Monday Roundup

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Big tobacco companies and their critics agree on at least one thing: The illegal, fruit-flavored, disposable vapes that are popular among teenagers have flooded the U.S. market and federal regulators haven’t done enough to stop it.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration and Justice Department said Monday they are stepping up enforcement by forming a multiagency task force to go after the illegal distribution and sale of e-cigarettes.
    • “Disposable vaping devices, almost none of which are authorized for sale by the FDA, represent more than 30% of U.S. e-cigarette sales in stores tracked by Nielsen, according to an analysis by Goldman Sachs. Many of them are imported from China. Breeze Pro and Elfbar, both of which were ordered off the market last year by the FDA, remain the top two disposable e-cigarette brands in the U.S.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental and closely watched medicine for Alzheimer’s disease is one step closer to approval, after receiving support from a panel of experts who advise the Food and Drug Administration. “An experimental and closely watched medicine for Alzheimer’s disease is one step closer to approval, after receiving support from a panel of experts who advise the Food and Drug Administration.
    • “On Monday, the panel unanimously voted that the medicine, developed by Eli Lilly and known as donanemab, appears to be an effective treatment for certain Alzheimer’s patients. The experts also concluded, by an 11-0 vote, that the drug’s benefits outweigh its risks, despite some safety concerns.
    • “I thought the evidence is very strong and the trials [show] the effectiveness of the drug,” said Dean Follman, a panelist and assistant director of biostatistics at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is billing the Postal Service’s survival from the worst days of the COVID-19 pandemic as an unsung comeback story — but the agency is still writing its next chapter, as it figures out how to stay financially healthy in the long term.
    • “DeJoy, speaking Monday at the National Postal Forum in Indianapolis, said he inherited a “broken business model” when he took office in June 2020 — and that the agency was months away from running out of cash at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • “Failure to adequately adapt to social, economic, technological, and industrial changes have destroyed giants in their industry – Kodak, Motorola, Blockbuster – in just a few short years,” DeJoy said in his keynote address. “The demands of the changes experienced by the Postal Service were magnitudes greater. In addition, these organizations did not have a Congress or a regulator to contend with.”
    • “Four years into his tenure as postmaster general, DeJoy is defending USPS changes under this 10-year reform plan — some elements of which USPS is temporarily pausing, after bipartisan scrutiny from Congress.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Moderna on Monday said a combination flu and COVID-19 shot it’s developing met the goal of a late-stage study, eliciting higher immune responses to the two viruses than did available vaccines when tested among adults 50 years or older.
    • “Dubbed mRNA-1083, the shot is made up of Moderna’s second-generation COVID vaccine and a candidate for influenza, which have each been tested on their own in separate trials. The company pit mRNA-1803 against Spikevax, its approved COVID vaccine, and against flu shots from drugmakers Sanofi and GSK.
    • “Moderna said the data showed a single dose of mRNA-1083 was statistically equivalent, or “non-inferior,” to giving those vaccines together. It plans to present full results at an upcoming medical meeting, and to discuss next steps with regulators.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “It’s a familiar scene for patients during a routine primary care visit. The doctor scans blood test results, notes high cholesterol flagged by a standard calculator to assess risk of heart attack or stroke, then decides — and ideally discusses — whether to recommend taking a statin to cut the risk over time.
    • “That conversation may happen less often if changes in the risk model presented by the American Heart Association in November translate into new guidelines for prescribing statins. Those guidelines haven’t been recalibrated yet, but a new analysis suggests that the new risk model could mean far fewer Americans — as many as 40% less than current calculators say — would be candidates for cholesterol-lowering drugs to prevent cardiovascular disease.”
  • NBC News informs us,
    • “New research points to a better way to measure obesity than body mass index.” New research points to a better way to measure obesity than body mass index.
    • “Body mass index was first developed in 1832 and has been the standard way to estimate a person’s body fat since the 1980s. The calculation, however, has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years.
    • “One major critique of BMI is that it doesn’t look at how much of a person’s weight is fat, and where fat is distributed around the body. It also doesn’t take into account the other elements that make up a person’s body composition beyond fat, including muscle, bone, water and organs.
    • “Fat distribution and body composition can vary dramatically among different people with the same BMI,” Wenquan Niu, a professor at the Capital Institute of Pediatrics in Beijing, wrote in an email.
    • “Because muscle is much denser than fat, BMI skews higher in people who are very muscular but have less body fat, like athletes, Niu said. On the other end of the spectrum, BMI can be underestimated in older people with much less muscle mass and more body fat.
    • ‘In a study published last week in JAMA Network Open, Niu and his colleagues showed that a different measurement, called the body roundness index, is a more precise way to estimate obesity.”
    • While BMI estimates a person’s body fat using just two measurements, height and weight, BRI also incorporates hip and waist circumferences to estimate how much total fat and visceral fat someone has. Visceral fat is a type of deep belly fat that surrounds the organs and can be more harmful to health.
  • Medscape offers an update on new oral weight loss drugs and tells us,
    • Fewer than one in five people eligible for lung cancer screening reported being up to date with screening in 2022, though patient navigation added to usual care could be a way of increasing these rates, according to two studies published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • Among nearly 26,000 respondents in a nationwide cross-sectional study, the overall prevalence of up-to-date lung cancer screening was 18.1% but varied across states (range 9.7% to 31%), with relatively lower rates in Southern states that have a high lung cancer mortality burden, noted Priti Bandi, PhD, of the American Cancer Society, and colleagues.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Altarum Institutes posted a report titled “Utilization and Price Drivers of Increasing Health Care Spending (2010-2023).”
    • “Following the 2022 slowdown in health care spending that led to the overall health care sector reaching its smallest share of the economy since 2014 (17.3%), there has been a gradual resurgence in health care spending beginning in early 2023. This resurgence, driven predominantly by the greater use of care (and particularly a return of elective and outpatient services), is following the pandemic-affected period of very slow spending growth, postponed care, and health care labor shortages from 2020 through 2022. Higher utilization has been observed in data such as our monthly Altarum health care spending and prices briefs, as well as other industry sources such as hospital and insurer financial reports. In this blog, we put 2023’s above-average health care utilization increases into perspective historically and break down utilization trends by the different major health care spending categories.
    • “Following the 2022 slowdown in health care spending that led to the overall health care sector reaching its smallest share of the economy since 2014 (17.3%), there has been a gradual resurgence in health care spending beginning in early 2023. This resurgence, driven predominantly by the greater use of care (and particularly a return of elective and outpatient services), is following the pandemic-affected period of very slow spending growth, postponed care, and health care labor shortages from 2020 through 2022. Higher utilization has been observed in data such as our monthly Altarum health care spending and prices briefs, as well as other industry sources such as hospital and insurer financial reports. In this blog, we put 2023’s above-average health care utilization increases into perspective historically and break down utilization trends by the different major health care spending categories.
    • Over the past fifteen years, rising U.S. health care spending has been driven both by increased utilization and higher prices, with utilization increases contributing more to higher spending (Figure 1). Since 2010, utilization of personal health care (spending on health goods and services, excluding spending on program administration, net cost of insurance, public health activities, and investment) has increased 47% (contributing about 60% of the overall spending growth), while underlying prices for care have increased 31%. Greater utilization since 2010 has been affected by increases in overall population rates of health insurance coverage, an aging population, greater direct government support for health care during the pandemic and increases in the intensity of care provided for many health care needs.” 
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Abbott said Monday it will launch two over-the-counter continuous glucose monitors after receiving clearance from the Food and Drug Administration.” Abbott said Monday it will launch two over-the-counter continuous glucose monitors after receiving clearance from the Food and Drug Administration.
    • “One product is the company’s Lingo device, sold as a wellness product for people who do not have diabetes. The other is Abbott’s new Libre Rio device, which is intended for adults with Type 2 diabetes who do not use insulin, posing a direct challenge to Dexcom’s Stelo device. 
    • “After Lingo was cleared last week, RBC Capital Markets analyst Shagun Singh wrote the over-the-counter nod could offer a more than $1 billion sales opportunity for Abbott.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Bobby Mukkamala, M.D., was voted in as president-elect of the American Medical Association (AMA) at the group’s annual meeting in Chicago. He will take over for immediate past president Jesse Ehrenfeld, M.D., whose last day in office is Tuesday, June 11. “Bobby Mukkamala, M.D., was voted in as president-elect of the American Medical Association (AMA) at the group’s annual meeting in Chicago. He will take over for immediate past president Jesse Ehrenfeld, M.D., whose last day in office is Tuesday, June 11. 
    • “Mukkamala will serve a one-year term for the physician advocacy group, which has been focused on reforming Medicare physician pay, reducing prior authorization burden and mitigating provider burnout, including through the use of technology to augment provider workflow. 
    • “Mukkamala is an otolaryngologist from Flint, Michigan, who has served in leadership roles within the American Medical Association and for local health initiatives in Michigan. He chairs the Substance Use and Pain Care Taskforce of the AMA and served on its board of trustees in 2017 and 2021.”
  • and
    • “Thought leaders from across the insurance industry will descend on Las Vegas this week for AHIP’s annual conference, kicking off three days of discussions on the biggest issues facing payers.”
    • “The Fierce Health Payer team will also be making the journey to Sin City, so keep an eye out for our coverage over the next several days. Ahead of the event, here’s a look at three key trends we expect to hear plenty about across panels, keynotes and meetings.”
      • GLP-1 Drug Costs and Shortages Remain Center-Stage
      • Continued Talk about Implementation of Value-Based Care, and
      • Cutting through the AI Hype.
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Teladoc Health has named a new CEO, months after the virtual care company’s long-term chief executive abruptly departed following flagging financial performance at the telehealth vendor.
    • “Charles “Chuck” Divita III will take on the role effective immediately, the company said Monday.
    • “His appointment comes about two months after Jason Gorevic, the former CEO who held the position since 2009, left the company.
    • “We are confident we have selected an innovative and visionary leader capable of delivering growth at scale, value for our clients and positive relationships with all our partners and colleagues,” David Snow Jr., chairman of Teladoc’s board of directors, said in a statement.
    • “Divita joins the virtual care company from GuideWell, a healthcare insurance and services company that includes Florida Blue, where he served as executive vice president of commercial markets and previously chief financial officer. He also worked as CFO at FPIC Insurance Group, which focuses on medical professional liability.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplas

From Washington, DC,

  • The Washington Post reports
    • Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) this week wrote to eight pharmaceutical company CEOs, urging them to remove 130 patents from a key federal registry, according to letters shared with The Washington Post. The Democrats are targeting Novo Nordisk, including some of its patents related to expensive drug Ozempic; GlaxoSmithKline; and other companies that produce asthma and diabetes medications.
    • The 130 patents are among more than 300 patents that the Federal Trade Commission in April identified as “junk patent listings” that should be removed from the registry and are blocking competitors from producing cheaper alternatives. Monday is the deadline for the companies to remove the patents or reaffirm that they believe the patents are legal, according to a person who spoke on the condition of anonymity to detail the private enforcement process.
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Friday expanded the approval for GSK’s vaccine to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, authorizing its use for at-risk adults as young as 50.”The Food and Drug Administration on Friday expanded the approval for GSK’s vaccine to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, authorizing its use for at-risk adults as young as 50.
