Weekend Update

Weekend Update

Happy belated Flay Day!

From Washington, DC

  • The Daily Caller explains,
    • The Senate’s confirmation of Trump nominees as of June 5 outpaced the Biden administration by 16 nominees and the first Trump administration by 33 nominees, according to information compiled by the Senate GOP leadership-aligned Senate Republicans Communications Center (SRCC).
    • Still, nearly 100 nominees are awaiting floor consideration, according to the Senate executive calendar.
    • The backlog is due in part to Senate Democrats placing blanket holds on hundreds of Trump nominees, requiring the Senate to use finite floor time to confirm each civilian nominee individually through multiple roll call votes. As a result, nearly 60% of the votes taken in the Senate during the 119th Congress have been related to nominations, according to the SRCC.
  • Roll Call summarizes other Senate work during this short workweek here.
  • The Supreme Court will be issuing opinions on Wednesday June 18 this week.
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, asks “Think you’re ready to tap your TSP? Here’s what you might be missing. Before touching your Thrift Savings Plan funds, make sure you understand the rules—and the risks—you might not have planned for.”

From the public health and medical research front.

  • STAT News reports,
    • “Sarepta Therapeutics said Sunday that it was halting shipments of its Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy for patients who can no longer walk, following the death of a second [male] person who received the treatment.
    • “Sarepta disclosed the first patient death — a 16-year-old boy — in March. Both occurred from acute liver failure, a side effect that has been seen with other gene therapies. The company said both patients were non-ambulatory, meaning their disease had progressed to the point they relied on a wheelchair. Most children with Duchenne lose the ability to walk by adolescence.
    • “The company said early Sunday it was working with experts to come up with an enhanced immunosuppressive regimen that could make the therapy, called Elevidys, safer for non-ambulatory patients. It said it would talk with the Food and Drug Administration about the the proposed regimen. 
    • “Sarepta also said it was pausing dosing in an ongoing clinical trial of Elevidys, called ENVISION, that’s focused on older ambulatory and non-ambulatory patients.” 
  • Per Fortune Well,
    • “Researchers at the University of California San Francisco have identified the U.S. regions, as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where dementia occurs most often.
    • “The large and comprehensive study, published in JAMA Neurology, examined data on more than 12.6 million veterans 65 and older enrolled in the Veterans Health Administration system; only 2% were women. 
    • “Researchers found the highest incidence in the Southeast (North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida) and the lowest in the Mid-Atlantic states (Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, New Jersey, Washington D.C.).” 
  • The Washington Post informs us,
    • A common genetic variant is linked to a doubled dementia risk for older men, a recent analysis in Neurology suggests.
    • The study used data from Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE), which followed elderly patients in the United States and Australia with no history of cardiovascular disease, dementia or cognitive decline between 2010 and 2017.
    • Researchers focused on 12,174 Australians of European ancestry over age 70, and looked for variants in the HFE gene. The gene is critical to regulating the body’s iron levels, and variants are common among people of European descent.
    • Those who carry two copies of the p.C282Y variant in the HFE gene can develop hemochromatosis, a condition that causes iron overload in the body, and resulting conditions such as liver cirrhosis, liver cancer, frailty, arthritis and dementia.
    • One in 3 people carry a gene variant called H63D, and 1 in 36 carry two copies, John Olynyk, a professor at the Curtin Medical Research Institute in Perth, Australia, says in a news release about the new study.
    • “Having just one copy of this gene variant does not impact someone’s health or increase their risk of dementia. However, we found having two copies of the variant more than doubled the risk of dementia in [previously healthy] men, but not women,” Olynyk says.
  • NPR offers “Advice for trying GLP-1 drugs for weight loss from a doctor who’s been there.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Many older people embrace vaccines. Research is proving them right.
    • “Newer formulations are even more effective at preventing illnesses that commonly afflict seniors — perhaps even dementia.”
  • and
    • “Many Falls Are Preventable. These Tips Can Help. Small changes and good habits make a difference.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • When Officer Chelsea Johnston came across a wanted felon one evening in May, Johnston jerked her cruiser in front of him, sprinted after him and tackled him to the ground. Still catching her breath, Johnston motioned for someone to step out of the cruiser: Joy Bogese.
    • “Thank God,” the man said. “It’s you.” 
    • Bogese, who served time for financial crimes that fed a heroin addiction, now spends many of her evenings in a police cruiser as a recovery specialist helping people with addiction get into treatment. The man asked Bogese to help him get into a drug-treatment program at the local jail, where Bogese occasionally facilitates groups. 
    • She is part of a growing effort in Chesterfield County’s [Virginia] fight against addiction. In this county of nearly 400,000, overdose deaths have dropped by half in a single year—about double the decline of the rest of the country—to levels seen before the crisis began in 2015.
    • The precipitous drops have astounded public officials and health-policy experts, who have traveled across the country in an attempt to learn the formula and replicate it. Governors, members of Congress and sheriffs from as far away as Alaska have all come through, along with an acting U.S. drug czar.
  • Per Medscape,
    • “A prospective study found that increased consumption of olive oil was associated with a reduced risk for breast cancer, particularly oestrogen receptor–negative (ER−) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2–negative (HER2−) breast cancers. A systematic review revealed that case-control studies more frequently reported this protective association, whereas prospective studies did not report any association.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Kauffman Hall points out,
    • Mehmet Oz, MD, the new CMS Administrator, in a Senate confirmation hearing, expressed support for exploring multi-year products for Medicare Advantage. While his remarks were made in the context of avoiding unnecessary member churn and associated elevated broker commissions, there are much broader ramifications of transitioning from single-year to multi-year health plan products. His remarks have sparked interest in the industry to explore this idea further.” * * *
    • “Multi-year health plan products have the potential to change a lot about how healthcare business models work today. Given the inherent complexity, it is likely to be a slow journey towards the destination. Even so, incumbent health insurers and risk-bearing providers would be well-advised to start strategizing and building / experimenting with prototypes to manage their risk of being disrupted by multi-year-native health plan innovators. The new administration has already shown that it can move with alacrity and is not afraid to be disruptive in the process. The shift to multi-year plans could come sooner than expected. Or it may not. But in any case, it is better to be prepared.”
  • The FEHB Program was offered on a multi-year basis for two years in the 1980’s although an Open Season was held between the two years in which there were no benefit changes.
  • The Washington Post reports, “Nurse practitioners step in as geriatrician ranks shrink. Nurse practitioners are not trying to replace doctors — they’re trying to meet patients’ needs, wherever those patients are, an expert said.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Chris Scoggins is taking the helm of Abbott’s diabetes business at a busy time for the company and the diabetes tech industry. Scoggins was promoted to Abbott’s executive vice president of diabetes care in December. Since then, Abbbott has collaborated with insulin pump firms Tandem Diabetes Care and Sequel Med Tech to integrate its planned glucose-ketone sensor with their devices. 
    • “Scoggins spoke with MedTech Dive about the company’s strategic approach ahead of the American Diabetes Association’s Scientific Sessions in June.”
    • The article includes the interview.

Friday report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec tells us,
    • “On Thursday night, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee published its portion of the budget reconciliation bill, which aims to cut federal spending to partially pay for tax cuts for the wealthy and increased immigration enforcement.
    • “Gone from the bill are House-passed provisions that would require all federal workers to contribute 4.4% of their basic pay toward the Federal Employees Retirement System, reduce their FERS benefit calculation from the average highest three years of salary to the highest five years, and eliminate the FERS supplement for employees who retire before Social Security kicks in at age 62.
    • “But in their place is a more draconian iteration of the controversial plan to force future federal workers to choose between a more expensive defined benefit annuity and at-will employment, meaning they can be fired “for good cause, bad cause, or no cause at all.” Under the Senate plan, all new federal hires would pay more than double toward FERS compared to feds hired after 2014—9.4% of their basic pay—and those who elect to accrue civil service protections would pay an additional 5 percentage points on top of that, or 14.4% of basic pay.”
  • Federal News Network adds,
    • “The Trump administration would proceed with plans to downsize the federal workforce and reorganize agencies with minimal interference from Congress, under a Senate committee’s proposal.
    • “The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, in its contribution to the budget reconciliation package, would allow the Trump administration to proceed with sweeping changes to the federal workforce — including those currently stalled by federal judges — without approval from Congress.
    • “The committee’s section of the “One Big, Beautiful Bill,” which passed the House last month, also sets aside $100 million for the Office of Management and Budget to oversee and implement the Trump administration’s reorganization plans over the next decade.”
  • Fierce Pharma lets us know,
    • “Independent Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Angus King of Maine have introduced a bill that would ban pharmaceutical companies from advertising directly to consumers.
    • “The End Prescription Drug Ads Now Act would prevent drugmakers from promoting prescription drugs through television, radio, print, digital platforms and social media.” * * *
    • “The proposal is likely to receive support from the Trump administration.” 
  • KFF released a report about “ACIP, CDC, and Insurance Coverage of Vaccines in the United States.”
  • The Sequoia Blog notes,
    • Recent guidance from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), and the United State Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) will impact coverage for women that must be provided by group health plans at no-cost, explained further [in the blog post].
  • Radiology Business adds,
    • “Radiology Partners was the No. 1 initiator of No Surprises Act payment disputes in the second half of 2024 with 136,784, according to new data released Wednesday. 
    • “The El Segundo, California-based industry giant accounted for about 15% of all disputes in Q4 of 2024 and 18% in Q3. HaloMD, a San Antonio, Texas, firm specializing in NSA dispute resolutions, was No. 2, initiating 134,318, followed by Knoxville, Tennessee, multispecialty group TeamHealth with 94,598. 
    • “In a summary document, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services highlighted the “high volume of disputes” handled between July 1 and Dec. 31, 2024. Provider groups such as Rad Partners initiated a total of 853,374 disputes through the federal independent dispute resolution (IDR) portal, up 40% from the first half of 2024. Across all of last year, a small number of organizations were responsible for the majority of disputes, CMS noted.
    • “Many of the top initiating parties are (or are represented by) large practice management companies, medical practices or revenue cycle management companies representing hundreds of individual practices, providers or facilities,” the agency said May 28. “The top three initiating parties (Radiology Partners, HaloMD, and TeamHealth) represent thousands of clinicians across multiple states and accounted for approximately 43% of all disputes initiated in the last six months of 2024.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “The links between ultra-processed food and higher risk of diabetes will be the focus of the first wave of health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s national “Take Back Your Health” campaign, according to a notice posted on a government site for contractors.
    • “The notice invites public relations agencies to pitch strategies for the launch of the ad campaign, “a wake-up call to Americans that eating processed foods dramatically increases the risk of diabetes and chronic disease.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “The FDA has approved Moderna’s mRESVIA for the prevention of lower respiratory tract disease caused by respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in adults ages 18 to 59 who are at an increased risk for severe disease.
    • “Back in May, mRESVIA scored an FDA approval in adults 60 and older, becoming Moderna’s second commercial product behind the company’s first-generation COVID-19 shot, Spikevax.”
  • and
    • “Despite a recent rebuff from an FDA advisory committee, the first treatment for a specific and underserved cohort of U.S. bladder cancer patients has crossed the FDA finish line as UroGen Pharma’s Zusduri.
    • “The New Jersey-based pharma paired chemotherapy mitomycin with a sterile hydrogel using its sustained-release RTGel technology to create a localized therapy for potent tumor ablation of recurrent low-grade intermediate-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (LG-IR-NMIBC). It’s a drug delivery combo familiar to UroGen from its 2020 approved Jelmyto, another hydrogel and mitomycin pairing formulated as a liquid solution made for delivery in the kidney’s pyelocalyceal system that is indicated for low-grade upper tract urothelial cancer.”
    • “In its phase 3 ENVISION trial, UroGen found that Zusduri could deliver a 78% complete response for patients with LG-IR-NMIBC at three months, with 79% of those patients still event-free 12 months later.”

From the judicial front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Anne Wojcicki, the co-founder and former CEO of 23andMe, is poised to regain control of the DNA-testing company after a nonprofit she controls topped a prior bid.
    • “23andMe said Friday that a nonprofit backed by Wojcicki was the new buyer for the company’s assets, offering $305 million.
    • “Last month, 23andMe said Regeneron, a biotech based in Tarrytown, N.Y., had won the bidding during a bankruptcy auction to buy the company for $256 million
    • “The bidding reopened early this month, after Wojcicki, through her nonprofit, TTAM Research Institute, made the unsolicited offer. TTAM is an acronym that aligns with the first letters of 23andMe.
    • “Regeneron declined to make a bid that topped TTAM’s offer, which is being financed by Wojcicki and her affiliated entities, according to a court filing. The TTAM bid still needs to be approved by the court.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • Reported on Friday, June 13, 2025
    • Seasonal influenza activity is low. COVID-19 and RSV activity is very low.
    • COVID-19
      • COVID-19 wastewater activity, emergency department visits, and laboratory percent positivity are at very low levels.
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • RSV activity is very low.
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP adds,
    • Dozens of medical and public health organizations have signed a letter urging insurers to continue covering COVID-19 vaccination in pregnant patients.
    • The letter from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists is in response to the recent move by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to no longer recommend COVID-19 shots for healthy pregnant women.
  • and
    • “In its latest update on variant proportion estimates, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said the level of NB.1.8.1 viruses, recently added as a variant under monitoring (VUM) by the World Health Organization (WHO), has grown from 15% to 37% since late May, bringing it nearly even with LP.8.1, which has been dominant over the last few months.” * * *
    • “The CDC also reported a rise in XFG variant proportions, which rose from 6% to 8% over the same period. Both viruses are descendants of the JN.1 Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variant.”
  • and
    • “The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) today in its weekly measles update reported 29 more cases, bringing the national total to 1,197 cases and coming within 77 cases of matching the total from 2019, which was the most since the disease was eliminated from the country in 2000.
    • “So far, 35 states have reported cases, one more than a week ago, which likely reflects Arizona’s first cases of the year.
    • “Four more outbreaks were reported, bringing the national total to 21. For comparison, the CDC recorded 16 outbreaks for all of 2024. Of measles cases reported this year, 90% have been part of outbreaks. Last year, 69% of the illnesses were related to outbreaks.
    • “School-aged children are the most affected group (37%), followed closely by adults ages 20 and older (33%), and children younger than 5 years old (29%).”
  • The AHA New relates,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has added new resources for health care providers to its Be Ready for Measles Toolkit. They include a decision tree to help providers determine when to give measles, mumps and rubella vaccinations to adults; checklists for summer camps; and immunity records templates.” 
  • CBS News reports,
    • “The average age of moms giving birth in the U.S. continues to rise, hitting nearly 30 years old in 2023, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “In the report, published Friday by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics, researchers found the average age of all mothers giving birth in the United States increased from 28.7 years old in 2016 to 29.6 in 2023. For new first-time moms, average age also increased, from 26.6 in 2016 to 27.5 in 2023. The data was taken from the National Vital Statistics System, which includes all birth records in the country.” 
  • The New York Times reports, “In Some Ozempic Households, the Weight Loss Is Contagious. Patients taking the drugs are finding their families are benefiting, too.”
  • Managed Healthcare Executive adds,
    • “Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) — a class of drugs typically prescribed for type 2 diabetes and weight loss — may significantly reduce the risk of developing several common age-related eye diseases, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and glaucoma, according to a study published online earlier this year in Ophthalmology.
    • “The study, based on an analysis of electronic health records (EHRs) from older patients in the United States, revealed that GLP-1RAs were associated with lower rates of age-related macular degeneration, as well as primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), when compared with other common medications such as metformin, insulin, statins and aspirin.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • Starting fecal immunochemical testing (FIT) at ages 40 to 49 was associated with reduced colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence and mortality compared with starting screening at age 50, a Taiwanese cohort study suggested.
    • Among over 263,000 participants, the incidence of CRC was 26.1 per 100,000 person-years for those who participated in early screening (at ages 40 to 49) versus 42.6 per 100,000 person-years for those who participated in regular screening (at age 50 and older), reported Tony Hsiu-Hsi Chen, PhD, of National Taiwan University in Taipei, and colleagues.
    • The mortality rate was 3.2 per 100,000 person-years for the early screening group compared with 7.4 per 100,000 person-years for the regular screening group, they noted in JAMA Oncology.
  • Per Health Day,
    • “A good number of people don’t know that high blood pressure is a silent killer, increasing a person’s heart risk with no obvious symptoms, a new poll has found.
    • “More than a third of Americans (37%) erroneously think high blood pressure always has noticeable symptoms like dizziness or shortness of breath, according to a survey by the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center.
    • “In truth, high blood pressure usually has no signs or symptoms to indicate its presence, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
    • “Likewise, nearly 4 in 10 people (39%) mistakenly believe that “feeling calm and relaxed” is an indication that blood pressure is normal, the poll shows.
    • “And very few people — only 13% — know the correct reading that reflects high blood pressure, 130/80, poll results show.
    • “Because controlling blood pressure reduces one’s risk of serious health problems, including heart attacks and strokes, correcting misperceptions about ways to identify it should be a public health priority,” Patrick Jamieson, director of the policy center’s Annenberg Health and Risk Communication Institute, said in a news release.”

