Midweek update

Midweek update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call informs us
    • “House leadership smoothed the path for consideration of a $78 billion family and business tax break deal Wednesday by committing to a floor vote as soon as next week on a separate bill to boost the state and local tax deduction cap for married couples.”
  • and later
    • “The House on Wednesday night passed a $79 billion family and business tax break bill after several days of uncertainty, teeing it up for consideration in the Senate. 
    • “The package negotiated by House Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith, R-Mo., and Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., easily mustered the two-thirds majority needed to pass, despite GOP drama earlier in the week and previous criticism from Democrats. 
    • “It’s a strong, commonsense, bipartisan step forward in providing urgent tax relief for working families and small businesses,” Smith said on the floor ahead of the 357-70 vote. “Parents in Main Street communities across this country will see lower taxes, more opportunity and greater financial security after we pass this legislation.”
  • Here is a link to today’s hearing held by the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee about national healthcare expenditures.
  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “Medicare Advantage (MA) payments are set to decrease yet again in 2025 as the feds phase in significant changes to risk adjustment.
    • “As those overhauls begin to take effect, benchmark payments are set to decline by about 0.2% on average, according to the latest advance notice released by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
    • “Despite this, the feds said Wednesday that payments to MA plans are expected to increase by 3.7% in 2025, a $16 billion increase over 2024. The payment rate announced today could change by the time the final rate announcement is published, no later than April 1.”
  • The CY 2025 Advance Notice may be viewed by going to: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Health-Plans/MedicareAdvtgSpecRateStats/Announcements-and-Documents and selecting “2025 Advance Notice.”
  • A fact sheet discussing the provisions of the CY 2025 Advance Notice, as well as frequently asked questions, can be viewed here: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/2025-medicare-advantage-and-part-d-advance-notice-fact-sheet.
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “A bipartisan group of lawmakers is urging CMS to maintain “payment and policy” stability in Medicare Advantage. 
    • “In a letter to CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, the group of 60 senators asked the agency to “consider the ongoing implementation of program reforms finalized last year and provide stability for the Medicare Advantage program in 2025.”  * * *
    • “The letter comes after two lawmakers, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Pramila Jayapal, wrote to the agency urging more action on curbing overpayments to the program. 
    • “Read the full letter here. 
  • Today, OPM posted on the Federal Register website a proposed FEHB rule that “would allow FEHB and PSHB coverage to become effective at the beginning of the pay period that the employee in pay status has an initial opportunity to enroll. This change would occur when the employee becomes eligible for FEHB or PSHB coverage, provided an appropriate request to enroll is received by the employing office within the initial pay period that the employee becomes eligible.”
  • American Hospital News reports,
    • “The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Jan. 31 issued a final rule that updates certain regulations for Opioid Treatment Programs and the standards for treatment of opioid use disorder. The rule makes some COVID-19-related flexibilities permanent, including take-home doses of methadone, the ability of an OTP to prescribe medication for OUD via telehealth without an initial in-person physical evaluation, and the removal of certain requirements for admission to an OTP to better align with evidence-based practice.”
  • KFF shares three charts about Medicare drug price negotiations.
  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “The Postal Service is looking to cut $5 billion from its operating costs and grow its revenue by the same amount over the next two years to overcome its long-term financial challenges.
    • “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is telling the White House and Congress that implementing these plans is necessary to keep USPS from running out of cash in the coming years.
    • “DeJoy, in a Jan.10 letter obtained by Federal News Network, told President Joe Biden and congressional leaders that USPS is “utilizing all of the self-help tools that are available to us,” and trying to get back on track with its “break-even” goal, after years of billion-dollar net losses.
    • “It is evident that to break even and avoid running out of cash in the next several years, we must press ahead on our financial improvement initiatives over the next two years,” DeJoy wrote. “While we have already achieved historic reductions, they are simply not enough to make us financially sustainable.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Check out this JAMA Open article to learn why “Paxlovid Is Effective but Underused—Here’s What the Latest Research Says About Rebound and More.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “As artificial intelligence advances in different areas of healthcare, there are concerns that technology and AI-based chatbots will replace the human connections between patients and practitioners.
    • “But, a new study finds promising potential for AI and large language models to enhance mental health therapy at scale by being able to analyze millions of text-based counseling messages to shine a light on what works.
    • “Researchers used AI to analyze more than 20 million text conversations of counseling sessions and successfully predicted patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes, according to a study published this week in the Journal of The American Medical Association (JAMA) Open.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • An analysis conducted by the National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) reveals a substantial increase in the overall use of complementary health approaches by American adults from 2002 to 2022. The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, highlights a surge in the adoption of complementary health approaches for pain management over the same period.
    • Researchers utilized data from the 2002, 2012, and 2022 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) to evaluate changes in the use of seven complementary health approaches, including yoga, meditation, massage therapy, chiropractic care, acupuncture, naturopathy, and guided imagery/progressive muscle relaxation.
    • The key findings include:
      • The percentage of individuals who reported using at least one of the seven approaches increased from 19.2% in 2002 to 36.7% in 2022.
      • The use of yoga, meditation, and massage therapy experienced the most significant growth from 2002 to 2022.
      • Use of yoga increased from 5% in 2002 to 15.8% in 2022.
      • Meditation became the most used approach in 2022, with an increase from 7.5% in 2002 to 17.3% in 2022.
      • Acupuncture, increasingly covered by insurance, saw an increase from 1% in 2002 to 2.2% in 2022.
    • Additionally, the analysis showed a notable rise in the proportion of U.S. adults using complementary health approaches specifically for pain management. Among participants using any of the complementary health approaches, the percentage reporting use for pain management increased from 42.3% in 2002 to 49.2% in 2022.
    • Despite the findings, the authors acknowledge study limitations, including decreasing NHIS response rates over time, possible recall bias, cross-sectional data, and differences in survey wording.
  • and
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health detected abnormal proteins in the spinal fluid of people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), which could help improve diagnosis of these diseases. The findings were published in Science Translational Medicine.
    • “The proteins in question are built from “cryptic” exons—abnormal portions of RNA, the cell’s instructions for how to build proteins. Cryptic exons occur when TDP-43, a protein that regulates how RNA is processed, stops functioning normally. TDP-43 dysfunction is linked to ALS, FTD, Alzheimer’s disease, and Limbic Associated TDP-43 Encephalopathy (LATE).
    • “The study showed that these mis-spliced sections of RNA can sometimes generate new proteins from the cryptic sequence. The findings advance our understanding of how cryptic exons may be involved in the dementia disease process and could help identify diseases involving TDP-43 dysfunction before symptoms appear. Currently, TDP-43 aggregates in the brain can only be detected at autopsy.”  
  • MedPage Today points out, “Getting clinicians to commit to the Choosing Wisely recommendations somewhat reduced low-value care for older adults in common scenarios, a cluster randomized trial found.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Novo Nordisk has resumed shipping starter doses of its weight-loss drug Wegovy, nearly nine months after manufacturing problems forced it to restrict distribution to maintenance shots in order to ensure that people who had already started taking it could continue, the company said Wednesday.
    • “The resumption of the starter doses, which begin at 0.25 milligrams per week, comes two months after obesity rival Eli Lilly gained U.S. approval for a competing drug, Zepbound, that could threaten to eat away at Novo’s sizable lead in weight-loss treatment.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “Nearly every employer in the country is now grappling with how—and whether—to pay for new weight loss drugs. Needless to say, such decisions are highly important to patients struggling with obesity.
    • “But for Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk, it actually doesn’t matter, for now, from a financial perspective. They are selling every injection they can make. It won’t change anytime soon.” ***
    • While the companies are both moving as fast as possible, expanding the manufacturing of injectables is complicated. 
    • “You’re talking about billions of pens. That’s not a trivial exercise,” says Guggenheim analyst Seamus Fernandez. “Producing pens is a very complex process that requires precision and lots of attention to safety.” 
    • “That is one reason why developing pills such as Lilly’s orforglipron, which is undergoing clinical trials, is so crucial, he adds. Figuring out how to make oral versions well-tolerated is a challenge, though.”
  • MedTech Dive tells us about the top medtech trends in 2024. “Experts said M&A, orthopedic procedure backlogs and emerging cardiac markets were among the top trends to watch in the medical device industry this year.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Cigna has agreed to sell its Medicare business to Health Care Service Corporation for roughly $3.7 billion, the health insurer announced Wednesday.
    • HCSC is acquiring Cigna’s Medicare Advantage, supplemental benefits and Medicare Part D plans, along with CareAllies, a division that helps providers transition to value-based care. In total, the plans cover 3.6 million people on Medicare.
    • “The companies said they expect the deal — which includes $3.3 billion in cash and $400 million in capital Cigna expects to be freed up — to close in the first quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approval.”
  • and
    • “Humana plans to expand its primary care network for seniors this year, as the insurer looks to lean on provider capabilities to boost its beleaguered Medicare Advantage business.
    • “In 2024, CenterWell Senior Primary Care plans to enter three new markets in North Carolina and Louisiana, and add additional centers in eight of its current markets in the U.S., the payer announced on Tuesday.
    • “Humana is one of many health insurers racing to build out a provider network to provide convenient access to primary care for its members. But for Humana, this strategy is more important than it might be for its rivals with a broader variety of plans, given Humana has made such a significant bet on Medicare Advantage, said Arielle Trzcinski, a healthcare analyst at market research firm Forrester.”
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • In 2021, the Food and Drug Administration for the first time approved a medicine meant to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease. Developed by partners Biogen and Eisai, the medicine, called Aduhelm, was viewed initially as a needed new treatment option by patients and a potential blockbuster product by Wall Street analysts.
    • “Now, less than three years since that approval, Biogen is fully giving up on the drug. The company said Wednesday it is handing rights to back to Aduhelm’s original developer, Neurimmune, and will redirect much of the money spent on the drug toward other Alzheimer’s therapies in its business.
    • “Biogen is reprioritizing resources to build a leading franchise to address the multiple pathologies of the disease and patient needs,” said Christopher Viehbacher, the company’s CEO, in a statement.”
  • Per Beckers Payer Issues,
    • “The share of U.S. employees in healthcare plans funded by their employer rose from 2015 to 2021, a study published in the January issue of Health Affairs found. 
    • “In 2015, 55% of employees were enrolled in self-funded plans, compared to 60% of employees in 2021. Most of the growth occurred in states and counties with lower levels of self-funded enrollment, the study found. 
    • “Groups of rapid growth in self-funded plans were concentrated in Arkansas, New York, Northern California, Pennsylvania and Utah, the study found. 
    • “Elevance Health is the largest administrator of self-funded plans, with around 19% of the total market, according to the study. CVS Health claimed the fastest growing self-funded enrollment from 2015 to 2021. “