    • “Arexvy, which was the first RSV vaccine approved, now becomes the first to be available to adults under the age of 60 who are not pregnant. Prior to this FDA decision, Arexvy was licensed for use in people 60 and older.”
  • Tammy Flanagan writing in Govexec discusses the state of federal civil service retirement: CSRS and FERS.
  • Govexec adds,
    • “The government’s backlog of pending retirement claims from federal workers hit an eight-year low last month. “The government’s backlog of pending retirement claims from federal workers hit an eight-year low last month.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management’s retirement process and subsequent backlog has long dogged the federal government’s HR agency, frustrating agencies and departing federal employees alike, in large part due to paper-based legacy personnel systems.
    • “But last year, OPM instituted a number of measures to try to make immediate improvements to the process, including dedicating more resources and manpower during the early-year busy season for retirement claims and setting up a new dashboard for claimants to better understand the process and avoid common pitfalls.
    • “In May, OPM received 6,751 new retirement applications, a slight decrease from the 6,901 it received the previous month. But after a modest decrease in the number of claims actually processed in April, the agency increased its pace again last month, processing 8,793 claims.
    • “By the end of the month, the backlog had fallen to 14,035, compared to 16,077 pending claims at the end of April. That marks the smallest retirement backlog OPM has experienced since May 2016, when it also finished the month with a backlog of 14,035 applications.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control informs us,
    • Summary
      • Seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and RSV activity is low nationally.
    • COVID-19
      • Most key indicators are showing low levels of activity nationally. However, COVID-19 test positivity has increased to 4.5%. Wastewater viral activity is showing increases in some states. We also estimate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in 30 states and territories, declining or likely declining in 1 state or territory, and are stable or uncertain in 18 states and territories, based on Rt estimates of epidemic growth. An increasing proportion of the variants that cause COVID-19 are projected to be KP.3 and LB.1 (CDC COVID Data Tracker: Variant Proportions).
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • Nationally, RSV test positivity remains low. Hospitalization rates are low in all age groups.
    • Vaccination
  • The Washington Post offers background on bird flu — How it spreads, milk and egg safety and more.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The American Cancer Society has begun an ambitious, far-reaching study focusing on a population that has long been overlooked, despite high rates of cancer and cancer-related deaths: Black women.”The American Cancer Society has begun an ambitious, far-reaching study focusing on a population that has long been overlooked, despite high rates of cancer and cancer-related deaths: Black women.
    • “The initiative, called VOICES of Black Women, is believed to be the first long-term population study of its size to zero in specifically on the factors driving cancer prevalence and deaths among Black women.
    • “Researchers plan to enroll 100,000 Black women without cancer, ages 25 to 55, in Washington, D.C., and 20 states where most Black American women reside. The subjects will be surveyed twice a year about their behaviors, environmental exposures and life experiences, and followed for 30 years; any cancers they may develop will be tracked.
    • “Similar studies by the American Cancer Society in the past yielded critical lessons about what causes cancer — for example, identifying cigarette smoking as a cause of lung cancer and linking red- and processed-meat consumption to increased risk of colon cancer.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “The moment when a person stops taking their antidepressant is fraught. Not only can patients see their psychiatric symptoms return, but they can experience a wide variety of new symptoms in the days and weeks immediately following the medication change.
    • “Symptoms like nausea and headache can be manageable, and typically begin and end within days of ending the medication. But more disruptive effects like insomnia, irritability, and sensory disturbance, or even severe ones like suicidal ideation or lethargy, can lead patients to reconsider their decision to stop treatment, even when they resolve relatively rapidly.
    • “A new systematic review of studies on antidepressant discontinuation published on Tuesday in The Lancet Psychiatry provides insight into the frequency and gravity of those symptoms. The review, which included 79 studies capturing 21,000 patients, found that about 15% experienced withdrawal symptoms after weaning from antidepressants. In 2 to 3% of the cases, the symptoms were severe.
    • “The analysis “is an important and long overdue contribution to the research literature,” said Awais Aftab, a professor of psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, who did not participate in the study. It confirms that withdrawal symptoms do happen with clinically relevant frequency, and should be managed with care. But it demonstrated a lower incidence than recent estimates based on online surveys, which generated public alarm when they suggested symptoms may occur in half or more of the patients.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Humana and CVS, two of the largest Medicare Advantage insurers in the country, are poised to seriously downgrade their plan benefits and geographic presence next year as they chase profits in the privately run Medicare program.”Humana and CVS, two of the largest Medicare Advantage insurers in the country, are poised to seriously downgrade their plan benefits and geographic presence next year as they chase profits in the privately run Medicare program.
    • “As a result, hundreds of thousands of Medicare Advantage seniors — and the billions in revenue they represent — could come up for grabs, representing a significant opportunity for insurers looking to take on more members despite ongoing challenges in MA.
    • “The size of the turnover depends on a number of factors. Deciding which benefits to cut versus keep is a tough calculus, and there are guardrails from the federal government limiting cutbacks, experts say.
    • “Those decisions have been made — bids were due to the CMS on Monday. However, it will be months before the industry knows how much turbulence Humana and CVS might cause in their drive to bolster profits next year, and which insurers might benefit.
    • “Of the national payers, market leader UnitedHealth may be best situated to pick up switching seniors, solidifying its dominance in MA, experts say.
    • “I think there will be a huge shakeup,” Alexis Levy, the managing director of health consultancy Chartis’ payer advisory practice, said.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues notes,
    • “Artificial intelligence has the potential to lower internal and member costs, for insurers while also increasing profits, but the industry has largely not embraced these opportunities, according to a June 5 analysis from McKinsey.”Artificial intelligence has the potential to lower internal and member costs, for insurers while also increasing profits, but the industry has largely not embraced these opportunities, according to a June 5 analysis from McKinsey.
    • “Incremental approaches will continue to yield only minor savings, as we have seen to date across most of the industry,” the analysts wrote. “To capture full value, payers must reimagine the end-to-end processes of each domain.”
    • Three key takeaways: 
      • 1. “If payers fully implemented already available generative AI and automation technologies, on average they could save 13-25% on administrative costs, 5-11% on medical costs and increase revenues by 3-12%.
      • 2. “Marketing and sales, utilization management, and IT are the divisions with the largest potential opportunities when using AI.
      • 3. “Payers that want to better use AI technology should have these six key things: a strategic plan, the right talent, a conducive operating model, technological capabilities, consumable data and the ability to ensure adoption and scale.
      • “In general, most payers are ill-equipped to pursue this opportunity,” the analysts wrote. “To do so, they have to close the gap that exists between their current capabilities and those needed to fully address the six areas outlined above.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Amid rising concern over prescription drug shortages, a new report finds that the number of shortages has increased over the past decade, most are lasting longer than ever before, and the problem is affecting medicines used to treat a wide range of maladies.
    • “Specifically, the average shortage lasted for more than three years in 2023 compared to about two years in 2020, and 27 of the 125 drugs in short supply were not available for more than five years. And 53% of new shortages occurred among generic sterile injectable medicines, according to the report from U.S. Pharmacopeia, an independent organization that develops standards for medicines.
    • “Meanwhile, most medicines for which shortages existed cost less than $5; nearly one-third of injectables cost less than $2; and two-thirds of solid oral medicines cost $3 or less. These low prices also translated into more product discontinuations, which rose by 40% from 2022 to 2023, and from 100 drugs to 140 during that time. This was also the highest rate of product discontinuations since 2019.
    • “A key culprit, according to U.S. Pharmacopeia, often are thin profit margins. “Economic pressures, especially the very low prices that generics manufacturers recover for many medicines, along with contracts that are frequently broken, have left our generic medicine supply chain fragile,” said Anthony Lakavage, senior vice president for global external affairs, in a statement.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Following up on the House Appropriations subcommittee’s approval of the Financial Services and General Government bill yesterday, Fedweek notes,
    • “By taking no position on a raise, the measure effectively endorses President Biden’s proposal for a 2 percent increase in January. That would follow the practice of most recent years of allowing the recommendation to take effect by default, and would result in the smallest raise since the 1 percent paid in January 2021. The measure however does continue longstanding language tying raises for wage grade employees to those of GS employees in an area, even though the two pay systems operate under separate locality-based rules.”
  • The Washington Post reports Biden wants hospitals to report data on gunshot wounds.”
    • “The Biden administration is enlisting America’s doctors to help combat gun violence.
    • “About 160 health-care executives and officials have been invited to the White House today and Friday to promote public health solutions to the epidemic. A top priority, I’m told: The White House wants hospital emergency departments to collect more data about gunshot injuries their physicians treat, as well as routinely counsel patients about the safe use of firearms.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “A federal judge ruled Wednesday Novant Health can move forward with its plans to purchase two North Carolina hospitals from Community Health Systems, despite a request from the Federal Trade Commission to stall the deal.”A federal judge ruled Wednesday Novant Health can move forward with its plans to purchase two North Carolina hospitals from Community Health Systems, despite a request from the Federal Trade Commission to stall the deal.
    • “The antitrust agency sued to block the deal in January, claiming it would decrease competition and drive up consumer prices in the greater Lake Norman, North Carolina, area by allotting Novant more than 65% control of the region’s inpatient market.
    • “U.S. district judge Kenneth Bell denied the FTC’s request for an injunction, saying the hospitals are likely to shutter absent a deal.”
  • On a related note, the Wall Street Journal continues its series on hospital consolidation.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports
    • “A 59-year-old male resident of Mexico died after being infected with a bird flu subtype never before confirmed to have spread to humans, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.”
    • “The man, who suffered from other underlying health conditions, had no known exposure to poultry or other animals before being formally diagnosed by a laboratory with the H5N2 subtype of avian flu. The case marks the first time a human has been confirmed to be infected with this subtype, and the first time an avian H5 virus was confirmed in a person in Mexico.
    • “Due to the constantly evolving nature of influenza viruses, WHO continues to stress the importance of global surveillance,” WHO said in a statement. “This case does not change the current WHO recommendations on public health measures and surveillance of influenza,” it added, rating current risks to the general population as “low.”
  • and
    • “‘Unusual’ cancers emerged after the pandemic. Doctors ask if covid is to blame.”‘Unusual’ cancers emerged after the pandemic. Doctors ask if covid is to blame.
    • “It’s not a new idea that viruses can cause or accelerate cancer. But it will probably be years before answers emerge about covid and cancer.”
  • Mercer Consulting offers bird flu considerations for employers.
  • The NIH Director in her blog relates,
    • “The ability to communicate using only your thoughts might sound like the stuff of science fiction. But for people who don’t have the ability to speak or move due to injury or disease, there’s great hope that this may one day be possible using brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) that can “read” relevant brain signals and translate them into written or spoken words. A research team has made a preliminary advance in this direction by showing for the first time that a computerized brain implant can decode internal speech with minimal training.
