From Washington, DC —
- The American Hospital Association informs us
- “The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline now offers American Sign Language services for people who are deaf and hard of hearing, the Department of Health and Human Services announced.
- “This new service is one more critical step towards making mental health support more accessible and inclusive for all,” said Miriam Delphin-Rittmon, HHS assistant secretary for mental health and substance use.”
- and
- “A new Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services fact sheet reviews how the agency selected the first 10 Part D drugs to include in the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program, its process for negotiating with the companies that make the drugs, opportunities for public input and key dates for implementation. CMS last week announced the first 10 drugs for the program and plans to publish the negotiated prices by next September, which would take effect in 2026.”
- The Department of Health and Human Services announced
- “new details of its agreement with Regeneron to extend its public-private partnership to develop life-saving monoclonal antibodies as part of Project NextGen enhancing our preparedness for COVID-19 strains and variants.
- “The HHS is committed to lowering drug costs for all Americans. As part of that commitment, HHS and Regeneron announced an extension of their long-standing partnership to develop life-saving monoclonal antibodies. That modification to Regeneron’s contract with the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response’s (ASPR’s) Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority is valued at $326M and supports the advanced development of a next-generation monoclonal antibody for COVID-19 prevention under HHS’s Project NextGen.
- “This agreement included a clause where Regeneron committed that if a new product is commercialized, its list price in the United States will be equal to or less than its retail price in comparable markets globally. Inclusion of this clause is the result of HHS’s and Regeneron’s shared interest in ensuring enduring and equitable access to therapeutics developed under public-private partnerships for all Americans.”
From the public health front,
- The American Hospital Association tells us
- “This season’s flu vaccines for the Southern Hemisphere have reduced the risk of being hospitalized for flu by 52%, based on mid-season data from five countries, suggesting the U.S. vaccines could provide similar protection if similar viruses continue to predominate, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports. Both hemispheres used similar flu vaccine formations. The CDC recommends all Americans aged 6 months and older get the seasonal flu vaccine in September or October.”
- Per Health Day,
- “The mpox vaccine appears to show effectiveness against the virus, new research shows
- “Among 37 gay and bisexual men who were either reinfected or had received their mpox vaccine, the disease was less severe
- “The findings show that the vaccine is a valuable addition to treatments used for mpox infection.”
- and
- “Standard Pap tests may miss a deadly type of cervical cancer
- “A new screening tool could pick up more of those cancers as well as lesions that may progress into cancer, its developers say
- “The findings must now be confirmed by clinical trials”
- More details are available in the Health Day articles.
- A Wall Street Journal reporter explains what he learned from trying to live a perfect life for a day based on expert advice.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Healthcare Dive reports,
- “CVS Health shuffled responsibilities for its leadership bench on Thursday in a bid to better align business segments, as the retail health giant undergoes corporate restructuring following flagging earnings.
- “CVS named CFO Shawn Guertin president of its health services segment, and said former Humana CFO Brian Kane will join this week as president of Aetna health benefits arm. CVS first announced Kane would be joining CVS in April.
- “CVS’ care delivery businesses Oak Street Health and Signify Health will continue to operate under health services umbrella. Their respective heads, Mike Pykosz and Kyle Armbrester, will now report directly to Guertin.”
- Beckers Payer Issues notes,
- “AHIP has named its general counsel, Julie Simon Miller, to serve as interim CEO, effective Oct. 2.
- “AHIP President and CEO Matt Eyles is stepping down from his role at the end of September, and the trade association is currently searching for a permanent chief executive, according to a Sept. 7 news release.
- “Ms. Miller has served as general counsel since 2015 and has been with the association for more than 18 years.”
- The Employee Benefit Research Institute points out,
- “IRS Notice 2019-45 allows health savings account (HSA)-eligible health plans the flexibility to cover 14 medications and services used to prevent the exacerbation of chronic conditions prior to meeting the plan deductible. A 2021 Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) survey of employers collected information on their response to the 2019 guidance and found that many employers added pre-deductible coverage as a result of the IRS notice. A recent EBRI report based on claims data from about 2 million HSA-eligible health plan enrollees confirmed the findings from the 2021 EBRI survey — fewer enrollees in HSA-eligible health plans have deductibles for services impacted by the IRS notice, and cost sharing has shifted from deductibles to copayments and coinsurance.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Prior authorization will become less of a hassle for physicians in Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan’s network, BCBSM officials hope, as they roll out an effort to relax about 20% of prior authorization requirements.
- “This is part of Blue Cross’ ongoing effort to improve healthcare quality, experience, access and affordability for members, while also reducing administrative tasks for clinicians,” BCBSM said in a press release.”
From the Rx coverage and research front,
- BioPharma Dive reports,
- “Seagen is committing $60 million to develop a new type of cancer drug, striking a multi-year alliance with biotechnology company Nurix that aims to combine their respective technologies.
- “Per terms of the deal announced by Nurix Thursday, Seagen could pay as much as $3.4 billion more if certain research, development, regulatory and commercial milestones are met. Nurix retains an option to co-market and share profits on two products that emerge from the partnership.
- “The companies plan to pair Seagen’s antibody expertise with Nurix’s protein degradation technology to create “degrader-antibody conjugates,” akin in some ways to Seagen’s approved antibody-drug conjugates. The collaboration comes as Pfizer works to close its $43 billion acquisition of Seagen.”
- and
- “Verge Genomics, a biotechnology company using artificial intelligence to develop therapies for diseases of the nervous system, announced on Friday a four-year partnership with AstraZeneca’s rare disease unit Alexion to identify new drug targets.
- “As part of the agreement, Verge will receive up to $42 million in upfront, equity and near-term payments. The company also could receive as much as $840 million in milestone payments over the deal, along with royalties on any resulting products.
- “The partnership seeks to find and validate new drug targets for uncommon neurodegenerative and neuromuscular diseases. The companies plan to do this by using Verge’s technology, which uses both AI and human tissue data to predict what drug targets are most likely to succeed in clinical testing.”