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “Key congressional negotiators have reached an agreement on how to divvy up funding for the fiscal 2024 spending bills, clearing a major threshold that will allow appropriators to finalize those measures. 
    • “The deal, confirmed by a source familiar with talks, was hammered out after weeks of negotiations between Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas, who respectively chair the Senate and House Appropriations Committees, and establishes how much money will be allocated to each of the 12 bills Congress must pass to fund government each year. With those allocations set, lawmakers can now complete their work of setting line-by-line funding for every program and office in agencies across government.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management is issuing a final rule to bar the government from considering a person’s current or past pay when determining their salary for federal employment. Administration officials said this step will help limit pay discrimination and ensure compensation is based on an applicant’s skills, experience and expertise.
    • “A similar proposal will offer protections to those employed by federal contractors.
    • “The Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council is issuing a proposal to prohibit federal contractors and subcontractors from seeking and considering information about a job applicant’s compensation history when hiring or setting pay for anyone who works on a government contract.
    • “The proposal also requires contractors and subcontractors to disclose salary ranges in job postings.
    • “Administration officials said the proposal would help federal contractors recruit, diversify and retain talent, improve job satisfaction and performance and reduce turnover.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services is holding a virtual summit this Wednesday January 31 “for policymakers, advocates, researchers, and a wide variety of stakeholders with equities in the Food is Medicine space to engage in a substantive conversation about why food is medicine is important, what actions are being taken to promote this concept, and what stakeholders can do to bolster this work.”
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services informs us about
    • “Increased participation in CMS’ accountable care organization (ACO) initiatives in 2024, which will increase the quality of care for more people with Medicare. Of note, CMS is announcing that 19 newly formed accountable care organizations (ACOs) in the Medicare Shared Savings Program (Shared Savings Program) are participating in a new, permanent payment option beginning in 2024 that is enabling these ACOs to receive more than $20 million in advance investment payments (AIPs) for caring for underserved populations. An additional 50 ACOs are new to the program in 2024, and 71 ACOs renewed their participation, bringing the total to 480 ACOs now participating in the Shared Savings Program, the largest ACO program in the country. CMS also announced that 245 organizations are continuing their participation in two CMS Innovation Center models — ACO Realizing Equity, Access, and Community Health (ACO REACH) and the Kidney Care Choices (KCC) models.”
  • Bloomberg reports,
    • “Justice Department investigators are scrutinizing the healthcare industry’s use of AI embedded in patient records that prompts doctors to recommend treatments.
    • “Prosecutors have started subpoenaing pharmaceuticals and digital health companies to learn more about generative technology’s role in facilitating anti-kickback and false claims violations, said three sources familiar with the matter. It comes as electronic health record vendors are integrating more sophisticated artificial intelligence tools to match patients with particular drugs and devices.
    • “It’s unclear how advanced the cases are and where they fit in the Biden administration’s initiative to spur innovation in healthcare AI while regulating to promote safeguards. Two of the sources—speaking anonymously to discuss ongoing investigations—said DOJ attorneys are asking general questions suggesting they still may be formulating a strategy.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Federal legislation holding patients blameless for surprise medical charges prevented more than 10 million unexpected bills in the first nine months of 2023, according to a new analysis by health insurance groups.
    • “The survey of U.S. payers from AHIP and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association also highlighted a “growing and troubling trend” — an increasing number of claims going through the payment negotiation process set up by the No Surprises Act.
    • “Regulators forecast that 17,000 claims would go through that process, called independent dispute resolution, each year. However, AHIP and BCBSA estimate almost 670,000 claims were submitted to IDRbetween January and September 2023 alone.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Philips has agreed to stop selling new sleep therapy devices or other respiratory care products in the U.S., roughly two-and-a-half years after launching its massive recall of related products, the company said Monday. 
    • “The company agreed to the action as part of a consent decree it is entering into with the U.S. Department of Justice, representing the Food and Drug Administration. Philips has been negotiating the decree in light of the quality problems that led to its recall of more than 15 million sleep therapy and respiratory care devices. The decree is now being finalized ahead of its submission to a U.S. court for approval.
    • “Philips shared details of the agreement as part of its fourth-quarter earnings call.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • ABC News reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is warning clinicians to remain on alert for measles cases due to a growing number of infections.
    • “Between Dec. 1, 2023, and Jan. 23, 2024, there have been 23 confirmed cases of measles including seven cases from international travelers and two outbreaks with five or more infections each, according to an email sent this week.
    • “Cases have been reported in PennsylvaniaNew JerseyDelaware and the Washington, D.C. area so far.
    • “Most of these cases were among children and adolescents who had not been vaccinated against measles, despite being eligible.
    • “According to the CDC, most measles cases in the U.S. occur when unvaccinated or partially vaccinated Americans travel internationally, contract the disease and then spread it to those who are unvaccinated upon their return.”
  • Bloomberg offers background on the effective measles vaccine.
    • “The measles, mumps and rubella combined vaccine is so effective that in the US, thanks to a widely accepted vaccine campaign, measles was declared eliminated in 2000.
    • “But the disease has made a comeback. A now-discredited studypublished in the journal The Lancet in 1998 suggested that the MMR vaccine was linked to autism. This is not true, but some parents became reluctant to immunize their children. Dahl’s letter about the measles vaccine has had an online revival multiple times in the past decade, as measles spread repeatedly in children who’d never gotten their shots.
    • “The disease is flaring up again now, this time in Europe, where the World Health Organization waved a warning flag last week. The region reported more than 40,000 cases between January and November of last year, compared to 942 in 2022. The havoc the Covid-19 pandemic wreaked on basic preventative care is partly to blame.”
  • The National Institutes of Health provides us with an emotional wellness tookit.
  • MedPage Today points out,
    • A multiparametric blood test for prostate cancer showed potential to avoid more than half of unnecessary biopsies without sacrificing accuracy, a large prospective study showed.
    • In a comparison against the current PSA testing standard of ≥4 ng/mL, the Stockholm3 biomarker, which incorporates a PSA cutoff of 15 ng/mL with other proteins and genomic information, would have spared 56% of men from biopsies for grade group (GG) 1 or benign disease. The standard PSA cutoff would have avoided 19% of unnecessary biopsies, decreasing to 10% with a cutoff of ≥3 ng/mL.
    • Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values with the multicomponent test either approximated or surpassed those achieved with conventional PSA testing, reported Scott Eggener, MD, of the University of Chicago, at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Health Payer Intelligence notes,
    • “UnitedHealth Group saw revenue growth of over 14 percent in 2023, while adding 1.7 million new consumers to its Medicare and commercial offerings, executives shared during the UnitedHealth Group Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call.
    • “Last year was a “year of balanced, sustainable growth for UnitedHealth Group,” according to Andrew Witty, CEO of UnitedHealth Group.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “Though Medicare Advantage enrollment keeps climbing, the program may not have the profitability it once did for insurers. 
    • “In a January analysis shared with Becker’s, Moody’s analysts wrote that the program “seems to be losing some of its luster,” facing a significant increase in medical costs and lower reimbursement rates from CMS. 
    • “Earnings in Medicare Advantage shrunk by 2.1% among the insurers Moody’s rated from 2019 to 2022, despite premiums and members growing by 40% in the same time period.”
  • and
    • After a called-off merger between Humana and Cigna, executives at both companies say the companies are focused on staying on their existing courses. 
    • Neither company has directly addressed the called-off merger, but they have each fielded questions from investors on the outlook for the future. 
  • Beckers Hospital Review explains how the Ozempic boom affects hospital pharmacies.

Weekend Update

From Washington DC

  • The House of Representatives and the Senate continue to meet on Capitol Hill this week for Committee meetings and floor business. For your information, here’s an interesting meeting:
    • House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health
    • Wednesday January 31, 2024 10:00 AM (EST) | 2123 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, D.C.
    • Hearing: Health Care Spending in the United States: Unsustainable for Patients, Employers, and Taxpayers
    • Meeting Details
  • Fortune Well discusses the Medicare income adjusted premiums known as IRMAA. In the FEHBlog’s view, the best course is to pay the IRMAA premium because the Medicare Part B is worth the temporary surcharge.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Medscape discusses research on a urine test that can diagnose lung cancer.
    • “Lung cancer is the deadliest cancer in the world, largely because so many patients are diagnosed late.
    • “Screening more patients could help, yet screening rates remain critically low. In the United States, only about 6% of eligible people get screened , according to the American Lung Association. Contrast that with screening rates for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer, which all top 70%.
    • “But what if lung cancer detection was as simple as taking a puff on an inhaler and following up with a urine test?
    • “Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Massachusetts, have developed nanosensors that target lung cancer proteins and can be delivered via inhaler or nebulizer, according to research published this month in Science Advances. If the sensors spot these proteins, they produce a signal in the urine that can be detected with a paper test strip.
    • “It’s a more complex version of a pregnancy test, but it’s very simple to use,” said Qian Zhong, PhD, an MIT researcher and co-lead author of the study.”
  • The American Medical Association reports
    • ‘While the 2018 physical activity guidelines recommend that adults engage in at least 150 to 300 minutes per week of moderate exercise, 75 to 150 minutes each week of vigorous movement or an equivalent combination of both intensities, it turns out that if adults do more than the recommended amount, it can lower their risk of death. Moderate physical activity is defined as walking, weightlifting and lower-intensity exercise. Meanwhile, vigorous exercise is categorized as running, bicycling and swimming.’ 
  • The American Medical Association points out what doctors wish their patient knew about which cold medicines work.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • Cognoa, maker of the first FDA-approved autism diagnostic tool, announced Highmark has signed on as its first commercial payer partner. 
    • “The tool, Canvas Dx, will now be reimbursed for commercial Highmark members. It aims to enable earlier and more equitable access to diagnosis for children and families without specialists. The tool leverages AI to empower doctors to quickly and accurately diagnose developmental risk without bias, the company claims.
    • “The contract should be seen as “model medical policy,” Dennis Wall, Ph.D., autism researcher and founder of Cognoa, told Fierce Healthcare. Wall hopes the coverage will be replicated across other payers. Highmark will cover the full price, including the total cost of CanvasDx and the time it takes for a provider to administer it.” 
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “At least, as of yesterday [January 25], in terms of market value. Eli Lilly, which has more than doubled in value since 2022, is now worth about $600 billion, eclipsing Elon Musk’s electric car company, which has fallen about 25% since the start of the year.
    • “There’s only so much one can read into the fates of two completely unrelated companies, but here’s a thought: For years, biotech specialists have pointed out that if generalist investors reallocated even 2% of their tech investments into the drug industry, it would make a massive difference for the comparatively small pond that is biotech.
    • “Through that lens, Lilly overtaking Tesla, to the extent it has any meaning at all, points to a future in which fund managers consider treating obesity and Alzheimer’s disease to be a better use of capital than making cars that sometimes don’t work when it’s cold, which would benefit biotech as a whole.”