From the healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “AstraZeneca said it entered into a strategic research collaboration with China’s CSPC Pharmaceuticals, focused on artificial intelligence-driven research, valued at up to $5.33 billion.
    • “The partnership aims to advance the discovery and development of novel oral candidates, with the potential to treat diseases across multiple indications, the British pharmaceutical giant said Friday.
    • “Under the terms of the deal, CSPC will receive an upfront payment of $110 million. It is also eligible to receive up to $1.62 billion in potential development milestone payments and up to $3.6 billion in sales milestone payments, as well as potential single digit royalties based on annual net sales of the products.
    • “The British group will have rights to exercise options for exclusive licenses to develop and commercialize worldwide candidates identified under the agreement.
    • “The research will be carried out by CSPC and will utilize its AI-driven technology.
    • “The collaboration boosts AstraZeneca’s presence in China following the $2.5 billion investment in the country announced earlier this year, while it also strengthens its collaboration with the Chinese group.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Amazon is restructuring its healthcare division and another high-profile executive is departing the company.
    • “As part of the restructuring, Amazon’s Vice President of Health Partnerships and Marketing Aaron Martin is planning to leave the company later this summer after assisting with the transition, according to a person familiar with the situation.
    • “The moves were made to simplify the company’s structure, reduce layers and elevate tenured leaders across six teams, said Neil Lindsay, senior vice president at Amazon Health Services, in a statement on Friday. 
    • “Two of Amazon’s healthcare teams will focus on Amazon’s One Medical virtual and in-person care product, with one focused on clinical care delivery while the other is centered on operations and performance. The four other teams will focus on pharmacy, growth and network development, compliance as well as a segment focused on marketing and technology.”
  • Medscape tells us,
    • “Hospitals are struggling with long emergency room (ER) wait times, capacity issues, and staffing shortages. A growing number of patients with cellulitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder, pneumonia, and other chronic conditions are being asked to skip hospital stays and return home.
    • “Hospital at Home models may be the answer. The explosion of Hospital at Home programs now makes it possible to provide acute level care at home. Today, 378 hospitals in 140 health systems and 39 states have been approved to provide healthcare at home. And a recent report found that 71% of health systems planned to launch Hospital at Home models.
    • “Digital care is the way of the future,” said Melissa Meier, MSN, RN, manager of Digital Care for OSF OnCall, the Digital Health Division for OSF HealthCare in Peoria, Illinois. “We’re always looking at ways to help reach more patients [and] always being on the cutting edge to reach our patients wherever they are is super important…[Hospital at Home] is certainly an answer for that.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • Becker’s has compiled a list of the hospitals with a CMS five-star rating for care transitions.
    • CMS’ “Patient survey (HCAHPS)-Hospital” database listed hospital ratings based on the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey. This is a national, standardized survey of hospital patients about their experience during a recent inpatient hospital stay. The survey was completed between July 2023 and June 2024. The data was last updated April 30. 
    • [The article lists] the 195 hospitals by state with five-star care transition ratings.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Quest Diagnostics has partnered with The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center to develop a cancer risk blood test.
    • “The collaboration, which Quest disclosed Tuesday, builds on MD Anderson’s research into protein biomarkers that may indicate a patient is at high risk of cancer diagnosis in the coming years.
    • “MD Anderson’s approach is potentially a cheaper way than liquid biopsies to find patients who would benefit from conventional screening, according to the announcement. Quest is aiming to launch the test next year.”
  • and
    • “Novo Nordisk is planning Phase 3 clinical trials for a obesity drug combination called amycretin, adding another emerging weight-loss medicine to the list of prospects it has in advanced testing.
    • “The Danish drugmaker said Thursday the trials could begin in early 2026 and will test both an injectable and an oral formulation. In a Phase 2 trial, amycretin helped people with obesity lose up to 22% of their body weight over 36 weeks, topping Novo’s marketed medication Wegovy as well as Eli Lilly’s rival Zepbound.
    • “Amycretin targets GLP-1, as Wegovy does, but also a separate metabolic hormone called amylin that has drawn increasing interest from drugmakers. Earlier this week, shares of Metsera climbed by double digits after the biotechnology company reported promising Phase 1 data for an amylin-targeting agent.”

Midweek report

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call tells us,
    • “House Republicans rescued their “big, beautiful” reconciliation bill from an early death in the Senate Wednesday by passing a measure deleting various provisions that would have violated Senate budget rules.
    • “To avoid a stand-alone vote on the fixes, automatic adoption of the resolution correcting the engrossment of the House reconciliation bill was embedded in a rule needed for floor debate of an unrelated bill that would cancel $9.4 billion in foreign aid and public broadcasting funds. The House adopted the rule on a nearly party-line vote of 213-207.
    • “Rules Chairwoman Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said during floor debate that no new provisions were added to the reconciliation bill. She said the corrections measure only deleted some provisions for technical reasons “to make sure this big, beautiful bill has its day in the Senate.”
  • The American Hospital Association News informs us,
    • “The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee today released its text for the budget reconciliation bill. The text includes one health care provision, which would fund cost-sharing reduction payments to insurers in Affordable Care Act marketplaces. It also includes several policies related to student loan and repayment programs, including the termination of the Grad PLUS loan program effective July 1, 2026, and a change to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program for new borrowers that would not allow medical or dental residents to count their time in residency as qualifying payments for loan repayment.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Senate health committee Chair Bill Cassidy (La.) is the latest Republican to take an interest in legislation that would tie U.S. brand drug prices to lower prices in other wealthy countries, according to seven people following the issue.” * * *
    • “Trump last month announced plans for pushing U.S. drug prices down to foreign levels, and more details are supposed to be forthcoming. However, it’s not clear that the administration could pressure drugmakers into matching the prices they charge abroad, which are typically much lower, without Congress passing a law that requires them to do so.” * * *
    • “After Trump’s announcement, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) also introduced a bill with Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) that would base U.S. prices on what other countries pay. 
    • “Cassidy’s bill would apply to Medicare prices, while the Hawley/Welch bill would apply to all retail drugs, not just those for which Medicare pays. 
    • “The Cassidy bill would instruct Medicare to claw back what it is owed when drugmakers charge prices that are higher than the foreign reference prices. It sets criteria for the countries that would be used to set prices, and Medicare would maintain that list. 
    • ‘The Hawley/Welch bill enforces its requirement for lower prices with civil monetary penalties that are 10 times the difference between the U.S. list price and the average price of the drug sold in Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, and the United Kingdom.”    
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. named eight people to the influential federal panel that recommends vaccines to Americans Wednesday, elevating several vaccine critics days after he purged the group’s entire membership.
    • His picks for the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices include a well-known pediatric infectious diseases expert and at least two people who have criticized the use of mRNA coronavirus vaccines. Some of the more notable selections include Martin Kulldorff, the co-author of the Great Barrington Declaration * * * and Vicky Pebsworth, who has been listed on the board of the nation’s oldest anti-vaccine group.
    • “All of these individuals are committed to evidence-based medicine, gold-standard science, and common sense,” Kennedy said in a Wednesday X post announcing the picks. “They have each committed to demanding definitive safety and efficacy data before making any new vaccine recommendations.”
    • “The other new members are Joseph R. Hibbeln, a psychiatrist; Retsef Levi, a professor of operations management; Robert W. Malone, a biochemist; Cody Meissner, a pediatrician; James Pagano, an emergency medicine physician; Michael Ross, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology.”
  • Federal News Network relates,
    • “More than 460 laid-off employees at the nation’s top public health agency received notices Wednesday that they are being reinstated, according to a union representing the workers.
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services confirmed reinstatement notices went out to the former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention employees but provided few details.
    • “About 2,400 CDC employees lost their jobs in a wave of cuts across federal health agencies in early April, according to a tally at the time.” * * *
    • “An estimated 200 of the reinstated workers are based in the CDC’s National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and Tuberculosis Prevention, HHS officials confirmed. Staffers at a CDC lab that does testing for sexually transmitted diseases are being brought back, said one CDC employee who wasn’t authorized to discuss what happened and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
    • “Also reinstated are an estimated 150 employees at the CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health, including people staffing a lab that works on lead poisoning, according to the union and employees.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Nine years after selling Medivation to Pfizer for $14 billion, David Hung, M.D., is going toe to toe with the New York drugmaker and two other pharma giants in a lung cancer field.
    • “Hung’s Nuvation Bio has won FDA approval for Ibtrozi, or taletrectinib, to treat patients with locally advanced or metastatic ROS1-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). With the nod, Ibtrozi will go up against existing medicines from Pfizer, Bristol Myers Squibb and Roche.
    • “ROS1 is a well-established subset of NSCLC. As it stands, Roche’s Rozlytrek is largely duking it out with BMS’ Augtyro, while Pfizer’s first-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) Xalkori gradually falls out of favor.
    • “However, ROS1 NSCLC has not been viewed as a major market opportunity, with combined Rozlytrek and Augtyro sales reaching roughly $200 million in 2024 despite their additional uses in NTRK gene fusion-positive solid tumors.
    • “But Hung believes Ibtrozi boasts a unique profile that could allow the next-generation TKI to reach new heights. For their part, analysts at Jefferies see potential for the Nuvation drug to become a blockbuster.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News points out,
    • “Deaths from alcohol-related liver diseases have been rising for years — and at an accelerated rate for groups including women, young adults, and Indigenous people. New data suggest a surge in deaths in the early months of the pandemic has continued in subsequent years. 
    • “The study presents a discouraging picture of the nation’s liver health. Between 2018 and 2022, the most recent year for which mortality data are available, the annual percentage change in alcohol-associated liver disease deaths was nearly 9%, compared to 3.5% between 2006 and 2018. 
    • “Men still made up the bulk of these deaths, with 17 deaths per 100,000 people. But women’s death rates sped up, jumping up to 8 deaths from 3 per 100,000 people in the time period studied. On average, the annual percent change in women’s mortality was 4.3% — nearly twice that of men. Researchers also highlight a worsening trend of sudden and dangerous liver inflammation appearing in young people.
    • “While alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) mortality was relatively stable from 1999 to 2006, it’s been on the rise since then, and has worsened especially since 2018, according to findings published Wednesday in JAMA Network Open. Experts know the pandemic had something to do with that change, since studies suggest people drank more during the Covid era. But new data, and the continuing influx of younger patients with severe illness, further troubles liver doctors and public health researchers. 
    • “It puts numbers to what we’re seeing in the hospital, in the clinic,” said Brian Lee, a hepatologist and liver transplant specialist at Keck Medicine of USC who was not involved with the study.”
  • The American Journal of Managed Care lets us know,
    • “In the process of recovering from COVID-like symptoms, mental health and well-being took close to 3 times as long to recover compared with physical health, according to new research published online today. These new data from December 2020 through the end of August 2022 show that although physical health tends to bounce back by 3 months after symptoms became apparent, mental well-being can take up to 9 months to reach a comparable level of recovery.
    • “In Open Forum Infectious Diseases, these findings and additional data from the CDC’s INSPIRE project (Innovative Support for Patients with SARS-CoV-2 Infections Registry; NCT04610515) shed new light on recovery after COVID-like symptoms.1 The study authors also highlight that up to 1 year after infection, close to 20% of patients continued to report a reduced health-related quality of life (HRQOL) vs before their self-reported COVID-like symptoms, and that there is potential for underestimation of other illnesses because of this; among their study population, health recovery recovered to a higher level for those who reported COVID-like symptoms vs those who tested negative.
    • “For patient prognostics, we found somewhat more pronounced recovery (i.e., return to the optimal HRQOL) for those in the COVID+ group compared to the COVID− groups, after adjustment,” the study authors wrote. Their results speak to the need for ongoing vigilance on the part of health care providers toward their patients’ mental health throughout recovery and to tailor care strategies accordingly.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “CT colonography, also known as virtual colonoscopy, reduced the incidence of colorectal cancer by up to 75% versus no screening, while stool DNA testing reduced the incidence by 59%.
    • “Stool testing was cost-effective relative to no screening, while CT colonography was actually cost saving.
    • “CT colonography should be considered a legitimate first-line screening option along with stool testing and optical colonoscopy.”
  • Per Medical News Today,
    • As people are living longer, there is a greater emphasis on healthy aging. 
    • Diet is one aspect that can contribute to healthier aging.
    • A new study found that consuming more foods and beverages rich in flavonoids may help lower a person’s risk of certain aspects of unhealthy aging, such as frailty and poor mental health.
    • Flavonoids are found in a variety of fruits, vegetables, and plant-based foods, such as: 
      • Berries like blueberries and raspberries; Citrus fruits like oranges and grapefruit; Dark chocolate; Fruits such as peaches and bananas; Green and black tea; Leafy greens such as kale and spinach; Red wine; Vegetables such as peas, onions, and tomatoes
  • The Washington Post relates,
    • “With a silly smile and frilly gills, the axolotl has wriggled its way into the hearts of millions, becoming a popular aquarium pet and pop culture icon in video games, children’s books and toy stores.
    • “But this adorable species of salamander is also helping researchers investigate a serious medical mystery: Could the human body be coaxed to regrow a severed arm or leg?
    • “Scientists are turning to the axolotl because it is an expert at regeneration. After losing a limb, an adult axolotl can grow it back fresh and new.
    • “In a study published in the journal Nature Communications on Tuesday, scientists used axolotls genetically engineered to glow in the dark to understand the molecular underpinnings of this amazing trait.
    • “This species is special,” said James Monaghan, a Northeastern University biologist who led the research. They’ve “really become the champion of some extreme abilities that animals have.”
  • GenEdge reports,
    • “Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research have identified a network of nerve cells that may be responsible for a reduction in feelings of hunger that may be felt as a result of smelling food, in mice. The team discovered a direct connection from the nose to a group of nerve cells in the brain that are activated by the smell of food and, when activated, trigger a feeling of fullness in lean mice, but not in obese mice. The discovery may suggest that treating obesity might require different advice about smelling food before a meal based on a person’s weight.
    • “Our findings highlight how crucial it is to consider the sense of smell in appetite regulation and in the development of obesity,” said study lead Sophie Steculorum, PhD, research group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research. “Our study shows how much our daily-lives’ eating habits are influenced by the smell of food. Since we discovered that the pathway only reduces appetite in lean mice, but not in obese mice, our study opens up a new way to help prevent overeating in obesity.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Some health-obsessed Americans believe the next antiaging therapeutic already exists—in the medicine cabinets of millions of diabetes patients.
    • “The widely used class of drugs, called SGLT2 inhibitors and sold under brand names such as Jardiance and Farxiga, have been on the market for over a decade as Type 2 diabetes medications. They have also gained regulatory approval to treat conditions like heart failure and kidney disease. 
    • ‘Recently, though, the drugs have emerged as a hot topic on popular health podcasts and Reddit forums for longevity enthusiasts, many of whom don’t suffer from any of those conditions. Instead, they are adding SGLT2 inhibitors to a roster of hacks they hope will help them live healthier for longer—or in other words, increase their healthspan.” * * *
    • “This is probably the drug class of our era,” says Dr. Timothy Gong, section physician leader for heart failure and transplant cardiology at Baylor University Medical Center, who has researched SGLT2 inhibitors. “You see cardiologists, nephrologists, endocrinologists, even general internists as well, just getting so excited.”
    • “Gong says he wouldn’t be surprised to take an SGLT2 inhibitor one day, once they are studied more, though he’s free from heart issues and diabetes. Yet it’s too early to prescribe it for longevity benefits in otherwise healthy patients. 
    • “I don’t think that the evidence is strong enough yet for us to be able to say that,” he says.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Risant Health CEO Dr. Jaewon Ryu said the new nonprofit system is making progress rolling out the first wave of its value-based care platform.
    • “The system is growing quickly, having completed two acquisitions in the past year-and-a-half. Oakland, California-based Kaiser Permanente launched Risant in early 2024 with the acquisition of Geisinger Health, followed by another deal in December to buy Cone Health. Kaiser formed Risant as a separate entity to acquire health systems and create a national value-based care network.
    • “As Risant expands, it is implementing a gameplan for value-based care throughout its footprint, ranging from primary care guidelines to technological tools that can help improve patient care.”
  • The Pharmacy Times discusses “The Role of Pharmacists in Cardiovascular Health: A Collaborative Approach to Treatment, Counseling, and Nutrition.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • NeuroFlow, a behavioral health tech company, has launched a suite of analytics tools to help payers and providers understand population risk.
    • BHIQ is a standalone product built on the analytics work NeuroFlow has already routinely been doing for years. It leverages existing data, like historical EHR, claims and pharma data, to predict the behavioral health needs of a population or a patient. It also helps organizations understand the efficacy of their interventions. NeuroFlow piloted BHIQ with a number of partners including commercial payers, Medicaid and Medicare Advantage plans and ACOs. 
    • “This certainly is not meant to be a replacement to a diagnostic tool, and it’s not meant to diagnose issues,” NeuroFlow CEO Chris Molaro told Fierce Healthcare. “It’s more of a compass to help point them in the right direction and give them insight into where there may be risk—and then stratify that risk.” 
    • “BHIQ is meant to complement NeuroFlow’s other offerings, though it can be purchased separately. Compared to the company’s product for measurement-based care, which draws on patient-reported outcomes questionnaires, BHIQ does not require patients to download an app or respond to surveys. This means organizations have another pathway for data analysis.”
  • and
    • “Alternative pharmacy benefit manager and administrator Capital Rx is acquiring Amino Health, a care navigation company.
    • “The acquisition, the company said, will allow Capital Rx to offer a better member-facing experience to complement its unified claims platform on the back end.” * * *
    • “Amino Health CEO John Asalone positions the company as helping large, self-insured employers (often Fortune 100 companies) lower their costs through a sleek interface helping members search for top-rated providers, view integrated cost estimates, uncover prescription drug savings and book appointments easily. This allows members to not only search by medical provider or procedure but also search for drugs like GLP-1s.”
  • and
    • “Blue Shield of California has teamed up with Zocdoc for members to more easily schedule in-person appointments with providers in their health plan network, the companies announced on Wednesday. 
    • “Zocdoc connects consumers with primary care providers and specialists and to see their schedules and book appointments digitally. Blue Shield of California is bringing that seamless digital experience to its members to facilitate access to covered providers. 
    • “The new feature is available through Blue Shield of California’s searchable provider directory on its website. With the last-mile infrastructure provided by Zocdoc, members can immediately see the participating providers’ availability and book an appointment.”

