Friday Factoids

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington DC,

  • Govexec informs us,
    • “According to the Biden administration’s quarterly update of its progress in fulfilling the President’s Management Agenda, released last month, the White House is keeping pace with its stated goals of strengthening the federal workforce and modernizing customer experience. 
    • “The latest Performance.gov post touts 5,800 new hires targeted for roles created by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and promises eight new pooled hiring efforts to support multi-agency hiring in fiscal 2024, amid other milestones situated across multiple strategy goals. 
    • “Likewise, the goal of making it easier for the public to interact with the federal government’s life experience services is progressing with the stand-up of several pilot programs, and its High Impact Service Providers are aligning operations and workforce capacity to eventually begin reporting customer feedback data.” 
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “For the first time, the Food and Drug Administration has authorized a U.S. state to import prescription drugs from Canada, granting Florida preliminary clearance to bulk purchase medicines from wholesalers there.
    • “The decision is a major policy shift for the agency, which has long resisted drug importation efforts on grounds that it couldn’t ensure the safety and supply of medicines shipped from abroad. Supporters have argued that importing drugs from Canada, where medicines cost far less than in the U.S., could help rein in pharmaceutical costs. * * *
    • “The pharmaceutical industry, which has vehemently opposed importation plans, may also sue to block Florida’s plan.
    • “We are deeply concerned with the FDA’s reckless decision to approve Florida’s state importation plan,” a spokesperson for the industry lobby PhRMA said in an email. “PhRMA is considering all options for preventing this policy from harming patients.”
  • Note the FEHBlog is ambivalent about this decision.
  • The Federal Times discusses a contract protest related delay in implementing new TRICARE contracts.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Covid is surging again, four years after the pandemic began, as a new virus subvariant becomes dominant in the U.S. and as people gather indoors to escape cold weather.
    • “Rising wastewater virus levels and hospitalizations underscore the latest winter Covid surge. One driver is JN.1, the latest offshoot of the virus to take over in the U.S. and an Omicron subvariant. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday estimated that JN.1 represents roughly 62% of cases nationwide.
    • “The good news is measures of severe illness—hospitalizations and deaths—remain below last winter’s highs and far lower than the pandemic’s peaks. But the virus remains dangerous for some and a major nuisance for many as people return to work and school after holiday breaks.
    • “The world has seen a steady cycle of new Omicron subvariants ever since that offshoot rapidly took over more than two years ago. When new versions become dominant, it indicates that they have some advantage, whether through their ability to evade immune defenses or easily spread from person to person.”
  • The FEHBlog credits Omicron for being an upper respiratory infection, which is much less dangerous than the initial waves of Alpha and Delta Covid, which were lower respiratory infections.
  • The CDC’s FluView notes,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity is elevated and continues to increase in most parts of the country.
    • “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 continues to increase.
    • “During Week 52, of the 651 viruses reported by public health laboratories, 581 (89.2%) were influenza A and 70 (10.8%) were influenza B. Of the 342 influenza A viruses subtyped during Week 52, 300 (87.7%) were influenza A(H1N1) and 42 (12.3%) were A(H3N2).”
  • Behavioral Health Business discusses
    • “How Fentanyl has changed Opioid Use Disorder Treatment,”
  • and
    • “Top behavioral health trends for 2024.”
  • The American Medical Association offers top health tips obesity medicine physicians want you to know.
  • The National Institutes of Health Director announced in her blog,
    • “Nearly 35 million people in communities across the U.S. have type 2 diabetes (T2D), putting them at increased risk for a wide range of serious health complications, including vision loss, kidney failure, heart disease, stroke, and premature death.1 While we know a lot about the lifestyle and genetic factors that influence diabetes risk and steps that can help prevent or control it, there’s still a lot to learn about the precise early events in the body that drive this disease.
    • “When you have T2D, the insulin-producing beta cells in your pancreas don’t release insulin in the way that they should. As a result, blood sugar doesn’t enter your cells, and its levels in the bloodstream go up. What’s less clear is exactly what happens to cause beta cells and the cell clusters where they’re found (called islets) to malfunction in the first place. However, I’m encouraged by some new NIH-supported research in Nature that used various large datasets to identify key signatures of islet dysfunction in people with T2D.”