Friday Factoid

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Govexec informs us,
    • “Federal agencies will have to speed up their presidential transition preparations and ensure they are prepared for extended periods without a known electoral winner under a new law introduced on Friday by a bipartisan pair of senators. 
    • “The Agency Preparation for Transitions Act, put forward by Sens. Gary Peters, D-Mich., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, aims to provide greater resources to career employees at federal agencies tasked with preparing potential future administrations. Agencies already face a slew of requirements in drafting materials and answering questions from campaign transition teams, but the new measure looks to speed up some of the established timelines for those interactions and boost communication between the White House and agency transition teams.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced
    • “On December 7, the Biden-Harris Administration announced new actions to promote competition in health care, including increasing transparency in the Medicare Advantage (MA) insurance market and strengthening MA programmatic data. Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), is continuing momentum in this area by releasing a Request for Information (RFI) to solicit feedback from the public on how best to enhance MA data capabilities and increase public transparency. Transparency is especially important now that MA has grown to over 50% of Medicare enrollment, and the government is expected to pay MA health insurance companies over $7 trillion over the next decade. The information solicited by this RFI will support efforts for MA plans to best meet the needs of people with Medicare, for people with Medicare to have timely access to care, to ensure that MA plans appropriately use taxpayer funds, and for the market to have healthy competition. * * *
    • The MA Data RFI can be accessed on the Federal Register’s webpage at https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/current.  Comments are due on May 29, 2024.
  • MedTech Dive reports,
    • “Absolutions Med has received breakthrough designation for an abdominal wall closure device that is intended to reduce the risk of hernia. 
    • “The Food and Drug Administration designation, which Absolutions disclosed Wednesday, covers a device designed to distribute suture tension over a large area of tissue.
    • “Absolutions began testing the device, Rebuild Bioabsorbable, in cancer patients undergoing abdominal surgeries in 2022, and the company began a study in a broader population in March 2023.”
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services made available the latest version of the Section 111 reporting user guide for group health plans and the slides from a recent webinar on the new Section 111 civil monetary penalties program that kicks in on October 11, 2024.
  • The Society Human Resource Management points out that
    • “The Department of Labor has issued guidance on emergency savings accounts linked to retirement savings plans, a new benefit available this year under a provision of the Secure 2.0 Act of 2022.
    • Secure 2.0 amended the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) to authorize the establishment of pension-linked emergency savings accounts (PLESAs), which are short-term savings accounts established and maintained as part of an individual’s retirement savings plan, such as a 401(k) plan. The provision creating PLESAs, Section 127, took effect on Jan. 1.
    • “The DOL guidance comes in the form of 20 frequently asked questions.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “A historic new study out of Scotland shows the real-world impact of vaccines against the human papillomavirus: The country has detected no cases of cervical cancer in women born between 1988-1996 who were fully vaccinated against HPV between the ages of 12 and 13.
    • “Many previous studies have shown that HPV vaccines are extremely effective in preventing cervical cancer. But the study, published on Monday in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, is the first to monitor a national cohort of women over such a long time period and find no occurrence of cervical cancer.
    • “The study is super exciting. It shows that the vaccine is extremely effective,” said Kathleen Schmeler, a professor of gynecologic oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, who was not involved in the research. “It’s obviously early. We’re just starting to see the first data of the impact of the vaccine because it takes so long from the time of the vaccine to the effects.”
    • “The results underscore the importance of working to increase uptake of the HPV vaccine in the U.S., said Schmeler. Scotland, for example, introduced routine immunization in schools in 2008, and close to 90% of students in their fourth year of secondary school (equivalent to 10th grade in the U.S.) in the 2022-2023 school year had received at least one dose of the vaccine. In the U.S., where HPV vaccines are not administered in school, uptake among adolescents ages 13 to 17 is a little over 60%.
    • “The study also points to how crucial the timing of vaccination is. “The girls that didn’t develop any cancer were vaccinated before becoming sexually active,” said Schlemer. “So we should not wait to vaccinate folks and really do it, for the guidelines, prior to becoming sexually active.”
  • The Centers for Disease Control tells us,
    • “A new CDC study has found that more recent COVID-19 hospitalizations among adults experienced fewer severe outcomes than during earlier parts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and that the proportion of severe hospital outcomes from COVID-19 became more similar to adults hospitalized with flu. Most recently, when COVID-19 Omicron variants predominated, hospitalized flu and COVID-19 patients had similar levels of intensive care unit (ICU) admissions and use of supplemental oxygen, respiratory support, and invasive mechanical ventilation. Even the risk of death as an outcome became more similar across the two diseases, with the exception of among people 18 to 49 years, who continued to experience higher in-hospital deaths from COVID-19. This study underscores the fact that both diseases have the potential to be dangerous and that both warrant the compliance with CDC prevention and treatment recommendations.
    • “The study, published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases, analyzed a subset of adult hospitalizations with COVID-19 or flu that were recorded in one surveillance system to compare clinical outcomes and other characteristics between the two groups. People who were hospitalized with COVID-19 were additionally sorted into groups depending on the predominant COVID-19 variant circulating at the time. The most recent COVID-19 Omicron BA.5-predominant period was compared to flu outcomes during the 2021-2022 season.”
  • MedPage Today offers a transcript of an interview with Dr. Paul Paul Offit, MD, on “the history of the MMR vaccine and the lasting legacy of COVID.”
  • Precision Vaccinations lets us know,
    • “In 2023, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved one respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine and an updated monoclonal antibody therapy to prevent respiratory disease in very young children.
    • “Given these were new options, health officials did not know which product pregnant women would prefer during the 2023-2024 RSV season.
    • “According to new data published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on January 23, 2024, the winner has been Beyfortus™ (Nirsevimab).”
  • The JAMA Open Network explains,
    • Question  What are the long-term trends in breast cancer incidence among women aged 20 to 49 years?
    • Findings  In this population-based, cross-sectional study using data from Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results, age-standardized, age-cohort–adjusted, and age-period–adjusted breast cancer incidence rates increased over the past 20 years among different races in different age groups. Incidence rates for estrogen receptor (ER)-positive, stage I, and stage IV tumors increased, while rates decreased for ER-negative, stage II, and stage III tumors.
    • Meaning  These results suggest that understanding factors driving differential trends in incidence rates for different age groups by race and ER-positive status should provide insights into breast cancer prevention in young women.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review reports,
    • “Nonprofit hospital operating margins soared last year, increasing 20% January to November 2023 as compared to the same period in 2022, according to Kaufman Hall’s “National Hospital Flash Report,” published Jan. 9. 
    • “Operating EBITDA jumped 15% year over year in November and was up 9% for the first 11 months of the year compared to 2022.
    • “Hospitals with 500-plus beds also did particularly well. On average their operating margin was up 59.3% year over year for November, and operating EBITDA margin was : up 20.5%, according to Kaufman Hall.”
  • and
    • Boston-based Tufts Medicine reported a $171 million operating loss in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, a 57% improvement on the $399 million loss it posted in the previous year, according to financial documents published Jan. 26. 
    • Year over year, revenue increased 14.4% to $2.6 billion while expenses grew by 3.8% to $2.8 billion. Under expenses, salaries and wages increased 6.4% to $1.3 billion and employee benefits were up 6% to $260.5 million.
    • After accounting for the performance of its investment portfolio and other nonoperating items, Tufts ended the 12-month period with an overall gain of $1.6 million, a significant improvement on the $530.4 million net loss recorded in the prior year. 
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Healthcare bankruptcies spiked in 2023 to the highest level in the past five years, according to a report released Thursday by healthcare restructuring advisory firm Gibbins Advisors.
    • “The analysis included Chapter 11 bankruptcies for companies with liabilities of at least $10 million. Gibbins Advisors found 79 such bankruptcies last year — more than three times the level seen in 2021.
    • “The number of filings dropped from the third to the fourth quarter, but total case volume could remain high in 2024 as the market continues to be “very challenging” for providers, said Tyler Brasher, a director at Gibbins Advisors, in a statement.”
  • Mercer Consulting shared its views on managing prescription drug benefits.

