Tuesday’s Tidbits

Tuesday’s Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From our Nation’s Capital, Roll Call fills us in on the debt ceiling negotiations. Significantly,

​Economists at Moody’s Analytics estimate that the Treasury Department will run out of borrowing room by mid-August if Congress doesn’t act to raise or suspend the statutory debt limit by then.

The “x date” after which Treasury may not be able to pay all of the federal government’s bills appears to be Aug. 18, specifically, according to Moody’s economists Mark Zandi, Christian deRitis and Bernard Yaros. 

The trio laid out various scenarios and potential consequences of failure to lift the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling in a new paper this week, on a topic that was examined more closely Tuesday afternoon in a Senate Banking subcommittee hearing led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. Zandi is among those slated to testify.

The propspect of a mid-August explosion may encourage Congress to suspend the debt ceiling suspension until the end of the federal fiscal year, September 30, and focus on negotiating the interrelated 2024 appropriations and the debt ceiling topics.

The President provided highlights of the Medicare proposals in his 2024 fiscal year budget. The American Hospital Association explains

The president’s fiscal year 2024 budget will propose policies to keep Medicare’s Hospital Insurance Trust Fund solvent for at least an additional 25 years by directing additional Medicare taxes and savings from prescription drug reforms to the HI Trust Fund, the White House announced today. According to the latest annual report by the Medicare Trustees, the fund currently has sufficient funds to pay full benefits until 2028. 

Among other Medicare provisions, the president’s budget will propose to eliminate cost-sharing for three behavioral health visits per year; require parity between physical health and mental health coverage; lower out-of-pocket costs for drugs subject to price negotiation; and cap Part D cost-sharing for certain generic drugs, the White House said.

The president’s FY 2024 budget is expected to be publicly released on March 9, with additional detail on March 13. AHA members will receive additional information on the president’s budget as those details are released.

Congress shared the budget with the Congressional Budget Office to analyze whether this plan will work.

Federal News Network reports on a recent GAO report about OPM.

The Office of Personnel Management is at “significant risk” of being unable to help agencies address governmentwide skills gaps, if it can’t first do a better job of addressing its internal skills gaps, GAO said in a report published last week.

Persistent internal skills gaps “could compromise OPM’s ability to implement its strategic objectives related to closing governmentwide skills gaps,” GAO said in the Feb. 27 report.

Although OPM has made progress in some areas of workforce management, such as creating an internal committee to hire and train new staff members, the agency is struggling to clearly identify and address several skills gaps within its own staff. * * *

Ron Sanders, former chairman of the Federal Salary Council and former associate director for HR policy at OPM, said the results of the GAO report were “unsurprising,” but that the reason behind the challenges may be difficult to measure.

“I think the skills gaps and have more to do with intangibles than they do with specific functional specializations,” Sanders, current president and CEO of Publica Virtu LLC, said in an interview with Federal News Network. 

Hang in there, OPM, which has a lot on its plate, as we all do.

Healthcare Dive tells us

  • The Federal Trade Commission will give the public an additional 30 days to comment on a sweeping proposal to ban employers from imposing noncompete contracts on their workers. 
  • The agency said interested parties have requested an extension, though acknowledged others oppose the delay. The public now has until April 19 to comment on the proposed rule, the FTC said on Monday.  
  • FTC Commissioner Christine Wilson said in a separate statement that she would have supported an even longer extension since the proposal is “a departure from hundreds of years of precedent.” 

MedCity News writes about the state of No Surprises Act rulemaking. Of note,

What the industry really needs from the government agencies at this point is a road map, or, as the Workgroup for Electronic Data and Interchange (WEDI) said in a recent letter to the secretary of HHS, a “glide path” that explains how the industry and the government will develop standards and operating rules together. In the letter, WEDI asked for the government’s expectations on vetting and testing standards and an estimate on timelines for implementing NSA regulations.

The FEHBlog heartily agrees with WEDI. Congress should consider amending certain provisions, particularly the good faith estimate and advance explanation of benefit provisions which should be amendments to the HIPAA electronic transaction standards and narrowed in scope.

From the Food and Drug Administration front —

  • STAT News provides an interview with Food and Drug Commissioner Dr. Robert Califf. For example

FDA Commissioner Robert Califf said on Monday that it “bothers” him that Novo Nordisk, which makes an obesity medication, funded the development of obesity coursework for medical schools. But he also said he saw it as an example of a drug company filling the void left by health systems that aren’t teaching doctors and trainees how to use new medicines.

“I think it’s a shame that you would need to depend on a pharmaceutical company for an educational program about something that’s affecting half of Americans,” Califf said during a meeting with STAT reporters and editors.

But, he said, “we also live in a practical real world. You might argue that if health systems did their jobs, you would have no need for educational programs from drug companies. But talk to people who practice medicine who are part of these big health systems and ask them how much help they get and guidance on what to do from the health systems they work for. I say this being a card-carrying lover of academic health systems, but that’s not where the money goes in academic health systems.”

  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,

The FDA is set to decide whether to fully approve Leqembi, Eisai and Biogen’s Alzheimer’s treatment by July 6, CNBC reported March 6.

Leqembi is an antibody treatment that targets brain plaque associated with Alzheimer’s. The drug is administered intravenously twice a month and in clinical trials has shown it can slow early Alzheimer’s disease by 27 percent; however, the deaths of three trial participants may be tied to brain swelling caused by the drug.

The FDA approved the drug on an expedited basis in January, but CMS has made it accessible to patients only in clinical trials. CMS plans to provide broader coverage if Leqembi is fully approved, according to CNBC.

Covis Pharma Group said it will stop selling its drug to prevent preterm births, after a study couldn’t confirm the medicine worked and U.S. health regulators were taking steps that could have it pulled.

Makena was the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration to reduce the risk of preterm birth in women with a history of early deliveries.

Covis said Tuesday it wants to work with the FDA to set a wind-down period for the drug so that patients aren’t abruptly taken off of it. The company said it was acting after experts advising the agency recommended it pursue Makena’s withdrawal from the market.

Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) today [March 3] announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an expanded indication for Verzenio® (abemaciclib), in combination with endocrine therapy (ET), for the adjuvant treatment of adult patients with hormone receptor-positive (HR+), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2-), node-positive, early breast cancer (EBC) at a high risk of recurrence. High risk patients eligible for Verzenio can now be identified solely based on nodal status, tumor size, and tumor grade (4+ positive nodes, or 1-3 positive nodes and at least one of the following: tumors that are ≥5 cm or Grade 3).1 This expanded adjuvant indication removes the Ki-67 score requirement for patient selection.