    • “In the new NIH-supported study, researchers implanted such a device in a brain area known to be important for representing spoken words called the supramarginal gyrus in two people with tetraplegia, a condition marked by full body paralysis from the neck down due to cervical spinal cord injury. The researchers found that the device could decode several words the participants “spoke” only in their minds. While we are far from using such a device to decode whole sentences or even phrases, and the exact mechanisms of internal speech are still under study, the findings, reported in Nature Human Behavior , are notable because it had been unclear whether the brain signals involved in thinking words could be reproducibly translated. * * *
    • “While there is much more to learn about how to decode internal speech more reliably across individuals, the findings offer proof-of-concept for a high-performance internal speech BCI. The new research adds to a growing portfolio of rapidly advancing technologies supported by the BRAIN Initiative that could one day routinely restore the ability to communicate for those who can no longer speak or even move, including people with brain injuries, paralysis, or diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration will need to weigh whether Eli Lilly’s experimental Alzheimer’s disease drug donanemab is widely effective or should be restricted only to people who have deposits in their brains of a toxic protein called tau, according to documents released Thursday ahead of a key regulatory meeting next week.
    • “The FDA will also ask its advisers to provide guidance on whether and when it’s safe for people to stop taking donanemab based on reductions in another toxic protein called amyloid, as well as on the risks of mild brain swelling that can result from donanemab and other drugs of its type.”The FDA will also ask its advisers to provide guidance on whether and when it’s safe for people to stop taking donanemab based on reductions in another toxic protein called amyloid, as well as on the risks of mild brain swelling that can result from donanemab and other drugs of its type.
    • “If approved, donanemab would be the third amyloid-targeted drug to launch. Biogen has withdrawn the first, called Aduhelm, after much controversy and few sales. Eisai, along with Biogen, more recently won approval of a second, called Leqembi, which brought in sales of $19 million in the first quarter.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Health Affairs offers advice to employers about how to help employees reduce their healthcare costs.
    • “Employers, and especially small employers, may have limited ability to affect the direct causes of increasing spending—notably high prices. However, they do have some options that could lower the burden of out-of-pocket costs for their employees. Employers could partner with insurers to use more innovative cost-sharing structures in the health insurance benefits offered to their employees. In addition, they could increase the use of benefit designs that distribute costs more equitably, which may improve affordability for low- to middle-income workers.”
  • HR Dive tells us,
    • “In an era when retirement is frequently at the forefront of ageismdiversity and benefits conversations, older adults now make up a larger share of American workforce members over the age of 55. The Employee Benefit Research Institute found that adults aged 65 and older made up 29.5% of the workforce in 2023, compared to an estimated 23% in 2000.
    • “Additionally, EBRI noted that the share of Hispanic workers aged 55 and older more than doubled, with the share of older White workers dropping from about 87% to 81%.
    • “The changing demographic characteristics of the older workforce are “important considerations for employers to understand, as older workers and a more diverse work force calls for additional or new answers to the optimal design of employee benefit plans,” Craig Copeland, director of wealth benefits at EBRI, said in a release.”
  • EBRI also released a Fast Facts publication informing us that “HSAs Reduce Use of Outpatient Services and Prescription Drugs, Increase Use of Inpatient Services; Overall Spending Unaffected.”

Midweek Update

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From Washington, DC,

  • The House Appropriations Committee tells us, “Today, the House Appropriations Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee met to consider its Fiscal Year 2025 bill. The measure was approved by the Subcommittee.”
  • This bill provides appropriations for OPM and the FEHBP. The Committee summary of the bill describes its OPM appropriations as follows —
    • “Provides $477 million for the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), which is $31.4 million below the FY25 Budget Request and $29.1 million above the FY24 enacted level.”
  • Govexec informs us,
    • “Senate Democrats have vowed to move quickly on legislation protecting Americans’ access to in vitro fertilization and other forms of assistive reproductive technology, including a provision expanding federal workers’ access to those treatments as part of the government’s employer-sponsored health insurance program.
    • “On Monday, Sens. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Cory Booker, D-N.J., introduced the Right to IVF Act, a repackaging of three separate previously introduced bills on reproductive health services.
    • “Included is the Family Building FEHB Fairness Act, first introduced last year by Duckworth, which would require the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program to cover additional costs associated with IVF, and would expand coverage to all types of assisted reproductive technology, such as gamete and zygote intrafallopian transfer.”
  • Govexec also pointed out this OPM Inspector General brief that summarizes OPM OIG recommendations that have been open for more than six months as of March 31, 2024. The FEHBlog understands why the FEHB open recommendations remain outstanding
  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Congress appears to be inching toward injecting more transparency into a controversial program that forces drugmakers to give safety-net hospitals steep discounts on drugs.
    • “It would be a win for pharmaceutical manufacturers, which have long lobbied that hospitals be required to account for their savings in the 340B program — or that it be overhauled entirely.
    • “The latter appears unlikely, after lawmakers on both sides of the aisle expressed blanket support for 340B during a House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee hearing on Tuesday. However, members said they approved of more oversight to try and stop financial gaming in the program.
    • “Though “we’re all in support of 340B … I think nearly all of us agree that the status quo is not acceptable,” said Rep. Larry Bucshon, R-Ind.”
  • Yesterday, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force released a final recommendation concerning “Falls Prevention in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: Interventions.” Its recommendations align with the recommendations currently in force.
  • Thompson Reuters Practical Law relates,
    • “In litigation under the No Surprises Act (NSA), a district court concluded that there is no cause of action for health providers to enforce awards involving surprise billing disputes under the NSA’s independent dispute resolution (IDR) process (Guardian Flight LLC & Med-Trans Corp. v. Health Care Serv. Corp.(N.D. Tex. May 30, 2024)).”
  • The American Hospital Association News shares the organization’s “comments [submitted’ June 5 on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ inpatient prospective payment system proposed rule for fiscal year 2025, expressing support for several provisions, including certain policies supporting low-volume and Medicare-dependent hospitals, and several aspects of CMS’ quality-related proposals. However, AHA raised concerns about the rule’s proposed payment updates.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CNN reports,
    • “About 61% of US adults will have cardiovascular disease by 2050, new research from the American Heart Association predicts. The biggest driver of this trend will be the large number of people who have or will develop high blood pressure, which makes them much more likely to develop dangerous problems like a heart attack or stroke.
    • “Other cardiovascular problems include heart attacks, arrhythmias like atrial fibrillation or a-fib, heart failure and congenital heart disease. * * *
    • In the research published Tuesday, the association predicts that 45 million adults will have some form of cardiovascular disease – excluding high blood pressure – or will have a stroke in 2050, up from 28 million in 2020.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • One of the nation’s premier medical advisory organizations has weighed in on long Covid with a 265-page report that recognizes the seriousness and persistence of the condition for millions of Americans.
    • More than four years since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, long Covid continues to damage many people’s ability to function, according to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, a nongovernmental institution that advises federal agencies on science and medicine.
  • and
    • “A committee of advisers to the Food and Drug Administration voted on Wednesday to update the formula for the Covid vaccine ahead of an anticipated fall immunization campaign, now an annual step to try to offer better protection against versions of the virus in circulation.
    • “The unanimous vote by the 16 advisers recommends a formula aimed at combating the variant JN.1, which dominated infections in the United States in February, or a version of it. In recent weeks, JN.1 has been overtaken by descendants known as KP.2 and KP.3.
    • “In the coming weeks, the F.D.A. is expected to formally recommend a variant target for vaccine makers for the next round of shots in the late summer or early fall. Any decision involves some educated guesswork, given that any new vaccine formula won’t be available until months after a variant becomes dominant.
    • “It’s becoming clear that the ideal timing for a vaccine composition decision remains elusive,” said Jerry Weir, an official with the F.D.A.’s vaccine division.”
  • Per Biopharma Dive,
    • “A saliva test may improve screening for prostate cancer by identifying people at higher risk based on genotype, researchers said Friday.”A saliva test may improve screening for prostate cancer by identifying people at higher risk based on genotype, researchers said Friday.
    • Data presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting suggest the test can support prostate cancer diagnosis in people who are missed by other screening methods.
    • “The researchers are now comparing the saliva test to several screening methods such as fast MRI scans and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood tests to determine the best approach.”
  • and
    • “Eli Lilly’s drug tirzepatide — sold as Zepbound for obesity — continues to show promise in the liver disease MASH. Clinical trial data disclosed in an abstract ahead of a European medical conference indicates that, after one year, the shot helped improve liver fibrosis without worsening MASH in just over half of treated participants, compared with 30% of those given placebo. Lilly had hinted at the study’s success earlier this year, but the full data will provide a more complete view of tirzepatide’s potential. The abstract’s release comes one day after Viking Therapeutics released trial data for its MASH pill VK2809 and less than two months after Madrigal Pharmaceuticals won U.S. approval of the first MASH drug.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research “today posted Protocol outlining how it will conduct the fourth annual assessment of how well major insurers’ prescription drug coverage policies align with a set of fair access standards. These standards were developed by ICER with expert input from patient advocates, clinician specialty societies, payers, pharmacy benefit managers, and life science companies.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “The CDC finalized new guidelines that recommend doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis (doxy PEP) for at-risk gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) to prevent bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs).”The CDC finalized new guidelines that recommend doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis (doxy PEP) for at-risk gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) to prevent bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
    • “Healthcare providers should discuss and offer doxy PEP to people in these populations with a history of at least one bacterial STI — specifically syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea — in the last 12 months, Lindley Barbee, MD, of the CDC’s National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, and colleagues wrote in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.”
    • “Doxy PEP represents the first new STI prevention tool in decades, at a time when innovation in the nation’s fight against STIs is desperately needed,” said Barbee in a CDC statement.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, has released its plan for advancing H5N1 influenza basic research and translating those findings into strategies and interventions that can benefit people. The research agenda focuses on four key objectives: increasing understanding of the biology of H5N1 viruses and the factors that influence their ability to transmit and cause disease; developing and evaluating prevention strategies, such as vaccines; advancing existing and novel treatments, including antivirals and monoclonal antibodies; and supporting strategies for detecting H5N1 virus. The NIAID Research Agenda for 2024 H5N1 Influenza – May 2024 aligns with the NIAID role in the federal public health response to the U.S. outbreak of H5N1 influenza in people, dairy cows and other animals.”The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, has released its plan for advancing H5N1 influenza basic research and translating those findings into strategies and interventions that can benefit people. The research agenda focuses on four key objectives: increasing understanding of the biology of H5N1 viruses and the factors that influence their ability to transmit and cause disease; developing and evaluating prevention strategies, such as vaccines; advancing existing and novel treatments, including antivirals and monoclonal antibodies; and supporting strategies for detecting H5N1 virus. The NIAID Research Agenda for 2024 H5N1 Influenza – May 2024 aligns with the NIAID role in the federal public health response to the U.S. outbreak of H5N1 influenza in people, dairy cows and other animals.”
  • The Washington Post reports, “Male birth control gel shows promise in early-stage clinical trials. “A National Institutes of Health official said the findings marked a milestone, even if the product is probably years away.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • KFF informs us,
    • The Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) limits the amount of premium income that insurers can keep for administration, marketing, and profits. Insurers that fail to meet the applicable MLR threshold are required to pay back excess profits or margins in the form of rebates to individuals and employers that purchased coverage.
    • In the individual and small group markets, insurers must spend at least 80% of their premium income on health care claims and quality improvement efforts, leaving the remaining 20% for administration, marketing expenses, and profit. The MLR threshold is higher for large group insurers, which must spend at least 85% of their premium income on health care claims and quality improvement efforts. MLR rebates are based on a 3-year average, meaning that rebates issued in 2024 will be calculated using insurers’ financial data in 2021, 2022 and 2023 and will go to people and businesses who bought health coverage in 2023.