 

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington DC,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “A group of bipartisan senators on Wednesday reintroduced a bill that aims to remove barriers to telemental healthcare for Medicarebeneficiaries.
    • “The legislation, introduced by Sens. Bill Cassidy, R-La., Tina Smith, D-Minn., John Thune, R-S.D., and Ben Cardin, D-Md., would remove requirements that telemental health patients see an in-person provider within six months of receiving services via telehealth.
    • “The senators warned the “arbitrary” requirement that patients be seen in-person will limit access to needed care, particularly in rural areas.”
  • The Senate Finance Committee lets us know,
    • “Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Ranking Member Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, today announced their commitment to working on bipartisan health care legislation to prevent and mitigate shortages of critical generic drugs used by patients and providers in the United States.
    • “In a white paper released today, Wyden and Crapo outline concerns raised by experts at a hearing held in the Finance Committee on December 5, 2023, as well as areas of interest and ideas the Committee is exploring to address the factors contributing to shortages through modifications to the Medicare and Medicaid programs. * * *
    • The white paper can be found here.
  • and
    • “U.S. Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Finance Committee Members Chris Coons (D-Delaware), Tom Carper (D-Delaware) and Thom Tillis (R-North Carolina), along with ten of their colleagues, wrote today to President Biden urging him to reject the proposal before the World Trade Organization (WTO) that would waive intellectual property (IP) protections for COVID-19 diagnostics and therapeutics.  Waiving protections afforded by the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of IP Rights (TRIPS) could have unintended consequences for the development of new treatments for dangerous diseases, while doing little to improve access to medicine.”
  • HHS’s Human Resource & Services Administration tells us,
    • “Today, Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Administrator Carole Johnson, joined by Rep. Lauren Underwood (D-IL), co-chair of the Black Maternal Health Caucus, launched a year-long Enhancing Maternal Health Initiative. The initiative will strengthen, expand, and accelerate HRSA’s maternal health work to address maternal mortality and maternal health disparities in partnership with mothers, grantees, community organizations, and state and local health officials across the country.
    • “The kick-off event at the Kaiser Family Foundation in Washington, DC, convened HRSA maternal health grantees from 11 states and the District of Columbia, as well as key national organizations and experts, providers, and individuals with lived experience. Attendees shared personal perspectives on maternal health care and support, the innovative ways HRSA grantees are making an impact on maternal health, and how they are addressing maternal mental health. * * * For more information on HRSA’s maternal health work, visit: www.hrsa.gov/maternal-health.”
  • The Government Accountability Office issued a report on OPM’s paid parental leave program.
    • “Starting October 1, 2020, most federal civilian employees became eligible to take up to 12 weeks of paid parental leave for the arrival of a new child whether by birth, adoption, or foster care.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management’s government-wide data showed that most federal employees were aware of the benefit, and the number of employees who took paid parental leave generally aligned with OPM’s initial estimates.
    • “However, OPM’s webpage for federal leave policies is outdated and doesn’t include information about the benefit. We recommended that OPM update guidance on its webpage to help ensure employees better understand their eligibility.”
  • FedWeek explains how to weigh the options if separating from a spouse before federal employee retirement eligibility.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission sued to block Novant Health’s $320 million acquisition of two North Carolina hospitals from Community Health Systems on Thursday, alleging the deal threatens to raise consumer prices and reduces incentives to provide quality care.
    • “The antitrust agency said the proposed deal, which was first announced in February of last year, would reduce competition in the region and “increase annual healthcare costs by several million dollars.”
    • “In response to the lawsuit, a representative from Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Novant said the nonprofit system would “pursue available legal responses to the FTC’s flawed position.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration this week convened a group of experts to discuss ways to develop new drugs for preventing spontaneous early births, a major health concern for which there are no good treatments.
    • “At the two-day workshop led by the FDA and and the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy, experts in maternal and fetal health, as well as advocates, discussed challenges to developing a medicine for preterm births, which affect 1 in every 10 babies in the U.S. and can jeopardize their health.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Abbott received approval from the Food and Drug Administration for a rechargeable deep brain stimulation (DBS) system.
    • “Abbott claimed in the Thursday announcement its device, called Liberta RC, is the world’s smallest and has the longest charge of any DBS technology on the market. The company says the device only needs to be recharged 10 times per year under standard settings for most users. 
    • “Earlier this month, Medtronic also received approval for a new DBS system called Percept RC, which has sensing technology to track patients’ response to treatment.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • HCPLive alerts us,
    • “Despite being the leading cause of death in the US for more than a century, more than half of the respondents to a 2023 survey conducted on behalf of the American Heart Association (AHA) failed to identify heart disease as the leading killer of US adults, according to the AHA’s 2024 Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics report.
    • “Data from the report, which is created annually by the AHA and National Institutes of Health to spotlight the impact of heart disease and stroke in the US and abroad, highlight a lack of awareness surrounding the impact of cardiovascular disease, with additional statistics paint a picture where 51% failed to identify heart disease as the leading cause of death, but also spotlights how advances in care and education have caused death rates from cardiovascular disease to decline by 60% in the last 75 years.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management offers advice on “a number of policies and strategies employers might want to turn to during this coronavirus and flu surge.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “The CDC has rejected findings from Ohio State University researchers that the JN.1 coronavirus variant is more severe than previous strains.
    • “While JN.1 currently accounts for almost 86% of current COVID-19 cases in the U.S., the CDC published a statement Jan. 22 saying that the agency has found “no evidence that it causes more severe disease,” adding that vaccines are still expected to increase protection against the variant as well.
    • “The Ohio State University research, published Jan. 8 in Cell, had focused on two subvariants: BA.2.86 and JN.1. Their study found that it “appears to have increased infectivity of human lung epithelial cells compared to all omicron variants…(which) raises a potential concern about whether or not this virus is more pathogenic,” Shan-Lu Liu, MD, PhD, senior author the study and a virology professor at OSU stated in a news release about the research.  
    • “Since JN.1 is an offspring of BA.2.86, OSU researchers found it had similar results.
    • “While the CDC does not align with this research, the agency did state it “is contributing to the spread of COVID-19 this winter.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Building off of some landmark discoveries published last year, researchers have mapped out the biological underpinnings of Parkinson’s disease, creating a framework for medicines that might treat the root of the disease rather than just its symptoms.
    • “Their work, published in the Lancet Neurology, stages Parkinson’s based on the accumulation of a misfolded protein called alpha-synuclein. Funded by the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, the work expands on a 2023 publication that validated an alpha-synuclein diagnostic for the disease.
    • “The new framework still has some gaps, but the researchers believe they’ve set out a path that will allow scientists to discover and rigorously test treatments aimed at the biological causes of Parkinson’s, providing a reliable measure of disease severity that might accelerate the process of drug development.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review posted,
    •  “its revised Evidence Repor assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of xanomeline tartrate/trospium chloride (KarXT, Karuna Therapeutics) for the treatment of schizophrenia. 
    • “Schizophrenia is a serious mental illness that affects how a person thinks, feels, and behaves,” said ICER’s Chief Medical Officer, David Rind, MD. “Among the important side effects of current treatments is weight gain leading to metabolic syndrome. This, in turn, places patients at risk for cardiovascular events and death. KarXT has a novel mechanism of action and, at least in the short run, does not seem to cause weight gain. This may lead to major health benefits compared with existing treatments, however current evidence on benefits and harms is limited.”
    • “This Evidence Report will be reviewed at a virtual public meeting of the New England CEPAC (New England CEPAC) on February 9, 2024. The New England CEPAC is one of ICER’s three independent evidence appraisal committees comprising medical evidence experts, practicing clinicians, methodologists, and leaders in patient engagement and advocacy.”
  • Healio calls our attention to these study findings:
    • “Adults who lose weight in the year after being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes are more likely to achieve diabetes remission.
    • “Weight regain after remission increases the risk for returning to hyperglycemia.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Raleigh (NC) News and Observer reports,
    • “Facing unsustainable costs, the NC State Health Plan’s board of trustees voted to end all plan coverage of popular weight-loss drugs beginning April 1. Board members met Thursday afternoon to consider options for how the plan could deal with rising costs. In October, the board imposed a moratorium on new prescriptions for one of the drugs, Wegovy, when made solely for weight-loss purposes. The moratorium began Jan. 1. At the conclusion of the lengthy meeting, the board voted 4-3 to exclude all coverage of obesity GLP-1 medications on April 1.
    • This will end coverage for plan members who were grandfathered in and already taking the medications as well. Usage of Wegovy, Saxenda and other drugs by plan members has increased significantly in recent years, as have costs incurred by the plan. The plan spent a projected $102 million on these drugs in 2023, or 10% of its roughly $1 billion in net pharmacy spending last year.
  • It stuns the FEHBlog that Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly continue to raise prices for their GLP-1 drugs when they have blockbuster aales.
  • The American Hospital News notes,
    • “Hospitals and health systems are prioritizing preserving access to care for patients in rural America, including via access points like hospital outpatient departments that provide essential services for rural and low-income communities, according to a new AHA report released Jan. 25. The report details how hospitals have been a lifeline for struggling rural physician practices helping to keep their doors open, and HOPDs have remained convenient, high-quality access points for rural patients with more complex care needs. Among other findings, hospitals were two and a half times more likely to acquire physician practices in rural areas than other entities, including commercial insurers which are overwhelmingly focuse”d on larger and more profitable markets.”
  • Healthcare Dive points out,
    • “Humana on Thursday released a profit outlook for 2024 that fell well short of Wall Street’s already-diminished expectations, as the health insurer continues to be plagued by high medical spending on seniors.
    • “The Louisville, Kentucky-based payer expects to bring in $16 in adjusted earnings per share in 2024 — a whopping $13 short of analysts’ consensus expectations. In comparison, Humana brought in $26.09 in adjusted earnings per share this year.
    • “Humana also rescinded its earnings target for 2025. The health insurer’s stock plunged 15% in morning trade Thursday following the results.”
  • and
    • “Cleveland Clinic executives applauded the operator’s financial rebound in an annual State of the Clinic address, but signaled it would continue lean operations to chase sustained profitability.
    • “We sustain and advance Cleveland Clinic’s mission by serving patients and managing our resources,” said Tom Mihaljevic, Cleveland Clinic CEO and president, during the Wednesday address. “It is possible to use fewer resources while touching more lives.”
    • “Cleveland Clinic exceeded its revenue projections for 2023, drawing in over $14 billion in revenue on more than 14 million annual patient interactions, according to Mihaljevic.
    • “The Ohio-based nonprofit reported an operating margin of 0.4% for the year — an improvement on the prior year’s performance, when the Clinic reported an operating margin of -1.6% on a $1.2 billion net loss.” 