Friday report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News reports,
    • “Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Andy Kim, D-N.J., June 5 reintroduced the SEPSIS Act, legislation which would task the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with continuing its efforts addressing sepsis care. The agency’s work would include an education campaign about addressing sepsis in hospitals, improving pediatric sepsis data collection, sharing information with the Department of Health and Human Services on data collection, and developing and implementing a sepsis outcome measure.
    • “The bill would also require a report on a sepsis outcome measure and a congressional briefing on the CDC’s sepsis activities. Additionally, the legislation includes a voluntary recognition program for hospitals that maintain effective sepsis programs or improve their programs over time.”
  • and
    • “The House June 4 passed the AHA-supported SUPPORT Act (H.R. 2483) by a 366-57 vote. The legislation reauthorizes key prevention, treatment and recovery programs for patients with substance use disorder, including programs to support the behavioral health workforce.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “More federal employees filed retirement papers with the Office of Personnel Management in May than in the last three months. OPM said it received more than 15,000 claims last month, driving the backlog up over 21,000. The processing time for these retirement claims remain consistent at 49 days on average in May and 52 days on average for the entire 2025. The increase in applications comes as OPM is requiring agencies to send retirement paperwork only in digital formats by July 15. OPM launched two new tools this week to improve the retirement services process. One is a new platform for agency HR and payroll providers and another to modernize the Electronic Official Personnel Folder (eOPF) platform.”
  • CMS shared “Federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) Technical Assistance for Certified IDR Entities and Disputing Parties –June 2025 — Topic: Errors Identified After Dispute Closure.”
  • BenefitFocus discusses “Health Care Transparency 2.0 – What Might We See in Forthcoming Transparency Regulations.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive, “FDA meeting gives window into gene therapy field’s angst. Gene therapy experts and advocates warning of the sector’s many challenges found a receptive audience in FDA leadership at a regulatory forum Thursday.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Medtronic is recalling certain tracheostomy tubes because of the risk that the devices could dislodge, causing an emergency where the patient cannot breathe or their airway is blocked, according to a Thursday Class I recall notice from the Food and Drug Administration. 
    • “The company sent a notice to customers on Feb. 26 asking them to quarantine and return all unused tubes from the affected lot. The recall applies to the Shiley adult flexible tracheostomy tube with taperguard cuff reusable inner cannula.
    • “Medtronic began the recall after receiving reports from customers that the flange used to secure the device may become disconnected. Patient harm was reported in some cases, but no deaths have been reported to date, a company spokesperson wrote in an email Thursday.”
  • BioPharma Dive relates,
    • “Vera Therapeutics lost nearly a third of its market value Friday after Otsuka Pharmaceutical presented late-stage study data on a rival drug it’s developing for the kidney disease IgA nephropathy. At a medical meeting, Otsuka said its therapy, sibeprenlimab, led to a 51% reduction in proteinuria, a key marker of kidney health, after nine months of treatment. Though cross-trial comparisons can be misleading, Vera’s therapy led to a 42% reduction in proteinuria compared to placebo at a similar timepoint in its own Phase 3 study, causing investors to sell off company shares. Still, some analysts defended Vera. Jefferies’ Farzin Haque cautioned not to “overinterpret the data” and argued the two datasets “are not clinically or statistically different for commercial uptake.” The Food and Drug Administration could approve Otsuka’s drug by Nov. 28. On Monday, Vera said it intends to file an accelerated approval application in the fourth quarter.”

From the judicial front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “The CEO of a healthcare software company was convicted by a federal jury for his role in operating a platform that generated fraudulent physicians’ orders to defraud Medicare and other payers out of more than $1 billion.
    • “Gary Cox, 79, of Maricopa County, Ariz., was the CEO of Power Mobility Doctor Rx (DMERx), an internet-based platform that generated fraudulent orders for unnecessary orthotic braces, pain creams and other items, according to a June 3 Justice Department news release.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • Seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and RSV activity is low.
    • COVID-19
      • COVID-19 wastewater activity is low and emergency department visits and laboratory percent positivity are at very low levels.
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • RSV activity has declined to low levels.
  • The AHA News lets us know,
    • “There have been 1,168 confirmed cases of measles across 33 states as of June 6 this year, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This year’s figure is more than four times higher than the 2024 total of 285 cases. There have been 17 outbreaks this year, and 89% of confirmed cases (1,040 of 1,168) are outbreak-associated. The vaccination status of 95% of all cases is classified as “unvaccinated or unknown.” 
  • Of note, Health Day warns us,
    • “An afternoon snooze might seem appealing to middle-aged folks and seniors, but these naps could carry a high cost.
    • “People with certain types of napping patterns have a greater risk of an early death, researchers are slated to report at an upcoming meeting of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM).
    • “People who slept longer during the day, had irregular daytime sleep patterns, or slept more around midday and early afternoon were at greater risk, even after accounting for health and lifestyle factors,” lead researcher Chenlu Gao, a postdoctoral research fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, said in a news release.
    • “The findings call into question the whole concept of the “power nap.”
  • HHS’s AHRQ posted a report about “Management of Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors in Youth: A Systematic Review.”
  • Per HR Dive,
    • “Work can either fuel employee well-being or become a source of strain for employees already stressed out by economic volatility and political tension, according to a May 12 survey of employee mental health by Inmar Intelligence.
    • “Of the 1,000 U.S. full- and part-time employees who responded to the May 12 survey, 34% said their job positively impacts their mental health, while 33% reported a negative impact, Inmar found.
    • “This near-even split reinforces the importance of thoughtful leadership and inclusive workplace design to support the full spectrum of employee needs,” the business technology firm stated in a May 29 post.”
  • Cardiovascular Business reports,
    • “Heart surgeons with the WVU Heart and Vascular Institute have made a bit of history, performing the world’s first robotic explant of a transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) device and subsequent aortic valve replacement.
    • “The group already has plenty of experience breaking new ground in the field of robotic-assisted surgery. They developed a robotic aortic valve replacement (RAVR) technique that is now being used all over the world and performed the world’s first robotic aortic valve replacement and coronary artery bypass (RAVCAB) procedure in 2024.
    • “This latest breakthrough started when Thelma Hyer, a 67-year-old female patient, presented with a failing TAVR valve in addition a leaky mitral valve. She had received her TAVR valve just four years prior, but premature structural valve degeneration had already made a full replacement necessary.
    • Vinay Badhwar, MD, executive chair of the WVU Heart and Vascular Institute, initially recommended open-heart surgery to remove the failing TAVR valve and then replace her aortic and mitral valves. However, Hyer and her family had hesitations due to her history of scoliosis and arthritis. Badhwar then proposed using robotics as an alternative. 
    • “The technology had never been used in this exact way before, but Badhwar was confident in the abilities of both his team and the robotic surgery platform. The group developed a plan, talked it over with the patient, and went forward with the robotic procedure in late May. 
    • “The operation—including the TAVR explant and the replacement of both heart valves—appears to have been a success. Hyer was discharged after less than a full week of observation.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Omada Health shares jumped after the company made its public-market debut, propelled by Americans’ renewed focus on how weight affects physical health.
    • “Shares of the virtual healthcare platform climbed 35% to $25 on Friday, at one point hitting a high of $28, above the initial offering price of $19. The price gives it a market valuation of around $1.4 billion.
    • “The gains are a sign investors are willing to invest in newly public companies after a volatile stock market pushed some companies like payments platform Klarna to delay its IPO filing. Stablecoin issuer Circle opened on Thursday at $69, more than double its offering price, and was recently trading at $119.15. Hinge Health HNGE 0.83%increase; green up pointing triangle, another digital health company, opened in May at $39 after offering a $32 price.
    • “Omada is trading publicly after 14 years of providing support to patients with weight-related chronic illnesses. Leadership sees the current moment as the perfect time for an IPO, as GLP-1 drugs such as Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro have sparked renewed focus on health problems that can stem from obesity, President Wei-Li Shao said.
    • “We’re entering this unique moment in time where there’s a convergence between what we’ve been working on for over a decade, and then also what society is increasingly caring about,” Shao said.”
  • Becker Hospital Review discusses ten key transactions that created Ascension 2.0.
    • “Over the last 16 months, St. Louis-based Ascension has sold or consolidated about 35 hospitals across the country as it revamps its hospital portfolio, operating model and overall financial performance.
    • “Despite reporting a $466 million operating loss (a -2.4% margin) for the nine months ending March 31, 2025, the Catholic nonprofit system has made notable strides in improving its liquidity position. That progress is largely attributed to the successful collection of accounts receivable that had temporarily spiked due to two major cybersecurity incidents — the May 2024 ransomware attack and the February 2024 Change Healthcare cyberattack.
    • “Since the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024 — the three months ending June 30, 2024 — Ascension has improved recurring operating performance by $1.4 billion, while increasing patient volumes and same-facility revenue.”
  • Beckers Health IT tells us,
    • “California-based Stanford Health Care is piloting an internally developed, AI-backed software designed to revolutionize clinician interaction with the EHR.
    • “Nigam Shah, MBBS, PhD, chief data science officer at Stanford Health Care, is leading the development team for ChatEHR, which allows clinicians to ask questions, request summaries and pull specific information from a patient’s medical record. ChatEHR is built directly into Stanford’s EHR to maximize clinical workflow.
    • “The pilot is available to a small cohort of 33 physicians, nurses and physician assistants. The technology is secure and designed for information gathering; not medical advice.
    • “ChatEHR, which has been in development since 2023, facilitates a more streamlined and efficient way for clinicians to interact with patient records.
    • “This is a unique instance of integrating [large language model] capabilities directly into clinicians’ practice and workflow,” said Michael Pfeffer, MD, chief information and digital officer at Stanford Health Care and School of Medicine, in a news release. “We’re thrilled to bring this to the workforce at Stanford Health Care.”
  • Drug Store News informs us,
    • “Walmart has become the first retailer to scale its drone delivery to five states with its recently announced service expansion in Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Orlando and Tampa. The new service will launch at 100 stores throughout Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas, in addition to current operations in Northwest Arkansas and the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
    • “As we look ahead, drone delivery will remain a key part of our commitment to redefining retail,” said Greg Cathey, SVP, Walmart U.S. transformation and innovation. “We’re pushing the boundaries of convenience to better serve our customers, making shopping faster and easier than ever before.”
    • “Continued Cathey: “This expansion of our drone delivery service marks a significant milestone in that journey. As the first retailer to scale drone delivery, Walmart is once again demonstrating its commitment to leveraging technology to enhance our delivery offerings with a focus on speed.” 

Tuesday Report

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.
  • This afternoon, the House of Representatives passed by voice vote the Esophageal Cancer Awareness Act, HR 3490.
    • “This bill requires the Government Accountability Office to report to Congress on (1) the impact of esophageal cancer-related health care spending under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) for federal employees and retirees diagnosed with esophageal cancer, and (2) how often FEHBP participants with a high risk of esophageal cancer undergo screenings according to established guidelines.” 
    • The bill honors the late Rep. Gerald Connelly (D VA) who died from the disease. The bill now heads to Senate.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “President Trump on Tuesday ratcheted up pressure on Senate Republicans to quickly embrace and pass legislation carrying his domestic agenda, intensifying a battle inside the G.O.P. about what should be in the measure and how much it should cost.”
  • Govexec adds,
    • “The Trump administration plans to send its first spending cuts request to Congress on Tuesday, asking lawmakers to swiftly eliminate $9.4 billion in funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and various foreign aid programs.
    • “The request for what are called rescissions allows the White House budget office to legally freeze spending on those accounts for 45 days while the Republican-controlled Congress debates whether to approve the recommendation in full or in part, or to ignore it.
    • “The proposal calls on lawmakers to eliminate $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides funding for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service. That means NPR and PBS would lose their already approved federal allocations, if the request is approved by Congress.”
  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plans to undertake several new health tech initiatives, senior leaders announced today at a closed meeting with stakeholders. 
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services held a meeting today to discuss health tech policy and its recent request for information on health tech initiatives. CMS seems to be moving ahead with some of the initiatives it asked stakeholders to provide feedback on in its RFI — among them a national provider directory and modern identity verification for Medicare beneficiaries.
    • “This comes as the HHS’ health IT office announced a new leader this morning, Thomas Keane, M.D. Keane spoke at the meeting of stakeholders today at the Hubert H. Humphrey building in Washington, D.C.” 
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • Thomas Keane, a software engineer and interventional radiologist, began his role as national coordinator [for health information technology] Monday, the spokesperson said. He previously worked at the ASTP and served as a senior advisor to the deputy secretary of the HHS, according to his biography on the agency’s website. 
  • Healthcare Dive also relates,
    • “The Trump administration rescinded guidance on Tuesday directing hospitals to perform abortions during medical emergencies, even in states with restrictive abortion bans. 
    • “The Biden administration published the guidance in 2022, shortly after Roe v. Wade was overturned, asserting doctors were required to perform emergency care, even if that included abortions, under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act. * * *
    • “The CMS now says that guidance “does not reflect the policy of this Administration.” The new guidance is effective May 29, and furthers an executive order from President Donald Trump seeking to remove regulatory red tape, the CMS said.” * * *
    • “Texas and Idaho, which have some of the nation’s most restrictive abortion bans, have repeatedly argued that there is no conflict between EMTALA and their policies, because both states allow abortion when the mother’s life is at risk.”