From the U.S. Healthcare business front —

  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “The first hospitals seeking CMS’ new rural emergency hospital designation have submitted their applications, Kaiser Health News reported March 6. 
    • “Hospitals that convert receive a 5 percent increase in Medicare payments as well an average annual facility fee payment of about $3.2 million, according to the report. In return, the hospitals must close their inpatient beds and focus solely on outpatient and emergency care.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us
    • “Regional health system Atrium Health [headquartered in Charlotte, NC] is partnering with tech retailer Best Buy to co-design hospital-at-home programming, bolster Atrium’s existing hospital-at-home program and sell to other hospital clients down the line.
    • The partnership, announced Tuesday, aims to combine Atrium’s hospital-at-home program and existing telemedicine infrastructure with Best Buy Health, the retailer’s healthcare vertical that includes care-at-home business Current Health, along with its home installation and supply chain capabilities.
    • “The Atrium and Best Buy partnership seeks to improve some aspects of hospital-at-home programs that can be particularly tricky for operators, like patient education and technology installation in the home.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us, “Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Co. has entered into an agreement with IBSA Pharma to sell Tirosint, a medication for hypothyroidism. It will be the first brand-name drug offered by Mr. Cuban’s pharmacy.”

From the medical and pharmaceutical research and studies front —

  • The Wall Street Journal relates
    • “Some doctors are urging patients to cut back their consumption of sugar substitutes as questions mount about their health effects. 
    • “In the latest study, published February in the journal Nature Medicine, Cleveland Clinic researchers found that the commonly used zero-calorie sweetener erythritol was associated with an increased risk of heart attacks, strokes and death within three years.
    • “Erythritol, a sugar alcohol produced naturally in the body, is used as a sugar substitute in low-calorie and low-carb products, often in those marketed as keto-friendly, such as ice cream, baked goods and condiments. It is also often mixed with other sweeteners. 
    • “As low-carb and ketogenic diets have grown popular, people have turned to nonsugar-sweetened products for a hit of sweetness with less sugar and carbs. Yet, researchers are warning that sugar substitutes might pose their own health concerns.”
  • Medscape considers whether Vitamin D is a viable prevention strategy for dementia.
  • The NIH Director’s Blog discusses the importance of dental/oral health care to overall health and well-being.
  • Securian Financial announced
    • “Fully 73% of Generation Z employees and 74% of Millennial employees have utilized mental health benefits offered by their employers, while 58% of Generation X employees and 49% of Baby Boomer employees have used the benefits.
    • Additionally, while 65% of Generation Z and 60% of Millennial workers say it’s “very important” for their employers to provide mental wellness benefits, just 49% of Generation X and 45% of Baby Boomer workers say the same.”
  • BioPharma Dive points out
    • “An experimental medicine for a rare blood vessel disorder [pulmonary arterial hypertension, or PAH, which is caused by a thickening of the blood vessels around the lungs] improved patients’ exercise capacity and potentially slowed the disease’s progression, according to detailed results from a late-stage clinical trial that were revealed on Monday.
    • “The drug, called sotatercept and owned by Merck & Co., was the principal prize of an $11.5 billion acquisition the pharmaceutical company negotiated more than a year ago.
    • “Data from the trial were presented at a medical conference and published in The New England Journal of Medicine. They have been highly anticipated since October when Merck said the study, dubbed STELLAR, was a success.”
  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health show the benefits of screening adult patients in remission from acute myeloid leukemia (AML) for the residual disease before receiving a bone marrow transplant. The findings, published in JAMA(link is external), support ongoing research aimed at developing precision medicine and personalized post-transplant care for these patients.
    • About 20,000 adults in the United States are diagnosed each year with AML, a deadly blood cancer, and about one in three live past five years. A bone marrow transplant, which replaces unhealthy blood-forming cells with healthy cells from a donor, often improves these chances. However, research has shown that lingering traces of leukemia can make a transplant less effective. 
    • “Researchers in the current study wanted to show that screening patients in remission for evidence of low levels of leukemia using standardized genetic testing could better predict their three-year risks for relapse and survival. To do that, they used ultra-deep DNA sequencing technology to screen blood samples from 1,075 adults in remission from AML. All were preparing to have a bone marrow transplant. The study samples were provided through donations to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research.

Weekend update

Bluebonnets — The Texas State Flower– already starting to bloom in Austin

From Capitol Hill, the House of Representatives and the Senate will be in session for Committee business and floor voting this week.

From the public health front —

  • McKinsey & Co. offers “insights to discover why it’s impossible to experience good health alone, and what shifts you can make now to strengthen your social world” in order to combat loneliness.
  • Fortune Well discusses “[a] ‘super strain’ of an antibiotic-resistant stomach bug [XBR Shingella] that is on the rise in the U.S.” Fortunately, the CDC offers ways to prevent a Shingella infection:
    • Carefully washing your hands with soap and water before sexual activity, eating or preparing food, and after going to the bathroom, changing a diaper, or cleaning up after someone who went to the bathroom;
    • Throwing away diapers in a covered, lined garbage can;
    • Cleaning up mess from diapers thoroughly and promptly;
    • Avoid swallowing water from lakes, ponds, and swimming pools and
    • Refraining from sex when you have diarrhea, and for two weeks after diarrhea resolves.

From the Rx coverage front —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • The way doctors treat diabetes is changing.
    • For years, people with Type 2 diabetes who needed to take drugs to lower their blood-sugar levels started with an old medicine called metformin. New guidelines now recommend patients can start with one of the newer diabetes medicines, which can also reduce weight and protect the heart and kidney.
    • These newer diabetes drugs belong to two classes known by the acronyms SGLT-2 and GLP-1 for how they work.
    • The goal of the changes was to make treatment more specific to the patient rather than focused on the drug, said Dr. Nuha Ali El Sayed, an endocrinologist at the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston who is vice president of healthcare improvement at the American Diabetes Association.
  • MedPage Today offers doctors ways to handle the current Adderall shortage.

From the worldwide healthcare front (and many FEHB plans (particularly nationwide plans) offer worldwide coverage), Beckers Hospital Review discusses  “Newsweek‘s 2023 list of top 250 global hospitals.”