  • The NIH further announced,
    • “Semaglutide, a highly popular medication approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat obesity and manage type 2 diabetes, was associated with a 49% to 73% lower risk of first-time or recurring suicidal ideations compared to other medications for controlling obesity and type 2 diabetes that work via different mechanisms. These findings provide evidence that semaglutide – which helps regulate appetite and insulin levels by targeting glucagon-like peptide 1 receptors (GLP1R) in the body – does not appear to increase the risk of suicidal ideation, contrary to the claims of some anecdotal reports. Published today in Nature Medicine and paired with a related Research Briefing(link is external)the study was co-led by scientists at Case Western Reserve University and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), National Institutes of Health.”
  • Per the American Medical Association,
    • “The AP (1/4, Neergaard) reports, “Seizures during sleep are a potential cause of at least some cases of sudden unexplained death in childhood, or SUDC, researchers at NYU Langone Health reported Thursday after analyzing home monitoring video that captured the deaths of seven sleeping toddlers.” The study “offers the first direct evidence of a seizure link,” although “scientists also have found that a history of fever-related seizures was about 10 times more likely among the children who died suddenly than among youngsters the same age.” The findings were published in the journal Neurology.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The cost of treating a COVID-19 hospital patient in the hospital rose by 26% over the first two years of the pandemic, more than five times the rate of medical inflation during that time, according to a newly published analysis of 1.3 million admissions.
    • “On average and after adjustments, direct treatment costs for a COVID-19 hospital admission rose from $10,394 in March 2020 to $13,072 in March 2022, a gain that researchers said landed alongside increased use of breathing assistance machines.
    • “Such technologies proved to be costly; stays in which a COVID-19 patient required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), for instance, averaged $36,484 and increased by 35% over the course of the study period, they wrote in JAMA Network Open.
  • Forbes reports,
    • “Health insurance giant Elevance Health said it has agreed to acquire Paragon Healthcare, Inc., a provider of infusion services to patients.
    • “Elevance said Paragon provides infusion services to patients through its “omnichannel model of ambulatory infusion centers, home infusion pharmacies, and other specialty pharmacy services.” Financial terms of the deal for privately held Plano, Texas-based Paragon were not disclosed.
    • “It’s the latest effort by Elevance Health to bolster its specialty pharmacy business and pursue its strategy to treat the whole health of the person. Last year, Elevance Health, which operates Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plans in 14 states, closed on its acquisition of BioPlus, a specialty pharmacy.”
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Tom Cowhey, a financial executive at CVS who stepped into the interim CFO role late last year, has been permanently named to the post, the company announced on Friday.
    • “In October, Cowhey replaced Shawn Guertin, who served as CFO and president of health services. Guertin, who has been on a leave of absence due to family health reasons, will now officially leave CVS later this year, the company said. 
    • “Cowhey joined CVS in early 2022 after previously serving as CFO of Surgery Partners. Before that, he worked at Aetna in strategy and finance positions, before the health insurer was acquired by CVS.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know,
    • “Significant changes in the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT®) code set for immunizations reflect the changing nature of how COVID-19 is being addressed as actions transition from a public health emergency response to combatting emerging variants much like the flu.
    • “One significant change involves the consolidation of more than 50 previous codes to streamline reporting of immunizations for COVID-19. A new vaccine-administration code, 90480, was approved for reporting the administration of any COVID-19 vaccine for any patient. This replaces all previously approved, product-specific vaccine-administration codes. * * *
    • “Additionally, the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC), an advisory group of the FDA, recommended that the COVID-19 vaccine for the 2023–2024 vaccination season be a monovalent vaccine that contains the XBB.1.5 strain, and noted that a number of COVID-19 vaccine products will no longer be recommended for use. The streamlined structure brings greater alignment between CPT and the current COVID-19 vaccine reporting environment.
    • “The new coding system will allow for new vaccines for new variants whenever they come up without having to do a new code,” said Samuel “Le” Church, MD, MPH, a member of the CPT Editorial Panel and vice-chair of its Immunization Coding Caucus.”
  • Mercer Consulting offers seven breakthrough benefit strategies to explore this year.