    • This analysis, using preliminary data reported by insurers to state regulators and compiled by Mark Farrah Associates, finds that insurers estimate they will issue a total of about $1.1 billion in MLR rebates across all commercial markets in 2024. Since the ACA began requiring insurers to issue these rebates in 2012, a total of $11.8 billion in rebates have already been issued to individuals and employers, and this analysis suggests the 2012-2024 total will rise to about $13 billion when rebates are issued later this year.
  • TechTarget calls our attention to the fact that “As providers seek to advance patient-centered care, many behavioral health organizations are turning to their EHR vendors to support integrated care models, according to a KLAS report.” Yippee.
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “U.S. bankruptcy Judge Chris Lopez authorized the sale dates for Dallas-based Steward Health Care’s 31 hospitals during a June 3 hearing. “U.S. bankruptcy Judge Chris Lopez authorized the sale dates for Dallas-based Steward Health Care’s 31 hospitals during a June 3 hearing. 
    • “The sales will be conducted in two rounds. The first round, which includes the health system’s physician group, Stewardship Health, and all Steward hospitals excluding its Florida facilities and some of the Texas hospitals, will have a bid deadline of June 24 and a first sale hearing July 11.
    • “The second round includes Steward’s Florida hospitals and four of its Texas facilities, with a bid deadline of Aug. 12 and a sale hearing of Aug. 22.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues tells us about the payers that landed on the 2024 Fortune 500.

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Hospital Association New tells us,
    • The House Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations subcommittee June 4 hosted a hearing to discuss oversight of the 340B Drug Pricing Program. AHA sent a letter to the subcommittee for the hearing, urging Congress to protect the program and highlighted its value to hospitals and health systems.
  • Roll Call offers more details on this policy issue.
  • Per a Health and Human Services press release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) in partnership with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), today welcomed 10 new states into the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic (CCBHC) Medicaid Demonstration Program, after they successfully developed the necessary state-level infrastructure and worked with providers in their states to develop programs that meet CCBHC standards: Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Vermont. The CCBHC Medicaid Demonstration Program provides states with sustainable funding that helps them expand access to mental health and substance use services, supporting President Biden’s Unity Agenda and the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to tackle the country’s mental health and addiction crises. The expansion of the program directly supports the President’s national strategy to transform our behavioral health system and builds on the Administration’s previous work to build a better crisis continuum of care, including through the transition to the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, add a new mobile crisis benefit to Medicaid and new crisis codes to the Medicare program.”
  • NBC News reports,
    • A Food and Drug Administration advisory panel on Tuesday declined to recommend the approval of MDMA as a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder, a major setback for advocates who have long pushed to include psychedelics in treating mental health disorders.
    • The two votes — one for the treatment’s efficacy and one for its safety, by the agency’s Psychopharmacologic Drugs Advisory Committee — marked the first time that FDA advisers have considered a Schedule I psychedelic for medical use. If approved by the FDA, it would be the first new treatment for PTSD in more than two decades.
    • The votes reflected panel members’ struggle to balance the need for new PTSD treatments against serious concerns about the data submitted by drugmaker Lykos Pharmaceuticals, which was marred by inconsistencies, poor study design and allegations of misconduct.
    • “It sounds like MDMA has really impacted a number of people in positive ways, but it seems that there are so many problems with the data,” said Melissa Decker Barone, an adjunct assistant professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. * * *
    • Last week, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, a non-profit group that evaluates the cost of drugs, said patients and providers in the trial treated psychedelics “more like a religious movement than like pharmaceutical products.” * * *
    • “The decision will now go to the FDA, which is expected to make a final ruling by August 11. The committee’s vote is only a recommendation, and the agency doesn’t have to follow its advice, although it usually does.”
  • Reuters adds,
    • “The FDA’s staff in separate documents said vaccine makers developing the new booster shots may need to consider targeting one of the JN.1 subvariants such as KP.2, as further evolution of the virus could take it away from the older strain. * * *”The FDA’s staff in separate documents said vaccine makers developing the new booster shots may need to consider targeting one of the JN.1 subvariants such as KP.2, as further evolution of the virus could take it away from the older strain. * * *
    • “The FDA staff’s review for updating viral strains for vaccines in the U.S. differs from that of the World Health Organization’s advisers, who in April recommended targeting only the JN.1 strain.
    • “Since then, the subvariant KP.2 has become the dominant strain in the U.S., estimated to account for about 28.5% of cases over a two-week period ended May 25, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Scan Health Plan won a lawsuit that alleged the federal government had improperly calculated its 2024 Medicare Advantage star ratings, which it argued could cost the insurer millions of dollars. “Scan Health Plan won a lawsuit that alleged the federal government had improperly calculated its 2024 Medicare Advantage star ratings, which it argued could cost the insurer millions of dollars. 
    • “The case centered around recent changes in how the CMS determined quality measures for the private Medicare plans. Scan alleged the agency didn’t follow its stated methodology, causing its rating to drop “precipitously” to 3.5 stars and risking $250 million in quality bonus payments. 
    • “The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled for the California-based insurer Monday, barring the federal government from using Scan’s original 2024 Star Rating for quality bonus decisions.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Surgeons removed the kidney of a genetically engineered pig from a critically ill patient last week after the organ was damaged by inadequate blood flow related to a heart pump that the woman had also received, according to officials at NYU Langone Transplant Institute.”Surgeons removed the kidney of a genetically engineered pig from a critically ill patient last week after the organ was damaged by inadequate blood flow related to a heart pump that the woman had also received, according to officials at NYU Langone Transplant Institute.
    • “The patient, Lisa Pisano, 54, who is still hospitalized, went back on kidney dialysis after the pig’s organ was removed. She lived with the transplanted organ for 47 days, Dr. Robert Montgomery, director of the institute, said. The kidney showed no signs of organ rejection.
    • “Lisa is in stable condition, and her left ventricular assist device is still functioning,” Dr. Montgomery said, referring to the heart pump. “We are hoping to get Lisa back home to her family soon.”
  • Health Day lets us know,
    • “As the H5N1 avian flu continues to spread among dairy cows in the United States, nearly 5 million doses of flu vaccine are now being prepared for possible use in humans.
    • “Since the outbreak in livestock began this spring, bird flu has been confirmed in three humans who worked on dairy farms in Texas and Michigan, and health experts are concerned the virus could mutate to the point where it could spread easily among humans.
    • “In response, vaccine maker CSL Seqirus announced last week that it has been tasked with making the additional doses of flu vaccine at its North Carolina plant.
    • “It utilizes a highly scalable method of production and is currently positioned to deliver up to 150 million influenza vaccine doses to support an influenza pandemic response within six months of a pandemic declaration,” the company noted in a news release.”
  • ABC News relates,
    • “Cases of whooping cough are on the rise across the United States, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows. “Cases of whooping cough are on the rise across the United States, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows.
    • “There have been at least 4,864 whooping cough cases reported this year. This is nearly three times higher than the 1,746 cases reported at the same time last year.
    • “The number of cases for 2024 is similar to those seen in 2018-2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • “The national trends mirror those seen in many U.S. states. The Oregon Health Authority said Thursday that 178 cases have been reported as of May 29, a 770% increase from the 20 cases reported by at the same time in 2023, according to local ABC News affiliate KATU. * * *
    • “There are two types of vaccines used today to protect against whooping cough: diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTaP) vaccine for babies and children younger age 7 and tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (Tdap) vaccines for children aged 7 and older, adults and pregnant women.
    • “People often think ‘Well once you get vaccinated you have lifelong immunity,’ and that’s actually not the case. You certainly need to get those booster doses,” Madad said.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out
    • “Mississippi is the unhealthiest state in the nation for older adults in 2024, according to the United Health Foundation’s 12th annual “America’s Health Rankings Senior Report.”
    • “The May 30 report provides a comprehensive look at the health and well-being of Americans 65 and older.   
    • “State rankings were derived from 35 measures across five categories of health: social and economic factors, physical environment, behaviors, clinical care and health outcomes. The full methodology can be viewed here.
  • The National Institutes of Health shared their most recent research insights.
  • NIH announced in various press releases,
    • “Two clinical trials have launched to examine a novel long-acting form of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in cisgender women and people who inject drugs. The mid-stage studies will assess the safety, acceptability, and pharmacokinetics (how a drug moves through the body) of lenacapavir, an antiretroviral drug administered by injection every six months. The studies are sponsored and funded by Gilead Sciences, Inc., and implemented through the HIV Prevention Trails Network (HPTN). The HPTN is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), with scientific collaboration on this study and others from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) as well as co-funding from NIDA and other NIH institutes.”
  • and
    • “A five-minute cognitive assessment coupled with a decision tree embedded in electronic medical records, known as 5-Cog, improved dementia diagnosis and care, based on a clinical trial funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and conducted in an urban primary care setting. Researchers evaluated the system among 1,200 predominantly Black and Hispanic American older adults who presented to primary care with cognitive concerns. The findings appear in Nature Medicine. * * *
    • “5-Cog combines three metrics designed to test memory recall, the connection between cognition and gait, and the ability to match symbols to pictures. Importantly, these tests are easy to perform, relatively quick, and are not affected by reading level or ethnic/cultural differences among patients. * * *
    • “Cognitive impairment is often difficult to diagnose in the busy primary care setting and, as a result, beneficial care plans are likely underutilized. This can result in lack of detection, which delays the start of support services and critical planning. Underdiagnosis is even more prevalent among older Black and Hispanic patients compared to white patients, suggesting this tool may be even more valuable to the populations represented in the study.”
  • and
    • “For military members and veterans who have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), adding a service dog to their usual care could reduce the severity of PTSD symptoms, feelings of anxiety, and lower depression while enhancing their quality of life and psychosocial functioning, according to a study funded by the National Institutes of Health.”For military members and veterans who have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), adding a service dog to their usual care could reduce the severity of PTSD symptoms, feelings of anxiety, and lower depression while enhancing their quality of life and psychosocial functioning, according to a study funded by the National Institutes of Health.
    • “The trial, which is the largest nationwide study comparing service dog partnerships to usual care alone, included 156 military members and veterans diagnosed with PTSD. Participants were recruited through the database of K9s For Warriors, an accredited non-profit service dog provider. Under U.S. federal law(link is external), service dogs are “individually trained to work or perform tasks for people with disabilities.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Abbott received clearance from the Food and Drug Administration for an over-the-counter glucose monitor. “Abbott received clearance from the Food and Drug Administration for an over-the-counter glucose monitor. 
    • “The device, called Lingo, first debuted in the U.K. last year as a sensor for people who don’t have diabetes to track glucose spikes. Abbott hopes to bring it to the U.S. but has shared few details about its plans. 
    • “With the recent FDA clearance, Abbott will compete with Dexcom for a new category of over-the-counter glucose monitors. Dexcom received FDA clearance for the first over-the-counter CGM in March.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Steward Health Care is aggressively courting new debtor-in-possession lenders to stay afloat amid its Chapter 11 restructuring process. Without additional capital, the health system says it will run out of funds by June 14.
    • “Medical Properties Trust, Steward’s landlord and initial DIP financier, appears unlikely to step up to the plate to offer more funds.
