From the public health front —
- The Wall Street Journal reports
- “Doctors are coalescing around the ironic idea that for some cancer treatment, less can be better.
- Some patients with cervical and pancreatic cancer can do as well with less invasive surgery, according to research presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology conference in Chicago over the weekend. Other studies at the annual meeting showed some patients with rectal cancer or Hodgkin lymphoma can safely get less radiation.
- “The findings expand a body of evidence doctors are using to design treatment plans that aim to reduce side effects and costs. They call the strategy de-escalation: cutting back on some therapies to improve a patient’s quality of life without hurting their odds of survival.
- “Newer treatments and tests are extending patients’ lives and moving cancer care away from a blunt, one-size-fits-all approach. On the strength of studies like those presented in Chicago, doctors are getting better at determining who needs the most aggressive care and who can get away with less treatment and less collateral damage.
- The Journal also reminds readers that
- “The approach of summer means warmer days, more time outside—and nagging worries about ticks. What to do if you find one on yourself?
- “Get it off, pronto. To infect you with Lyme disease, a tick must bite and attach to your skin, typically for at least 24 hours. Take care as you remove it. In some cases, you should call your doctor after you take it off.
- “Lyme disease is especially common in the Northeast and Midwest, transmitted by blacklegged ticks. They can transmit other pathogens that cause different diseases, too. And other types of ticks can transmit other diseases.
- “This year, parts of the Northeast should expect a particularly bad season for tick-borne diseases, says Richard S. Ostfeld, a senior scientist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, N.Y., who has been monitoring local tick populations and their hosts for 30 years.”
- Fierce Healthcare tells us,
- “Self-insured employers face myriad challenges in trying to manage growing healthcare costs, and one of those results from recent history, according to a survey by the National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions (NAHPC).
- “Employers are seeing a rise in high-cost claims for younger plan members, with $1 million+ claims disproportionately weighted toward this demographic,” the NAHPC survey said. “The top conditions for these claims include cancer, prenatal/neonatal care, and treatment for COVID-19/long COVID.”
- “The NAHPC survey is based on input from the Alabama Employer Health Consortium, the Dallas Fort-Worth Business Group on Health, HealthCareTN and the Nevada Business Group on Health. NAHPC and affiliated organizations represent 45 million Americans who spend over $400 billion annually on healthcare.
- “The employers’ concerns come from a pre-survey of 39 firms that was conducted in October and November 2022 and a series of roundtables that NAHPC held with 50 employers conducted in November 2022.
From the Rx coverage front —
- BioPharma Dive informs us,
- “Johnson & Johnson expects its cancer cell therapy Carvykti to become a go-to option for treating multiple myeloma earlier, presenting Monday a fuller look at clinical trial results that show the therapy substantially outperformed the current standard.
- “In the trial, Carvykti reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 74% versus one of two commonly used drug combinations in patients for whom a mainstay medicine called Revlimid no longer works. According to J&J, it’s the largest relative risk reduction to be reported in a Phase 3 study of a treatment for the blood cancer.”
- Medscape relates,
- “Patients with a certain type of brain tumor could soon be treated with an oral targeted drug instead of undergoing more toxic chemotherapy and radiation, say researchers reporting new results that could potentially change the treatment landscape.
- “The investigational drug vorasidenib (Servier) is awaiting approval for use in gliomas bearing mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1, IDH2).
- “Results from the pivotal phase 3 INDIGO trial show that the drug was associated with a significant delay in time to disease progression when compared with placebo.
- “The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 27.7 months for patients on vorasidenib, compared with 11.1 months for patients assigned to placebo (hazard ratio (HR) for progression or death with vorasidenib of 0.39 (P < .0001).”
- BioPharma Dive adds,
- “Wedged into the surface of a tumor cell, the protein called HER2 acts as a homing beacon for some of the most potent cancer medicines developed. Its discovery decades ago, and abnormal abundance in some breast cancers, led to the development of targeted drugs like Herceptin that have greatly improved patient care.