From the plan design front, Financial Advisor points out an EBRI report on health savings accounts.

The New York Times Morning Column considers a renewed interest in workplace personality tests.

“Covid has opened our eyes to the fact that there are different ways in which we can work,” said David Noel, a human resources executive at Scotiabank, a Toronto-based bank with 90,000 employees. Partly for that reason, Scotiabank has begun to put more weight on personality tests, and less weight on résumés, when it makes hiring decisions.

In the post-pandemic era, personality tests seem to have a new relevance. They can help determine who will thrive in which work arrangements and what personality mix can maximize a team’s chance of success. Some advocates of the tests argue that they can also increase the diversity of a company’s work force by reducing the focus on standards that have traditionally benefited white men. Since Scotiabank began using personality tests more heavily in its campus hiring program, the share of its new employees who are Black has risen to 6 percent, from 1 percent.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill, the Wall Street Journal reports that “Sen. Joe Manchin, who has been a crucial vote in shaping major pieces of President Biden’s agenda, urged Democratic colleagues to hold talks with Republicans on cutting federal spending, ahead of a summer deadline to reach a deal on raising the country’s debt ceiling.”

From the public health front —

The Wall Street Journal informs us

A larger share of people are being diagnosed with colorectal cancer at a younger age and at a more dangerous stage of the disease, a report showed. Doctors aren’t sure why.

The American Cancer Society said Wednesday that about 20% of new colorectal cancer diagnoses were in patients under 55 in 2019, compared with 11% in 1995. Some 60% of new colorectal cancers in 2019 were diagnosed at advanced stages, the research and advocacy group said, compared with 52% in the mid-2000s and 57% in 1995, before screening was widespread.   

Cases and death rates for colorectal cancer have continued a decadeslong decline overall thanks to screening, better treatments and reductions in risk factors such as smoking, the ACS report’s authors said. But the shift of the burden toward younger people and diagnoses at more advanced stages has oncologists on alert. 

“The improvements have slowed, and they’ve slowed because of this opposite trend we’re seeing in young people,” said Kimmie Ng, director of the Young-Onset Colorectal Cancer Center at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. “More and more are getting diagnosed with cancer that might not be curable.” 

The U.S. Preventive Serves Task Force is routinely reevaluating its 2018 grade A recommendation to screen pregnant women/persons for syphilis.

From the medical device front —

MedTech Dive tells us

  • The number of remote patient monitoring (RPM) reimbursement claims hit a new high in 2022, according to a report by Definitive Healthcare.
  • By November, the volume of claims across the 10 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ codes for RPM was already 27% above the total for all of 2021, adding to the growth seen since the start of 2019.
  • Cardiologists are the main users of RPM devices, with blood pressure diagnoses accounting for more than half of all claims made in 2021. Diabetes, which accounts for 16% of claims, is the next most active area.

and

Medicare will cover continuous glucose monitors for a broader group of patients, starting in April, according to an updated policy published by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 

The policy change included broader language and also came earlier than expected, making it a “welcome surprise,” and could double the market for the devices, J.P. Morgan analyst Robbie Marcus wrote in a research note. * * *

In an earlier draft of coverage guidelines, CMS had suggested covering the devices for people with diabetes who take daily insulin, or who have a history of problematic hypoglycemia. Now, the policy includes people withnon-insulin treated diabetes and a history of recurrent level 2 or at least one level 3 hypoglycemic event.

From the Rx coverage front, the Congressional Research Service issued an “In Focus” report about “Selected Issues in Pharmaceutical Drug Pricing.”

From the healthcare quality front, NCQA posted slides and a recording from its latest Future of HEDIS webinar on February 28.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

Healthcare Dive relates

  • The Cleveland Clinic reported a $1.2 billion net loss for 2022 as expenses climbed from the prior year. Expenses ticked up in every key category in 2022, including salaries and wages, supplies and pharmaceuticals, Cleveland Clinic’s latest financial report shows.    
  • Cleveland Clinic grew 2022 revenue roughly 5% to $13 billion from the prior year, but didn’t outpace expenses as costs increased nearly 14% to $12.4 billion before interest, depreciation and amortization.    
  • Investment income helped pull the Midwest provider into the red as non-operating losses totaled $1 billion.  

and

Oak Street Health’s losses grew in 2022 to almost $510 million as the value-based primary care company, which is pending an acquisition by CVS Health, continued to aggressively pursue growth.

In comparison, Oak Street, which operates a network of clinics for seniors on Medicare, reported a loss of $415 million in 2021.

The company opened 40 new centers over 2022 and ended the year with 169 facilities in 21 states, serving some 224,000 patients.

STAT News reports

In what may well be the latest fad in hospital consolidation, two not-for-profit health systems located across the country from one another are seeking to link up — this time, to create a system with roughly $11 billion in revenue.

UnityPoint Health and Presbyterian Healthcare Services announced Thursday they’ve inked a letter of intent to explore a merger. Hospital mergers often involve partners in the same region so they can gain leverage with insurers, but in this case, UnityPoint is in the Midwest, whereas all nine of Presbyterian’s hospitals are several states away in New Mexico.  

The deal illustrates not only health systems’ insatiable desire to get bigger in a tough operating environment, but their evolving strategy for doing so. Antitrust regulators have sunk deals involving partners they said would command too much market share in a given region, so hospitals are doing the next-best thing: seeking partners in far-flung states. 

Healthcare Dive adds

  • Walmart plans to expand its network of medical centers in 2024, including a launch into two new states, as retail health giants race to build out their primary care footprints.
  • The company announced Thursday it plans to open 28 new Walmart Health centers in 2024, bringing its number of total locations to more than 75.
  • Walmart Health will open clinics in Missouri and Arizona for the first time, while deepening its presence in Texas by expanding in the Dallas area and growing into Houston, according to the announcement.

Weekend update

Photo by JOSHUA COLEMAN on Unsplash

The Senate and the House of Representatives will be in session this week for Committee business and floor voting.

As we close out Black History Month, let’s join the Trust for American Health in celebrating notable African American in public health.

From the Covid front, the Wall Street Journal reports

The U.S. Energy Department has concluded that the Covid pandemic most likely arose from a laboratory leak, according to a classified intelligence report recently provided to the White House and key members of Congress.

The shift by the Energy Department, which previously was undecided on how the virus emerged, is noted in an update to a 2021 document by Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines’s office.