From the judicial front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “A federal district court judge on Tuesday denied motions to dismiss complaints in two lawsuits against data analytics firm MultiPlan — now operating as Claritev — and a number of insurers.
    • “Judge Matthew Kennelly of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois denied Claritev’s motion to dismiss complaints in two lawsuits involving federal and state antitrust and consumer protection claims.” * * *
    • “Both lawsuits allege Claritev colluded with insurers to reduce pay for out-of-network providers, violating state and federal antitrust laws under the Sherman Act.
    • “We remain confident in the strength of our legal position and look forward to presenting the facts as the case moves forward,” Claritev said in a statement Tuesday. “These lawsuits will only serve to increase healthcare cost for employers and patients. We will vigorously defend ourselves through the legal process while remaining focused on delivering value to our customers and the broader healthcare ecosystem.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Centene is being sued for wrongful death after one of its members died after failing to get the mental healthcare he needed because of the insurer’s inadequate provider networks, according to the lawsuit filed by the member’s mother.
    • “The suit, filed late May in the Superior Court of Maricopa County in Arizona, accuses Centene’s subsidiary in the state, Health Net, of maintaining “ghost networks” — wherein insurers say providers are in network that aren’t, inflating the care options available under their plans to the detriment of actual access.
    • “As a result, Centene violated state and federal laws requiring network accuracy and adequacy, according to the suit, which also accuses the St. Louis-based payer of negligence and fraud. Centene did not respond to a request for comment.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration did not appeal a recent U.S. District Court decision that set aside the agency’s final rule aimed at increasing its authority over laboratory developed tests, according to two lab industry groups.
    • “The 60-day window for the FDA to appeal the ruling by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas expired over the weekend. The Association for Molecular Pathology supported the FDA’s move not to appeal.
    • “This decision should finally conclude the FDA’s unwarranted and overreaching attempts to assert regulatory authority over LDTs,” AMP President Jane Gibson said in an emailed statement.”

News from the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s conference

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A group of 97 patients had longstanding multiple myeloma, a common blood cancer that doctors consider incurable, and faced a certain, and extremely painful, death within about a year.
    • “They had gone through a series of treatments, each of which controlled their disease for a while. But then it came back, as it always does. They reached the stage where they had no more options and were facing hospice.
    • “They all got immunotherapy, in a study that was a last-ditch effort.
    • “A third responded so well that they got what seems to be an astonishing reprieve. The immunotherapy developed by Legend Biotech, a company founded in China, seems to have made their cancer disappear. And after five years, it still has not returned in those patients — a result never before seen in this disease.
    • “These results, in patients whose situation had seemed hopeless, has led some battle-worn American oncologists to dare to say the words “potential cure.”
    • “The new study, reported Tuesday at the annual conference of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and published in The Journal of Clinical Oncology, was funded by Johnson & Johnson, which has an exclusive licensing agreement with Legend Biotech.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Though they are both multiple myeloma drugs with the same mechanism of action, Sanofi’s Sarclisa has had difficulty competing with Johnson & Johnson’s powerhouse Darzalex, largely because it reached the market five years later.
    • “But one advancement that could help Sanofi close some of the gap is its on-body delivery system for its CD38 antibody.
    • “Tuesday, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Chicago, Sanofi presented data from two trials that showed Sarclisa administered subcutaneously (SC) from an investigational on-body injector (OBI) reduced treatment time and produced similar efficacy and safety compared to intravenous (IV) infusion.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental, non-hormonal drug from Bayer can reduce the hot flashes and other menopausal side effects many women taking a common breast cancer therapy experience, according to results from a late-stage clinical trial run by the pharmaceutical company.
    • “The study, known as Oasis-4, is the fourth successful trial test of Bayer’s drug, called elinzanetant. Detailed data presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting Monday showed treatment reduced vasomotor symptoms in women receiving endocrine therapy to treat or prevent hormone receptor-positive breast cancer.”
  • and
    • “A Johnson & Johnson drug currently used for advanced prostate cancer can help keep the disease from progressing in men who are at earlier stages and have certain genetic mutations, according to newly unveiled data from a Phase 3 clinical trial.
    • “Results from this trial, named Amplitude, were released Tuesday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s meeting in Chicago. They could potentially expand the number of people able to receive J&J’s Akeega, a pill that combines the active ingredients from the medicines Zejula and Zytiga.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Roche said Tecentriq combined with lurbinectedin shows significant survival benefits for patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer.
    • “The Swiss pharmaceutical company said Tuesday that late-stage trials showed the combination led to a 46% reduction in the risk of the disease progressing or death, and 27% reduction in the risk of death.
    • “The combination can be used a as a first-line maintenance treatment for people with the cancer following induction therapy with carboplatin, etoposide and Tecentriq, it said.
    • “The safety profile of the combination was consistent with the known safety profiles of Tecentriq and lurbinectedin, Roche said.”

In other medical research and public health news,

  • Cigna, writing in LinkedIn, explains why early detection is so important to fighting breast cancer.
  • The latest issue of the National Institutes of Health’s Research Matter covers “Customized gene therapy | Parents with substance use disorders | Ultra-processed food consumption.”
  • The New York Times discusses “Anorexia in Middle Age and Beyond. A growing number of older women are seeking treatment for eating disorders. Many have struggled without help for decades.”
  • MedCity News informs us,
    • “The World Health Organization estimates that about 10% of women and girls of reproductive age around the world — roughly 190 million people — suffer from chronic pain as a result of endometriosis. 
    • “Take this estimate with a grain of salt, though — it’s likely too low. The average diagnostic delay for endometriosis patients is eight years, driven in large part by the fact that the standard method used to diagnose the disease is an invasive surgical procedure.”
    • Boston-based biotech startup Heranova Lifesciences is working to address this problem by developing a non-invasive blood-based test. Just this spring, the company announced the LDT validation and U.S. launch of this product, which is called HerResolve. * * *
    • “The gold standard that doctors use to diagnose endometriosis is laparoscopy followed by histological confirmation. With this method, doctors put patients under anesthesia and perform a laparoscopy to look at the tissue and lesions growing outside the uterus — then, the doctor takes a tissue sample to confirm the diagnosis under a microscope.
    • “This method of testing is invasive — and not very quick. Heranova’s test seeks to address these issues by using machine learning to analyze a panel of biomarkers in a patient’s blood sample to determine whether or not they have endometriosis. 
    • “The test’s accuracy is on par with laparoscopy followed by histopathology, said Farideh Bischoff, Heranova’s chief medical officer.”
  • Per Health Day,
    • “Clinicians consider administration of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine as feasible at age 9 to 10 years, and parents appear to be receptive to discussing vaccination at this age, according to a study published online June 2 in Pediatrics.
    • “Caroline K. Tietbohl, Ph.D., from the University of Colorado and Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, and colleagues conducted an explanatory sequential mixed-methods study as part of an ongoing randomized trial that compared initiation at ages 9 to 10 years (intervention) versus 11 to 12 years (control) across 17 practices in Colorado (nine intervention) and 16 practices in California (eight intervention). At one month after study initiation, practice clinicians were surveyed, and semi structured interviews were conducted at three months after study initiation.” * * *
    • “The results of our prospective trial will determine if initiating vaccination earlier increases vaccination completion rates, especially by age 13 years,” the authors write.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • People are more likely to get cancer as they age. Dr. Miriam Merad has an unconventional idea of how that might be reversed: using allergy drugs and other seemingly unlikely medications to damp a condition known as “inflammaging.”
    • The immunologist and oncologist has spent years examining malignant tumors to learn why people over age 50 account for nine in 10 cancer diagnoses in the U.S. She and her research team at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City have homed in on an answer: the aging immune system. Their studies of individual immune cells in human lung tumors, as well as in old mice, have revealed how chronic, or pathogenic, inflammation in older people—dubbed inflammaging—interferes with the immune system and fuels cancer growth.
    • Merad and other researchers are testing whether existing anti-inflammatory medications usually used to fight rheumatoid arthritis or allergy conditions like asthma or eczema can slow cancer in older patients. They are also searching for new drugs. “Aging is something that we think we can transform,” says Merad, director of the Marc and Jennifer Lipschultz Precision Immunology Institute at Mount Sinai.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Becker Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “Following a tumultuous period for UnitedHealth Group, new CEO and board chair Stephen Hemsley addressed investors on June 2, acknowledging the company’s recent shortcomings and detailing his plan to restore the high performance that investors and customers expect moving forward.
    • “Mr. Hemsley expressed a deep commitment to regaining trust through increased transparency, improved pricing strategies, and a renewed focus on internal operations, particularly at Optum Health and UnitedHealthcare. 
    • “We are well aware we have not fulfilled your expectations or our own,” he said. “We apologize for that performance and we are humbly determined to earn back your trust and your confidence.”
    • The article also provides eight notes on Mr. Hemsley’s talk.
  • STAT News adds,
    • UnitedHealth Group’s new CEO told investors that the company is reevaluating how it tallies Medicare Advantage patients’ diagnoses for reimbursement purposes, an issue currently under investigation by the Justice Department. 
    • Stephen Hemsley’s remarks during the company’s annual shareholder meeting on Monday signal a noteworthy shift: UnitedHealth is now publicly acknowledging potential issues with how it assesses the health of its Medicare Advantage members.” * * *
    • “Our management team has been working with urgency through a comprehensive and methodical review of our operations from end to end,” Hemsley said. “Digging into every part of the organization to evaluate how we have been performing and to improve that performance.”
  • Fierce Pharma notes,
    • “Medicare Part D beneficiaries can now tap into Amazon Pharmacy’s PillPack for pre-sorted medication packets, the retail giant announced on Tuesday.
    • “PillPack sorts a patient’s medications into personalized, tear-away packets that are labeled by date and time, which can make it easier to follow prescribed regimens. The expansion brings this service to more than 50 million Part D enrollees who take daily medications, Amazon said.
    • “Once eligible customers sign up for packets through PillPack, Amazon Pharmacy will coordinate needed refills to ensure prescriptions arrive on time.
    • “In addition to growing its reach in the Part D market, Amazon announced that it will roll out new services to support caregivers in managing medications for a family member or loved one.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Pyx Health, a digital mental health platform, on Tuesday announced its acquisition of FarmboxRx, a company that provides fresh produce food boxes to Medicare and Medicaid members.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us that “Hospitals [are] push[ing] back on low Leapfrog grades.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “In January, H1 picked up provider data management software company Ribbon Health to broaden its reach into the health plan, provider system and digital health sectors.
    • “Five months later, the healthcare tech company has acquired Veda Data Solutions to build out its provider data and automation solutions for payers.
    • “Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
    • “Founded 10 years ago, Veda fixes bad provider data for healthcare organizations. Inaccurate and out-of-date health plan provider directories continue to be a thorny problem in healthcare and can make it difficult for patients to find a clinician when they need care.”

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The White House is not requesting an increase in pay for federal employees in fiscal 2026. President Donald Trump released more details of his budget request for next year late Friday afternoon. The appendix section of the budget proposals also includes provisions to continue the pay freeze for certain non-career Senior Executive Service members and political appointees. In all, the new budget document details more specific discretionary spending requests for each agency. Unlike the “skinny” budget released in early May, the administration did include funding requests for the Office of Personnel Management, the Education Department and independent agencies like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “The White House released a more detailed budget proposal on Friday that yields more information on how the Trump administration is aiming to reshape the HHS next year, including drastic cuts to the National Institutes of Health.
    • The updated proposal doubles down on plans to slash the NIH’s budget nearly in half, consolidate the HHS’ 28 operating divisions into 15, eliminate dozens of federal healthcare and social welfare programs and terminate more than 5,000 contracts.
    • “The Trump administration argues the changes are necessary to streamline HHS functions and eliminate priorities around diversity, equity and inclusion panned by conservatives.
    • ‘The administration can’t fully implement the budget without the support of Congress. Lawmakers usually make changes to the executive branch’s spending wish list in appropriations legislation.
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “HHS has proposed oversight of the 340B drug pricing program to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services as part of a broader reorganization. 
    • “The move, initially referenced in a preliminary memo from White House officials in April, would place the 340B program under CMS’s Program Management authority, allowing the agency to use its in-house drug pricing expertise and streamline oversight, according to HHS’s Budget in Brief. 
    • “Funding for 340B oversight would be maintained at $12 million to “provide oversight and auditing of covered entities and drug manufacturers, support operational improvements, and increase operational efficiencies,” the document said. 
    • “The 340B drug pricing program requires drug manufacturers to offer discounts on outpatient prescription drugs to eligible safety-net hospitals. CMS Program Management is a key part of the federal health infrastructure, overseeing the administration of Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program and the Federal Exchange.” 
  • Per Federal News Network,
    • “The Trump administration is proposing changes that would make it easier to fire federal employees accused of misconduct in a matter of days, because they no longer meet “suitability and fitness” standards required to join the federal workforce.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management, in a proposed rule it will publish Tuesday in the Federal Register, plans to expand suitability adjudications normally reserved for federal job applicants to include current employees.
    • “The proposed rule, once finalized, would allow the Trump administration to fast-track the firing of federal employees, on the grounds that they no longer meet suitability standards for federal employment.
    • “OPM’s proposed rule states agencies must remove federal employees within five workdays, if it decides they no longer meet the suitability standard.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Cardiovascular Business reports,
    • “BiVacor has received the FDA’s breakthrough device designation for its titanium Total Artificial Heart (TAH), which serves as a bridge to transplant for patients with end-stage heart failure.
    • BiVacor’s TAH is based on rotary blood pump technology and approximately the size of an adult’s fist. It has no valves or flexing ventricle chambers, and its only moving part is a magnetically suspended double-sided centrifugal pump impeller.
    • “The FDA’s decision signals just how much potential the agency sees in this technology. The breakthrough devices program is designed to help medical devices make it through the approval process faster than they would otherwise. Its representatives work directly with the manufacturer, for example, and submissions are prioritized.
    • “This is more than a regulatory milestone,” Daniel Timms, PhD, founder and chief technology officer of BiVacor, said in a statement. “It’s a validation of a concept we’ve spent decades proving that a fully implantable, TAH isn’t just possible, it’s necessary. Patients with biventricular failure have been overlooked for too long. The early results from our clinical trial show that we can give them a second chance, without the compromises of older technologies. The breakthrough device designation puts us on a faster track to deliver exactly that.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “The FDA granted de novo authorization to the first artificial intelligence (AI) program to support breast cancer risk prediction from screening mammograms.
    • “The program, called Clairity Breast, analyzes mammograms for subtle features that correlate with future breast cancer risk, according to a news release from Clairity. The analysis results in a 5-year risk score validated from analysis of more than 77,000 mammograms from multiple hospital-based and free-standing mammography facilities.
    • “The system can be applied immediately to clinical practice, Larry Norton, MD, a breast cancer specialist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, told MedPage Today.
    • “We’re very excited about it,” said Norton, who also is founding scientific director of the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, which supported development of Clairity Breast. “We were confident that it’s going to turn out to be something that’s going to help people, something that we think really has great science behind it.”