Midweek Update

Thanks to ACK15 for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC

  • Govexec informs us,
    • “A new website has made available a database of anyone serving in a top-ranking position in the federal government, offering new insight that advocates said will boost transparency and better prepare new administrations to transition into power.  
    • “The Office of Personnel Management launched the site to comply with the Periodically Listing Updates to Management (PLUM) Act, which so far includes the names, roles and pay levels of more than 8,000 executives in government.
    • “OPM said that figure will grow to 10,000 as it ensures compliance and updates the list over the coming months. It will include senior leaders at every federal agency, including all 4,000 political appointees, Senior Executive Service members and other top or non-competitively appointed officials. “
  • The Department of Health and Human Services tells us,
    • On Wednesday, January 3, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra met virtually with long-term care facility (LTCF) leaders to express concerns about low vaccination rates among nursing home residents and remind industry leaders of their obligations to offer the COVID-19 vaccine to residents and staff.
    • Today’s conversation was a follow-up call from a previous HHS virtual meeting on December 21 with LTCF leaders to discuss the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) December 2023 report finding that just 33% of long-term care facility residents were up to date with their COVID-19 vaccinations. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) requires all nursing homes to offer COVID-19 vaccines to residents and staff and educate them on their benefits.
  • FedWeek notes,
    • “Fraud against the federal retirement program is continuing, an inspector general report has said, with lack of reporting to OPM on the deaths of beneficiaries the most common means.
    • “These unreported deaths may allow payments to continue because of program vulnerabilities or intentional fraud on the part of bad actors. Sometimes, CSRS or FERS improper payments continue for years and cost tens of thousands of dollars before discovery,” says the IG’s latest summary of its investigative activities.”
  • FEHBlog note — The government needs a better system to keep track of deaths.