The new report highlights how different parts of the intelligence community have arrived at disparate judgments about the pandemic’s origin. The Energy Department now joins the Federal Bureau of Investigation in saying the virus likely spread via a mishap at a Chinese laboratory. Four other agencies, along with a national intelligence panel, still judge that it was likely the result of a natural transmission, and two are undecided.

From the miscellany department —

  • Fortune Well provides us with insights on how to manage a life-threatening diagnosis.
  • Health Payer Intelligence tells us what payers can expect to find in the proposed CMS electronic prior authorization rule. The public comment deadline on the rule is March 13, 2023

Happy Presidents’ Day

Mount Rushmore

The House of Representatives and the Senate are on District/State work breaks this week.

Govexec alerts us, “Labor Secretary Marty Walsh will be leaving the Biden administration in mid-March to become executive director of the National Hockey League Players’ Association.” 

Federal News Network offers an update on implementing the Postal Service Health Benefits Program that takes effect on January 1, 2025. The article expresses concern about a tight timeline for implementation. The article does not consider OPM’s January 2023 decision to allow FEHB plans to offer Medicare Part D EGWPs in 2024. That welcome decision puts the new PSHBP and the existing FEHB on a similar footing.

While the new PSHBP will be more tightly integrated with Medicare Part B., the benefits of that phased in change will develop over time. For example, although the Postal Services will offer a one-time, penalty-free Part B Special Open Enrollment Period next year for annuitants over 65 who did not elect Part B, early retirees under 65 and active employees over age 64 on January 1, 2025, will be exempt from the PSHBP’s mandatory Part B election requirement.

In other FEHB news, AHIP has made available a topic overview for the March 29 – 30 OPM AHIP FEHB Carrier Conference.

In OPM news, Meritalk breaks down last week’s inaugural DEIA Annual Report from OPM’s Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility (ODEIA).

From the Omicron and siblings front, the Wall Street Journal and Fierce Healthcare report on the Covid death rate. The Journal points out, “Deaths caused by Covid are heavily concentrated among the elderly, an analysis of CDC data shows. In recent weeks people 75 years and older have represented about seven of every 10 Covid-19 deaths.” Fierce Healthcare provides this perspective:

The JAMA Network Open study concluded that “COVID-19 due to the Omicron variant was associated with a higher risk of in-hospital mortality compared with patients with influenza. This indicates that the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant should still be taken seriously, and improved prevention and treatment strategies are still highly relevant, although overburdening of the health care system has become less likely over time.”

Fortune Well tells us about the importance of cardiac care following even a mild case of Covid.

In a bid to determine why and how COVID can affect the heart, Dr. Andrew Marks, a cardiologist and biophysics professor at Columbia University, and Steven Reiken, a research scientist in his lab, studied heart tissue from people who died of COVID, in addition to the hearts of mice that had been infected with COVID.

Among their findings, which they’ll present Monday at the 67th Annual Biophysical Society Meeting in San Diego:

  • Heart tissue from humans shows increased levels of oxidative stress and inflammation, and changes in calcium levels due to damage to the system that regulates them in the heart. Such alterations can lead to arrhythmia or heart failure, according to the researchers.
  • Chest pain and tachycardia, or an unusually fast heartbeat, are common long-term among COVID survivors.
  • Heart tissue from mice shows an increased percentage of fibrosis and dilation of fibers—a common signal of early cardiomyopathy, which makes it more difficult for the heart to pump blood and can result in heart failure.
  • The death of heart cells and blood clots in the hearts of mice who had been infected with COVID-19 were also observed.

“Doctors should be aware of heart changes related to COVID-19 infections and should be looking for them,” Marks says. He hopes his research leads to increased awareness among medical providers of the virus’s potentially stealthy cardiac fallout—and, eventually, treatments for those whose hearts have been damaged by the pathogen.

MedPage Today adds

People who took the antiviral Paxlovid to treat COVID-19 infections were not more likely to get back-to-back bouts of the virus, a new study shows.

The findings offer clarity amid concerns that the use of Paxlovid, which works by stopping the spread of the virus in the body, increased the risk of COVID-19 rebound.

“Rebound is a re-emergence of symptoms and an uptick in viral load after a period of recovery,” the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy explained in a summary of the study.

Researchers found that patients who received Paxlovid, another antiviral called Lagevrio, or no antiviral medication had rebounds at similar rates, ranging from 4.5% to 6.6%.

From the medical research front, the Wall Street Journal reports

A fist that opened and shut. A once-limp arm that moved from her side. Two women whose strokes left them with partial paralysis for years saw life trickle back to their limbs when electric pulses were delivered to the back of their spinal cord as part of a pilot study. 

Neurologists said the approach, reported Monday in the journal Nature Medicine, could be transformative for stroke survivors, many of whom have some arm impairment after the event.

“I think it is amazing,” said Helmi Lutsep, a neurologist at Oregon Health & Science University, who wasn’t involved with the study. “I think patients will be thrilled if this comes to fruition.” 

The pilot study was convincing but it would take much larger studies and a decade or more to know if stroke patients generally could benefit, according to Nick Ward, a neurologist at the University College London who wasn’t involved with the study.  

From the U.S. healthcare business front, the Wall Street Journal informs us why “Walgreens CEO Bets on Doctors Over Drugstores in Search for Growth; Rosalind Brewer is shifting the chain’s focus to medical clinics,” like Village MD.

The strategy is guided by Ms. Brewer’s belief that the nation’s second-largest drugstore chain is in a business that she says no longer works. Industry growth is chronically slow, she said. Meanwhile, a shortage of workers is further cutting into revenue because the chain has had to reduce pharmacy hours.  

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From our Nation’s capital

  • Govexec informs us that the President “doubled down Thursday on his administration’s commitment to using the federal government’s power to support underserved communities and advance racial equity.  A new executive order issued by the president builds on one he signed his first day in office as well as other executive and legislative actions.”
  • “The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM), Department of Labor, and Office of Management and Budget (OMB) have developed and launched a new portal on USAJOBS for prospective Federal interns. Located at intern.usajobs.gov, the Federal Internship Portal is a one-stop shop for prospective interns to find opportunities and apply for internships in the Federal government.”
  • The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee held a hearing on PBM transparency and accountability, which Fierce Healthcare describes as the hearing as “heated.”
  • The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee held a hearing on healthcare workforce shortages, which Fierce Healthcare describes as the beginning of “a major effort to shore up the healthcare workforce after lingering shortages have roiled the industry.”
  • The U.S. Commissioner of Food and Drugs updated the public on his agency’s efforts prevent drug overdoses and reduce deaths.
    • In related news from MedPage Today, “Advisors to the FDA unanimously recommended the agency approve the first over-the-counter (OTC) naloxone (Narcan) product, though many committee members expressed continued concern about user instructions for the opioid overdose reversal drug. * * *While the FDA is not required to follow the recommendations of its advisory committees, it typically does.”