From the judicial front,

  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “The US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit granted a Texas doctor group’s request Friday to rehear its challenge to a Biden administration rule governing the arbitration process for surprise medical bill disputes.
    • “The No Surprises Act protects patients from most unexpected out-of-network bills by requiring insurers and medical providers to undergo an arbitration process for payment disputes. But the process is the subject of countless legal battles, and the Texas Medical Association has successfully challenged multiple provisions of the implementation regulations.
    • “A three-judge panel previously upheld several portions of the rule (RIN: 1210-AC17) in a mixed decision regarding the qualifying payment amount—a key factor arbitrators use to settle disagreements. The Texas Medical Association had asked the full panel to reconsider the decision upholding the exclusion of bonuses as well as the inclusion of “ghost rates,” or contracted rates for services that a doctor hasn’t actually provided.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CBS News reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its warning about the risk of contracting measles while traveling, after the agency tallied dozens of cases so far this year in travelers who were infectious while flying on airplanes within the U.S.
    • “Travelers can catch measles in many travel settings including travel hubs like airports and train stations, on public transportation like airplanes and trains, at tourist attractions, and at large, crowded events,” the agency now says, in an update published Wednesday.”
  • Per HCPLive,
    • “Cardiac deaths have risen since 2020, with more occurring at home, indicating a potential gap in care for heart disease patients during the pandemic.
    • “Hospital data showed a 20–34% reduction in acute myocardial infarction hospitalizations, while at-home cardiac deaths increased, suggesting changes in care-seeking behavior.”
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “Measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination rates in children declined in some counties across the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers found.
    • “Across 2,066 counties in 33 states with both pre- and post-pandemic vaccination data, the county-level mean MMR vaccination rate decreased from 93.92% to 91.26%, according to Lauren Gardner, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and colleagues.
    • “A decline in coverage was reported in 78% of counties during this time, and only four states — California, Connecticut, Maine, and New York — had an increase in median county-level vaccination rates, they reported in a JAMA research letter.”
  • The American Medical Association tells us what doctors wish their patients knew about e-cigarettes.
  • Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, discusses “What to know about nerve pain and tingling hands and feet. Tingling or painful sensations in your hands and/or feet are the main symptoms of neuropathy.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Novartis said Pluvicto demonstrated positive results in patients with PSMA-positive metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
    • “The Swiss pharmaceutical company on Monday said Pluvicto showed statistically significant and clinically meaningful benefits—including combined with hormone therapy versus hormone therapy alone—with positive trend in overall survival.
    • “The results are from a prespecified interim analysis of a Phase 3 trial, it said.
    • “Pluvicto is already approved for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and now shows potential in patients in an earlier disease setting, it said.
    • “The company will present results at an upcoming medical meeting and based on FDA feedback, will submit for regulatory review in the second half of the year, it said.
    • “Pluvicto is a radioactive medication used to treat some types of prostate cancer.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental medicine from Vera Therapeutics succeeded in a late-stage trial in a rare kidney disease, positioning the company to discuss an approval application with U.S. regulators in the near future. 
    • “According to Vera, the drug, called atacicept, met its main goal in a Phase 3 trial in IgA nephropathy, a chronic condition that can lead to kidney failure. After 36 weeks of treatment, atacicept was associated with a 42% reduction versus a placebo — and a 46% decline from the study’s start — in the amount of protein in participants’ urine, an important marker of kidney health. 
    • “Without providing specifics, Vera said atacicept’s other efficacy results were “consistent with or better than” what was observed in mid-stage testing and had a safety profile “comparable to placebo.” The company will share the data with the Food and Drug Administration in the coming weeks and intends to file an accelerated approval request in the fourth quarter.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Amgen has detailed a positive phase 3 readout for its T-cell engager Imdelltra in previously treated small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
    • “The DLL3xCD3 bispecific has shown that it can help patients live longer, has a more tolerable safety profile and improves certain cancer-related symptoms compared with chemotherapy in second-line SCLC, according to results from the phase 3 DeLLphi-304 trial. The data will be presented June 2 at the 2025 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting and simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “The drug significantly reduced the risk of death by 40% versus chemo in SCLC patients who had tried one line of platinum-based chemotherapy. Patients in the Imdelltra arm lived a median 13.6 months, compared with 8.3 months for chemo.
    • “All patient subgroups appeared to have benefited, regardless of their prior PD-1/L1 exposure, presence of brain metastases or liver metastases, and the type of prior chemotherapy. Among those who had tried a PD-1/L1 inhibitor, Imdelltra’s death risk reduction was 39%. In PD-1/L1-naïve patients, the number was 35%.
    • “These data underscore Imdelltra’s potential to transform patient outcomes and the small cell lung cancer treatment paradigm,” Amgen’s R&D chief, Jay Bradner, M.D., said in a statement.
    • “Findings from the DeLLphi-304 trial could help convert Imdelltra’s accelerated approval earned last year into a full approval.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “UnitedHealth Group shareholders signed off on the planned compensation package for newly-reinstated CEO Stephen Hemsley.
    • “Hemsley, who returned to the CEO role last month, will earn a $1 million base salary each year. He will also receive a one-time $60 million equity award in nonqualified stock options.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “BioNTech & Bristol Myers will jointly develop BioNTech’s BNT327 cancer-drug candidate.
    • “Bristol Myers will make a $1.5B upfront payment to BioNTech, with $2B in payments through 2028.
    • “BNT327 is being evaluated in Phase 3 trials as a first-line treatment in lung cancer.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “In late April, when Sanofi revealed that it was selling a controlling stake in its consumer health business Opella for 10 billion euros ($11.4 billion), chief financial officer Francois Roger said that the French drugmaker would “explore external growth opportunities for bolt-on acquisitions.”
    • “Just five weeks later, Sanofi has made a deal few would describe as “bolt-on,” as it has bought out Massachusetts-based Blueprint Medicines for up to $9.5 billion.
    • “With the deal, Sanofi gains Blueprint’s portfolio of rare immunological disease treatments, including systemic mastocytosis (SM) pill Ayvakit, which generated sales of $479 million last year and has peak sales potential of $2 billion, the 14-year-old company projected last year.
    • “Blueprint also brings a next-generation SM candidate in elenestinib, a KIT D816V inhibitor which is the subject of a phase 2/3 study, and an early-stage KIT inhibitor BLU-808. KIT plays a central role in mast cell activation, Sanofi said, which is implicated in a broad range of inflammatory diseases.”
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • Atai Life Sciences, among the most prominent biotechs focused on psychedelic medicines, said Monday it will merge with private psychedelic startup Beckley Psytech, pending results of a trial for a drug based on the practice of “smoking toad.”
    • “The new company will be known as Atai Beckley, with Beckley Psytech shareholders receiving 31% of shares in the entity.  The deal, which values Beckley at $370 million, comes as the Trump administration has expressed support for the field.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “St. Louis-based Ascension is reportedly in talks to acquire ambulatory surgery center company AmSurg for about $3.9 billion, according to Bloomberg.
    • “AmSurg split from Envision Healthcare when the company emerged from bankruptcy in 2023. It is now backed by Pacific Investment Management Co., King Street Capital Management and Partners Group.
    • “A potential acquisition would significantly expand Ascension’s footprint in the ASC space, aligning with the broader trend toward lower-cost, outpatient care settings. AmSurg has a network of more than 250 surgery centers across 34 states and supports nearly 2,000 physicians, according to its website.”
  • and
    • “Blythe, Calif.-based Palo Verde Hospital is at risk of shutting down due to financial challenges over resignations and months of litigation, The Desert Sun reported May 30. Becker’s reached out to the hospital, which remains open as of June 2. 
    • “Congressman Raul Ruiz, MD, raised concern for the 51-bed hospital in a May 28 letter, obtained by the Sun, to California Gov. Gavin Newsom, asking the state for $4 million in emergency funding, otherwise the hospital could shutter “as soon as tomorrow.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review also collected eight GLP-1 updates for your information.
  • Per Healthcare IT News,
    • “The Clinic by Cleveland Clinic, an initiative with telemedicine technology and services company Amwell, has been getting life-changing results from leading-edge virtual care. 
    • “The Clinic has been providing virtual second opinions by the many top specialists at the renowned healthcare organization. The platform connects patients to more than 3,500 specialists across Cleveland Clinic without the need for the patients to travel to a major medical center.
    • “Misdiagnoses contribute to more than 800,000 deaths or disabilities each year in the U.S., Johns Hopkins has found, costing the healthcare system hundreds of billions, beyond the human cost. 
    • “Data from the Clinic by Cleveland Clinic shows that in 67% of cases patients receive a new diagnosis or treatment recommendation after seeking a second opinion.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Electronic health records giant Epic announced Monday that more than 1,000 hospital customers and 22,000 clinics using its EHR are now live on a government-backed data exchange, as the company doubles down on a commitment it made last year.
    • “Epic said in an announcement that it marks a significant milestone in “making health information seamlessly and securely available wherever care happens.”
    • “In March, Epic reported that more than 2,000 hospital customers and more than 50,000 Epic clinics were either live or preparing to go live on the federal Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) framework for nationwide health data exchange, according to Becker’s Health IT.
    • “The company’s goal is to have all its customers live on TEFCA by the end of the year, Epic said in August. The health IT company now commands 42.3% of the hospital EHR market, up from 39.1% a year prior, so shifting all its hospital customers to TEFCA would represent a significant share of U.S. hospitals.”
  • and
    • “Digital health company Scripta Insights is joining forces with RxSaveCard with the goal of making it easier for employers to manage drug costs and meet their fiduciary duties.
    • “RxSaveCard offers a proprietary cost management and payment solution for pharmacy benefits, and those tools will be integrated into Scripta’s AI-powered Rx Navigation platform.
    • “For members, the integration is designed so they can better find savings for a variety of drugs, including high-cost specialty products.
    • “The platform is designed to identify lower-cost options both in the member’s prescription drug coverage or through cash-pay, according to an announcement from the companies.”

Friday Report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP tells us,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday updated its childhood immunization schedule with a revised recommendation on COVID-19 vaccines for healthy children.
    • “The changes partly reflect a new position on COVID vaccine recommendations for healthy children announced earlier in the week by Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., though they do not go as far as Kennedy had suggested.
    • “The CDC childhood immunization schedule now says that healthy children ages 6 months to 17 years, when the parent expresses a desire for their child to vaccinated, “may receive COVID-19 vaccination, informed by the clinical judgement of a healthcare provider and personal preference and circumstances.” Previously, the agency had recommended COVID-19 vaccines for healthy children ages 6 months and older, based on the recommendation of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.” * * *
    • “[A]ccording to the CDC, shared clinical decision-making recommendations on the immunization schedule are required to be covered by private insurers [with no cost sharing when provided in-network] under the Affordable Care Act.
    • “The CDC is still recommending COVID vaccination for children ages 6 months to 17 years who are moderately or severely immunocompromised.”
  • Govexec informs us,
    • “The White House on Friday told the government’s top watchdog it will only cooperate when doing so does not impede its ability to carry out President Trump’s agenda, reigniting a feud that traces back to the president’s first term in office. 
    • “The letter, from Office of Management and Budget General Counsel Mark Paoletta to the Government Accountability Office, follows the watchdog last week finding the Trump administration violated federal spending laws by withholding money appropriated by Congress. Paoletta denied that the administration has flouted the Impoundment Control Act, the law that prohibits the executive branch from withholding congressionally appropriated funds for policy reasons. 
    • “The OMB official criticized GAO for asking too many questions of the White House, including the dozens of probes the watchdog has opened into potential illegal impoundments. Paoletta noted that GAO has around 50 “open engagements” with the budget office. 
    • “Not only does GAO exceed its statutory authority when it unhelpfully injects itself into an agency’s implementation of a program, GAO also hampers the Executive Branch’s ability to carry out its statutory mandates,” Paoletta said in the letter, which was first reported by The Washington Post. He added the legislative branch agency often attempts to substitute its “policy views for those of the president.” 
  • The American Medical Association News lets us know,
    • “The Government Accountability Office May 29 released a report recommending the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services target behavioral health services when auditing Medicare Advantage plans’ use of prior authorization. CMS said it currently does not target behavioral health services because they make up a small percentage of MA services, the report said.     
    • “The report describes selected MA organizations’ prior authorization requirements and use of internal coverage criteria for prior authorization decisions on behavioral health services. It also examines CMS’ oversight of the use of internal coverage criteria, among other issues. GAO said that CMS “would take the recommendation under advisement in the future.” 