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced that
    • “21.3 million people selected an Affordable Care Act Health Insurance Marketplace plan during the 2024 Open Enrollment Period. Total plan selections include more than five million people — about a fourth — who are new to the Marketplaces and 16 million people who renewed their coverage. Notably, open enrollment continues in four states and Washington, D.C., through January 31.
    • “For decades, when it came to federal programs we could depend on to keep Americans covered, three were always top of mind — Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security, but now it’s crystal clear that we need to add a fourth — the Affordable Care Act,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “Once again, a record-breaking number of Americans have signed up for affordable health care coverage through the Affordable Care Act’s Marketplace, and now they and their families have the peace of mind that comes with coverage. The ACA continues to be a successful, popular, and important federal program to millions of people and their families. As we celebrate the success of this most recent enrollment effort, HHS will double down on the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to increase access to quality care and lower costs.”
  • The Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker identifies “Health Cost and Affordability Policy Issues and Trends to Watch in 2024.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “After discontinuing the use of semaglutide and liraglutide weight-loss medications, a majority of patients were able to maintain the same weight they were at when halting the use — or even continued to lose additional weight after one year, a new study revealed. 
    • “The research, published Jan. 23 in Epic Research, focused on the outcomes of 20,274 patients who were prescribed semaglutide and 17,733 patients prescribed liraglutide, who lost at least five pounds while taking it. 
    • “Sustained weight loss slightly differed for the drugs — 56.2% of patients prescribed semaglutide kept the weight off one year after discontinuation of the drug, while that same outcome was 55.7% of patients who took liraglutide.
    • “While the majority were able to maintain their weight or shed additional pounds, some did not, and the outcomes differed by medication type. 
    • “One year after discontinuation of semaglutide medications, 17.7% regained all the weight they had lost while on the medication, and some even gained additional weight. For liraglutide, 18.7% entirely regained their weight one year after halting use.
  • Medpage Today tells us,
    • “Infants born to unvaccinated mothers who had COVID-19 during pregnancy were at high risk for developing neonatal respiratory distress, the longitudinal, cohort COMP study found.
    • “The odds of developing respiratory distress were threefold higher (OR 3.06, 95% CI 1.08-10.21) in infants born to unvaccinated mothers diagnosed with COVID-19 while pregnant compared with COVID-exposed infants born to COVID-vaccinated mothers, Mary Catherine Cambou, MD, of the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), and colleagues reported in Nature Communications.
    • “This was not something we were expecting to see, as none of the babies were diagnosed with COVID-19 themselves,” co-author Karin Nielsen-Saines, MD, also from UCLA, told MedPage Today in an email. “We also noted that respiratory distress was not transient and lasted several days.”
    • “However, when pregnant participants had received at least one mRNA vaccine dose prior to SARS-CoV-2 infection, the odds of their infants developing neonatal respiratory distress dropped to 0.33 (95% CI 0.10-0.96) — a 67% decline, the authors pointed out.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have found overactivation in many brain regions, including the frontal and parietal lobes and the amygdala, in unmedicated children with anxiety disorders. They also showed that treatment with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) led to improvements in clinical symptoms and brain functioning. The findings illuminate the brain mechanisms underlying the acute effects of CBT to treat one of the most common mental disorders. The study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, was led by researchers at NIH’s National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). 
    • “The findings can help our understanding of how and for which children CBT works, a critical first step in personalizing anxiety care and improving clinical outcomes,” said senior author Melissa Brotman, Ph.D., Chief of the Neuroscience and Novel Therapeutics Unitin the NIMH Intramural Research Program. * * *
    • “This study provide evidence—in a large group of unmedicated youth with anxiety disorders—of altered brain circuitry underlying treatment effects of CBT. The findings could, in time, be used to enhance treatment outcomes by targeting brain circuits linked to clinical improvement. This is particularly important for the subset of children who did not significantly improve after short-term CBT.
    • “The next step for this research is to understand which children are most likely to respond. Are there factors we can assess before treatment begins to make the most informed decisions about who should get which treatment and when? Answering these questions would further translate our research findings into clinical practice,” said Brotman.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “An 11-year-old boy who was born deaf can hear after receiving an experimental gene therapy, developer Eli Lilly reported on Tuesday.
    • “The boy, identified as Aissam Dam by The New York Times, was the first participant treated in a small study Lilly is running to test the therapy, which is designed to correct a particular type of inherited hearing loss.
    • “While only from one person, the result is a striking example of gene therapy’s potential. According to Lilly, Dam experienced restored hearing across sound frequencies within a month of treatment. In some frequencies, Dam’s hearing was within the normal range at day 30, Lilly said.
    • “Lilly plans to present full data from Dam, as well as a second participant in its study, at a medical conference in early February.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Elevance Health raked in $6 billion in profit last year on revenue of more than $171 billion — a better performance than Wall Street expected, given that high medical costs have been dogging payers.
    • “The payer beat analysts’ consensus expectations for earnings and revenue in the fourth quarter of 2023, with a topline of $42.7 billion, up 7% year over year. Elevance’s fourth-quarter profit of $831 million was down, however, by 5% year over year.
    • “Elevance chalked its revenue growth up to higher premiums and growth in its pharmacy benefit manager CarelonRx. Analysts said the Indianapolis, Indiana-based payer also benefited from better-than-expected medical costs and higher investment income in the quarter.” 
  • and
    • “Walgreens is considering a sale of its specialty pharmacy business Shields Health Solutions as the struggling retail chain attempts to improve its halting finances, according to a Bloomberg report. 
    • “Shields could be valued at more than $4 billion in a sale, and a deal might appeal to private equity firms or healthcare companies, Bloomberg said, citing sources familiar.
    • “Walgreens is in the midst of a shift to focus on delivering healthcare services to payer, provider and pharmaceutical clients. But the company’s U.S. Healthcare division — which Shields is a part of — isn’t currently profitable.” 
  • and
    • “HCA Healthcare’s outpatient surgery operator Surgery Ventures has acquired majority interests in two ambulatory surgical centers in North Texas, the for-profit hospital operator announced on Monday.
    • “The centers are now affiliated with HCA subsidiary Medical City Healthcare, which runs 19 hospitals and 15 surgery centers in the region.
    • “The purchase comes after HCA, one of the largest hospital operators in the country, has made other recent acquisitions in Texas, which is one of the chain’s largest markets.” 
  • Per BioPhama Dive,
    • “Johnson & Johnson CEO Joaquin Duato sold 2023 as a “remarkable year” on an earnings call with investors Tuesday. But the pharmaceutical giant faces looming difficulties that hang over its performance, including incoming biosimilar competition to its blockbuster immune drug Stelara and a $700 million settlement over claims the company’s talc product caused cancer.
    • “As far as last year goes, J&J narrowly beat Wall Street’s expectations with $85.2 billion in revenue. Pharma sales grow 9.5% in the fourth quarter compared to the same period the year before. Cancer treatments and immunology medicines like Stelara made up the bulk of that revenue.
    • “As one of the largest pharma companies and often the first in the sector to report earnings each quarter, J&J is often considered a sort of bellwether for the industry.”
  • and
    • “Novo Nordisk is adding yet another prospect to its obesity drug pipeline, this time from a biotech company spun out of Harvard University and Zurich University. · EraCal Therapeutics tests compounds in larval zebrafish in a bid to trigger behavioral changes related to appetite while minimizing other effects in the body. The Swiss startup says it’s seen early success in mice and may be able to produce a drug that helps people lose weight without the side effects sometimes seen with current treatments. ·
    • “As part of the deal announced Tuesday, EraCal is eligible for payments worth as much as 235 million euros, or about $256 million, as well as royalties if a product reaches the market. The total includes an unspecified amount of money up front, as well as future payments tied to developmental and commercial milestones.”
  • North Carolina Public Radio reports
    • “The board that oversees the North Carolina State Health Plan will face a heavy decision Thursday when it considers dropping coverage of weight loss medications like Wegovy. * * *
    • “The State Health Plan is the health insurance plan for more than 740,000 teachers, state employees, retirees, and their dependents. It’s a massive health plan that paid more than $4 billion in claims last fiscal year, according to plan data.
    • “But even at that size, the high costs of these GLP-1 medications take an outsized bite of the pie. In 2023, the 24,750 people with prescriptions of Wegovy, Saxenda, and Zepbound cost the plan $102 million after rebates. In 2024, CVS Caremark, the plan’s pharmacy benefits manager, warned those rebates might lessen or go away completely, something that could push total costs north of $170 million. For context, as recently as 2019-20, the plan paid less than $790 million for all pharmacy claims for the entire fiscal year.”
  • Bolton consulting group identifies seven key employee benefit trends for this year.

The FEHBlog is back!!

On Friday, the FEHBlog flew from Austin to Washington, DC, having left his briefcase at home. As a result he did not have his laptop or his FEHBlog log in information over the weekend. He is back in action today.