- “Results from an exploratory clinical trial unveiled Monday suggest targeting HER2 could also be a useful strategy against other cancers that are not as widely associated with the protein.
- “The findings, which will be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting in Chicago, show that a newer HER2-targeting drug called Enhertu shrank tumors of the uterus, cervix, ovaries, bladder and, to a lesser extent, bile duct. In this way, they’re another data point in a yearslong shift toward describing cancers by their genetics, rather than only by their location in the body.
- “Developed by AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo, Enhertu is different from drugs like Herceptin, which interfere with how HER2 incites tumor growth. Instead, Enhertu combines a targeting molecule aimed at HER2 with a cell-killing toxin in a biochemical assemblage known as an antibody-drug conjugate.
- “The reason why this [result] is exciting is that the tumor doesn’t have to be addicted to HER2 to respond to this therapy,” said Angela DeMichele, a medical oncologist at Penn Medicine. “The HER2 in this case is acting as a docking station for delivery of the chemotherapy.”
- The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research proposed today
- “a set of changes to its methods and processes for conducting value assessments, beginning in 2024. These proposals are based on ICER’s experience in methods development for health technology assessment (HTA) reports in the US, benchmarking with HTA agencies around the world, and input from stakeholders across the US health system. ICER is accepting public comment on these proposals through June 30, 2023.
- “Areas with proposed changes include:
- “Clinical trial diversity ratings and other methods adaptations related to health equity.
- “Cost-effectiveness scenarios related to potential effects of Medicare drug price negotiation.
- “New methods to ensure that cost-effectiveness analyses done according to a modified societal perspective have “non-zero” inputs for impacts on productivity for the patient and caregivers, even when direct data are lacking.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front —
- Fierce Healthcare reports
- “The home health bidding wars are heating up as UnitedHealth Group’s Optum unit is making a big play for home health and hospice firm Amedisys.
- “Just one month ago, Amedisys agreed to be bought by another healthcare company, Option Care Health, a provider of post-acute care and infusion services. That deal valued Amedisys at $3.6 billion. That deal was expected to close in the second half of 2023.
- “Optum has made an all-cash offer of $100 per share to Amedisys’ board of directors, the healthcare behemoth announced Monday morning. The deal represents a “superior proposal for Amedisys shareholders, with price certainty at a 26% premium over most recent share price,” Optum executives said. According to news reports, the deal is valued at $3.26 billion
- “Option Care Health proposed last month to buy the company for roughly $97.38 per share.
- “On May 27, 2023, the Board determined that the unsolicited proposal received from Optum could reasonably be expected to result in an ‘Amedisys Superior Proposal’ as defined in Amedisys’ merger agreement with Option Care Health,” Amedisys wrote in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). “As permitted by the terms of Amedisys’ merger agreement with Option Care Health, Amedisys entered into a confidentiality agreement with Optum on May 30, 2023, and is currently engaging in exploratory discussions with Optum with respect to Optum’s proposal.”
From the plan design front —
- Govexec encourages federal and postal employees to consider a high deductible health plan with a health savings account for 2024. Although the Govexec headline is directed at federal and postal employees under age 65 also can take advantage of health savings accounts.
- “Once you turn 55, you’ll be able to contribute an additional $1,000 per year as a “catch-up” contribution on top of the normal contribution maximum.
- “Once you turn 65, a big change with your HSA takes place: You’re allowed to make non-medical distributions and only pay your regular tax obligations. Prior to age 65, non-medical distributions would create a 20% income-tax penalty on top of your normal taxes. This change gives you more flexibility on how to use your HSA funds, including as supplemental retirement income.
- “There are other healthcare-related qualified expenses that you can choose to use your HSA for in retirement and pay no taxes on. The premium for long-term care insurance, which pays for nursing homes and assisted living centers, is a qualified expense, as are Medicare Part B and D premiums both for you and a spouse.”