Weekend Update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC

  • Forbes columnist Avik Roy writes about good and bar Congressional efforts to control drug pricing.

From the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) conference currently being held in Chicago,

  • STAT News reports
    • “In patients with stage 3 lung cancer where a particular genetic mutation is present in the tumor, taking AstraZeneca’s cancer-fighting pill Tagrisso reduced the chance that disease would progress by 84%.
    • “This will be practice changing as soon as this becomes available,” said David R. Spigel, chief scientific officer of the Sarah Cannon Research Institute at a press conference announcing the results at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. “This will be how patients are treated wherever they can get access to this drug.”
  • and
    • The cancer drug Enhertu stalled the growth of tumors by more than a year, significantly longer than standard chemotherapy did in women with the most common form of metastatic breast cancer — a clinical trial result that once again promises to rewrite the rules for the treatment of the disease.
    • The makers of Enhertu, Daiichi Sankyo and AstraZeneca, said the new data, if cleared by regulators, could shift the way physicians treat hormone receptor-positive, metastatic breast cancer, and create a new standard of care in which patients with breast tumors that express even the faintest amount of HER2 protein can benefit.
    • “It’s not an overestimation to say that trastuzumab deruxtecan is the most potent drug ever developed for breast cancer,” said Paolo Tarantino, a medical oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, using the scientific name for Enhertu. “It does come with side effects that we’re learning to manage, but with that said, I’ve never seen data like what’s being reported here.”
    • The results, from a Phase 3 study called Destiny-Breast06, were presented Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
  • and
    • Comfort can be delivered to patients with advanced cancer virtually just as well as in person, according to a new study presented on Sunday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Chicago.
    • That’s welcome news to palliative care experts who have, in many cases, preferred the convenience and efficacy of telehealth sessions for both themselves and their patients since the Covid-19 pandemic forced virtual visits.

In other public health and medical research news,

  • The Wall Street Journal seconds STAT News by reporting
    • “There is more hope than ever for people diagnosed with the deadliest cancer. 
    • “Declines in smoking and the advent of screening and newer drugs have transformed the outlook for patients with lung cancer, once considered a death sentence. Progress against the disease has propelled the drop in overall cancer deaths in the U.S. over the past three decades.
    • “And there is more to gain. More patients can fend off the disease for months or years with targeted or immune-boosting drugs, [e.g., Tagrisso] results released this weekend at a top cancer conference showed. That includes patients with forms of the disease that are notoriously tough to treat.”
  • Fortune Well offers the “best science-backed strategies for a strong mind as you age.
  • The New York Time helps readers distinguish among spring allergies, the common cold, and Covid. This article reminded the FEHBlog that the Covid public health emergency ended a year ago last month.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • “Fortune Well informs us a “longevity scientist’s three surprising predictions for the growing industry of healthy aging. The longevity scientist is “Alina Su, CEO of precision medicine and health tech company Generation Lab, at Fortune’s Brainstorm Health conference in Dana Point, Calif., last week. 
  • The Washington Post explains how “author and hospitality guru Chip Conley wants to replace the midlife crisis with a midlife renaissance.”
    • “In his book “Learning to Love Midlife: 12 Reasons Why Life Gets Better With Age,” Conley, 63, asks: “What if we could reframe our thinking about the natural transition of midlife not as a crisis, but as a chrysalis — a time when something profound awakens in us, as we shed our skin, spread our wings, and pollinate our wisdom to the world?”