From the medical research front

  • STAT News tells us, “A team of researchers from Stanford and University of California San Francisco have built a predictive model that uses electronic health records to calculate the risk of sepsis, cerebral palsy, and other serious conditions in newborns. The team trained a deep learning model on health records from more than 30,000 mother-newborn pairs treated in the Stanford health system, building a neural network that could predict 24 different health outcomes. The researchres, who also published an interactive website for readers to explore the network’s data. said the predictions outperformed currently-used risk scores.” 
  • Nature explains “How a pioneering diabetes drug teplizumab offers hope for preventing autoimmune disorders. Approving an antibody therapy that pauses the progression of type 1 diabetes is a first in the field, and some say, a model for other drug developers.
  • The National Institutes of Health disclosed that “Black and Hispanic Americans appear to experience more symptoms and health problems related to long COVID, a lay term that captures an array of symptoms and health problems, than white people, but are not as likely to be diagnosed with the condition, according to new research funded by the National Institutes of Health. The findings – from two different studies by NIH’s Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) Initiative – add to a growing body of research aimed to better understand the complex symptoms and other issues associated with long COVID that millions have experienced.”
  • The All of Us program shared its research roundup, focusing on heart disease this month.
  • The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation offers an award-winning scholar’s “Lessons From the Intersection of Race, Inequality, and Health.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review “released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of resmetirom (Madrigal Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) and obeticholic acid (Ocaliva®, Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). This preliminary draft marks the midpoint of ICER’s eight-month process of assessing these treatments, and the findings within this document should not be interpreted to be ICER’s final conclusions.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Beckers Payer Issues identified over thirty payers who made Forbes rankings of top U.S. employers.
  • Beckers also reports, “A federal judge granted Cigna a temporary restraining order in its lawsuit alleging former executive Amy Bricker’s departure for rival CVS Health violated a noncompete agreement, Bloomberg Law reported Feb. 15.”  A TRO is a short duration order that allows the court time to consider awarding a preliminary injunction.
  • According to Healthcare Dive
    • CommonSpirit Health announced Wednesday that it will acquire regional health system Steward Health Care in Utah for $685 million.
    • The deal marks CommonSpirit’s entry into Utah, expanding the hospital operator’s footprint to a total of 22 states.
    • CommonSpirit will acquire five hospitals from Steward, along with more than 40 clinics and other ambulatory services, the system said. The deal is expected to close later this year. CommonSpirit’s Centura Health will manage the Utah sites.
  • Also from Healthcare Dive
    • Wednesday is the last day that LHC Group will trade on the Nasdaq, suggesting UnitedHealth will complete its acquisition of the home health business prior to market open on Thursday.
    • LHC’s stock will be halted aftermarket on Wednesday, according to a Nasdaq notice. As a result, the merger is tentatively scheduled to close the next morning, subject to pending regulatory approvals.
    • Speculation that the Federal Trade Commission will move to block the $5.4 billion deal has been rampant, but reports late last month suggest that regulators are unlikely to challenge the transaction. 
    • Louisiana-based LHC is a major player in the home health space, with more than 960 locations in 37 states and $2.2 billion in revenue last year
  • The Baton Rouge Business Report discusses a foundation that would be created in the wake of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana sale would have more than $3 billion in assets. The Accelerate Louisiana Initiative, as the foundation would be called, would be one of the largest private foundations in the nation, says Cindy Wakefield with BCBSLA. 
  • Fierce Healthcare reports, “EHR provider Elation Health announced its acquisition of medical billing company Lightning MD. The growth adds a piece to the Elation puzzle as it seeks to become the sector’s first all-in-one technology solution for primary care practices, the company said.”

From the miscellany department —

  • Health Payer Intelligence reports, “AHIP Asks CMS to Reconsider Proposed Medicare Advantage Policy Changes. The extensive policy changes included in the proposed rule will negatively impact Medicare Advantage beneficiaries and plans, AHIP said.” It’s easier to write up orders than to implement them.
  • CMS announced that “a new chart titled Top 10 Section 111 Group Health Plan Reporting Errors, covering the July 1 – December 31, 2022, is now available in the Download section below.  Descriptions of these and all reporting errors are available for review in the GHP User Guide.”
  • WTW explains “What the end of the COVID-19 emergencies will mean for group health plans.”

Midweek Update

From Washington D.C., Roll Call tells us

The federal government will run out of cash to pay all its bills sometime between July and September unless the statutory debt limit is lifted, the Congressional Budget Office [CBO] warned Wednesday.

The report by the nonpartisan budget scorekeeper could put pressure on a divided Congress to reach a deal to increase, or at least suspend, the debt limit before adjourning for the annual August recess.

[A] separate CBO report issued Wednesday underscores the challenges for both parties in making the math add up. Deficits over the next decade are now projected to grow by $3.1 trillion, or 20 percent, during the next decade from the agency’s forecast last May. 

STAT News “sat down with AMA President Jack Resneck on the sidelines of the [AMA’s Washington., D.C.] conference to talk about legislative reforms, physician burnout, and where the doctors’ lobby goes from here.” The Q&A made the FEHBlog crack up

What is the AMA stance on implementation of the law to end surprise medical bills for patients?

There’s a lot about the way those [HHS] rules were first written that went way outside of congressional intent. They put major thumbs on the scale of basically moving towards the insurers’ notion of what that value should be.

There’s so many things about those rules that basically would encourage insurers to either just say “Oh, I can pay so much less through this arbitration system that I’m just going to purposely not contract with any physicians” … or just unilaterally, dramatically lower payment rates in a way that threatens practices.

What nonsense!

Medical Economics shares a letter to Congress from a group of medical associations on the topic of value-based care.

The National Academies issued a report on “Achieving Whole Health.”