    • “The Dallas-based health system, which employs 30,000 people across eight states, declared bankruptcy last month. At the time, the real estate investment trust put up $75 million of DIP financing and said it might offer up to $225 million more, contingent upon successful asset sales.
    • “But MPT has since shown little interest in providing additional financial support for Steward. As of Friday, Steward’s attorneys told the court that MPT had made no further commitment to pony up funds, leaving the health system in immediate need of new funding.”

 

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Bloomberg News reports,
    • “Federal agencies are aiming to issue final regulations this year that aim to make the arbitration process more efficient for No Surprises Act health care payment disputes, an IRS official said.
    • “The regulations are a priority for the Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services departments, said IRS Office of Chief Counsel Senior Technician Reviewer Kevin Knopf during a Thursday panel at the Federal Bar Association’s Insurance Tax Seminar.
    • “The proposed rules aim to reduce certain administrative fees tied to participating in an independent dispute resolution system that arbitrates clashes between medical providers and health insurers over payments. They also aim to clarify requirements to prove that a dispute is eligible for the dispute resolution process.” 
  • The Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) announced,
    • “Today, on National Heat Awareness Day, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is launching a new tool to help communities prepare for extreme heat and prevent heat-related illness, especially among those most at risk. The Heat and Health Index (HHI) is the first nationwide tool to provide heat-health outcome information at the ZIP code level. The HHI will help state and local officials identify communities, at the zip code level, most likely to experience negative health outcomes from heat, ensure that outreach and medical aid reach the people who need it most, and help decision-makers prioritize community resilience investments.”
  • The National Committee for Quality Assurance released a fact sheet about Mental Health Awareness Month, which ended today.
  • HHS’s Agency for Health Research and Quality tells us,
    • “As we round out Older Americans Month, it is crucial that we continue to recognize the significant contributions of older adults and the urgent need to transform and improve their healthcare. Our current system is ill-equipped to meet the complex needs of older adults, who often contend with multiple chronic conditions. This inadequacy leads to fragmented and sub-optimal care, resulting in poor health outcomes, avoidable adverse events, hospitalizations, institutionalization, and increased costs. 
    • “To meet these challenges, AHRQ remains committed to using its research capabilities to build the evidence base and identify solutions ready for action. To do so, the agency has released a Special Emphasis Notice to announce its strong interest in funding health services research to improve care quality for older adults.  Research proposals for enhancing service access, delivery, organization, and equitable distribution are welcome. In particular, AHRQ seeks research to address critical questions related to the development, implementation, evaluation, and scalability of person-centered models of care to optimize older adults’ physical and mental health, functional status, and overall well-being.” 
  • BioPharma Dive informs us,
    • The Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved a third vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus, clearing a shot from biotechnology company Moderna one year after granting a green light to vaccines from GSK and Pfizer.
    • The vaccine, dubbed mResvia, is for the prevention of disease caused by respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, in adults 60 years of age and older. Experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are expected to meet next month to provide recommendations on the shot’s use. Moderna had said it expects the vaccine to be available in time for the fall immunization season in the U.S.
  • The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) adds,
    • “The RSV vaccine is not currently an annual vaccine, meaning people do not need to get a dose every RSV season. Currently, CDC recommends only a single dose of RSV vaccine for adults ages 60 and older, using shared clinical decision-making. Additional surveillance and evaluation activities are ongoing to determine whether older adults might benefit from receiving additional RSV vaccines in the future. So far, RSV vaccines appear to provide some protection for at least two RSV seasons.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • HHS posted a “Fact Sheet: In Response to H5N1, HHS and USDA Focus on Protecting Farmworkers.” For more information on the ongoing response, please visit FDACDC, and USDA’s ongoing H5N1 update pages.
  • STAT News reports,
    • “There are a lot of reasons why updated data on Pfizer’s Lorbrena, a treatment for non-small cell lung cancer, might not seem to be a big deal. The results are an update on the clinical trial that resulted in the Food and Drug Administration granting Lorbrena full approval in 2021, so in a sense they are not even that new. For Pfizer investors, Lorbrena isn’t that big a deal, either. The medicine, for patients whose lung tumors have particular genetic mutations, generated only $575 million last year — an amount that is up 57% from the year prior, but that still constitutes only 1% of the drug giant’s annual sales.
    • “But there is one number that makes the Lorbrena data quite eye-catching: In the updated data, the daily pill decreased the risk that cancer would progress or that a patient would die by 81% over five years.
    • “That’s a stunning number, especially when one considers that Lorbrena was not being compared to an inert placebo but to Xalkori, another Pfizer targeted cancer drug.
    • “Put a different way, 60% of the patients who received Lorbrena were alive and had not seen their tumors progress in the five years of the study, compared to 8% who received Xalkori.
    • “The data are being presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
  • BioPharma Dive informs us,
    • “People with chronic myeloid leukemia, a simmering cancer of the bone marrow, are often treated with one of several targeted drugs that, over the past two decades, have helped to substantially prolong survival from the disease.
    • “Study results revealed Friday suggest that Scemblix, the newest of those therapies, can be both safer and more effective, potentially supporting wider use of it as an initial treatment. The results are from a late-stage clinical trial run by Scemblix’s maker, Novartis, and will be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting.
    • “In the trial, dubbed ASC4FIRST, Scemblix led to treatment responses in significantly more participants than did other targeted drugs, which included the mainstay therapy Gleevec as well as more recently introduced medicines. Additionally, more people given Novartis’ drug experienced what’s called a “deep molecular response,” which over time can be considered a remission and allow treatment to be stopped.
    • “Study researchers also reported “markedly favorable safety and tolerability” for Scemblix, compared to Gleevec and the other so-called kinase inhibitors it was tested against.”
  • Medscape notes,
    • A personalized diet, created by integrating microbiome analysis with artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms, is a promising approach to the management of irritable bowel syndrome(IBS) symptoms, leading to enhanced symptom relief and greater gut microbiome diversity than a standard low–fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols (FODMAP) diet, new research suggests.
  • and
    • “About 9 out of 10 people will have a genetic difference in their DNA that can impact how they respond to common medications,” said Emily J. Cicali, PharmD, a clinical associate at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy, Gainesville, Florida.
    • “Cicali is the clinical director of UF Health’s MyRx, a virtual program that gives Florida and New Jersey residents access to pharmacogenetic (PGx) tests plus expert interpretation by the health system’s pharmacists. Genetic factors are thought to contribute to about 25% or more of inappropriate drug responses or adverse events, said Kristin Wiisanen, PharmD, dean of the College of Pharmacy at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in North Chicago, Illinois.
    • “Pharmacogenetics helps consumers avoid drugs that may not work well for them or could cause serious adverse events. It’s personalized medicine,” Cicali said.
    • “Through a cheek swab or blood sample, the MyRx program — and a growing number of health system programs, doctors’ offices, and home tests available across the United States — gives consumers a window on inherited gene variants that can affect how their body activates, metabolizes, and clears away medications from a long list of widely used drugs.”
  • The Wall Street Journal recounts the experiences of readers months after stopping GLP-1 drug treatment.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Employee Benefit Research Institute relates.
    • According to findings of the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI)/Greenwald Research Consumer Engagement in Health Care Survey, most plan enrollees are satisfied with their health plan, but high-deductible health plan (HDHP) enrollees are less likely to be extremely or very satisfied than traditional plan enrollees.
    • HDHP and traditional plan enrollees are both satisfied with the quality of care received and choice of doctors.
    • Differences in overall satisfaction may be driven by cost sharing. HDHP enrollees are less likely than traditional plan enrollees to be extremely/very satisfied with out-of-pocket expenses for prescription drugs and other health care services.
  • Beckers Hospital Review reports,
    • “The Justice Department has rejected bankrupt Dallas-based Steward Health Care’s suggested auction timeline for its physician group Stewardship Health to be sold to UnitedHealth Group’s subsidiary Optum. 
    • “In a May 28 bankruptcy court filing, obtained by Becker’s, Brian Boynton, principal deputy attorney general for the justice department, detailed how the debtor-in-possession financial deal between Steward and its landlord Medical Properties Trust interferes with the health system’s “obligation to comply with the United States’ antitrust review” of the Stewardship Health, Optum deal and should not be approved.”
  • and calls attention to an American Hospital Association report identifying the inpatient and outpatient services that are biggest money losers for hospitals.
  • Healthcare Dive points out,
    • “Most of the nation’s leading nonprofit healthcare providers reported progress toward financial recovery during earnings for the quarter ended March 31.
    • “However, improvements varied widely by health system, and the industry at large has a long way to go before it is back to profitability levels enjoyed pre-pandemic — if it fully rebounds at all, analysts told Healthcare Dive.
    • “Nonprofits struggled with cost challenges, confirming reports from analysts at credit rating agencies Moody’s Ratings and Fitch Ratings that predicted expenses, particularly labor costs, would continue to vex providers in 2024.
    • “Analysts also expected this year to bring a bifurcated financial recovery for the sector, where health systems that could successfully contain costs would recover more quickly.
    • “With early financial data now in for 2024, that expectation appears to be playing out.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s proposed supplemental Postal Service Health Benefits Program (PSHBP) rule appears in todays’ Federal Register. The public comment deadline is June 24.
  • The proposed rule includes a requirement that PSHBP annuitants eligible for Medicare Parts A or B must participate in their PSHB plans’ Medicare Part D EGWP. Those who opt out will not be eligible for their PSHB plans’ regular prescription drug benefits. Here is a link to the proposed rule’s preamble where OPM lays out it thought process.
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “The House Budget Committee met Thursday to discuss the impact of healthcare mergers and acquisitions on cost, quality and access and arrived at a bipartisan consensus: Something needs to be done to halt the rampant pace of consolidation before it inflates medical costs further.
    • “What, exactly, remains unclear, though lawmakers and witnesses during the hearing expressed support for standardizing Medicare payments between hospital-owned outpatient sites and independent physician offices for the same services.
    • “Such site-neutral policies are “very bipartisan,” testified Sophia Tripoli, the senior director of health policy at patient advocacy group Families USA. “It is a no brainer.”
    • “Congress has been increasingly interested in tamping down on healthcare consolidation amid a mountain of evidence it increases costswithout a corresponding increase in care quality, harming Americans’ ability to access and afford medical care. After a merger, hospitals can jack up their prices anywhere from 3% to 65%, according to a Rand review from 2022.
    • “We just can’t afford to have this continued increase in prices,” said Rep. Ron Estes, R-Kan., during the hearing.”
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “A top Food and Drug Administration official on Friday again advocated for the speedy approval of gene therapies for rare diseases. But he didn’t drop any clues on where the agency stands on a coming decision to possibly broaden use of one of them, a Duchenne muscular dystrophy treatment the regulator cleared last year.
    • “At a meeting hosted by the patient advocacy group CureDuchenne, Peter Marks, head of the FDA office that reviews gene therapies, said the agency’s thinking has changed in recent years to become more patient focused. That mindset has led it to more aggressively look for ways to speed the development of rare disease gene therapies.
    • “Although we’re a regulatory agency,” he said, the regulations “have to ultimately serve getting products to patients. So we’re trying to focus on the patient, and use that to negotiate the regulations to get there as rapidly as possible.”