From Washington, DC,

  • The White House issued a fact sheet about new actions taken by the White House Task Force on Reproductive Healthcare Access which is marking the 51st Anniversary of Roe v. Wade. Of note to the FEHB Program, the Fact Sheet discusses
    • “Strengthen[ing] Contraception Access and Affordability for Women with Private Health Insurance. The Administration is committed to ensuring that women have access to contraception—an essential component of reproductive health care that has only become more important in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade—and reducing barriers that women face in accessing contraception prescribed by their provider. The Departments of the Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services (HHS) are issuing new guidance [ACA FAQ 64] to clarify standards and support expanded coverage of a broader range of FDA-approved contraceptives at no cost under the Affordable Care Act. This action builds on the progress already made by the Affordable Care Act to expand access to affordable contraception for millions of women nationwide.
    • “In addition, the Office of Personnel Management will strengthen access to contraception for federal workers, retirees, and family members by issuing guidance to insurers participating in the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program that incorporates the Departments’ guidance. OPM will also newly require insurers that participate in the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program to take additional steps to educate enrollees about their contraception benefits.”
  • You may recall that OPM issued comprehensive guidance for carriers on contraceptive coverage in Carrier Letter No. 2022-17 back in the summer of 2022.
  • The FEHBlog was surprised that new ACA FAQ 64 does not announce a decision on whether group health plans are required to cover the new over-the-counter female contraceptive Opill which is not yet reached pharmacy shelves. The FEHBlog expects that the regulators will requires that group health plans cover Opill with no cost sharing when purchased at a network pharmacy.
  • In related news, the HHS and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced:
    • “launch[ing] a series of actions to educate the public about their rights to emergency medical care and to help support efforts of hospitals to meet their obligations under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA). As part of this comprehensive plan, the Department will:
      • “Publish new informational resources on CMS’s website to help individuals understand their rights under EMTALA and the process for submitting a complaint if they are denied emergency medical care;
      • “Partner with hospital and provider associations to disseminate training materials on providers’ obligations under EMTALA; 
      • “Convene hospital and provider associations to discuss best practices and challenges in ensuring compliance with EMTALA; and
      • “Establish a dedicated team of HHS experts who will increase the Department’s capacity to support hospitals in complying with federal requirements under EMTALA.”
  • In sum, HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra also sent a “letter to Medicare plans, health insurance issuers, and State Medicaid and CHIP programs about upholding their [contraceptive coverage] bligations under federal law.
    • Secretary Becerra wrote: ‘From day one, the Biden-Harris Administration has made clear that women should have access to the healthcare they need, including contraception and other family planning services. I’m writing to reaffirm that access to reproductive healthcare is a core priority of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.’”
  • American Hospital News tells us,
    • “A Department of Veterans Affairs policy that provides free emergency suicide prevention care has helped nearly 50,000 veterans and former service members in its first year, the VA announced last week. The policy allows the agency to provide, pay for or reimburse for eligible individuals’ emergency suicide care, transportation costs and follow-up care at any VA or non-VA facility for up to 30 days of inpatient care and 90 days of outpatient care.”
  • CMS issued its latest top ten Section 111 reporting issues for group health plans.
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • Truveta, the real-world data analysis company backed by dozens of health systems and other life sciences groups, won a multi-million-dollar contract from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to assist with the agency’s research into maternal health, pediatric care and respiratory viruses, including COVID-19.
    • “The company will let the CDC tap into its collection of more than 100 million patients’ deidentified, normalized electronic health record data.
    • “The Bellevue, Washington-based collective receives the information from its 30 health system members, which include major providers like Providence, Trinity Health and Tenet Healthcare. Together, the members provide over 18% of the country’s daily clinical care.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • U.S. New and World Report lets us know,
    • “Coronavirus hospital admissions last week decreased for the first time in more than two months, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Though the number remains elevated, weekly hospitalizations fell by nearly 10% week over week.
    • “More than 32,800 new COVID-19 hospital admissions were reported over the week ending Jan. 13, and over 27,800 Americans on average each day were considered currently hospitalized due to the disease during the same time frame, according to CDC data.
    • “Despite test positivity (percentage of tests conducted that were positive), emergency department visits, and hospitalizations remaining elevated nationally, COVID-19 rates have stabilized, or in some instances decreased,” the CDC said in a post on Friday.”
  • The CDC’s Fluview from last Friday notes,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated in most parts of the country.
    • “After several weeks of increases in key flu indicators through the end of 2023, two weeks of decreasing or stable trends nationally have been noted. CDC will continue to monitor for a second period of increased influenza activity that often occurs after the winter holidays.
    • “Outpatient respiratory illness has been above baseline nationally since November and is above baseline in all 10 HHS regions.
    • “The number of weekly flu hospital admissions has decreased slightly for two consecutive weeks.”
  • Medpage Today points out,
    • “Several recent measles outbreaks have public health officials concerned — and are drawing attention to rising childhood vaccine exemptions and renewing calls for increased measles awareness.
    • “Philadelphia’s health department confirmed nine casesof the illness as of Tuesday, which spread at local health facilities and a daycare. At least three of the infections were in unvaccinated children, according to ABC News.
    • “As of January 12, two counties in Washington state noted “3 lab-confirmed and 3 [epidemiologically]-linked measles cases have been identified among unvaccinated adults.” Delaware identified 20-30 people who were exposed to measles at the Nemours Children’s Hospital a few days earlier. * * *
    • “Katelyn Jetelina, MPH, PhD, epidemiologist and author of the “Your Local Epidemiologist” newsletter, calls the recent measles outbreaks a potential symptom of “collective amnesia” in a recent newsletter, writing, “As generations age, the memory of mid-20th-century diseases like measles fade. … Some don’t know why this disease is bad or if this vaccine is safe. This is understandable.”
  • The FEHBlog subscribes to the Your Local Epidemiologist on Substack and he finds it to be worth the money.
  • NBC News reports,
    • “After decades of good news in the fight against cervical cancer — marked by decades of steady declines in cases and deaths — a new report suggests that some women are being left behind. * * *
    • “Among women in their 30s and early 40s, incidence has been edging upward. Diagnosis of cervical cancer among women ages 30 to 44 rose almost 2% a year from 2012 to 2019.
    • “We need to make sure we are not forgetting about that generation that was a little too old for HPV vaccination,” said Jennifer Spencer, an assistant professor at the Dell Medical School at University of Texas-Austin who studies population health.
    • “Fortunately, the cancers found in 30- and 40-something women were mostly early, curable tumors, said Ahmedin Jemal, senior author of the new report and the cancer society’s senior vice president for surveillance and health equity science. About 13,800 American women are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year and 4,360 die from the disease.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Cigna issued a report on the top healthcare trends of 2024.
  • Kaiser Health News calls our attention to the following Modern Healthcare story
    • “Blue Cross Blue Shield insurers have become the first carriers to cover multimillion-dollar new gene therapies for sickle cell disease, and other insurers and Medicaid agencies are moving to follow suit. Blue Cross’ Synergie Medication Collective has inked risk-sharing agreements with drugmaker BlueBird Bio to offer its $3.1 million Lyfgenia gene therapy treatment for sickle cell disease to some self-insured employers, as well as competitor Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ $2.2 million Casgevy treatment.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealthcare is rolling out a new resource hub that seeks to make it easier for members to use wellness offerings while also easing the financial burden on employers.
    • “The UHC Hub features more than 20 different options, including wellbeing programs that target healthy living and more complex care management. Its network is built to make it easier for employers to find and purchase solutions and to make it simpler for consumers to engage.
    • “It’s not a secret that employers are feeling increasingly overwhelmed with the wide array of vendor options available to them. Samantha Baker, chief consumer officer for UnitedHealthcare’s commercial business, told Fierce Healthcare in an email that this is a pain point that comes up frequently in conversations with plan sponsors. * * *
    • “UnitedHealthcare said in an announcement that the hub builds on existing advocacy programs that it offers to clients, which help members in finding in-network providers, during a hospital discharge or in reviewing treatment and medication options.” 
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Intermountain-owned Saltzer Health said it will shut down if it cannot find a buyer by March 29, citing financial and economic challenges.
    • “The physician group said it’s in active negotiations with healthcare companies over the sale of some operations, and is “optimistic that a sale can be achieved,” according to a Thursday news release. 
    • “The health group, which is owned by Salt Lake City-based Intermountain Health, employs 450 people and serves approximately 100,000 annual patients across 11 Treasure Valley locations, according to a company spokesperson.”
  • BioPharma Dive explains why “With two biotech buyouts, schizophrenia drugs appear back on pharma’s radar. Deal documents suggest others besides Bristol Myers and AbbVie may be looking.”

King Day Weekend Update

Happy King Day. Dr. King would have been 95 years old today.

From Washington DC,

  • Roll Call adds
    • “House and Senate leaders have agreed to extend temporary government funding in two batches, through March 1 and March 8, according to a source familiar with the plan.
    • “The decision comes as lawmakers face a Friday, Jan. 19 deadline to clear a temporary spending bill for four of the dozen annual appropriations bills — Agriculture, Energy-Water, Military Construction-VA and Transportation-HUD. The remaining eight bills’ stopgap funds expire after Feb. 2 under the most recent interim spending law.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Medicare patients lining up to fill pricey prescriptions at the pharmacy counter this year will realize some good news: For the first time, there is a ceiling on how much they will pay in 2024 for their Part D drugs.
    • Changes brought about by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act mean that people on Part D plans now pay no more than roughly $3,300 on drugs annually—a number that could shift a bit based on whether they take brand or generic medications. In 2025, that cap will change again to a flat $2,000.
  • Patient Engagement HIT informs us,
    • “Transportation access continues to be a leading social determinant of health, with new CDC data showing it affected 5.7 percent of adults over the course of 12 months.
    • “The report, which used 2022 data, also showed that women were more likely than men to face transportation access barriers, with 6.1 percent and 5.3 percent reporting as much, respectively. * * *
    • “Younger adults rather than older adults, for example, were more likely to face challenges related to transportation access, with 7 percent of 18-34-year-olds reporting problems compared to 4.5 percent of those over age 65. Odds of transportation-related barriers decreased with age, the CDC researchers said.
    • “Moreover, racial disparities persisted, with American Indian/Alaska Native adults being the most likely to report a lack of reliable transportation. Of those respondents, 17.1 percent said they faced barriers in the previous 12 months.
    • “That compares to 9.2 percent of Black respondents, 7.6 percent of other or multiple-race respondents, 6.9 percent of Hispanic respondents, 4.8 percent of White respondents, and 3.6 percent of Asian respondents who said the same.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post and Consumer Reports tell us “How to prevent shingles and what to do if you get it.”
    • Shingrix, a two-dose shingles vaccine that was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2017, can reduce the incidence of shingles and its complications significantly. “The vaccine, the one we have available today, is spectacularly effective,” says William Schaffner, an infectious-disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville.
    • “But only about 30 percent of adults eligible for this vaccine have gotten it, according to 2022 report by the Government Accountability Office. If you’re wondering about the effects and risks of shingles and whether Shingrix is right for you, [the article provides] what you need to know.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Marijuana is neither as risky nor as prone to abuse as other tightly controlled substances and has potential medical benefits, and therefore, should be removed from the nation’s most restrictive category of drugs, federal scientists have concluded.
    • “The recommendations are contained in a 250-page scientific review provided to Matthew Zorn, a Texas lawyer who sued Health and Human Services officials for its release and published it online on Friday night. An H.H.S. official confirmed the authenticity of the document. * * *
    • “President Biden urged federal officials to “expeditiously” re-examine marijuana classification in October 2022, when he also issued pardons for those charged with marijuana possession under federal law.”
  • Fortune Well identifies “seven immune-boosting foods to eat when you’re sick with COVID or flu.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front