Whole health is physical, behavioral, spiritual, and socioeconomic well-being as defined by individuals, families, and communities. Whole health care is an interprofessional, team-based approach anchored in trusted relationships to promote well-being, prevent disease, and restore health. It aligns with a person’s life mission, aspiration, and purpose. It shifts the focus from a reactive disease-oriented medical care system to one that prioritizes disease prevention, health, and well-being. It changes the health care conversation from “What’s wrong with you?” to “What matters to you?”

The Office of Personnel Management released

its inaugural report: Government-wide DEIA: Our Progress and Path Forward to Building a Better Workforce for the American PeopleThis report highlights accomplishments aligned with the Government-wide Strategic Plan to Advance DEIA in the Federal Workforce and preview priorities for 2023 consistent with Executive Order (EO) 14035.

“Whether you want to cure diseases, protect and preserve our national parks, combat climate change, or embark on missions to discover new galaxies, the Federal government is full of opportunity for the best and brightest to serve our country,” said OPM Director Kiran Ahuja. “In order to recruit and sustain the best talent, we must ensure every service-minded individual feels welcome and supported in contributing their talents to the Federal workforce. This inaugural report highlights progress made to advance diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility in the workplace, and we look forward to continuing the work to break down barriers to serve and help build a Federal government that draws from the strength and diversity of its people.”

Tomorrow, February 16, at 10 am ET, the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee will hold a hearing titled “Bringing Transparency and Accountability to Pharmacy Benefit  Managers.”

This hearing will address how the “Pharmacy Benefit Manager Transparency Act” will bring transparency into PBM business practices and prohibit unfair or deceptive PBM conduct that drives up costs for consumers. The bipartisan S. 127, Pharmacy Benefit Manager Transparency Act of 2023, was introduced by Chair Cantwell and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), on January 27, 2023.

From the Omicron and siblings front —

STAT News reports

In an unexpected shift, Moderna has decided not to ask Americans to pay for its Covid-19 vaccine, a move that follows intense criticism over initial plans to charge $110 to $130 per dose after the company pivots from government contracts to commercial distribution.

The vaccine maker released a brief statement that it “remains committed” to ensuring everyone in the U.S. has access to its Covid-19 shot, regardless of whether they have health insurance coverage. For those lacking sufficient insurance, the company will tap a patient assistance program. “Everyone in the U.S. will have access to Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine regardless of their ability to pay,” the company said.

The about-face came on the same day that Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who chairs the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, accused the company of “corporate greed” and scheduled a hearing next month to examine the initial decision to charge Americans for its Covid-19 shot. Moderna Chief Executive Officer Stéphane Bancel is among those expected to testify. * * *

A spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, an industry trade group, suggested that health insurers will still get a bill. He sent a note saying the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (which advises the CDC) recently updated its list of recommended Covid vaccines and that, while beneficiaries pay nothing in cost sharing after commercialization, health plans are picking up the full cost.

No doubt about the validity of AHIP’s point.

Medscape notes, “The increased risk for diabetes following COVID-19 infection has persisted into the Omicron era, but vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 appears to diminish that likelihood, new data suggest.”

From the public health front —

  • The White House announced
    • “the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) released a new report that shows that the number of Americans with medical debt on their credit reports fell by 8.2 million from the first quarter of 2020 to the first quarter of 2022. Today’s report is consistent with a recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that found that the number of Americans who are part of families having trouble paying their medical bills declined by 5.5 million between 2020 and 2021. One driver of these declines is the significant increase in the number of insured Americans over this period, a result of the President’s strategy of protecting and strengthening the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and lowering health care costs. The decline also reflects continued actions by the CFPB to highlight problems with inaccurate reporting of debt in collections and put the industry on notice to correct their behavior.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports “More older women with low-risk breast cancer could forgo radiation after surgery to avoid further side effects and costs, research showed, as some doctors work to limit tough treatments without hurting survival.” STAT News also offers an article on this topic.
  • The National Cancer Institute posts on a variety of cancer topics. For example
    • “The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved tucatinib (Tukysa) with trastuzumab (Herceptin) to treat HER2-positive advanced colorectal cancer. The approval was based on the MOUNTAINEER trial, in which nearly 40% of participants’ tumors shrank after receiving the drugs.”

In other health care cost news —

Beckers Payer Issues relates

Employer-sponsored plans pay much higher rates for physician-administered drugs than Medicare, a research letter published Feb. 10 in JAMA Health Forum found. 

Researchers at the Healthcare Cost Institute compared per-unit prices for the 10 most expensive and 10 most common physician-administered drugs from 2016 to 2020. 

For the most commonly used drugs, employer-sponsored plans paid prices up to 3,350 percent higher than Medicare. For midazolam, employer-sponsored plans paid 30 times more than Medicare for the same drug, and they paid 20 times more for ondansetron. 

For the most expensive drugs, employer-sponsored plans did not pay as extreme markups, the researchers found. Markups were  54 percent more than Medicare at the high end, and employer-sponsored plans paid similar prices to Medicare rates for some drugs. 

Read the full study here. 

Thank heavens OPM is allowing FEHB plans to offer Medicare Part D EGWPs for the Medicare prime members next year.

Health Payer Intelligence informs us “Out-of-pocket costs for buprenorphine prescriptions for opioid use disorder treatment decreased between 2015 and 2020, but costs varied by payer, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front

Beckers Payers Issues advises

The nation’s largest payers have filed their fourth quarter earnings reports, revealing which have the most U.S. commercial members.
Commercial includes fully- and self-insured members

Commercial enrollment rankings in 2022:

  1. Elevance Health: 31.4 million
  2. UnitedHealth Group: 26.7 million
  3. Cigna: 22 million
  4. CVS Health (Aetna): 17 million
  5. Centene: 2.5 million
  6. Humana: 986,000

Healthcare Dive reports

  • After more than two decades together, CommonSpirit Health and AdventHealth are dissolving their joint venturemanaging hospital operations in Colorado and western Kansas. 
  • The management company, Centura, operates one of the largest hospital networks in the region, with 20 hospitals and a network of outpatient practices.
  • In a release on Tuesday, the systems said the partnership had reached its “natural maturity.” CommonSpirit and AdventHealth didn’t lay out a timeline for the transition.

and

Elevance has closed its deal to acquire specialty pharmacy BioPlus, the insurer announced Wednesday, after first announcing the buy in November 2022.

The acquisition builds off the Indianapolis-based insurer’s promise to acquire companies around its health services business, with Elevance CEO Gail Boudreaux announcing at a November industry conference that the insurer planned to grow “very aggressively” into adjacent care services.