From the U.S. public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The holidays have come and gone, and once again Americans are riding a tide of respiratory ailments, including Covid. But so far, this winter’s Covid uptick seems less deadly than last year’s, and much less so than in 2022, when the Omicron surge ground the nation to a halt.
    • “We’re not seeing the signs that would make me think that we’re heading into another severe wave,” said Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “So far, we’re in relatively good shape.”
    • “Still, * * * just a fraction of the most vulnerable people have received the latest Covid shots, she noted.
    • “It’s not too late,” Dr. Rivers added. “We have not even reached peak yet for Covid, and once you reach peak, you still have to get down the other side.” That leaves plenty of time for the vaccine to provide some protection.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • “COVID-19 and flu admissions continue to climb across the country, with the majority of states now reporting high levels of respiratory virus activity. 
    • “Overall, 31 states reported high levels of respiratory virus activity for the week ending Dec. 23. Included in this total are a growing number of states seeing “very high” activity levels: Alabama, California, Colorado, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and New York City. Two weeks ago, just five states reported very high levels.” 
  • Medscape notes
    • “While COVID has now claimed more than 1 million lives in the United States alone, these aren’t the only fatalities caused at least in part by the virus. A small but growing number of Americans are surviving acute infections only to succumb months later to the lingering health problems caused by long COVID.
    • “Much of the attention on long COVID has centered on the sometimes debilitating symptoms that strike people with the condition, with no formal diagnostic tests or standard treatments available, and the effect it has on quality of life. But new figures from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that long COVID can also be deadly.
    • “More than 5000 Americans have died from long COVID since the start of the pandemic, according to new estimates from the CDC.”
  • STAT News alerts us,
    • “One in three heart patients live with anxiety, depression, and ongoing stress, according to a 2023 meta-analysis of over 100 studies. But even in the age of 24/7 monitoring via implantable loop recorders and wearables, many patients are without professional support for the mental and emotional social aspects of coping with heart disease.
    • “The technology of cardiology is locked down. People get that. What’s not locked down is the patient experience,” said Sam Sears, professor of health psychology at East Carolina University, and the author of over 200 research studies on psychological interventions for heart health. “The human factors in all this just don’t get addressed as a standard of care.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Cigna is in advanced talks to sell its Medicare business in an about-face for the health-insurance giant, which had been expanding its footprint in the fast-growing sector. 
    • “Cigna, which has been running an auction for the business, known as Medicare Advantage, is now in exclusive talks to sell it to Health Care Service Corp. for between $3 billion and $4 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. 
    • “Should there be a deal, it would mark a major expansion for HCSC, a big nonprofit health insurer that is the parent of Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in five states including Texas and Illinois. HCSC has long been a powerful player in its home states, but the deal would give it a significant Medicare business and far broader reach. Cigna is offering Medicare plans in 29 states for 2024.
  • Drug Channels offers its annual “reality check on U.S. drug pricing.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • Solera Health, a chronic condition management platform for payers and employers, is expanding its platform to include virtual specialty care facilitated by several new clinical partners.
    • “Solera’s HALO Platform is an omni-condition management tool that aims to address high-cost chronic conditions, mostly serving commercial populations. The latest expansion into virtual specialty care furthers the company’s value-based care mission by widening access to specialist docs in a low-cost setting, executives told Fierce Healthcare.
    • “The new capabilities leverage partnerships with two new partners, 9am.health and Vori Health, as well as an existing partner, Oshi Health.
    • “Each partner specializes in addressing high-cost conditions, from obesity and diabetes to musculoskeletal pain to GI conditions. They offer a health coach, nutritionist, peer support and other support services while also coordinating with a patient’s primary or in-person care doc.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence looks at employer-sponsored plan trends for 2024.