In Food and Drug Administration news,

  • Per Healio,
    • “The FDA approved Tryptyr to treat the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease, according to a press release from Alcon.” * * *
    • “Many of my patients continue to face frustrating challenges with dry eye management, and there is a clear need for additional treatment options,” Marjan Farid, MD, professor of ophthalmology at the University of California, Irvine, said in the release. “Tryptyr is the first eye drop that stimulates corneal nerves to directly address tear deficiency, a known cause of dry eye disease.” * * *
    • “Alcon expects a third quarter launch for Tryptyr in the U.S.”
  • Per HCPLive,
    • “The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved hydrocortisone (KHINDIVI) oral solution as a replacement therapy in pediatric patients aged 5 years and older with adrenocortical insufficiency.1
    • Announced by Eton Pharmaceuticals on May 28, 2025, this approval marked the first FDA-approved oral solution formulation of hydrocortisone, designed to address administration and dosing accuracy in patients who may have difficulty swallowing pills or special administration needs.” * * *
    • “Adrenal insufficiency is a rare, serious condition characterized by decreased production of aldosterone and cortisol due to reduced adrenal gland function. It can present acutely in an adrenal crisis or chronically, and if not recognized, can lead to very high morbidity and mortality.2 In the release, Eton Pharmaceuticals estimated that more than 5,000 adrenal insufficiency patients are present in the US between the ages of 5 and 17.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • Seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and RSV activity is low.
    • COVID-19
      • COVID-19 wastewater activity, emergency department visits, and laboratory percent positivity are at very low levels.
      • Additional information about current COVID-19 activity can be found at: CDC COVID Data Tracker: Home.
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • RSV activity has declined to low levels.
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP adds,
    • “The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in its weekly update today reported 42 measles cases, some tied to a large outbreak centered in West Texas and others linked to instances of community transmission or travel to other states or countries, lifting the nation’s total to 1,088 infections.
    • “Two more states reported their first cases this week, Iowa and Nebraska, putting the number of affected jurisdictions at 33. The number of outbreaks remained at 14, and 90% of cases are linked to outbreaks.” * * *
    • “The Texas Department of State Health Services (TDSHS) today reported 9 more cases in the West Texas outbreak, putting the total since January at 738. Though 35 counties have reported cases linked to the outbreak, only 7 still have ongoing transmission. 
    • “Like other states, Texas also continues to record measles cases from various sources that apparently aren’t linked to the larger outbreak, and today officials reported 8 more such infections, lifting that total to 32. 
    • “A few other states have reported cases linked to West Texas activity, but no new illnesses were reported in New Mexico or Oklahoma. On May 28, Kansas reported a total of 64 cases from 11 counties, 59 of them linked to an outbreak in the southwestern part of the state.’
  • CBS News reports,
    • “Hormel Foods Corporation is recalling over 256,000 pounds of canned beef stew nationwide due to potential contamination with wood fragments, according to federal health officials.
    • In a recall notice posted Wednesday [May 28], the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service said the 20-oz. metal cans containing “Dinty Moore Beef Stew” were shipped to retail locations nationwide.
    • “The recalled products have a “FEB 2028” best by date, lot code “T02045” and establishment number “EST 199G” printed on the can. 
    • “The problem was discovered after the establishment notified FSIS that they had received three consumer complaints reporting pieces of wood in the beef stew product,” the notice read. 
    • “So far, there have been no confirmed reports of injury.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know “what doctors wish patients knew about improving eye health.”
  • Health Day points out,
    • “Among U.S. youth, overdose deaths attributable to synthetic opioids alone are increasingly predominant, according to a study published online May 20 in Pediatrics.
    • “Megan Miller, M.P.H., from the New York University Grossman School of Medicine in New York City, and colleagues examined trends in overdose deaths involving combinations of synthetic opioids with benzodiazepine, cocaine, heroin, prescription opioids, and other stimulants. Findings were based on U.S. youth aged 15 to 24 years from 2018 to 2022 using the National Vital Statistics System multiple cause of death datasets.
    • “The researchers found that between 2018 and 2022, overdose death counts increased from 4,652 to 6,723 (10.85 to 15.16 per 100,000), with a slight decrease between 2021 and 2022. Deaths involving synthetic opioids only showed the largest increases (1.8 to 4.8 deaths per 100,000). Regardless of race, ethnicity, or sex, fatal synthetic opioid-only overdose rates were higher than polydrug overdose rates involving synthetic opioids since 2020. In 2022, rates of synthetic-only overdose deaths were 2.49- and 2.15-times higher among male versus female youth and among those aged 20 to 24 versus 15 to 19 years, respectively.”
  • and
    • “Heart disease, strokes and diabetes contribute to many dementia cases in the United States, but the risk is not equal everywhere, a new study says.
    • “Overall, more than a third (37%) of U.S. dementia cases are linked to eight conditions: diabetes, heart failure, atrial fibrillation, coronary artery disease, heart attack, stroke, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, researchers found.
    • “The South has the strongest link between these diseases and dementia, researchers reported recently in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
    • “A substantial number of dementia cases could be eliminated by mitigating modifiable cardiometabolic risk factors, especially in U.S. counties with a high risk of dementia attributed to these risk factors,” senior researcher Dr. Brad Racette said in a news release. He’s chair of neurology at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix.”
  • Per a National Institutes of Health news release,
    • “A research team funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has identified a diagnostic aid that has the potential to accurately predict the recurrence of diabetic foot ulcers that appear to be fully healed. By measuring the skin’s barrier function through a process known as trans-epidermal water loss, or TEWL, scientists were able to determine which wounds were more likely to reopen. TEWL measurements are a major factor in burn care, where deep layers of the skin are often damaged. The findings suggest that full restoration of skin barrier function should be incorporated into existing wound treatment standards to ensure complete wound closure and to better identify patients at risk of wound recurrence.
    • “This study is an important initial step to give clinicians treating diabetic foot ulcers a reliable diagnostic aid for the first time to assess an individual’s risk of ulcer recurrence,” said Teresa Jones, M.D. program director for the Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, & Metabolic Diseases at NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). “Foot ulcers are such a confounding issue with diabetes and being able to determine which wounds are at highest risk for recurrence could save many lives and limbs.”  
  • NCQA, writing in LinkedIn, tells us,
    • The use of peer support is a growing trend for populations affected by mental health and substance use disorders. Peers—both paid and volunteer—have many of the same lived experiences as the people they serve, and can help them navigate the health care system, access treatment and overcome barriers to recovery.
    • Peers are another avenue of support in the behavioral care system—their shared experience related to mental health, addiction and recovery helps them build trust relationships. Many studies show the benefits of peer support: decreased days in inpatient care, increased engagement in outpatient treatment, reduced readmission rates and lower relapse rates.
    • “There’s a stigma associated with receiving mental health and substance use treatment,” says Chrissy Craig, MSPH, NCQA’s Senior Health Care Analyst. “Because of their lived experience, peers can connect with people who may not be ready to engage in traditional treatment approaches. They can build trust and encourage individuals to get the help they need.”
    • Recognizing the importance of peer support, NCQA has added it as an option for follow-up care in four HEDIS® measures:
      • Follow-Up After Emergency Department Visit for Substance Use (FUA).
      • Follow-Up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness (FUH).
      • Follow-Up After Emergency Department Visit for Mental Illness (FUM).
      • Follow-Up After High-Intensity Care for Substance Use Disorder (FUI) (MY 2026).
  • Per Health Leaders Media,
    • “An AI tool that can detect inflammation in the coronary artery could help clinicians diagnose heart disease much earlier, even decades before the patient shows any outward signs of distress.
    • “CaRi-Heart Technology, developed by Connecticut-based Caristo Diagnostics, was recently given its own Category III CPT code by the American Medical Association’s CPT Editorial Panel, an important step in the path to adoption after FDA approval and, just as important, payer reimbursement. The technology has also shown promising results in trials conducted in 2024 at five National Health Service hospitals in the UK, where reports indicate more than half of patients analyzed by the AI tool had their treatments changed.
    • “To clinicians, the tool could be a critical step forward in the diagnosis and treatment of heart disease, the leading cause of death in the country.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Sanofi and Regeneron’s respiratory drug, itepekimab, showed mixed results in late-stage trials for COPD.
    • “One trial saw a statistically significant 27% reduction, while the other missed its primary goal with only a 2% reduction.
    • “Sanofi shares fell 7% and Regeneron shares dropped 12% after the results; future steps will be discussed with regulators.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “A dual-acting drug developed by Summit Therapeutics and Akeso delayed tumor progression in a Phase 3 lung cancer trial but didn’t extend survival, complicating its potential path to approval in the U.S.
    • “When administered alongside chemotherapy, the drug, known as ivonescimab, reduced the risk of death or disease progression by 48% compared to chemotherapy alone in patients whose non-small cell lung cancer has a mutation in a gene called EGFR. However, a 21% reduction in death risk, specifically, didn’t meet the threshold for statistical significance, Summit said in a statement Friday.
    • “Summit intends to seek Food and Drug Administration approval based on the study results. Yet in its statement, the company indicated the timing of a filing is uncertain given the agency has made clear that a survival benefit is “necessary” to support a submission.”

Fromm the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The actuarial consulting firm, Milliman, announced on May 27,
    • the release of the 2025 Milliman Medical Index (MMI), which measures healthcare costs for Americans covered by a typical employer-sponsored health insurance plan. Healthcare costs for the average person increased 6.7% in 2025, with pharmacy costs increasing by 9.7% and outpatient facility care costs rising 8.5%. Healthcare costs for a hypothetical family of four rose to $35,119.
    • “Pharmaceutical costs have been a leading driver of healthcare spending in recent years,” says Milliman Principal and Consulting Actuary Dave Liner. “This year, outpatient facility services and pharmacy costs together accounted for nearly 70% of the total cost increase. Much of the outpatient growth is linked to high-cost drugs administered in outpatient settings.”
    • In recognition of the MMI’s 20th anniversary, this edition includes a look back at how healthcare costs have evolved in the last 20 years. “Since we began publishing the MMI 20 years ago, healthcare costs for American families have nearly tripled,” says Milliman Principal and Consulting Actuary Deana Bell. “Annual growth has averaged 6.1%, far outpacing any other household expense. No other cost category has risen as steeply or as consistently over the past two decades. Outpatient facility care saw the largest increase of any category, rising 286% since 2005, reflecting the growing complexity of procedures now handled outside of inpatient settings.”
    • Read this year’s MMI.
  • An essayist writing in the Wall Street Journal, opines “America’s hospital-bed shortage is about to become a crisis. As new construction declines and occupancy rates soar, experts warn that hospitals may soon cease to function properly because of overcrowding.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Health systems, accountable care organizations and others are bringing extra staff and tracking technology into post-acute care to reduce hospital readmissions.
    • “Health systems, such as OSF Healthcare, and accountable care organizations, such as Provider Partners Connect Care are using remote patient monitoring equipment, electronic medical records software and additional staff to ensure patients don’t have a set-back that will send them back to the hospital. Readmissions add costs that ripple through the healthcare system and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services penalizes hospitals and nursing homes for higher-than-predicted readmissions within 30 days of a hospital discharge.”
  • and
    • UnityPoint Health, based in West Des Moines, Iowa, and MercyOne Siouxland Medical Center in Sioux City, Iowa, have signed a letter of intent for UnityPoint to acquire the medical center. The proposed agreement includes the hospital, its associated facilities, physician practices and home care services. The acquisition is expected to be finalized this summer, pending customary closing conditions.”
  • and
    • MDaudit, a cloud-based continuous risk monitoring platform that helps healthcare organizations reduce billing vulnerabilities and increase revenue, has entered into a definitive merger agreement to acquire Streamline Health Solutions, a provider of tools that help healthcare providers improve financial performance. The all-cash transaction is valued at approximately $37.4 million, including debt. The deal is expected to close in the third quarter.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • Women’s healthcare company Wisp has launched a diagnostics arm to offer low-cost testing at home for sexual and reproductive health, the company announced May 28. 
    • Wisp is an online platform that prescribes medication for a range of women’s health needs such as oral contraception, yeast infections, fertility, emergency contraception and some medication abortion. Women can pick up their prescriptions at the pharmacy on the same day as their request, following approval by a provider. Wisp also ships medications in discreet packaging. 
    • Wisp will now offer at-home tests for common sexually transmitted infections and free telehealth consultations for positive results, according to a release by the company. Patients will send completed urine tests or swabs to a partnered CLIA/CAP accredited laboratory and receive results in three to five business days. 
    • “The new model expands on Wisp’s direct-to-consumer telehealth platform and eliminates the need for patients to visit an in-person clinic to complete diagnostic testing. Patients can collect samples at home with tests sent in discreet packaging to maintain privacy in their healthcare and receive services entirely from home.”
  • and
    • Talkspace inked a partnership with Amazon Pharmacy to streamline psychiatric medication fulfillment and home delivery for its members.
    • “It marks the first time a virtual behavioral health solution has integrated with Amazon Pharmacy, the companies said.
    • “Psychiatric patients of Talkspace can now have their medications fulfilled through Amazon Pharmacy and delivered to their homes for seamless medication management. Talkspace and Amazon Pharmacy tout the partnership will improve medication adherence for Talkspace members.” 
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • Best Buy reported $109 million in charges primarily linked to restructuring at the electronics retailer’s health unit in its first quarter, the company said in earnings released Thursday. 
    • The company began restructuring its health business after it recorded a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $475 million in its fourth quarter ended Feb. 1, linked to a downward revision in the long-term financial projections for its health segment. 
    • The retailer partners with healthcare organizations to provide in-home health services, but the business has taken “longer to develop than we initially thought,” as providers grapple with financial challenges and the future of the federal government’s hospital at home waiver seems uncertain, Best Buy CEO Corie Barry said during a call with investors Thursday.

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Modern Healthcare relates,
    • “A coalition of healthcare trade associations and companies representing 550 providers and accountable care organizations is pleading with Congress to restore incentive bonuses for Medicare alternative payment models.
    • “The American Medical Association, Boston-based Mass General Brigham and others wrote congressional leaders Thursday expressing concern that failure to renew bonus payments will worsen providers’ financial instability, particularly in underserved regions.
    • “While we have seen steady growth for advanced [alternative payment models] in recent years, 2025 is a pivotal year for Medicare’s value transformation,” the letter says. “The expiration of Medicare’s advanced [alternative payment model] incentive payments and sharp increase in qualifying thresholds is creating significant challenges for physician practices and hospitals as they plan for the years ahead.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. The Department of Health and Human Services has canceled a contract with Moderna to develop messenger RNA vaccines against influenza strains seen as potential pandemic risks, leaving the future of the underlying research uncertain.
    • “Moderna revealed in a statement Wednesday that the HHS had terminated the contract, which could have handed the company more than $700 million in total funding. Moderna also reported that an experimental H5 avian influenza vaccine it’s developed showed promising results in an early-stage clinical trial. But without the government’s help, it will now be forced to “explore alternatives for late-stage development and manufacturing.”
    • “While the termination of funding from HHS adds uncertainty, we are pleased by the robust immune response and safety profile observed in this interim analysis,” said CEO Stéphane Bancel, in a statement. “These clinical data in pandemic influenza underscore the critical role mRNA technology has played as a countermeasure to emerging health threats.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “Federal job applicants will soon be quizzed on their favorite Trump administration policy as part of the hiring process, according to the Office of Personnel Management’s new “merit hiring plan.”
    • “How would you help advance the president’s executive orders and policy priorities in this role?” asks one of four essay questions that job seekers must answer if they are seeking any federal position GS-5 or above. “Identify one or two relevant executive orders or policy initiatives that are significant to you, and explain how you would help implement them if hired.”
    • “The federal government’s dedicated HR agency published the plan via a joint memo from Vince Haley, director of President Trump’s Domestic Policy Council and acting OPM Director Charles Ezell. The document is a hodgepodge of bipartisan reforms developed under both Trump and former President Biden to accelerate and improve the hiring process, alongside plans to eradicate longstanding efforts to make the federal workforce more reflective of the American populace.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, discusses what the latest FERS changes found in the budget reconciliation bill mean for federal and postal employee retirement benefits.
  • The Congressional Budget Office announced its 2025 panel of health advisors.
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “The White House will fix errors in a much-anticipated federal government report spearheaded by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., which decried America’s food supply, pesticides and prescription drugs.
    • “Kennedy’s wide-ranging “Make America Healthy Again” report, released last week, cited hundreds of studies, but a closer look by the news organization NOTUS found that some of those studies did not actually exist.
    • “Asked about the report’s problems, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the report will be updated.
    • “I understand there was some formatting issues with the MAHA report that are being addressed, and the report will be updated,” Leavitt told reporters during her briefing. “But it does not negate the substance of the report, which, as you know, is one of the most transformative health reports that has ever been released by the federal government.”
  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefits Plans discusses what the President’s April 15 executive order on PBM transparency means for employers and other purchasers of PBM services.
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Six years after being spun out from Novartis and becoming a public company, eye care specialist Alcon has gained its first FDA approval for a prescription drug, scoring a nod for dry eye disease (DED) treatment Tryptyr (acoltremon ophthalmic solution).
    • “Tryptyr, which is administered as a single drop twice daily, is a first-in-class TRPM8 receptor agonist intended to activate tear production. 
    • “Tryptyr is the first eye drop that stimulates corneal nerves to directly address tear deficiency, a known cause of (DED),” Marjan Farid, M.D., professor of ophthalmology at the University of California, Irvine, said in a release.
    • “There are roughly 38 million in the U.S. who have DED. Fewer than 10% of those who have been diagnosed are being treated with a prescription product, according to Alcon.”