Beckers Hospital Review tells us

Walgreens has agreed to buy the assets of defunct digital pharmacy Medly for $19.35 million, according to a bankruptcy court filing.

Medly declared bankruptcy in December, months after its founder stepped down and it laid off more than half its staff. A judge approved the acquisition of Medly’s assets, including its files, inventory and intellectual property, Feb. 7 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

Medly raised $100 million in 2020, positioning itself as a digital competitor to retail pharmacies such as Walgreens and CVS.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill, STAT News reports

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday passed legislation to prevent drug companies from gaming the patent system to delay competition from cheaper generics, but members in both parties said they still have concerns about the reforms.

It’s unclear when the bills might advance in either chamber. 

The Congressional Research Service released an analysis of healthcare coverage spending in 2021.

Meanwhile, the Health Affairs Council on Healthcare Spending and Value updates us on the recommendations proposed in its 2018 Road Map for Action.

From the Omicron and siblings front —

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced that its Secretary Xavier Becerra had given the States 90 days advance notice of the end of the Covid public health emergency on May 11, 2023.

To help you and your communities in your preparations for the end of the COVID-19 PHE, I have attached a fact sheet to this letter that includes information on what will and will not be impacted by the end of the COVID-19 PHE.2 In the coming days, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will also provide additional information, including about the waivers many states and health systems have adopted and how they will be impacted by the end of the COVID-19 PHE. I will share that resource with your team when available.

MedPage Today informs us,

Early treatment with a single dose of pegylated interferon lambda in a highly vaccinated population of COVID-19 outpatients decreased the risk for hospitalization and emergency department (ED) visits lasting more than 6 hours, the phase III TOGETHER trial found.

Among nearly 2,000 participants with acute COVID symptoms and a risk factor for severe illness, 2.7% of those who received pegylated interferon lambda within a week of symptoms required hospitalization or ED visits, as compared with 5.6% of those given placebo (relative risk [RR] 0.49, 95% Bayesian credible interval [CrI] 0.30-0.76), reported Gilmar Reis, MD, PhD, of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and colleagues.

Results were similar regardless of vaccination status (over 80% were vaccinated), and the treatment effect with the long-acting form of interferon lambda-1 was more pronounced in those who received the subcutaneous injection with 3 days of their symptoms.

From the miscellany department —

HHS released initial guidance for Medicare’s Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program created by last year’s Inflation Reduction Act.

Under the Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program, drug companies who raise prices faster than the rate of inflation will be required to pay rebates to the Medicare Trust Fund. Below is a timeline of key dates for implementing the Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program:

  • October 1, 2022: Began the first 12-month period for which drug companies will be required to pay rebates to Medicare for raising prices that outpace inflation on certain Part D drugs.
  • January 1, 2023: Began the first quarterly period for which drug companies will be required to pay rebates for raising prices that outpace inflation on certain Part B drugs.
  • April 1, 2023: People with Traditional Medicare and Medicare Advantage may pay a lower coinsurance for certain Part B drugs with price increases higher than inflation.
  • 2025: CMS intends to send the first invoices to drug companies for the rebates.

The law has a circular aspect because the government needs a much lower general inflation index to get the full bang for the buck from this program. The notice also poses issues for public input.

The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans tells us,

The International Foundation has been tracking fertility and family-forming benefits over the past seven years. According to Employee Benefits Survey: 2022 Results, 40% of U.S. organizations currently offer fertility benefits (an increase from 30% in 2020).
Overall:

  • 28% cover fertility medications (8% covered in 2016, 14% in 2018, 24% in 2020)
  • 30% cover in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatments (13% in 2016, 17% in 2018, 24% in 2020)
  • 16% cover genetic testing to determine infertility issues (11% in 2018, 12% in 2020)
  • 17% cover non-IVF fertility treatments (6% in 2016, 11% in 2018, 11% in 2020).

In 2016, only 2% of organizations covered egg harvesting/freezing services. That jumped to 6% in 2018, 10% in 2020 and even higher in 2022, with 14% reporting that they cover the benefit.

Healthcare Dives points out, “National telehealth utilization increased 1.9% month-over-month among the privately insured population in November 2022, following one month of decline, according to a new analysis from Fair Health’s monthly tracker.” The bump is attributable to the tripledemic.

Fierce Healthcare relates, “UnitedHealthcare is rolling out a new wearables-based rewards program for members and their spouses. In UnitedHealthcare Rewards, eligible members can earn up to $1,000 per year by using wearable devices to complete health goals and activities, the insurance giant announced Wednesday.”

Health Payer Intelligence notes that “High deductible health plan (HDHP) enrollment hit a record high in 2021, with nearly six out of ten employer-sponsored health plan members enrolled in a high deductible health plan, according to a ValuePenguin survey.”

Benefits consultant Tammy Flanagan writing in Govexec, explains how federal employees can get the full advantage out of the Thrift Savings Plan, which is part of the Federal Employees Retirement System.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill, Roll Call offers the House Speaker’s perspective on the debt ceiling negotiation, and the Washington Post does the same for the Senate Majority Leader. The FEHBlog is becoming more optimistic that the debt negotiations will be successful.

From the Omicron and siblings front, the FEHBlog was pleasantly surprised to see that his favorite Covid columnist David Leonhardt of the New York Times, has returned from his four-month long book leave. In his return column, he lists seven surprises that happened during his leave. Here is the Covid surprise.

A milder Covid winter. In each of the past two winters, the country endured a terrible surge of severe Covid illnesses, but not this winter.

His column includes this chart of COVID hospitalizations.

New York Times February 6, 2023

Mr. Leonhardt explains —

It’s a sign that the virus has become endemic, with immunity from vaccinations and previous infections making the average Covid case less severe. If anything, the best-known Covid statistics on hospitalizations and deaths probably exaggerate its toll, because they count people who had incidental cases. Still, Covid is causing more damage than is necessary — both because many Americans remain unvaccinated and because Covid treatments are being underused, as German Lopez has explained.

Mr. Leonhart’s comment should come as no surprise to FEHBlog readers. Nevertheless, it’s encouraging to read it in the New York Times.

It’s worth noting that the first high peak from the left is Alpha which the Covid vaccines (released in December 2020) helped stem. The middle high point was Delta, and the highest point is Omicron which Paxlovid (released in December 2021) and other treatments helped stem. The public health authorities back in the day discussed a three-legged stool to deter Covid — one leg was immunity, the other was prevention (vaccines, etc.) and the third was treatments, which we did not broadly have until December 2021. What’s more the Omicron siblings have defeated some antiviral treatments but not Paxlovid.