    • “Those comments build on points Marks has made before. Last year, at a meeting held by a different advocacy group, he advocated for flexibility in reviewing rare disease gene therapies while fighting off criticism about accelerated approvals, which allow drugmakers to bring therapies to market based on interim measures of benefit. On Friday, he again threw support behind speedy clearances, noting that they are a “very important” tool in bringing forward rare disease treatments.”
  • Tammy Flanagan writes in Govexec about “What is the retirement age for federal employees?”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control informs us today,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare remains low nationally.
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID-19, influenza, and RSV are at low levels.
    • “Nationally, COVID-19, influenza, and RSV test positivity remained stable at low levels compared to the previous week.
    • “Nationally, the COVID-19 wastewater viral activity level, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, is minimal.”
  • STAT News reports
    • “Stroke prevalence has been climbing over the past decade, reversing a steady decline among all Americans while rising the most among adults under 65, a new CDC analysis reports.
    • “Strokes still strike more adults older than 65, but the increase at younger ages mirrors another recent turnaround: rates of heart failure deaths, which had been dipping, are rising the most in adults under 45.
    • “The rising prevalence comes even though medicines to tamp down such risk factors as hypertension and high cholesterol, as well as technologies to treat strokes, are much more available in wealthier countries like the U.S. than elsewhere around the world.
    • “Stroke rates in the United States had fallen by 3.7% during a five-year stretch ending in 2010, but they headed back up by 7.8% through 2022. The increase was nearly double — 15% — for adults younger than 65. Thursday’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report broke it down further to a jump of 14.6% among adults age 18 to 44 and 15.7% among those age 45 to 64.”
  • and
    • “Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic cut the risk of death in a trial of patients with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease, suggesting it may offer some added benefits over other classes of drugs approved to treat this population.
    • “Specifically, the diabetes drug cut the risk of cardiovascular-related deaths by 29% and all-cause deaths by 20%. Given the study parameters, this implies that over three years, 39 people would need to be treated to prevent one death from any cause, according to new results presented Friday at a meeting of the European Renal Association and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “Ozempic also lowered the risk of major heart complications — including cardiovascular-related death, heart attack, or stroke — by 18%, driven primarily by the reduced rate of heart-linked death.
    • “The full results of this trial, called FLOW, affirm the primary result reported earlier this year that Ozempic reduced the risk of major kidney events — including kidney failure, reduction in kidney function, or death from kidney or heart causes — by 24%.”
  • The New York Times relates,
    • “Colorectal cancer rates are rapidly rising among adults in their 20s, 30s and 40s, and the most common warning sign for the disease is passing blood in the stool, according to a new scientific review.
    • “Rectal bleeding is associated with a fivefold increased risk of colorectal cancer, according to the new analysis, which looked at 81 studies that included nearly 25 million adults under 50 from around the world.
    • “Abdominal pain, changes in bowel habits and anemia are other common warning signs of the disease and should not be ignored, said the researchers, who published the paper on Thursday in the journal JAMA Network Open.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Eli Lilly plans to spend another $5.3 billion building production capacity for its popular obesity and diabetes drugs, responding to immense demand for the medicines with what it claims is now the largest investment of its kind in U.S. history.
    • “The commitment announced by Lilly Friday adds to $3.7 billion the drugmaker already planned to invest in a manufacturing site it’s constructing in Lebanon, Indiana, some 30 miles from its corporate headquarters in Indianapolis.
    • “The site will help Lilly make the active drug ingredient tirzepatide, which is in its weight loss shot Zepbound and diabetes treatment Mounjaro. Despite pressing hard to expand manufacturing capacity, Lilly has so far had trouble keeping the drugs in steady supply. Certain dose strengths of both products are currently listed as in shortage by the Food and Drug Administration, with limited availability at least through the end of June.”
  • Beckers Behavioral Health points out,
    • “UnitedHealth Group’s Optum has acquired Plymouth, Minn.-based CARE Counseling, the Star Tribune reported May 23. 
    • CARE Counseling has 10 locations in the Minneapolis area, and employs over 200 clinicians. 
    • “Expanding and diversifying our behavioral health care delivery capabilities through this combination will build on a strong foundation of patient-centered, high-quality and affordable care in an environment that supports and enables the talented clinicians delivering these critical services,” UnitedHealth Group told the Star Tribune. “We look forward to working with CARE Counseling to build on their deep roots in the community.”
  • Reuters reports,
    • “CVS Health Corp (CVS.N), opens new tab has been seeking a private equity partner to fund growth at Oak Street Health, a primary care provider it bought a year ago, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.
    • “The company has been working with financial advisers to help find capital to back new clinics that will be opened by Oak Street, the report said, citing people familiar with the matter.
    • “The deliberations are in a preliminary stage and the structure could change, while there is no guarantee a deal will be reached, according to the report.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • OPM’s proposed supplemental Postal Service Health Benefits Program rule was posted on the Federal Register’s public inspection list today. The proposed rule will be published in the Federal Register tomorrow and the comment deadline will be thirty days thereafter.
  • The American Hospital News informs us,
    • “The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions May 23 passed legislation that included proposals on mental health and emergency pediatric services during a markup session. The AHA submitted a statement for the hearing, expressing support for the passage of the Dr. Lorna Breen Health Care Provider Protection Reauthorization Act (S. 3679), which would reauthorize grants for health care providers to establish programs offering behavioral health services for front-line workers, as well as a national education and awareness campaign providing health leaders with evidence-based solutions to reduce health care worker burnout. The AHA also expressed support for the bill as a member of the Healthcare Workforce Coalition, which earlier this week sent a letter to Senate HELP Committee leadership.” 
  • and
    • “The AHA praised Congress May 23 for their support and introduction of the bipartisan Hospital Inpatient Services Modernization Act, which would grant a five-year extension to the hospital-at-home program. 
    • “Standing up a H@H program requires logistical and technical work, with an investment of time, staff and money,” AHA wrote in letters to Senate and House leaders. “In addition to being approved for the federal waiver, some providers must navigate additional regulatory requirements at the state level. For some, this whole process could take a year or more to complete before that first patient is seen at home. A longer extension of the H@H program would provide much-needed stability for existing programs to continue providing care to their patients, and it would give time for others to start programs allowing more patients to benefit from this innovative program.” 
  • and
    • “The AHA May 23 submitted statements for a House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health hearing on challenges for private physician practices, and a House Budget Committee hearing on the budgetary effects of consolidation in health care. For the Ways and Means Committee hearing, AHA noted how physicians are challenged by increased costs, inadequate reimbursements and administrative burdens from public and private insurer practices.”  
  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Drugmakers are allowed to limit and impose conditions on pharmaciesthey send discounted drugs to under the 340B program, [the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit] ruled Tuesday.
    • “The ruling is a win for drug manufacturers, who were previously threatened with fines from the federal government for violating guidance regarding which pharmacies they would send discounted drugs to.
    • “The Court of Appeals upholds a prior District Court ruling, which sided with drugmakers Novartis Pharmaceuticals and United Therapeutics after they sued the HHS in 2021. It’s the latest ruling regarding the controversial 340B drug program — a separate appellate court also ruled with drugmakers early last year.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “An independent panel of advisers to the Food and Drug Administration recommended the agency approve Guardant Health’s blood-based colon cancer detection test. If the agency follows the recommendation, it will clear an early hurdle for the test’s broader adoption.
    • “The expert panel spent hours listening to presentations from Guardant, the FDA, and members of the public before voting on the screening test, called Shield. The panel’s nine voting members then voted on whether the test was safe, effective, and whether its benefits outweigh its risks, with eight, six, and seven panelists endorsing those views, respectively.
    • “FDA approval is a requirement for winning coverage from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which could be the difference between Guardant’s test becoming widespread — or irrelevant.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • MedPage Today relates,
    • “Over the last 2 years, most new cases of mpox in the U.S. occurred in unvaccinated people, and less than 1% occurred in people who were fully vaccinated against the disease, according to CDC data.
    • “Among 32,819 U.S. mpox cases reported to the CDC from May 2022 to May 2024, only 0.8% occurred among people who had received two doses of the mpox vaccine Jynneos, while 75% of cases occurred among unvaccinated people, reported Sarah Anne Guagliardo, PhD, of the CDC’s Mpox National Response Team, and colleagues in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
    • “Despite a perceived increase in [mpox] infections among fully vaccinated persons during 2024, this report indicates that, to date, persistent vaccine-derived immunologic response among persons who received the 2-dose vaccine series exists,” the authors wrote.”
  • and
    • “An at-school vaccination program in France significantly increased human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine coverage, according to results of the PrevHPV cluster randomized trial.
    • “Among girls and boys ages 11 to 14 years, a school-based program offering HPV vaccinations significantly increased median HPV vaccination coverage by an adjusted 5.5 percentage points after 2 months of the intervention, Morgane Michel, PhD, of the Universite Paris Cite, and colleagues reported in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The intervention consisted of three components: free at-school HPV vaccination, education and motivation of adolescents and their parents, and a training program for general practitioners (GPs). “Free HPV vaccination on school premises was the only component that consistently and significantly increased vaccination coverage,” Michel and colleagues wrote.”
  • STAT News observes,
    • “You’d think if there were a vaccine that would prevent tens of thousands of cases of cancer a year, people would want it for themselves and for their kids.
    • “But new data being released Thursday ahead of the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology show that just isn’t the case.
    • “The data showed that the vaccine reduced the risk of HPV-related cancers by 56% in men and 36% in women — numbers that actually probably understate the efficacy of the vaccine because participants in this observational study likely got the vaccine too late to prevent all HPV infections. The data were analyzed by researchers led by Jefferson DeKloe, a research fellow at Thomas Jefferson University. * * *
    • “There is not really any debate, at this point, that this vaccine would prevent tens of thousands of cases of cancer a year if it were used more widely. It’s a miraculous product, and we should be using it.”
  • KFF reports
    • “This brief examines disparities in mental health care by race and ethnicity and other factors based on data from the 2023 KFF Racism, Discrimination and Health Survey, a large, nationally representative survey based on responses from over 6,000 adults. The survey provides unique data on access to the health care system and how factors such as racism and discrimination impact these experiences and overall health and well-being. Key findings include:
    • Among adults who report fair or poor mental health, White adults (50%) are more likely to say they received mental health services in the past three years compared with Black (39%) and Hispanic adults (36%). Across racial and ethnic groups, about half of all adults (53%) who report that they received mental health services said they were very or extremely helpful.
    • Adults identify cost concerns and scheduling difficulties as primary barriers to mental health care, and Hispanic, Black, and Asian adults disproportionately report additional challenges, such as finding a provider who can understand their background and experiences, lack of information, or stigma or embarrassment. Among adults who received or tried to receive mental health care, Asian (55%), and Black (46%) adults are more likely to report difficulty finding a provider who could understand their background and experiences compared to their White counterparts (38%). Among those who thought they needed mental health care but did not try to find a provider, Hispanic adults are more likely than White adults to say the main reason was they didn’t know how to find a provider (24% vs. 11%) and/or that they were afraid or embarrassed to seek care (30% vs. 18%).
    • Adults who report unfair treatment or negative experiences with a provider are twice as likely as those without these experiences to say they went without needed mental health care. Four in ten (41%) adults who report they were treated unfairly or with disrespect by a health care provider and about one-third (35%) of adults who say they’ve had at least one negative experience with a health care provider say they did not get mental health services they thought they needed compared to smaller shares of those who do not report these experiences (18% and 15%, respectively).