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The U.S. Census Bureau informs us,
    • “[T]he U.S. population [was projected to be] 335,893,238 on New Year’s Day, an annual increase of 1,759,535 or 0.53%.
    • “In January 2024, the United States is expected to experience a birth every 9.0 seconds and one death every 9.5 seconds. Meanwhile, net international migration is expected to add one person to the U.S. population every 28.3 seconds. The combination of births, deaths and net international migration increases the U.S. population by one person every 24.2 seconds.
    • “The projected world population on Jan. 1, 2024, is 8,019,876,189, up 75,162,541 (0.95%) from New Year’s Day 2023. During January 2024, 4.3 births and 2.0 deaths are expected worldwide every second.”
  • The Internal Revenue Service released the Employers’ Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits for use in 2024.
  • Federal News Network discusses four ways federal pay practices have changed for 2024.
  • The Food and Drug Administration accounts for its recent actions.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Medscape explains the other health conditions, besides diabetes and obesity, that GLP-1 drugs might treat. It’s an impressive list.
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Reducing or eliminating alcohol consumption reduces the risk of developing oral cavity and esophagus cancers, according to a special report from the International Agency for Research on Cancer. But more data are needed to conclude whether the same is true for several other cancer types, including colorectal, breast, and liver cancer.
    • “Even so, it is likely that reducing or ceasing to drink alcohol will lessen the risk of these cancers, said Farhad Islami, a cancer epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society and an author of the report. “Given that many of these cancers have similar mechanistic pathways, we think we will see a similar association with reduction or cessation,” he said. “That’s why we recommend more studies, so we can have stronger evidence.”
  • BioPharma Dive points out ten clinical trials that are worth watching in the first half of 2024.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “BJC HealthCare and Saint Luke’s Health System closed their merger on Monday, about seven months after the Missouri-based systems announced plans to combine.The combined organization will operate under the BJC HealthCare brand in its eastern region, serving St. Louis and southern Illinois. The Kansas City region will retain the Saint Luke’s brand name. The new system has a combined workforce of 44,000 employees, according to a Tuesday announcement.”
  • MedTech Dive notes,
    • “Roche reached an agreement to acquire LumiraDx’s point-of-care testing technology, the companies announced on Dec. 29.
    • “Roche will pay $295 million upfront and an additional amount up to $55 million to fund Lumira’s point-of-care technology platform business until the acquisition closes. 
    • “The acquisition comes as Lumira faces a potential delisting amid declining revenue.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence identifies trends in health insurer strategies for 2024. “In 2024, payer strategies will include improving health equity partnerships, differentiating their Medicare Advantage plans, and offering care navigation.”
  • Healthcare IT News offers an interview with “[t]wo investment bankers discuss the players in the telehealth sector, the main financial backers, the dynamics between venture capital and private equity, and more.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Feeling blue? Your employer might have an AI app for that, The Wall Street Journal reported Dec. 27. 
    • “Workplaces increasingly are offering employees access to digital mental health tools, including AI chatbots meant to mimic therapists and wellness apps that diagnose mental health conditions, the report said. Over the summer, a survey of 457 U.S. companies conducted by professional services company WTW found that about one-third offer a “digital therapeutic” for mental health support. Another 15% were considering adding one by 2025. 
    • “The capabilities and goals of these services vary. Amazon gives employees free access to the app Twill, which uses AI to track users’ moods and create “personalized mental-health plan(s).” A construction workers’ union in Ohio will begin offering access to Wysa, a self-described “emotionally intelligent” AI chatbot that encourages users to “vent or just talk through negative thoughts and emotions” and “let it help you cope with pandemic anxiety and lockdowns.” 

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network informs us
    • “As part of a big push from the Biden administration to conduct a governmentwide AI hiring surge, the Office of Personnel Management is trying to make it easier for agencies to recruit experts in the field.
    • “OPM has authorized direct hire authority for a handful of governmentwide occupations — IT specialist, computer scientist, computer engineer, and management and program analyst — according to a memo the agency published Friday.
    • “This authorization will assist agency efforts to increase AI capabilities in the federal government,” OPM said in the memo.”
  • The Washington Post explores efforts to improve access to primary care in the US.
    • “Primary care is one of the few interventions that has been shown to improve health outcomes,” said Shantanu Nundy, a primary care physician who works for a virtual care company and at a federally qualified health center. The current system devalues routine preventive care in favor of expensive treatments, he said, and “Americans are living poorer-quality and shorter lives as a result.” * * *
    • “In September, Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) announced a $26 billion legislative bill aimed at expanding primary care and reducing staffing shortages. The impact of that bill is likely to be limited, partly because it is focused almost exclusively on federally qualified health centers, which cater to less than 10 percent of the population, while the problems with primary care are far more extensive.
    • “The HHS initiative also does not change an essential flaw in the current financial structure, which relies on a physician visit to initiate the billing process. If a community health worker first knocks on somebody’s door, there is no way to reimburse that visit. Those problems became clearer during and after the pandemic, which put a spotlight on how few people have a lasting relationship with a primary care doctor. The challenge is to figure out ways to pay for entry-level services and care providers beyond the family doctor.
    • “Given the shortages and trust issues, it makes much more sense for people to be allowed to see those other health professionals first,” Nundy said. “The whole system bottlenecks on the physician.”
    • FEHBlog note: So PCP gatekeepers are now bottlenecks.

