Weekend Update

Jingle bells! The FEHBlog will be on a holiday break until next Thursday December 26.

From Washington, DC

  • The President signed into law yesterday the skinny continuing resolution (H.R. 10545) funding the federal government through March 14, 2025, and creating funding for disaster relief and farmers. No shutdown. No PBM “reform.”
  • Healthcare Finance adds,
    • “Acute hospital-care-at-home and telehealth temporary waivers were continued but were not given the long-term extensions that were included in a Dec. 18 bipartisan resolution. Both received short-term extensions until March 31.
    • “The original bill extended telehealth for two years and acute hospital care at home by five years.
    • “Stripped out of the bill is a provision to prevent the Medicare pay cut to physicians. This means physicians get a 2.8% Medicare payment cut on January 1, 2025. 
    • Also excluded from the CR is a provision extending the ability of high deductible health plans to cover telemedicine services before the deductible beyond December 31, 2024.
  • The Senate also passed the Social Security Fairness Act on Saturday which benefits federal, state, and local government employees who receive Social Security retirement income. That bill now goes to the President for his signature. 
  • The 118th Congress has completed its work. The 119th Congress will be gaveled in on January 3, 2024.

In Food and Drug Administration News,

  • The New York Times shares the story of a woman “fighting to avoid her mother’s fate [early onset dementia], for her daughters’ sake. A mutant gene is coming to steal Linde Jacobs’s mind. Can she find a way to stop it?” Fascinating.
  • Per FDA press releases,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Symvess [December 20], the first acellular tissue engineered vessel indicated for use in adults as a vascular conduit for extremity arterial injury when urgent revascularization (restoration of blood flow) is needed to avoid imminent limb loss, and autologous vein graft is not feasible.
    • “Vascular trauma occurs when a blood vessel is injured such as a rupture of an artery in the extremities, which can lead to serious, life-threatening complications such as hemorrhage or blood clotting. When damage to an artery in the extremity occurs, urgent surgical repair is needed to restore normal blood flow. The current standard of care for patients with extremity vascular injuries can include procedures such as autologous vein grafting (surgical repair using the patient’s own blood vessels) or implantation of a synthetic graft. These treatments are not suitable or available for every patient.
    • “Today’s approval provides an important additional treatment option for individuals with vascular trauma, produced using advanced tissue engineering technology,” said Peter Marks, M.D., Ph.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER). “The FDA remains committed to facilitating the development of innovative products that offer potentially life-saving benefits for patients with severe injuries.” 
  • and
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Ryoncil (remestemcel-L-rknd), an allogeneic (donor) bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) therapy indicated for the treatment of steroid-refractory acute graft-versus-host disease (SR-aGVHD) in pediatric patients 2 months of age and older.
    • “Ryoncil is the first FDA-approved MSC therapy. It contains MSCs, which are a type of cell that can have various roles in the body and can differentiate into multiple other types of cells. These MSCs are isolated from the bone marrow of healthy adult human donors. 
    • “Today’s decision marks an important milestone in the use of innovative cell-based therapies to treat life-threatening diseases with devastating impacts on patients, including children,” said Peter Marks, M.D., Ph.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER). “This first mesenchymal stromal cell therapy approval demonstrates the FDA’s commitment to supporting the development of safe and effective products that could improve the quality of life for patients with symptoms that are unresponsive to other therapies.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Fortune Well tells us,
    • “A drug already FDA-approved for people with a rare form of breast cancer has now been shown to improve patients’ long-term survival, new clinical trial data suggest.
    • Lynparza (olaparib), a product of Fortune 500 pharmaceutical firm Merck and Fortune 500 Europe company AstraZeneca, exhibited clinically meaningful improvements in overall survival, among other promising findings, in people with germline BRCA-mutated (gBRCAm), HER2-negative high-risk early breast cancer. About 87.5% of patients treated with the drug were alive after six years, compared to 83.2% who received a placebo. Long-term results of the OlympiA phase 3 trial were presented Dec. 11 at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
    • “The durable long-term efficacy seen in the OlympiA study reinforces Lynparza as an important treatment option for those living with this truly challenging, very aggressive form of breast cancer,” Dr. Eliav Barr, senior vice president, head of global clinical development, and chief medical officer of Merck Research Laboratories, said in a news release about the findings.”
  • A mother, writes in the Washington Post, about having a stroke soon after giving birth. According to the article, “postpartum strokes happen more often than you’d think.”
  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • Dabbing has emerged in recent years as a popular way to consume marijuana, especially among youths. But it is dangerous. Like other new forms of marijuana use that have proliferated in recent years, dabbing involves highly potent concentrates of cannabis.
    • Health authorities are sounding the alarm, warning that dabbing could addict users and is sending teenagers to emergency rooms with seizures, cyclical vomiting or psychosis. Some users and doctors call a cannabis overdose, with the accompanying sweaty nausea and disorientation, a “green out,” a term believed to be a play on “black out.” 
    • “People are consuming extremely high doses of THC,” the psychoactive component of cannabis, said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. “People can become psychotic.”
  • and
    • California OnTrack uses a skills-based therapy program called coordinated specialty care, which is offered through at least 381 programs in all 50 states. The program substantially reduces symptoms of psychosis, as well as hospitalizations and homelessness compared with traditional treatment, according to published studies.
    • “The premise of the treatment is simple: Teach people with psychosis to live with their imagined voices, hallucinations and false memories. With practice, such symptoms can be managed or ignored. The techniques taught in the program, in conjunction with medication, diminish symptoms over time and keep new ones at bay.
    • “People who enroll in the treatment within two years of their first psychotic episode fare the best, studies found. People with longer-term psychosis also improved but to a lesser degree.
    • “It’s not like a switch where all the symptoms subside. It’s like a dimmer switch,” said Carlos Larrauri, who completed a similar treatment in Florida after being diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2011 at age 24. He has since finished law school, trained as a nurse practitioner, married and now works as a lawyer.
    • “For more than a decade, the federal government and the American Psychiatric Association have identified coordinated specialty care as the gold standard to treat early psychosis. Yet few people know about it, and fewer still have a chance to benefit from it. Three of the largest private insurers only recently began covering the treatment, which has largely been limited to Medicaid patients. California OnTrack is one of the few providers in the U.S. that has secured coverage from private insurance.” 

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