    • Reported awareness of the 9-8-8 mental health hotline remains low overall, particularly among Black, Hispanic, and Asian adults. As of Summer 2023, about one in five (18%) adults say they have heard a lot or some about 9-8-8, with Black (16%), Hispanic (11%), and Asian (13%) adults less likely to say they have heard about 9-8-8 than White adults (21%). At the same time, about one in five (21%) adults say they or a family member has ever experienced a severe mental health crisis that resulted in serious consequences such as homelessness, hospitalization, incarceration, self-harm, or suicide, with this share rising to 39% among young (ages 18-29) White adults.”
  • and
    • “Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is often an underrecognized substance use disorder (SUD) despite its substantial consequencesOver half of US adults (54%) say that someone in their family has struggled with an alcohol use disorder, making it the most prevalent non-tobacco substance use disorder. Yet, only one-third of adults view alcohol addiction as a crisis, compared to over half who see opioids as such. Federal data show that 1 in 10 people had an alcohol use disorder in the past year, over 4 in 10 alcohol users report binge drinking in the past month, and per capita alcohol consumption is higher than the decade prior. Treatment rates for alcohol use disorders are notably low, especially for the use of medication, a recommended AUD treatment component. Although the opioid crisis has been declared a public health emergency by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services since 2017, no similar declaration exists regarding alcohol deaths. However, HHS has set a priority goal of reducing emergency department visits for acute alcohol use, mental health conditions, suicide attempts, and drug overdoses by 10% by 2025.”
  • The Washington Post adds,
    • “More people in the United States say they are using marijuana daily or near daily, compared with people who say they are drinking alcohol that often, according to a new study.
    • “In 2022, about 17.7 million people reported daily or near-daily marijuana use, compared with 14.7 million people who reported drinking at the same frequency, said the report, which was based on more than four decades of data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health. It was the first time the survey recorded more frequent users of cannabis than alcohol, the report added.
    • “The research was published Wednesday in the peer-reviewed journal Addiction. The research window spans the years 1979 to 2022, and the 27 surveys that were analyzed involved more than 1.6 million participants during that time frame.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Enticed by the immense market opened by GLP-1 weight loss drugs Wegovy and Zepbound, a handful of biotech companies are trying to develop next-generation, longer-lasting therapies based on a very different approach: RNA interference.
    • “This Nobel Prize-winning science works by degrading the biological blueprints that RNA use to make proteins — without the genetic instructions, the troublesome proteins are never made and the gene is essentially muted.
    • “If the companies succeed, it would be a significant shift in the obesity treatment revolution, away from weekly drugs targeting hormones to medications that could be given much less frequently — twice a year or even less — and pinpoint genetic contributors to weight.
    • “Scientists at Regeneron and Alnylam are aiming to silence a gene expressed in the brain called GPR75, what Regeneron Chief Scientific Officer George Yancopoulos calls the “laziness gene.” Through sequencing of almost 650,000 people, they found that those with a mutation to the gene have a lower body-mass index and lower risk of obesity.
    • “Alnylam has also homed in on the INHBE gene, expressed in the liver. Scientists found that people with mutations in the gene have a lower waist-to-hip ratio — a surrogate for abdominal fat, the type of fat that’s especially harmful and is linked to cardiovascular problems. Other companies like Wave Life Sciences and Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals have caught on and are also pursuing RNAi therapies aimed at blocking INHBE.”
  • Medscape explains the scientific impact of the recent creation of a map of the human ovary.
  • BioPharma Dive takes “An early look at cancer drug study results; Clinical trial abstracts posted Thursday ahead of this year’s ASCO meeting give a peek at anticipated datasets from Immunocore, Merck & Co., J&J and Arcus.”
  • The NIH Director writes in her blog,
    • “Human consciousness requires a person to be both awake and aware. While neuroscientists have learned a great deal from research about the underlying brain networks that sustain awareness, surprisingly little has been known about the networks that keep us awake.
    • “Now, an NIH-supported team of researchers has mapped the connectivity of a neural network they suggest is essential for wakefulness, or arousal, in the human brain. According to the researchers, this advance, reported in Science Translational Medicine , is essential for understanding human consciousness. It may also lead to new ways of understanding what happens in the brain when people lose consciousness, with potentially important implications for treating those who have entered a coma or vegetative state.
    • “The team—led by Brian Edlow , Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, and Hannah Kinney , Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School—set out to map the brain network that sustains wakefulness in a manner similar to earlier research that identified the default mode network, which influences awareness. Default networks in the brain are most active when people are at rest rather than focused on a goal-oriented task.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Express Scripts — one of the largest pharmacy benefit managers in the country — has notched a major partnership with independent pharmacies, amid contentious relations between the two industries.
    • The Cigna-owned PBM unveiled a collaboration on Thursday with pharmacy network CPESN USA to coordinate care delivery for seniors on Medicare with hypertension and diabetes, two common chronic conditions. CPESN’s independent pharmacies will also help identify at-risk patients and improve medication management, according to a release.
    • “Express Scripts and CPESN plan to expand the partnership based on client feedback, said a spokesperson for Evernorth, Cigna’s health services business and the division that includes Express Scripts. Financial terms of the partnership were not disclosed.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “After several years of modest or declining growth, the average pay for doctors jumped 5.9% in 2023, rebounding from a decline of 2.4% in 2022.”After several years of modest or declining growth, the average pay for doctors jumped 5.9% in 2023, rebounding from a decline of 2.4% in 2022.
    • “Most medical specialties experienced positive growth in 2023, with the top 10 seeing annual growth rates exceeding 7%, according to the 2024 Physician Compensation Report from professional medical network Doximity. 
    • “Among specialties, hematology and family medicine claimed the top two spots, with double-digit percentage growth compared to 2022 (12.4% and 10.2%, respectively).” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review lists the forty highest paid physician specialties based on this report.
  • Beckers Health IT calls attention to Newsweek’s list of “the top digital health companies in the U.S. for 2024, including a breakout of 50 data analytics companies.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review identifies “10 new drug shortages, according to drug supply databases from the FDA and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • Senators and experts on Tuesday examined the range of tools that brand-name drug manufacturers have used to keep generic and biosimilar competition at bay — from patent thickets and product hopping to “pay-for-delay” settlements — and wrestled with how to prevent such abuses.
    • “Too often the prices charged by Big Pharma do not reflect a scientific advancement,” argued Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), during a Tuesday hearing of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary. “Rather, they’re the result of skilled lawyers manipulating the patent system and skirting our nation’s competition laws.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to lowering health care costs, promoting innovation, and making sure that taxpayer investments result in advancements in biomedical research that are accessible to everyone across the country.
    • “Today, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) issued a first of its kind draft policy proposal to promote equitable access to products stemming from NIH-owned inventions. By requiring organizations partnering with the NIH through patent license agreements to outline detailed plans for patient access to drugs, biologics, vaccines, or devices developed from NIH-owned inventions, we are accelerating how breakthroughs in medical research originating from the NIH’s Intramural Research Program can translate into affordable and sustainable solutions for patients across the country. NIH has released a request for information and welcomes public input to inform this new policy.”
  • The American Hospital News informs us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services May 21 announced that individuals now have the option to file an Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act complaint directly with the agency, in addition to the traditional process of contacting state survey agencies. The new form is the latest in a series of new resources from CMS to help educate the public about EMTALA.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “The CDC is asking health officials in all 50 states to continue monitoring the prevalence of influenza as H5N1 bird flu infections among poultry and livestock increase and have begun to prompt concern over the possibility of human-to-human transmission, according to a news release shared with Becker’s.”The CDC is asking health officials in all 50 states to continue monitoring the prevalence of influenza as H5N1 bird flu infections among poultry and livestock increase and have begun to prompt concern over the possibility of human-to-human transmission, according to a news release shared with Becker’s.
    • “As of May 21, there has only been one confirmed human infection of the current H5N1 outbreak in a dairy farm employee in Texas, but no evidence of human-to-human transmission.”
  • KFF adds a report titled “Who is at Risk Amid the H5N1 Influenza Outbreak? Characteristics and Health Coverage of Animal Production Workers.”
  • The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association lets us know,
    • “Despite the explosion in demand for weight loss drugs known as GLP-1s, 58% of patients discontinue use before reaching a clinically meaningful health benefit. This is the key finding from new researchreleased by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) and conducted by Blue Health Intelligence® (BHI) based on data from nearly 170,000 commercial health plan members since the first FDA approval for a weight-loss GLP-1 in 2014.  
    • “When patients take medication, we want it to be safe and effective,” said Razia Hashmi MD, MPH, FAAFP, vice president of Clinical Affairs at BCBSA. “This study shows most people are unlikely to see lasting benefits.  Unfortunately, weight loss isn’t as simple as filling a prescription.”
    • “In the largest study using commercial data to date on this topic, BHI’s assessment also found that 30% of patients discontinued use of the medications within the first month. 
    • “This study underscores how much more we have to learn about these medications,” said Kim Keck, president and CEO of BCBSA. “The science behind these drugs is moving faster than our ability to truly understand which patients will benefit, how to sustain their success and how to pay for them. If we don’t get it right, we will drive up costs for everyone with little to show for it.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Hundreds of genetic variants can nudge someone’s risk of breast cancer up or down or towards a particular subtype. The studies identifying those gene variants, though, have largely involved people with European ancestry and thus give a less accurate picture of breast cancer risk for people who are not white.
    • “That’s beginning to change. Last week, researchers published a genome-wide association study on breast cancer in roughly 40,000 people of African descent in Nature Genetics, marking a leap forward in scientists’ knowledge of breast cancer genetics in people of African ancestry.
    • “Before we started this study in 2016, there were just several thousand cases for Black Americans. It was a very small number,” said Wei Zheng, the study’s senior investigator and a cancer epidemiologist at Vanderbilt University. This study combined data from dozens of other studies and included genetic data for thousands of new participants, making it the largest combined breast cancer genetics study done with people with African ancestry.
    • “Specifically, the study compiled data from about 30 different studies investigating breast cancer in African or African American people. About 18,000 of them had breast cancer, while the other 22,000 were healthy controls, and investigators were able to scour their genetic data for specific variations that seemed closely related to breast cancer. The statistical power that comes with such numbers enabled the team to make two key advances.
    • “First, the team found 12 loci, or locations in the genome, that showed a significant association with breast cancer. Of those, the team identified variants of three genes that appear to increase the risk of triple negative breast cancer, one of the most aggressive subtypes. Since everyone has two copies or alleles of each gene, that means someone could have anywhere between one and six risk-related alleles of these three genes. Those who had all six risk-related alleles had roughly double the chance of getting triple negative breast cancer than those who only had three. * * *
    • “The other advance came when the researchers used the data to build a breast cancer risk prediction model for people with African ancestry. Such models take into account hundreds of different genetic variants that can slightly push breast cancer risk up, adding them all up into a polygenic risk score.”
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • GSK’s experimental drug for asthma met its goals in the latest trial, moving a treatment with potential annual peak sales of more than 3 billion pounds ($3.81 billion) closer to market.
    • The British pharmaceutical company’s depemokimab drug reduced asthma attacks in late-stage trials for patients with severe eosinophilic asthma, a form of the disease caused by high levels of white blood cells, GSK said Tuesday.