  • Benefits Pro points out,
    • “A new report from Humana finds that “value-based care,” which focuses on quality of care and patient experience with deeper patient engagement, that is provided to Medicare Advantage members kept patients healthier and lowers costs.
    • The new report is part of an annual assessment of the model, which stresses a more personal approach, more time spent with patients, and more coordinated care than traditional fee-for-service models of care. The model also puts an emphasis on prevention and lifestyle changes to help patients manage their health.
    • “The tenth-annual report on the efficacy of the value-based model for Medicare Advantage members noted that the U.S. health system has faced some significant challenges in recent years, including the COVID pandemic, a stressed workforce, and growing awareness of inequities in health care. The Humana analysis acknowledges challenges remain but found better scores on measurements across the board for patients in the value-based care model.”
  • Per Forbes,
    • “On November 13, 2023, women’s health advocates – including entrepreneurs and investors – celebrated a positive step forward for the industry; that day, the White House announced the first-ever Initiative on Women’s Health Research. The goal of the Initiative is to engage the federal government and private and public sectors to fund women’s health, spur innovation, close research gaps, and improve diagnosis, disease prevention, education, treatment, and more.
    • “This Initiative, however, was not the only new and noteworthy event in women’s health recently. In 2023 alone, women’s health startups saw gains in their average deal sizes, in the percentage of healthcare venture capital funding they raised, and in the attention they received. If these trends continue, 2024 could be the long-awaited and much-needed transformative year, bringing attention, capital, and recognition to this historically overlookedunderinvested, and undervalued space.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “Speaker Mike Johnson reiterated support Friday for the fiscal 2024 spending agreement he negotiated in the face of opposition from members of the House Freedom Caucus, who’ve been lobbying him to toss the deal. 
    • “Johnson, R-La., told reporters that while he is seeking feedback from across his conference, he is committed to the “strong” deal he negotiated with Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y.
    • “Our topline agreement remains; we are getting our next steps together, and we are working toward a robust appropriations process,” he said.”  * * *
    • “Next week, Congress will face a more pressing Jan. 19 spending deadline for agencies covered under four of the 12 annual appropriations bills. Schumer took the first procedural step needed for a stopgap spending bill Thursday, filing cloture on the motion to proceed to a shell vehicle. 
    • “The Senate’s continuing resolution is expected to last until March, sources familiar with the talks say. But while Johnson has said he is “not ruling out” the need for another continuing resolution, he has not yet said definitively whether or not he would support one. 
    • “And that stopgap measure will be essential to keep the government open, as Senate Appropriations Chair Patty Murray, D-Wash., and House Appropriations Chairwoman Kay Granger, R-Texas, are continuing to negotiate over the final subcommittee allocations, also known as 302(b)s. 
    • “Negotiators will need about a month to wrap up their work after those allocations are finalized, House Appropriations ranking member Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., said Friday. “
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management made some of its best progress at reducing the number of pending retirement applications from federal workers last year, reducing the backlog by 34% in 2023 and breaking multiple recent records in the process.
    • “Long a source of frustration for the governmental HR agency, lawmakers and retirees alike, OPM’s inventory of pending retirement claims has been plagued by delays due to the still largely paper-based nature of federal employment records, staffing issues and other challenges. The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated many of these issues, as the backlog climbed to a high of more than 36,000 pending claims in March 2022.
    • “But OPM moved on multiple fronts last year to improve the process. The agency released its long-awaited IT strategic plan, which includes plans to develop a “digital retirement system,” complete with electronic records and an online retirement application process.
    • “And officials launched a series of short-term fixes aimed at shoring up the current system, including a guide for retirees to follow as they navigate the retirement process, as well as staffing up and coordinating more actively with federal agencies to prepare for the annual wave of new retirement claims that occurs between January and March.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “The Postal Service says its competitive package business is growing, following its busy year-end holiday season.
    • “USPS says it delivered 130 million more packages in the “peak” first quarter of fiscal 2024, a nearly 7% increase, compared to the same period last year.
    • “USPS delivered more than 1.9 billion packages in the first quarter of fiscal 2023, which covers October through the end of December.
    • “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, in a video message to employees, said growing the package business is the key to turning around the Postal Service’s long-term financial problems.”
  • KFF analyzes the Food and Drug Administration’s recent decision to allow Florida to import prescription drugs from Canada.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare, AHIP, among others, expressed opposition to the provision in the proposed 2025 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters Notice, reducing the number of non-standardized plans that an Affordable Care Act plan carrier can offer from four to two.
    • “AHIP is particularly concerned about the impact of non-standardized plan limits on issuers’ ability to offer broad networks for consumers that want access to a variety of providers and specialists, which is often a key factor in plan selection for those with chronic health conditions,” the lobbying group wrote in comments on the proposed rule.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force offers a report on its 2023 accomplishments.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Becker’s Hospital Review provides three updates on the predominant Omicron strain JN.1.
    • “Disease severity: New findings from a study led by researchers at the Ohio State University indicate BA.2.86 and its close relative, JN.1, may be linked to an increase in disease severity. The research focused on mutations in the spike protein of BA.2.86 and found it can infect human cells that line the lower lung, which is a feature linked to severe symptoms. Researchers emphasized additional research is needed to confirm the findings, since the study used pseudoviruses. 
    • “But from our past experience, we know that infectivity in human epithelial cell lines provides very important information,” Shan-Lu Liu, MD, Ph.D., senior study author and virology professor at OSU, said in a news release. “The concern is whether or not this variant, as well as its descendants including JN.1, will have an increased tendency to infect human lung epithelial cells similar to the parental virus that launched the pandemic in 2020.” 
    • “In late December, the WHO classified JN.1 as a “variant of interest” due to its rapid spread. At the time, the agency said the overall risk to public health posed by the strain remains low, since updated vaccines continue to offer protection against severe illness. The CDC published its latest update on JN.1 Jan. 5, stating, “At this time, there is no evidence JN.1 causes more severe disease.” 
  • The Centers for Disease Control points out,
    • “As seasonal flu activity remains elevated nationally, CDC is tracking when, where and what influenza viruses are spreading and their impact on the public’s health. So far this season, the most commonly reported influenza viruses are type A(H1N1) and type B viruses. According to CDC research, this could mean more severe outcomes among people who are hospitalized with flu.”
  • Here’s a link to the CDC’s latest Fluview report.
    • “Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated in most parts of the country.
    • “After several weeks of increases in key flu indicators, a single week of decrease has been noted.  CDC will continue to monitor for a second period of increased influenza activity that often occurs after the winter holidays.
    • “Outpatient respiratory illness has been above baselinenationally since November and is above baseline in all 10 HHS Regions.
    • “The number of weekly flu hospital admissions decreased slightly.”
  • The CDC also announced,
    • “On October 23, 2023, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued Health Alert Network (HAN) Health Advisory 499 to provide guidance for prioritization of nirsevimab given the limited supply. Nirsevimab (Beyfortus, Sanofi and AstraZeneca) is a long-acting monoclonal antibody immunization recommended for preventing RSV-associated lower respiratory tract disease in young children.
    • Given the recent increase in nirsevimab supply and the manufacturers’ plan to release an additional 230,000 doses in January, the CDC advises healthcare providers to return to recommendations put forward by the CDC and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) on the use of nirsevimab in young children. Infants and children recommended to receive nirsevimab should be immunized as quickly as possible. Healthcare providers should not reserve nirsevimab doses for infants born later in the season when RSV circulation and risk for exposure to RSV may be lower. RSV activity remains elevated nationwide and is continuing to increase in many parts of the country, though decreased activity has been observed in the Southeast.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Though prescriptions for antiviral influenza medications have declined somewhat since 2023, perhaps indicating that the United States might be less encumbered by the flu than in recent record-breaking years, healthcare providers still find themselves battling a surge above historic norms, according to data by the Evernorth Research Institute.
    • “Researchers there examined pharmacy claims for more than 32 million people during current and past flu seasons and found an increasing prevalence of antiviral medication prescriptions since Thanksgiving 2023, though that’s tapered off slightly recently. More individuals experience flu symptoms severe enough to send them to physicians’ offices for prescriptions, and most of many of those forced to do so did not get the flu vaccination. Evernorth, a Cigna subsidiary, tries to develop cost-effective delivery systems for pharmacy benefits.
    • “Urvashi Patel, M.D., vice president of the Evernorth Research Institute, told Fierce Healthcare in an email that “since the shift to remote work from the pandemic, many employees who used to get their flu vaccines at the office are no longer able to. This may change as more workers continue to return to the office, but it’s likely a contributor to lower vaccination rates.”
  • The Wall Street Journal shares an employee’s favorable experience with the powerful weight loss drug Mounjaro.
  • Health Day provides the following study notes:
    • “U.S. doctors are prescribing antifungal creams to patients with skin complaints at rates so high they could be contributing to the rise of drug-resistant infections, new research shows.
    • “These are “severe antimicrobial-resistant superficial fungal infections, which have recently been detected in the United States,” noted a team led by Jeremy Gold, a researcher at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “One of the biggest emerging threats: Drug-resistant forms of ringworm (a form of dermatophytosis).”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “UnitedHealth was slammed with medical costs as it closed out 2023. The health insurance behemoth still managed to exceed Wall Street’s financial expectations.
    • “UnitedHealth posted a medical loss ratio of 85% in the fourth quarter — its highest MLR since the COVID-19 pandemic began early 2020.
    • “MLR is a metric of how much payers shell out to cover their members’ medical expenses. Payers tried to shake the effects of higher medical costs all last year as patients who delayed healthcare during the pandemic returned to doctor’s offices.
    • “The bulk of higher costs in the fourth quarter was driven by more seniors using outpatient services, a trend that first appeared in the second quarter of 2023, said UnitedHealth CEO Andrew Witty on a Friday morning call with investors.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review offers an interview with Mayo Health System President “Prathibha Varkey, MBBS, [who] is excited about the future of healthcare,” and an analysis of nurse practitioner pay by specialty.
  • The Washington Post offers an interview with the American Medical Association President Jesse Ehrenfeld, MD.
  • Mercer Consulting offers guidance on network strategies to optimize patient care and save while its sister company, Oliver Wyman, peers into the crystal ball concerning the state of healthcare in 2035.
  • Beckers Payer Issues offers a look at ten updates to the 2024 Medicare Advantage landscape.
  • MedCity News discusses seven JP Morgan Conference news items that you don’t want to miss.
  • BioPharma Dive poses five questions facing the pharmaceutical industry this year. “Many drugmakers hope to compete with Novo and Lilly in obesity, while others seek to win oncology’s next era. Meanwhile, a contentious drug pricing law looms.”
  • Drug Channels shares a guest post titled “Repairing the Patient Journey: How Pharma Can Fix the Obvious–and Not So Obvious–Breaking Points of Nonadherence.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • CVS Health plans to close dozens of pharmacies inside Target stores at a time when pharmacy chains are struggling to grow retail profits.
    • “CVS will close the pharmacies between February and April this year, said a company spokeswoman. The closures are part of CVS’s efforts to pare down its retail footprint “based on our evaluation of changes in population, consumer buying patterns and future health needs,” she said. * * *
    • “CVS has operated pharmacies inside Target stores since late 2015 when it bought the business from the retailer for around $1.9 billion. It has pharmacies in around 1,800 of Target’s more than 1,950 U.S. stores. A Target spokeswoman declined to comment. The latest round of closures account for a small percentage of CVS’s pharmacies at Target stores.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Artificial intelligence was dominating CES 2024 this week. From assistive speech tools to pet wearables to AI-enabled pillows to prevent snoring, the majority of companies exhibiting at CES boasted the use of the technology as part of their products.
    • “Digital health companies at the show also are putting AI to use from Intuition Robotics’ AI-enabled ElliQ care companion robot to hearing eyewear.
    • “Amid all this hype, entrepreneur and investor Mark Cuban believes AI will be transformative for healthcare.
    • “There are two types of companies in the world — those who are great at AI and everyone else and either you know how to use it to your advantage or you’re in trouble,” he said during a digital health panel at CES on Thursday.
    • “He added, “I don’t think it will be dominated by five or six big models. I think there will be millions of models. I think we’ll find every company will have a model, every vertical will have its own model, individuals will have their own models, doctors have their own models, and trying to get to the point where it’s more democratic so that specific verticals will be used within healthcare is going to be an evolution and I don’t think we’ve figured all that out.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds
    • “Generative artificial intelligence can be used to pull social determinants of health data, like housing or employment status, from clinician notes to identify patients who need additional support, according to a new study.
    • “Large language models trained by researchers could identify 93.8% of patients with adverse social determinants of health, while official diagnostic codes include that data in only 2% of cases. 
    • “The finely tuned models were also less likely than OpenAI’s GPT-4 to change their determination when demographic information like race or gender was added. Algorithmic bias is a major concern for AI use in healthcare, amid fears the technology could worsen health inequities.” 

