houston, San Antonio and Abilene will give the state’s largest nonprofit health system a foothold in new markets. The deal also catapults BSW to a new role as one of Texas’ major providers of urgent care services.
    • “We are dedicated to providing customers with as much choice as possible when seeking care,” Pete McCanna, CEO of BSW, said in a Thursday release from the system. “Through this venture, the NextCare sites across the state will be integrated into our ecosystem of offerings, which already includes 24/7 virtual care available to all Texans via MyBSWHealth.com.”
  • and
    • “Hospital outpatient departments are marking up the prices for biologic medicines more than physician offices, particularly for “innovator biologics” that have clinically equivalent and lower cost alternatives on the market, according to a new analysis from the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI).
    • “These higher charges for these products among hospital outpatient departments (HOPDs) are “roughly doubling costs for employers and minimizing savings that could be achieved through biosimilar competition,” the independent research group found in its review of a proprietary commercial claims database of 25 million people with private health insurance.
    • “While HOPDs tend to charge higher prices for all medicines relative to the [physician office], higher HOPD markups on biologic medicines are roughly doubling costs for employers and minimizing savings that could be achieved through biosimilar competition,” Paul Fronstin, director of health benefits research at EBRI, and M. Christopher Roebuck, CEO of health policy research firm RxEconomics, wrote in the brief.”