From the judicial front,

  • Chain Drug Review reports,
    • “Express Scripts, a Cigna-owned pharmacy benefit manager, and CVS Health have filed separate lawsuits against the state of Arkansas, seeking to halt the implementation of a new law that would bar PBMs from owning, managing, or controlling pharmacies within the state. 
    • “In a statement, CVS Health said the “unconstitutional law puts local politics ahead of patients, restricting their access to life-saving medications and undermining fair competition.“
    • “The lawsuits, filed Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, argue that the law, scheduled to take effect in 2026, is unconstitutional under multiple provisions, according to Modern Healthcare. Both companies claim the legislation would lead to significant disruptions in pharmacy access, workforce displacement, and increased medication costs.”
    • FEHBlog note — Good luck, CVS and ESI.
  • The Groom Law Group, which represents ERIC in its federal court lawsuit challenging the problematic to say the least 2024 mental health parity amendments, brings us up to date on the litigation, which so far has been successful.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Adults diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder experience a range of benefits, including improved self-understanding, reduced self-blame and enhanced communication with others.
    • “The diagnosis can lead to positive changes in relationships, as individuals can now better explain their needs and behaviors to loved ones.
    • “Adults with autism may make adjustments to their routines and social interactions to accommodate their sensory sensitivities and communication challenges.”
  • Cardiovascular Business points out,
    • “Smoking marijuana and eating THC-based gummies have a negative impact on a person’s vascular health, according to new research published in JAMA Cardiology. In fact, the impact appears to be comparable to the damage seen in some tobacco users.
    • “There is a popular belief that marijuana smoke is harmless,” wrote first author Leila Mohammadi, MD, PhD, a vascular specialist with the University of California San Francisco, and colleagues. “However, marijuana smoke contains many of the thousands of chemicals contained in tobacco smoke, along with fine particles that contribute to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. As cannabis legalization increases, it is crucial to understand the public health and clinical implications of marijuana use.” * * *
    • “Click here to review the full analysis.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Use of the investigational non-opioid analgesic resiniferatoxin appeared to improve pain control in patients with advanced cancer who had intractable pain, though all patients experienced adverse events (AEs), according to an interim analysis of a first-in-human phase I trial.
    • “Among 19 patients with refractory cancer pain localized to the abdomen and/or lower extremities, a total of 213 treatment-emergent AEs were reported with a single intrathecal injection of resiniferatoxin, including 37 serious AEs in 14 patients, and at least one AE in all patients, reported Andrew J. Mannes, MD, of the NIH, and colleagues.” * * *
    • “In an accompanying editorial, Krishna B. Shah, MD, and Bilal Dar, MD, both of the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, noted that the improvements in efficacy “exceeded thresholds typically considered clinically meaningful,” and that the drug has the potential to provide “durable, opioid-sparing analgesia while preserving functional and cognitive abilities.”
    • “These interim results “represent an important step toward expanding the therapeutic interventional opioid-sparing options for patients with refractory cancer pain,” they wrote.”
  • Medscape notes,
    • “Extreme fatigue, bone loss, and abdominal pain are real-world adverse events noted with the use of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s) that may not have been apparent from the clinical trials.
    • “In a wide-ranging “meet the professor” lecture at the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology (AACE) Annual Meeting 2025, obesity expert W. Timothy Garvey, MD, the Charles E. Butterworth, Jr. professor and university professor at the University of Alabama (UAB) and director of the UAB Diabetes Research Center at Birmingham, Alabama, said these phenomena all point to the importance of close clinical management of people taking GLP-1s and to the dangers of online prescribing of these medications.
    • “You can’t engage in complications-centric obesity care unless you evaluate the patient for complications, which doesn’t happen with online availability of prescriptions,” said Garvey.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Intellia Therapeutics shares dropped 25% early Thursday after the gene-editing company disclosed that one patient in an ongoing Phase 3 trial had signs of liver stress.
    • “Lab tests showed the patient had grade 4 liver transaminase elevations that “appear to be resolving” without hospitalization or medical treatment and have since fallen to less dangerous levels, Intellia said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Wednesday. “We continue to monitor these events as the Magnitude study progresses,” the company said.
    • “The Magnitude trial is testing Intellia’s experimental therapy in a type of deadly heart condition known as transthyretin amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy, or ATTR-CM. Intellia has already recruited 365 patients and plans to enroll a total of 765 by early 2027. Though the study is blinded, it’s likely that the patient with the potentially serious liver signals received treatment with Intellia’s therapy, analysts said.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “Healthcare C-suite leaders are trying to keep pace with rapid changes in U.S. economic and regulatory policies in the first four months of the second Trump administration.
    • “Among 700 business executives across six industries, nearly half (48%) of business executives rank economic policy among the top three factors driving strategic change over the next one to two years, according to a new PwC May pulse survey
    • “For healthcare executives, persistent policy and market volatility is a bigger concern, with six out of 10 (61%) rethinking short-term business strategies due to economic policies.
    • “Leaders at healthcare organizations also cited a number of other factors affecting short-term strategic changes — AI and data regulations (56%), U.S. trade policy (44%) and U.S. federal government spending and budget policy (37%). Healthcare C-suite leaders seem less concerned about corporate tax policy, cited by 34% as a factor driving short-term strategic changes, as well as the U.S. antitrust and competition environment (24%), climate policy (22%) and U.S. immigration policy (22%).
    • “About half (48%) of the business executives surveyed expect the current uncertainty to last less than a year, but many anticipate it could extend through the next presidential election.” 
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Private practice is slowly fading as a way to do business, going the way of landline phones, bank deposit slips and fax machines.
    • “An analysis by the American Medical Association found the percentage of physicians in a practice wholly owned by physicians last year to be at the lowest level since the survey began in 2012. The AMA examined data from its biennial Physician Practice Benchmark Survey, most recently conducted in 2024.
    • “The percentage of physicians working in private practice has dropped below 45%.
    • “Of the remaining physicians surveyed, the highest percentage are employed by hospitals.
    • “Along with that shift, only 35% of physicians described their employment status as owners in 2024.”
  • The Wall Street Journal explains how Novo Nordisk lost its mojo in the GLP-1 drugs market.
    • “Novo Nordisk, once Europe’s most valuable company, is losing its grip on the anti-obesity market due to production issues and slow marketing.
    • “Eli Lilly’s weight-loss drug Zepbound has surpassed Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy in weekly U.S. prescriptions, and Lilly has a more promising pipeline.
    • “Novo Nordisk’s CEO was ousted, shares have tumbled, and the company faces challenges in R&D and direct-to-consumer marketing.”
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) news release,
    • ICER publishes Evidence Report on Treatment for Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis
    • There are significant uncertainties regarding long term efficacy of tolebrutinib;
    • ICER estimates that treatment would achieve common thresholds of cost-effectiveness if priced between $3,250 and $5,900 per year.
  • Health Affairs concludes in a recent article,
    • “Because many value-based care programs in the US are fragmented, heterogeneous and complex, none are driving large-scale, systemic change. Clinical care redesign driven by value-based healthcare programs has been halting and has achieved far less than promised.
    • “A rising mood of despair over the ability to achieve a sustainable, high-value healthcare system is causing some to support interventions such as price controls and heavier regulation to drive down spending. However, a key missing ingredient in value-based reforms has been sufficiently nuanced information about the clinical context in which patients are treated. A primary challenge in finally achieving high value healthcare in the US is discovering how to harness the comprehensive and nuanced data generated in the provision of care, which is available in each patient’s EHR, to support systemic care redesign to achieve better outcomes at lower cost. Adding that key ingredient could be transformative.
    • “The system currently used to extract data from EHRs in the US, ICD-10-CM, does not adequately capture clinical detail and nuance. Gaps, limitations, and errors in describing healthcare today lead directly to our inability to accurately measure both the outcomes resulting from the care provided and the cost of that care. The WHO created and released ICD-11 to address these issues, and with an appropriate comprehensive extension such as ICD-11-CCL the ability to measure and attain value in healthcare would be achievable. However, even if the US loses access to ICD-11, there is another viable option. SNOMED CT is a comprehensive clinical terminology, optimized for the capture of clinical nuance, that uses architecture designed for computerized data analytics. It is already used to capture and store clinical content in EHRs and could be leveraged through the creation of a comprehensive code set to also extract and transmit data with all clinical nuance preserved. Such a system would overcome most, if not all, of the current limitations in ICD-10-CM and could empower existing value-based programs to improve the cost-effectiveness of healthcare.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Retail giant Walmart is rolling out a new platform for insurers and benefit managers that’s designed to make it easier to encourage healthy eating.
    • “The tool, called Everyday Health Signals, is powered by artificial intelligence, analyzing a consumers’ retail history on Walmart.com to surface personalized feedback such as shopping lists and nutrition analyses. Given that the retailer sees 145 million customers each week in stores and online, it has a bevy of data to pull from, according to an announcement.
    • “Eligible customers can opt in to allowing Everyday Health Signals to dig into their shopping history, Walmart said.
    • “The program is initially launching in partnership with NationsBenefits, connecting its members to data they can use to meet key health goals. Walmart intends to expand to other insurers and benefits organizations in the future.”
  • and
    • “Humana is the latest major insurer to partner with digital sleep clinic Dreem Health to improve members’ sleep care.
    • “California-based Dreem Health was acquired by sleep diagnostics company Sunrise in December. The company already has partnerships with the country’s largest payers including Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, HealthNet, UnitedHealthcare and Medicare.
    • “Sunrise was built on the back of research conducted by Jean-Benoit Martinot, M.D., the father of Sunrise CEO and founder Laurent Martinot. The company developed a small device that patients are able to use to diagnose sleep disorders from anywhere—without the inconvenience of spending the night hooked up to wires in a lab—while still providing a near-similar level of information.
    • “Our dream today is to become the largest sleep clinic in the country,” said Laurent Martinot in an interview with Fierce Healthcare. “We already have the largest virtual care sleep clinic. We would like to become the No. 1 one place you go if you feel you are not sleeping well and you need some care.”
    • “The Sunrise device is a diagnostic tool that is able to measure jaw movements, muscle contractions and snoring noises (through a built-in mic) from the comfort of a patient’s own bed. It’s disposable and is able to record data for up to three nights. A report is generated after just one night of sleep, allowing a care team to engage and start next steps immediately.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Highmark Health is off to a challenging start to the year as its insurance business dinged the company’s bottom line during the first quarter.
    • “On Thursday, the privately held for-profit Blue Cross and Blue Shield licensee reported net income of $13 million, a steep decline from $194 million the prior year, as revenue rose 11% to $8 billion
    • “As we’ve seen with the nationals on the health plan side, elevated trends are here to stay,” said Carl Daley, chief financial officer and treasurer of Highmark Health.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Cancer drugmaker iTeos Therapeutics said Wednesday it plans to wind down operations and seek to sell the company’s assets and intellectual property rights.
    • “ITeos has for years struggled to develop a cancer treatment that sufficiently impressed investors and its pharmaceutical partners. Two weeks ago, it said it was shelving its most advanced drug prospect, a TIGIT-targeting treatment developed with GSK.
    • “The immuno-oncology developer is the latest biotechnology company considering merger prospects or liquidatation of its assets this year. Others such as Cargo Therapeutics and Third Harmonic Bio have made their own plans to dissolve.”

Midweek update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC,

  • Bloomberg Law tells us,
    • US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s decision to pull the Covid-19 vaccine from the CDC’s recommended immunization list for healthy children and pregnant women means health plans must navigate whether to keep providing coverage for the shot. * * *
    • “Kennedy’s announcement in a video posted on X appeared to skip recommendations from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, a panel of outside medical experts who guide the CDC on vaccine policy and vote for any new or updated recommendations to the schedule.
    • “The ACIP holds weight because the Affordable Care Act and the Inflation Reduction Act tie coverage in the commercial and Medicaid markets to the committee’s recommendations, attorneys say. That committee also votes on whether vaccines should be added to the federal Vaccines for Children program, which provides vaccines to children who can’t to afford them. 
    • “The panel is currently scheduled to meet starting June 26 to consider Covid-19 vaccines.
    • “The HHS did not respond to request for comment on further details of the announcement.”
  • Fierce Pharma informs us,
    • “While the Trump administration’s threat of pharmaceutical import tariffs and most favored nation (MFN) drug pricing has weighed heavily on the pharmaceutical industry in recent months, many branded drugmakers are well-positioned to handle the pressures.
    • “That was the perspective offered in a new report by S&P Global, which suggests that many global pharma companies can endure pricing pressures, trade duties and more, and that some of the most concerning policies floated by President Donald Trump are unlikely to materialize as planned.
    • “Still, Trump’s ambition to impose a most favored nation (MFN) drug pricing policy—which would attempt to close the gap between the costs of U.S. drugs and those in other countries—would be “highly negative” to branded drugmakers’ credit quality if enacted, the S&P team cautioned.”

In Food and Drug Administration news,

  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Abbott said Tuesday it received Food and Drug Administration approval for the Tendyne transcatheter mitral valve replacement system to treat calcium buildup in the ring that supports the heart valve.
    • “The device is available for patients with severe mitral annular calcification who are not candidates for open heart surgery or transcatheter mitral valve repair.
    • “Abbott’s MitraClip system for mitral valve repair competes with Edwards Lifesciences’ Pascal repair device. The rivals are now set to compete in mitral valve replacement: Edwards won Europe’s CE mark last month for the Sapien M3 transfemoral system and expects U.S. approval in 2026.”
  • and
    • “Boston Scientific said Wednesday it plans to end worldwide sales of its transcatheter aortic valve replacement systems, citing regulatory hurdles. The company will discontinue its Acurate Neo2 and Acurate Prime TAVR systems, which are sold in Europe, and will not pursue Food and Drug Administration approval for the devices. 
    • “Boston Scientific said in a regulatory filing that the decision followed recent discussions with regulators, adding that the products faced increased requirements to maintain approvals in global markets and to obtain approvals in new regions.”

From the judicial front,

  • Yesterday, the U.S. Solicitor General filed with the Supreme Court a requested amicus brief recommending that the Court not review a U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit decision that overrode parts of Oklahoma’s PBM reform law based on ERISA and Medicare preemption. The Supreme Court is likely to make a ruling on this issue next month. The FEHBlog is happy about this development.
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “An Elevance Health subsidiary is suing the billing dispute consulting company HaloMD and two hospital-based Georgia providers, alleging they conspired to exploit the No Surprises Act.
    • “Blue Cross Blue Shield Healthcare Plan of Georgia, which operates under Elevance Health’s Anthem brand, filed the suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia on Tuesday. The company alleges HaloMD and its out-of-network clients inappropriately won higher reimbursements through the No Surprises Act’s independent dispute resolution, or IDR, system.
    • “Defendants procured improper payments from [Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia] on thousands of disputes. Indeed, nearly 70% of disputes on which defendants received an IDR payment determination were clearly ineligible for the process. Since 2024, defendants’ scheme has caused millions of dollars in damages, and it continues to harm [Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia], employer plan sponsors and other managed care companies,” the insurer wrote in its complaint.
    • “Elevance Health estimates it spent $5.9 million on excess reimbursements and IDR fees from Jan. 3, 2024, to April 29, 2025.”
    • Unquestionably the IDR system needs to become more transparent to the parties.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • ABC News relates,
    • “About a month ago, the rate of new measles cases was accelerating at a seemingly unprecedented rate with more than 100 infections being confirmed every week.
    • “However, over the last couple of weeks, the rate of newly confirmed cases appears to be slowing.
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed an average of 22 weekly cases over the last two weeks.
    • “Even in western Texas, which had been driving most new cases in the U.S., about 11 cases have been confirmed since May 23.
    • “Public health experts told ABC News they believe measles cases are slowing down due to a mix of vaccination, a build of natural immunity and people staying home when sick.”
  • The Washington Post points out,
    • “Scores of researchers have produced new tools that can deliver genes and selectively activate them in hundreds of different cell types in the brain and spinal cord, a breakthrough that scientists hope advances them toward developing targeted therapies to treat neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS, Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s.
    • “The discoveries, made through the National Institutes of Health’s BRAIN initiative, show with unprecedented clarity and precision how neural cells work together, but also how diseases disrupt their tight choreography. The insight offers the promise that doctors may one day treat diseases by manipulating dysfunctional cells.
    • “Looking ahead, with sustained investment, the advances we can achieve in understanding consciousness — and in repairing neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders — will be nothing short of life-changing,” Gord Fishell, a professor of neurobiology at Harvard Medical School and one of the scientists involved in the discoveries, said in an interview for the BRAIN webpage. “This will revolutionize both our grasp of how the brain works and our ability to treat currently intractable conditions.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Self-reported maternal mental health declined in recent years, as did maternal physical health, though less drastically, a cross-sectional study suggested.
    • “After adjustments for secular changes in sociodemographic groups, “excellent” physical health decreased by 4.2 percentage points, “excellent” mental health decreased by 12.4 percentage points, and “fair/poor” mental health increased by 3.5 percentage points from 2016 to 2023, reported Jamie Daw, PhD, of the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in New York City, and colleagues in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • “Daw told MedPage Today that this decline in mental health was even greater than what she and her team were expecting to find. Recent research has focused on the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health, but this study indicated that the downward population-level trends were happening before 2020.
    • “This is not just a pandemic story — it’s much broader than that,” Daw said. “This study helps us expand our thinking about when we should be caring about the health of mothers, and in pointing out that it is well beyond the perinatal period.”
  • and
    • “For patients with major depression, there was a clinically meaningful but not statistically significant improvement in the primary endpoint with 20-mg azetukalner.
    • “There were significant improvements in secondary endpoints.
    • “A phase III trial of azetukalner in major depressive disorder is now underway.”
  • The McKinsey Health Institute discusses how “the advent of weight management drugs such as GLP-1s have brought the treatment of obesity to the forefront of public attention, provoking a larger opportunity to work toward metabolic health for all.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality notes,
    • “In 2022, the top 1 percent of people ranked by their healthcare expenditures accounted for 21.7 percent of total healthcare expenditures, while the bottom 50 percent accounted for less than 3 percent.
    • “People with the top 1 percent of expenses had an average of $147,071 in healthcare expenditures in 2022, which was lower than in 2021.
    • “People ages 65 and older and non-Hispanic Whites were disproportionately represented in the above median expenditure tiers.
    • “Ambulatory events, inpatient stays, and prescribed medicines each accounted for about 30 percent of healthcare expenses for people with the top 5 percent of expenses.
    • “Over three-quarters of expenses for people with the top 5 percent of expenses were paid for by private insurance or Medicare.
    • “Among adults in the top 5 percent expenditure tier, 75.1 percent had two or more of the AHRQ-designated priority conditions.”
  • MedCity News tells us,
    • “Most large employers plan to uphold their well-being benefits in 2025 even though they’re facing increasing healthcare costs and global economic headwinds, according to a recent survey from the Business Group on Health.
    • “The Business Group on Health is a nonprofit advocacy organization for large employers. The survey included responses from 131 employers that employ 11.2 million people across the world. Conducted in January and February, it follows another Business Group on Health survey that projected healthcare costs to rise nearly 8% in 2025, the highest increase in over a decade.
    • “The new survey found that 73% of employers plan to maintain their well-being programs in 2025, while 20% will be expanding their programs. The remainder will either decrease their well-being programs or are unsure.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “Customer satisfaction with health plans is on the decline, and the gap between the highest and lowest performers is getting wider, according to a new report.
    • “J.D. Power released its annual study looking at consumers’ attitudes toward commercial health plans, which found that the average satisfaction score for this market is 563 on a 1,000-point scale. But there is notable variation in scores based on geography and plan, with a high of 594 and a low of 523.
    • “The J.D. Power report said this means plan members in different parts of the country are having different experiences and finding varied value in their coverage.
    • “Member experience is a critical differentiator for employers and plan sponsors, with 20% of employers saying they switched plans due to low satisfaction among employees. Plans that separate themselves from the pack have invested in engagement, education and service, according to the study.”
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • “A new digital health care marketplace, launched last week, has a good amount of Amazon in its DNA. General Medicine, with $32 million in funding, came out of stealth with three former Amazon employees as co-founders and investors, a business model that could compete with Amazon’s One Medical — and behind the scenes, a current senior Amazon executive. 
    • “The former employees, including the founders of PillPack — the pharmacy company that Amazon bought in 2018 for about $750 million and grew into Amazon Pharmacy — bill General Medicine as a “one-stop shop for expert care” that connects patients to its own telehealth medical practices and to outside care. Sunita Mishra, Amazon Health Services’ chief medical officer, is the physician owner of one of those practices and advised the company early on, General Medicine and Mishra confirmed.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “ChristianaCare plans to assume operations of five Crozer Health outpatient facilities in Pennsylvania after submitting the highest bid of $50.3 million. 
    • “The auction was held as Prospect Medical Holdings, Crozer’s parent company, seeks to sell the system’s assets after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January. The sale to Wilmington, Delaware-based ChristianaCare is subject to court approval, according to a Wednesday news release. 
    • “The sale includes two facilities in Glenn Mills, Pennsylvania as well as single facilities in Havertown, Broomall and Media, Pennsylvania. ChristianaCare said it is evaluating the programs and services offered at each location to determine what will be continued, expanded or revamped.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Secaucus, N.J.-based Hudson Regional Health, a four-hospital system, has been created as part of the final step in CarePoint Health’s bankruptcy exit.
    • “U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Kate Stickles approved the plan April 17, which went into effect May 22. The system comprises Secaucus-based Hudson Regional Hospital, Jersey City-based Christ Hospital, Hoboken (N.J.) University Medical Center and Bayonne (N.J.) Medical Center, and more than 70 affiliated locations, according to a May 27 Hudson Regional Health news release shared with Becker’s.”
  • “and provides a list of ten new shortages and discontinuations, according to drug supply databases from the FDA and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.” 

