Happy first day of Fall 2024!
From Washington, DC,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “House Republican leaders on Sunday unveiled a bipartisan spending deal that would keep the government open for three more months and give the Secret Service an extra $231 million to help the agency to protect presidential candidates during the final hectic weeks of election season.
- “Secret Service officials have faced questions on whether a lack of resources contributed to the security lapses that enabled a gunman to shoot Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in the ear during a campaign rally in Butler, Pa., in July. Secret Service agents stopped a second apparent assassination attempt on Trump at his Florida golf course last weekend.
- “The additional money wouldn’t be available until the agency transmits a report on the first assassination attempt to a bipartisan task force investigating the incident. It would also give Secret Service officials the flexibility to move around money within the agency to accommodate demand through the end of the year. Leaders of both parties and President Biden have said that they are open to sending additional money to the agency.”
- Federal News Network informs us,
- “Legislation to repeal the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset is nearing the finish line in the House.
- “Just over a week after it was filed, a discharge petition for the Social Security Fairness Act has reached the 218-signature threshold needed to force the bill to a floor vote.”
- FedWeek adds,
- “Repealing the government pension offset and windfall elimination provisions would benefit those affected by those two Social Security reductions—including current and future federal retirees under the CSRS system—by a total of $196 billion over 10 years, says a cost estimate for Congress.
- “But that also means passage would increase costs by that much to that already financially troubled system, the Congressional Budget Office said in an estimate whose price tag may complicate the current push to enact that long-standing proposal this year.”
- The new mental health parity rule has been published in a complete and more compact form in the Federal Register.
From the public health and medical research front,
- STAT News lets us know,
- “A second health worker who cared for a person hospitalized in Missouri with H5N1 bird flu developed mild respiratory symptoms but was not tested for influenza, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Friday.
- “The CDC said Missouri health officials didn’t learn that the health worker had symptoms until after the individual had recovered, too late to run a diagnostic test.
- “CDC is in close communication with the state of Missouri in its ongoing investigation into the positive H5N1 case there, including regarding the identification of an additional symptomatic close contact,” a spokesperson for the agency told STAT via email. “The finding does not change CDC’s assessment that the risk to the public remains low.” * * *
- “The CDC said that the newly identified health worker will also be asked to submit a blood sample for testing. Asked if the health care workers have agreed to provide blood samples for antibody testing, Cox said: “We should know more next week.”
- “Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Diseases Research and Policy, said there could be another explanation for this health care worker’s illness. At the time the confirmed case was in hospital, there was a lot of respiratory illness, including high levels of Covid-19 activity.
- “We’ll have to see what the serology shows,” Osterholm said.
- “This news emerged as California announced it had found seven more infected dairy herds, bringing the number of affected farms in the state to 17, and the cumulative number of infected herds in the country to 215 in 14 states. The outbreak in cattle was first confirmed in late March.”
- The Washington Post points out,
- “Immigration status, structural racism and other social factors may contribute to disparities in cardiovascular health among Asian Americans, according to a statement prepared by a group of clinicians and researchers and published in the American Heart Association journal, Circulation.
- “Asian Americans are less likely than White adults to have or die of heart disease, according to the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health. But researchers in the Circulation article note that cardiovascular health can vary widely between subgroups of Asian Americans and warn that combining different subgroups of people into a single “Asian” category could mask important differences.
- “A 2021 Pew Research Center analysis of federal census data found that the number of Asian Americans grew 81 percent between 2000 and 2019, making it the nation’s fastest-growing racial group. Yet the term includes people from different subgroups, including Chinese, Indian, Filipino, Vietnamese, Korean and Japanese Americans.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “Roche’s antiviral drug Xofluza reduced influenza transmission among household contacts in a large Phase 3 study, the company said Wednesday.
- “Treatment with a single dose of Xofluza within 48 hours of symptom onset lowered the likelihood an infected person passed on the virus to other individuals within the same household. Roche didn’t disclose detailed results in its press release.
- “Xofluza is currently approved to treat flu symptoms and prevent infections after exposure to the virus. The new data bolster its benefits and, according to Roche, represent the first time an antiviral drug has reduced transmission of a respiratory virus in a global Phase 3 study.”
- MedPage Today discusses how GLP-1 drugs have the potential to reduce healthcare costs in unexpected ways.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Modern Health tells us,
- “Cardinal Health plans to acquire Integrated Oncology Network for $1.12 billion in cash.
- “The transaction is subject to regulatory approval and expected to close later this year, a Cardinal spokesperson said.
- “As part of the deal, Nashville, Tennessee-based Integrated Oncology would join Cardinal’s oncology practice alliance, Navista, and share resources for practice management services, analytics capabilities and artificial intelligence tools, according to a Friday news release.
- “Integrated Oncology has more than 50 practice sites in 10 states and represents more than 100 providers, offering medical oncology, radiation, diagnostic testing and other services.
- “Dublin, Ohio-headquartered Cardinal, a pharmaceutical distributor and medical product manufacturer, has about 48,000 employees operating facilities in more than 30 countries. In March, the company acquired multispecialty group purchasing organization Specialty Networks for $1.2 billion in cash.”
- Per Healthcare Dive,
- “Cigna is the latest health insurer to roll back its Medicare Advantage offerings next year, as the privately run Medicare plans look for ways to preserve profits amid higher costs from more seniors utilizing medical care.
- “Cigna’s planned reductions will affect 36 plans in eight states, and include the insurer exiting at least three counties entirely, according to a notice to marketing agents published by Pinnacle Financial Services on Wednesday.
- “However, the majority of those plans have low membership, and patients in most markets will have access to another Cigna MA plan, according to the notice.”
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “Since an initial FDA go-ahead in 2020, Sanofi’s Sarclisa has been specifically approved for patients with previously treated multiple myeloma. That changed Friday.
- “The FDA has approved Sarclisa to be used in combination with bortezomib, lenalidomide and dexamethasone (VRd) to treat patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who are not eligible for stem cell transplant.
- “With the expansion, Sarclisa stands to give Johnson & Johnson’s Darzalex some company in the indication. Since 2018, the J&J med has been the lone CD38 antibody approved for first-line myeloma. For that Darzalex approval, the FDA cleared the med to be paired with bortezomib, melphalan and prednisone, also for transplant-ineligible patients. That Darzalex regimen is considered outdated and not used very often these days.
- “Before the latest FDA approval, Sarclisa-VRd was recently added to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) myeloma treatment guidelines as a preferred regimen for transplant-ineligible patients, along with VRd alone and a Darzalex-Rd combo. All three regimens bear the highest category 1 recommendation.
- “We’re getting access to the biggest segment of this market, and we are leveling the playing field in a major class of drug,” Olivier Nataf, Sanofi’s global head of oncology, said in a recent interview with Fierce Pharma.”