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call brings us up to date on the FY 2024 appropriations discussions on Capitol Hill.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “As part of continuing efforts by the Biden-Harris Administration to help people access comprehensive, high-quality health coverage, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) launched a new, online and user-friendly hub for partners to access critical Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) renewal and transition resources.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, explains 2024 benefit changes for federal employees and annuitants.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “The FDA has issued temporary authorization for the importation of a syphilis drug that’s been in short supply since last April. 
    • “Federal regulators have cleared French drugmaker Laboratoires Delbert to import penicillin G benzathine, Bloomberg reported Jan. 10. A shortage of Pfizer’s version of the drug, Bicillin L-A, is estimated to last through June and is the only treatment for congenital syphilis. 
    • “Last April, the CDC said syphilis rates are at their highest since 1950, with nearly 177,000 cases reported in 2021.” 
  • The Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC) reports
    • “[Canadian] Health Minister Mark Holland says Florida’s plan to import cheaper Canadian pharmaceuticals is a non-starter and the federal government will use its regulatory power to ensure the national drug supply does not face any shortages due to actions by a foreign state.
    • “There is no way we will allow any jurisdiction, be it a state or another foreign jurisdiction, to endanger the Canadian drug supply. That is not an appropriate solution to whatever challenges they may be facing,” Holland said during an official announcement in Nova Scotia of a bilateral health-care deal with the province.
    • “We’re going to do everything in our power to make sure that another country cannot be given the ability to pillage our health system for its own benefit.”
    • “Holland said he will soon travel to Washington, D.C. to make it known to officials there that Canada will not stand idle if Florida or other U.S. states pursue bulk imports that threaten Canadians’ access to medication in any way.”
  • KFF analyzes the Affordable Care Act’s latest open enrollment period.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Cancer is hitting more young people in the U.S. and around the globe, baffling doctors. Diagnosis rates in the U.S. rose in 2019 to 107.8 cases per 100,000 people under 50, up 12.8% from 95.6 in 2000, federal data show. A study in BMJ Oncology last year reported a sharp global rise in cancers in people under 50, with the highest rates in North America, Australia and Western Europe. 
    • “Doctors are racing to figure out what is making them sick, and how to identify young people who are at high risk. They suspect that changes in the way we live—less physical activity, more ultra-processed foods, new toxins—have raised the risk for younger generations.
    • “The patients are getting younger,” said Dr. Andrea Cercek, who co-directs a program for early-onset gastrointestinal cancer patients at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, where Keen was treated. “It’s likely some environmental change, whether it’s something in our food, our medications or something we have not yet identified.” 
  • The National Institutes of Health’s Directors Blog points out “A New Target to Improve the Health and Lives of Childhood Cancer Survivors: Diabetes Prevention.”
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) has updated its adult immunization schedule for 2024 to include recommendations on new vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and meningitis, the mpox (formerly known as monkeypox) vaccine, and the updated COVID-19 vaccines.”
    • The article notes the 2024 changes in this schedule.
    • “In an accompanying editorial, Scott Ratzan, MD, and other members of the Council for Quality Health Communication offered scathing criticism of the CDC’s complex written and visual presentation of the recommendations.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association will lead an effort to improve maternity care in about 600 acute care and pediatric hospitals across the nation, including a push to address racial and ethnic disparities.
    • “Health equity in maternal care will be added to the list of conditions that the insurer’s Blue Distinction Centers focus on, the company said in an announcement. The effectiveness of that care will be measured against industry standards. Blue Distinction Centers comprise hospitals and other providers that the insurer deems deliver high quality care.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Researchers have linked a decade-long decline in the blood lead levels of American Indian adults to long-term cardiovascular health benefits, including reduced blood pressure levels and a reduction in a marker associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and heart failure. The research, supported by the National Institutes of Health, found that adults who had the greatest reductions in blood lead levels saw their systolic blood pressure fall by about 7 mm Hg, an amount comparable to the effects of blood pressure-lowering medication. Lead exposure is known to harm the health of children by damaging the brain and nervous system and slowing growth and development. It has also been associated with increased risks for heart disease in adults. The findings published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
    • “This is a huge win for public health, especially since many American Indians can face higher risks for elevated lead levels,” said Anne E. Nigra, Ph.D., the senior study author and an assistant professor of environmental health sciences at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York City. “Compared to the general U.S. population, American Indian communities experience both a higher burden of cardiovascular disease and elevated metal exposure. We saw that even small decreases in a person’s blood lead levels can have meaningful health outcomes.”
  • Medscape tells us,
    • “In addition to better-known risk factors such as diabetes, stroke, heart disease, and depression, findings of a large study suggested vitamin D deficiency, elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) levels and social isolation increase the risk for young-onset dementia (YOD).”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News, Fierce Healthcare, and Precision Medicine Online offer summaries of the fourth and final day of the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, which was held in San Francisco.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Novartis has backed away from its pursuit of Cytokinetics putting a damper on the prospects of a deal for the promising heart-drug developer. 
    • “The Swiss drug giant had been closing in on a purchase of South San Francisco-based Cytokinetics, with an agreement expected as soon as this week, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. But Novartis, which had been pursuing the biotech for several months, backed away sometime in the past day or two, according to the people.” 
  • The Segal Company offers a helpful white paper on key factors impacting healthcare costs. trends.
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “The Cigna Group is getting ready to launch a new program that offers employers and health plan sponsors a way to manage obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease using weight loss drugs, or GLP-1s.
    • EncircleRx is set to launch in the first quarter of 2024 under Evernorth, Cigna’s health services arm. On the company’s website, it describes the program as “the first-ever GLP-1 financial guarantee from a PBM.”
    • “The program works to target the individuals who are at the highest risk, would have the most benefit from meaningful changes from access to the GLP-1, and supports it with the right ongoing clinical and behavioral support,” Eric Palmer, CEO of Evernorth, told investors at the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference Jan. 9. “[The program] makes sure that an individual is prepared to work through all of the effects of going through this kind of life-changing set of therapies and is also set up with the right value-based reimbursement as well.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • Billing for patient messages sent to providers has risen in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a study published in JAMA. 
    • “Charging for e-visits, or asynchronous messages that require medical decision making and take at least five minutes of clinician time over the course of a week, spiked at the beginning of the pandemic as health systems shifted to virtual care. But billing fell after the early pandemic peak before beginning to steadily increase again in mid-2021. 
    • “More than 470 healthcare organizations billed at least 50 e-visits in the third quarter of 2022, an increase of nearly 40% compared with the same period in the previous year. The upturn suggests organizations now see e-visits as a long-term source of potential revenue, researchers said.”