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC

  • Federal News Network interviews Bloomberg Government deputy news director Loren Duggan about what’s next for the Big Beautiful Bill Act.
  • Per a Senate press release,
    • Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) joined Sens. John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) to introduce the Don’t Sell My DNA Act to safeguard consumers’ sensitive genetic data during corporate bankruptcy proceedings.
    • The Don’t Sell My DNA Act strengthens consumer privacy protections by:
      • Modernizing the Bankruptcy Code to include genetic information in the definition of “personally identifiable information”;
      • Requiring written notice and affirmative consumer consent prior to the use, sale or lease of genetic information during bankruptcy proceedings; and
      • Requiring the trustee or debtor in possession of genetic information to permanently delete any data not subject to a sale or lease.
    • “Consumers should feel confident that any personal information shared with a public company isn’t up for grabs when that company files for bankruptcy,” Grassley said. “This bill would fill gaps in current law to help safeguard consumers’ genetic information and ensure Americans’ DNA isn’t treated like any other financial asset.”
  • The American Hospital Association lets us know,
    • Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. May 27 announced in a post on X that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would no longer recommend the COVID-19 vaccine for healthy children and pregnant women. 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Center announced Monday it is extending three tracks within the Kidney Care Choices (KCC) Model through 2027.
    • “Starting in performance year 2026, the model’s financial methodology and participation options will be modified to “improve model sustainability,” the agency said. However, one KCC Model track will be shuttered a year early at the end of December.
    • “The KCC Model has 93 participants, and implementation first began in January 2022. The most recent participants were announced Jan. 15.”
  • The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced last week
    • The EEOC collects workforce data from employers with more than 100 employees (lower thresholds apply to federal contractors). Employers meeting the reporting thresholds have a legal obligation to provide the data; it is not voluntary.  * * *
    • The 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection opened on Tuesday, May 20, 2025. The deadline to file the 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 report is Tuesday, June 24, 2025.
    • “As part of EEOC Acting Chair Lucas’ efforts to identify continued cost savings for the American public, there will be a shorter collection period during which filers may submit their 2024 reports. The collection period will not extend beyond the Tuesday, June 24, 2025 “Published Due Date” deadline. Additionally, beginning with the 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection, all communications sent to filers will be electronic.” * * *
    • “Filers should visit the dedicated EEO-1 Component 1 website at www.eeocdata.org/eeo1
      to access the EEO-1 Component 1 Online Filing System (OFS), to find supplementary resource materials such as the 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 Instruction Booklet and 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 Data File Upload Specifications, and to get the latest updates. Filers needing additional assistance can access the Filer Support Team Message Center upon logging into the OFS.”

In Food and Drug Administration News,

  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of certain lots of BD esophagogastric balloon tamponade tubes due to the potential for serious injury or death. BD said it became aware of some users encountering challenges removing the plastic plugs from the rubber lumen to inflate the balloons. BD and their subsidiary C.R. Bard Urology and Critical Care sent all affected customers a letter with updated use instructions. There have been two serious injuries, and one death associated with the issue.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • Despite facing ongoing legal pressure from its rival United Therapeutics, Liquidia has successfully landed a pair of long-awaited FDA approvals for its dry powder formulation of treprostinil.
    • The FDA has cleared treprostinil—also known by the trade name Yutrepia—to improve exercise ability in adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and pulmonary hypertension associated with interstitial lung disease (PH-ILD).
  • and
    • The FDA has also approved Sanofi’s meningococcal vaccine MenQuadfi for use in infants as young as 6 weeks, multiple news outlets reported Tuesday. The shot was already cleared to protect against four prolific strains of meningococcal bacteria in individuals as young as 2 years and older.
    • The FDA based its decision on data from three phase 3 trials that found MenQuadfi worked as well as GSK’s rival meningococcal vaccine Menveo when given with other routine vaccines in children between the ages of 6 weeks to 19 months, Reuters pointed out. Sanofi’s trials enrolled more than 6,000 participants.
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “A patient who received an experimental gene therapy developed by Rocket Pharmaceuticals has died following treatment, the company disclosed Tuesday.
    • “According to Rocket, the patient experienced what’s known as capillary leak syndrome, where plasma and proteins seep from blood vessels into surrounding tissue, and later died from an acute systemic infection.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration ordered the study’s halt Friday, while Rocket works with clinical trial monitors and other experts to investigate the cause. The company said it is focusing on a “novel immune suppression agent” it recently added to a pre-treatment preparatory regimen.”

From the judicial front,

  • The American Medical Association informs us,
    • “In a win for the nation’s youth—and all Americans’ health—the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled (PDF) that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) did not act in an arbitrary and capricious manner when it told applicants that they could not put certain flavored e-cigarette liquids on the shelf.
    • “The unanimous decision overturned a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling. Had that appellate-court ruling been allowed to stand, companies could have marketed products that clearly were designed to appeal to children, with names such as “Jimmy the Juice Man Peachy Strawberry,” “Suicide Bunny Mother’s Milk and Cookies,” “Pink Lemonade,” “Iced Pineapple Express” and “Killer Kustard Blueberry.”
    • “Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., who wrote the opinion for the court, said the FDA did not act arbitrarily and capriciously when it denied the companies’ applications for premarket approval of the tobacco products. The companies challenged the agency’s decision arguing that, among other things, that the FDA didn’t give them fair notice about the evidentiary and comparative requirements used during the application stage and that the agency had changed its position on scientific evidence. 
    • “The high court remanded the case to the 5th Circuit to review other legal arguments, so this is not the end of the litigation, but it is a favorable step forward. The 5th Circuit’s decision was an outlier among the federal circuits that have considered similar cases.”
  • Per Govexec,
    • “At least one agency’s staff impacted by the mass dismissals of probationary workers can pursue their reinstatements as a class, the panel that hears federal employees’ challenges to firings has for the first time ruled, creating a new path for sweeping reversals of those terminations. 
    • “Hundreds of recently hired and subsequently fired employees at the Homeland Security Department will be part of a class action alleging their dismissals were unlawful after a Merit Systems Protection Board administrative judge granted the request. The DHS ruling was the first to come down after a consortium of lawyers filed similar challenges on behalf of fired probationary employees at 20 federal agencies
    • “I find that a class appeal is the fairest and most efficient way to adjudicate the appeal and that the putative class counsel and named appellants will adequately represent the interests of the parties,” said Sara Snyder, the chief administrative judge for MSPB’s western regional office.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CBS News reports,
    • Cases of the new COVID-19 variant NB.1.8.1, linked to a large surge in China, have been detected in multiple locations across the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The earliest cases in the U.S. date back to late March and early April, and were detected through a screening program at airports for arriving international travelers.
    • “CDC is aware of reported cases of COVID-19 NB.1.8.1 in China and is in regular contact with international partners,” a CDC spokesperson said in a statement last week.
    • The spokesperson said that, so far, too few U.S. sequences have been reported of NB.1.8.1 to be included in the agency’s variant estimates dashboard.
    • But hospitalizations abroad have raised questions about the new variant, its symptoms and more.
    • Answers to those questions may be found in the CBS News article.
  • ABC News adds,
    • “More than five years after the first cases of COVID-19 were detected in the United States, hundreds of people are still dying every week.
    • “Last month, an average of about 350 people died each week from COVID, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).” * * *
    • “The experts said there are a few reasons why people might still be dying from the virus, including low vaccination uptake, waning immunity and not enough people accessing treatments.” * * *
    • CDC data shows that those aged 75 and older currently have the highest rate of COVID-19 deaths at 4.66 per 100,000.”
  • The American Medical Association let us know what doctors wish their patients knew about lung cancer screening.
  • The Washington Post relates,
    • “Engagement with digital technology was associated with a 58 percent reduced risk of cognitive impairment in people middle-aged and older, according to a study in the journal Nature Human Behavior.
    • “Researchers conducted a systematic review of 57 studies to see whether exposure to technology has helped or harmed cognition among the first generation of adults with prolonged exposure to digital devices such as smartphones, tablets and computers. The studies involved more than 411,000 adults with an average age of 69.
    • “The analysis revealed that technology could play a role in preserving brain function, not worsening it, said co-authors Jared Benge, a clinical neuropsychologist at the University of Texas at Austin’s Dell Medical School, and Michael Scullin, an associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infection is associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but treating the viral infection may offer protection, a new study found.
    • “In a matched case-control study of nearly 700,000 older adults, HSV-1 was more common in those with AD, and antiviral therapy for HSV-1 was associated with a lower risk of developing AD.
    • “However, the authors and outside experts cautioned that no firm conclusions can be drawn from this observational study and called for more research.
    • “The study was published online on May 20 in BMJ Open. It was funded by Gilead Sciences, which is actively involved in the research and development of treatments for HSV.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • Good posture improves circulation, respiration, digestion and bladder function. It also enhances cognitive ability and mood.
    • To improve posture, become aware of your body position, stand against a wall to align yourself, and perform dynamic stretching exercises.
    • Upright posture is associated with confidence, self-esteem, and reduced anxiety. Physical therapists can help develop personalized plans to improve posture.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fair Health released today a claims-based analysis of GLP-1 drugs and obesity. Beckers Hospital Review summarizes this analysis here.
  • The Wall Street Journal considers the price outlook for GLP-1 drugs used to treat obesity.
  • Fierce Pharma tells us,
    • “After a fourth quarter in which revenue boomed throughout the biopharma industry, there were reversals for several drugmakers in the first three months of 2025. 
    • “The companies that took the biggest hits were in the United States, where there is already considerable angst in the industry over the tariff threats and drug price-slashing aspirations of President Donald Trump, along with the unsettling prospects of having a pharma adversary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., heading up the Department of Health and Human Services.
    • “Among the top 25 revenue companies in the industry in Q1, there were seven that saw year-over-year sales declines, all from the U.S. Viatris took the biggest hit at 11%, followed by Pfizer (-8%), Organon (-7%), Bristol Myers Squibb (-6%), Regeneron (-4%), Merck (-2%) and Gilead (-0.3%).”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Eli Lilly is wagering up to $1 billion on a private biotechnology company developing new, non-opioid pain drugs that have already caught the attention of other large pharmaceutical firms.
    • “Per an announcement Tuesday, Lilly plans to acquire SiteOne Therapeutics in an all-cash deal. The companies aren’t disclosing how much money is being exchanged upfront or when they expect the transaction to close. But, if SiteOne’s research programs hit certain regulatory and commercial goals, the amount paid to its shareholders could reach that 10-figure mark.”
  • and
    • “Biogen is partnering with RNA drug developer City Therapeutics to develop a better way of reaching an unspecified target that “mediates key central nervous system diseases.” Biogen will pay City, a startup that launched publicly late last year, $16 million in upfront fees and invest another $30 million in convertible notes that could later become a minority stake. “With this effort, we are further expanding the modalities in our R&D toolbox to potentially reach our targets of interest more precisely by adding an RNAi-based approach,” Biogen research head Jane Grogan said in a statement.”
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review news release,
    • ICER today released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of apitegromab(Scholar Rock Holdings), nusinersen (Spinraza®, Biogen), onasemnogene abeparvovec-xioi (Zolgensma®, Novartis), and risdiplam (Evrysdi®, Genentech) for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).
    • “This preliminary draft marks the midpoint of ICER’s eight-month process of assessing this treatment, and the findings within this document should not be interpreted to be ICER’s final conclusions.”
  • Beckers Health IT discusses why Texas Health is taking a loss on its hospital at home program and summarizes Medscape’s list of telehealth friendly states which Utah leads.
  • Beckers Clinical Leadership identifies the 24 U.S. hospitals that have received the American Nurses Credentialling Center’s Magnet with Distinction award. “The Magnet with Distinction program was created as a special designation to celebrate hospitals and healthcare organizations that exceed scoring thresholds required to earn Magnet recognition.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “AI-powered ambient-listening technology is expanding in healthcare, documenting doctor-patient encounters.
    • “AI scribes save doctors time on documentation, reducing burnout and improving focus on patients, according to pilot programs.
    • “Concerns exist around patient privacy, data security and costs, but patient feedback has been largely positive.”
  • Fierce Healthcare offers insights into how Anthem Blue Cross is growing its behavioral health network in California.
    • “The insurer’s network is built on partnerships with multiple organizations, with recent additions including Headway, Rula and Octave. Through its relationship with these firms, the insurer is seeking to make it simpler for members to find providers that meet their unique needs.
    • “Through Headway, the insurer connects employers and plan members with personalized services. Rula, meanwhile, makes it easier for members to schedule an appointment with one of the more than 10,000 providers in its network.
    • “Octave, similarly, is built to make it simple for members to find a provider across multiple specialties, backgrounds and evidence-based approaches, according to the announcement.”
  • NIST explains for those interested how an MRI machine works.