On a related note of interest to care providers, CMS yesterday called attention to its regularly update Current Emergencies website which a chock-a-block full of helpful information.

From the Affordable Care Act and ERISA fronts

  • Fierce Healthcare discusses provider and payer reactions to the ACA’s regulators’ recently closed request for public input on the apprpropriate scope of the ACA’s essential health benefits requirement.
  • The Miller & Chevalier law firm discusses an important 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals decision on remedies available in ERISA claim disputes. The decision favored the ERISA plans and their thir party administrators as well as the objective of health plan cost control.

From the executive personnel front —

  • Fierce Healthcare invites us to meet Express Script’s new president Adam Kautzner.
  • Healthcare Dive introduces us to CVS Health’s senior vice president and chief diversity, equity and inclusion officer Shari Slate.

From the broader U.S. healthcare business front —

The Wall Street Journal reports

CVS Health Corp. is close to an agreement to acquire Oak Street Health Inc.for about $10.5 billion including debt, a deal that would rapidly expand the big healthcare company’s footprint of primary-care doctors with a large network of senior-focused clinics, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The companies are discussing a price of about $39 a share, the people said. The deal, if it goes through, could be announced as soon as this week, they said. CVS is scheduled to report earnings on Wednesday.

The Journal adds that “Oak Street, which has more than 160 centers across 21 states, focuses on the care of patients enrolled in Medicare” and that the deal would push CVS Health “far deeper” into direct provision of healthcare.

Beckers Payer Issues informs us

Alphabet, the parent company of Google, saw its medical stop-loss insurance business grow “nearly sixfold” last year, tech news site The Verge reported Feb. 2. The business, called Granular, provides medical stop-loss coverage to employers and is a subsidiary of Verily, Alphabet’s life sciences business.

Healthcare Dive tells us

  • Looking at 2,000 U.S. hospitals’ websites, only about a quarter were in full compliance with federal price transparency rules, according to a new analysis from PatientRightsAdvocate.org.
  • The majority of hospitals have some required files posted, but most are incomplete, illegible or do not clearly identify prices both associated with payer and plan, according to the report. Some 6% of the hospitals posted no usable pricing files.
  • This latest report calls out both major for-profit and nonprofit chains across the country for not following the rules, including HCA Healthcare, Tenet, Providence and UPMC, which lacked any compliant hospitals.

From the Rx coverage / drug research front —

BioPharma Dive reports

  • Gilead has secured an expanded U.S. approval for its breast cancer medicine Trodelvy, announcing Friday the Food and Drug Administration cleared the antibody treatment for the most commonly occurring form of the tumor type. 
  • Previously approved only for rarer, “triple-negative” breast tumors, Trodelvy can now be used to treat patients with metastatic breast cancer that’s hormone receptor, or HR, positive, but negative for a protein called HER2. This type of breast cancer accounts for an estimated 70% of all new cases, according to Gilead. 
  • The FDA’s decision is a win for Gilead, which gained Trodelvy when it paid $21 billion to acquire Immunomedics in 2020. But clinical trial results showed the drug’s benefit was modest, and Gilead will face competition from a rival drug sold by AstraZeneca and Daiichi.

The Raleigh NC News and Observer discusses a late stage breast cancer injectable drug that Duke University researchers have converted into an FDA approved pill. “[Duke researcher Donald] McDonnell expects elacestrant, which will be marketed as Orserdu, to completely replace the injectable treatment regimen. Not only is the pill less taxing for patients, clinical trials also found it to be more effective.”

STAT News reports

Japanese drugmaker Eisai reported Monday the first U.S. sales of Leqembi, its treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, although exact numbers were not provided and people taking the drug appear to be paying out of pocket because insurance coverage has not yet been established. * * *

The Food and Drug Administration approved Leqembi on Jan. 6. It costs $26,500 per year and is administered by infusion every two weeks. The drug has the potential to be a commercial blockbuster, but only if Medicare can be convinced to pay for it. Unless Medicare changes the way it pays for drugs like Leqembi, Eisai expects a slow commercial rollout.

“Engagements with payers is steadily ongoing towards insurance coverage,” Eisai said Monday, although no new details about its communications with Medicare were provided. “Several” private insurers were “advancing their formulary discussions” about Leqembi reimbursement, Eisai also said, although specific coverage decisions, if any, were not disclosed Monday.

Weekend Update

The House of Representatives and the Senate are holding Committee business and floor voting this week. The President will give the State of the Union address tomorrow at 9 pm.

Following up on the May 11 end of the Covid public health emergency decision, CNBC informs us that the federal government’s free vaccine supply with be exhausted in “early fall,” likely October.

Vaccine pricing in the early fall 

Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel told CNBC last month that the company is preparing to sell the vaccines on the private market as early as this fall. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told investors during the company’s earnings call this week that he is preparing for the vaccines to go commercial in the second half of the year.

Pfizer and Moderna have said they are considering hiking the price of the vaccines to somewhere around $110 to $130 per dose once the U.S. government pulls out of the vaccine program.

Paxlovid pricing and available supply

Pfizer has not announced how much the antiviral will cost once it goes commercial. The federal government is paying about $530 for a five-day treatment course. It’s unclear how much patients will have to pay out of pocket and how much of the price insurance will cover.

Dawn O’Connell, who heads the federal office responsible for the U.S. stockpile, said last August that the Health and Human Services Department expected to run out of Paxlovid by mid-2023.

[Dr. Ashish] Jha [the Omicron czar] said on Tuesday that there are still millions of doses of Paxlovid and omicron boosters in the U.S. stockpile. “They will continue to be available for free to all Americans who need them,” Jha said of the remaining federal supply.

From the public health front —

  • NPR Shots reflects on the end of the 2021-2022 tripledemic. The FEHBlog was pleasantly surprised that the Omicron X.BB surge was manageable even after the flu and RSV surges faded. In the FEHBlog’s layman’s view as a grandfather, the RSV surge was an unavoidable one-time event. The silver lining in that particular cloud is that a single-shot vaccine against RSV for infants appears on the horizon. The flu, like Omicron, will be with us for the foreseeable future.
  • The New York Times Magazine featured a thought-provoking article on menopause.
  • Fortune Well discusses available and future cancer vaccines.