    • Depemokimab could be the first approved drug to allow a long-term dosing interval, requiring only two injections a year. This would benefit patients exposed to multiple therapies, the company said.
    • GSK plans to submit the drug for approval for severe asthma in the U.S. in the second half of the year.
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration is seeking examples of artificial intelligence and machine learning models that can identify and predict freezing of gait events related to Parkinson’s disease. 
    • “Freezing of gait is a temporary loss of forward movement while walking. These episodes affect people’s quality of life and daily activities, but they can be difficult to measure because they often happen when patients are outside of a clinic or hospital setting. 
    • “By testing these models against its own data, the FDA hopes to better understand the ability of these technologies to provide digitally derived endpoints that could help with early disease detection and prevention or support treatment and care in the home.” 
  • From the U.S. healthcare business front,
  • Milliman tells us, “In 2024, the cost of healthcare for a hypothetical American family of four in a typical employer-sponsored health plan is $32,066, according to the Milliman Medical Index (MMI).”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “National drugstore chains, once resistant to the retail apocalypse that swept across the U.S., are finally succumbing to competition from online shopping and discount stores.
    • “About 3,000 fewer drugstores were open for business at the start of this year compared with the same period in 2019, according to analytics company RetailStat, which tracks 15 pharmacy chains. 
    • CVS HealthWalgreens and Rite Aid have each closed hundreds of stores since the onset of the pandemic. Online shopping has been growing and offers customers a more convenient way to buy household staples. 
    • “Competition has also increased from discount retailers such as Walmart, grocers such as Aldi, and dollar stores, which all sell many of the same items at lower prices. The spread of beauty stores such as Sephora further siphoned customers from drugstore aisles. 
    • “Everybody’s gone after a component of their business,” said Henry Fonvielle, president of the real-estate company Rappaport.”
  • STAT News notes that “Reports of telehealth’s death have been greatly exaggerated.”
    • “Virtual care isn’t in trouble. What is in trouble are the aftermarket telehealth solutions that largely function as a virtual extension of our siloed, fragmented health care system. This specific application of virtual care, which we call Telehealth 1.0, has consistently failed to bring meaningful value to patients, clinicians, and purchasers.
    • “In that sense, its collapse is a welcome development. It’s a sign that the market discerns where the real value lies in virtual care, and it validates the evolution from transactional, one-off care to more sophisticated virtual-first models.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “UnitedHealth-owned Optum Rx, one of the biggest pharmacy benefit managers in the U.S., is launching a new drug pricing model next year meant to make payers’ spending on pharmaceuticals more predictable.
    • “The model, called Clear Trend Guarantee, combines costs that used to be separated out, including retail pharmacy, home delivery, specialty drug and rebates, into one single per-member price, according to a Monday release.
    • “Clear Trend is value-based, meaning Optum Rx will share in any savings tied to patient outcomes created in the model.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The Purchaser Business Group on Health has unveiled a new purchasing agreement that aims to improve maternal health.”The Purchaser Business Group on Health has unveiled a new purchasing agreement that aims to improve maternal health.
    • “Benefits experts at retail giant Walmart and technology company Qualcomm led the initiative as co-chairs, with the goal of establishing “a collective commitment among employers and public purchasers of healthcare” to address maternal health and birth equity, according to an announcement from PBGH.
    • “The agreement centers on five key principles: deploying evidence-based, coordinated models to ensure high-quality care; ensuring timely access; promoting equitable care built on cultural humility; transparency and accountability; and value-based care.
    • “It also establishes a consensus for employers and public healthcare purchasers as to what high-quality and high-value maternity care is and outlines expectations for both insurers and providers to follow to meet that bar.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “A decade ago, as British drugmaker AstraZeneca fought off a hostile takeover bid by Pfizer, CEO Pascal Soriot made a big promise: The company, he said, would boost sales by nearly three-quarters to reach $45 billion by 2023.”A decade ago, as British drugmaker AstraZeneca fought off a hostile takeover bid by Pfizer, CEO Pascal Soriot made a big promise: The company, he said, would boost sales by nearly three-quarters to reach $45 billion by 2023.
    • “With that goal now successfully met, Soriot on Tuesday announced a plan to push the company even higher, setting a target of $80 billion in annual sales by 2030. A slate of new medicines in metabolic and autoimmune disease headline the plan, which also involves sustaining existing businesses in respiratory disorders and cancer.
  • Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to “Fortune and PINC AI’s “15 Top Health Systems” list released May 21.”
  • McKinsey & Company discusses what’s new in consumer wellness trends.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “The Senate Finance Committee is considering policies to create more stability in Medicare payments for doctors, an update cheered by physician groups that have long lobbied for reforming how the insurance program reimburses clinicians.
    • “Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Ranking Member Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, released the white paper on Friday proposing Medicare adjust payments to account for inflation, a key goal for physicians that argue government reimbursement hasn’t kept pace with rising costs.
    • “The Senate Finance Committee is also interested in exploring ways to use incentives to increase provider participation in alternative payment models, and potential changes to Medicare’s budget neutrality requirements, which require the CMS to cut payment to certain specialties to raise it for others.”
  • Fedweek tells us
    • The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee has passed:
      • S-4035, to require that when FEHB enrollees seek to add a family member to their coverage based on a qualifying life event that the event has occurred and that the individual is eligible for coverage; require the OPM to consider coverage of ineligible individuals when conducting FEHB fraud risk assessments; require a comprehensive audit be conducted of family members currently enrolled; and require OPM to disenroll any ineligible individual found to be receiving FEHB coverage.
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • “Executives from the three major pharmacy benefit manager companies have been invited to testify before the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability next month, four sources familiar with the planning told STAT.
    • “Executives from Optum, CVS Caremark, and Express Scripts, owned by Cigna, were asked to testify before the panel on June 4. * * *
    • “Lawmakers are next eyeing action in December, when a number of health care programs and authorities are expiring.
    • “Ipsita Smolinski, founder and managing director of the consulting firm Capitol Street, said she believes some PBM reforms will pass in December, but not ones that are detrimental to the industry’s business model.
    • “They are largely Medicare and Medicaid, and provide minimal system savings,” she said.”
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management announced,
    • “Today, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) highlights key actions taken to recruit, hire, and train AI and AI-related talent into the federal government. OPM’s efforts support the AI in Government Act of 2020 and President Biden’s landmark Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI.   
    • “Recruiting AI talent ensures the federal government can use the latest technology to tackle global challenges, improve government services, and better support the American public,” said OPM Acting Director Rob Shriver. “As a strategic partner to federal agencies, OPM has taken a number of actions that will set agencies up to compete for top talent in this critical field now and in the future.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post and Consumer Reports tell us about “Heart checkups you should have and those you can probably skip.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Physician enthusiasm for new pulsed field ablation systems suggests the treatment will be rapidly adopted, to the benefit of device makers bringing the products to market, said analysts who attended the Heart Rhythm Society’s (HRS) annual meeting over the weekend.
    • “Talk about pulsed field ablation (PFA), a catheter-based cardiac ablation technique to treat atrial fibrillation (AFib), dominated the meeting in Boston.
    • “The amount of data and discussions on pulsed field ablation (PFA) was almost overwhelming, with late-breaking data presentations packed by physicians,” Citi Research analyst Joanne Wuensch said in a report to clients Sunday. * * *
    • “PFA is seen as a potentially safer alternative to traditional radiofrequency and cryoablation to treat AFib, the most common form of irregular heart rhythm. Shorter operating times are viewed as another advantage.
    • “Antiarrhythmic drugs are currently recommended as the first treatment for AFib but are associated with adverse events, according to the HRS. PFA differs from thermal ablation to disable cardiac cells by using electricity instead of heat or extreme cold.”
  • Medscape discusses how artificial intelligence fits into clinical practice.
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “The FDA approved the first interchangeable biosimilars to aflibercept (Eylea) to treat macular degeneration, according to an announcementopens in a new tab or window from the agency.
    • “As interchangeable biosimilars, aflibercept-jbvf (Yesafili) and aflibercept-yszy (Opuviz) have the same approved indications as the reference product: diabetic macular edema, diabetic retinopathy, macular edema following retinal vein occlusion, and neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Like reference aflibercept, the two biosimilars are administered via intravitreal injection.
    • “The FDA pointed out in the announcement that a biosimilar “has no clinically meaningful differences” from the reference product, which means that patients “can expect the same safety and effectiveness from the biosimilar as they would the reference product.” Interchangeability means that the biosimilar met other requirements and may be substituted for the reference product without consulting the prescriber.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News relates,
    • “Americans, especially Medicare beneficiaries, are getting more medical care these days. Demand from aging Baby Boomers is keeping people in doctor’s offices, and health care providers are continuing to build capacity post-Covid.
    • “Those trends — the same ones that tanked health insurance stocks a few weeks ago — made a strong mark on nonprofit health systems’ first quarter financial reports. STAT took a look at 20 large nonprofit health systems and found that all but four reported higher operating and net margins in the first three months of 2024 compared with the same period in 2023. Hospitals are seeing more patients and cutting down on the expensive contract labor they relied on during the Covid-19 pandemic. And they’re seeing strong investment gains on the non-operating side.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Hims & Hers Health shares soared after the company said it would add injectable weight-loss drugs to its platform, granting access to the popular treatments to its telehealth patients.
    • “The company on Monday said it now offers access to GLP-1 injections in addition to its oral weight-loss treatments, giving users a broader option to choose from. It will be providing a compounded form of the injections that use the same active ingredients as the popular drugs Ozempic and Wegovy, which are facing shortages that are limiting access for some patients.
    • “The price for compounded GLP-1 injections will start at $199 a month. Its oral medication offering starts at $79 a month. Both are not available in all states.
    • “Hims & Hers said it plans to make branded GLP-1 options available to customers once consistent supply is available through the pharmacies’ wholesaler.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Steward offered specifics on how it intends to auction off its assets in motions filed in bankruptcy court last week, including a timeline for selling its hospitals and physician group as well as contingency plans, including possible closures, if the assets fail to lure qualified bidders.
    • “The physician-owned healthcare network, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy earlier this month, operates 31 hospitals and a physician group, Stewardship Health, in Massachusetts, Arizona, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas and Florida. 
    • “All of its assets are up for sale — and Steward is looking to sell quickly, according to the filings.
    • “Steward says it is in advanced discussions with Optum and hopes to finalize an agreement in the near-term for the company to serve as the stalking horse bidder for its physician group, Stewardship Health — the initial bid that sets the floor price during auction.” 
  • NBC News notes,
    • “Many of the ADHD medication shortages that have plagued the U.S. for the last two years have now been resolved, the Food and Drug Administration says. Yet some doctors and patients report they are still struggling to get prescriptions filled.
    • “Dr. Royce Lee, a psychiatrist at the University of Chicago Medicine, said supply has gotten better but it’s still an issue for about a third of the patients he writes prescriptions for. This often means he still has to call around to pharmacies to see if they have the medications in stock, switch patients to different drugs, and deal with insurance companies to confirm coverage.
    • “I do see signs of the shortages easing up,” Lee said. “But there are still enough shortages that every day we’re having to put in a little bit of work for prescriptions that need to be changed or hunted down.”
    • “I think a lot of people are still not getting their treatments,” he added.”