From the public health front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control’s Fluview tells us,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity is elevated and continues to increase in most parts of the country.
    • “Outpatient respiratory illness is above baselinenationally for the eighth consecutive week and is above baseline in all 10 HHS Regions.
    • “The number of weekly flu hospital admissions continues to increase.
    • “During Week 51, of the 875 viruses reported by public health laboratories, 748 (85.5%) were influenza A and 127 (14.5%) were influenza B. Of the 391 influenza A viruses subtyped during Week 51, 309 (79.0%) were influenza A(H1N1) and 82 (21.0%) were A(H3N2).”
  • Medscape points out,
    • “The COVID-10 pandemic may no longer be a global public health emergency, but millions continue to struggle with the aftermath: Long COVID. New research and clinical anecdotes suggest that certain individuals are more likely to be afflicted by the condition, nearly 4 years after the virus emerged. 
    • “People with a history of allergies, anxiety or depression, arthritis, and autoimmune diseases and women are among those who appear more vulnerable to developing long COVID, said doctors who specialize in treating the condition.”
  • STAT News reports on three addiction stories to watch next year:
    • Will methadone access expand?
    • Will there be a return to police-first drug policy?
    • Will telehealth be given a role in recovery?
  • The American Medical Association tells us what doctors wish their patients knew about their family health history.

From our U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Though often associated with gaming, virtual reality (VR) is a technology rapidly evolving in healthcare. From pain management to enabling more efficient surgeries to gamifying physical therapy, VR use cases continue to proliferate. 
    • “It especially holds promise in revolutionizing the behavioral health space, with substantial research supporting its effectiveness. VR is being used to treat a number of conditions, including anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance use disorders and autism.
    • “VR therapy is not a new concept. It was formally studied more than two decades ago, though it wasn’t until the last few years that the field became prominent, with new companies moving into the space. And as technology has improved and gotten more intuitive to use, it has also become less expensive. And in 2022, the American Medical Association approvedthe first-ever CPT code for VR-mediated therapy. 
    • “There is no question mark in my view about the clinical validity and clinical value the technology can bring to the market,” Eran Orr, CEO at XRHealth, told Fierce Healthcare, pointing out there are more than 15,000 published papers on VR’s efficacy across modalities.
    • “Not only can VR expand a provider’s arsenal of treatment tools, Orr said, but it also offers a wealth of insights on engagement, biofeedback, wellness and other data. “VR is the technology for mental health,” Orr said.
    • “Despite its potential, the technology still faces hurdles to adoption, like reimbursement, logistical challenges and regulatory pressures.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review shares the top ten trending Google health searches of 2023 with us.

Tuesday Tidbits

From Washington, DC

  • Federal News Network informs us
    • “Agencies don’t have to worry about a 1% sequestration on discretionary funds kicking in for a few more months.
    • “The Office of Management and Budget says the requirement to reduce discretionary spending under the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA), signed into law in June, wouldn’t take effect until “after full year appropriations are enacted, or April 30, whichever comes first.”
    • “OMB will take no action on Jan. 1, 2024, and no additional action should be taken by agencies to reduce impacted discretionary funding, even though a short-term continuing resolution will be in effect at that time,” OMB wrote in frequently asked questions on 2024 discretionary spending sent to agencies on Dec. 22. “If any discretionary appropriation account remains on a short-term CR past April 30, OMB is required to issue a final sequestration report that compares the annualized appropriation levels provided by all discretionary appropriations bills under current law as of April 30 against the [FRA’s] section 102 interim spending limits. A breach of the section 102 spending limits would require OMB to order a sequestration to bring the current law discretionary appropriations in line with those interim spending limits.”
  • Govexec identifies the federal agencies with the greatest increases and decreases in employee morale in 2023 according to OPM’s 2023 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey.
  • Fedweek offers a summary of OPM’s current regulatory activities.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Immune-boosting drugs have revolutionized cancer care. Now doctors are experimenting with cutting them off.  
    • “Immunotherapies unleash the immune system on tumors. They have extended the lives of people with melanoma, lung and bladder cancers. They have also been a boon for drugmakers, generating global sales of $44 billion in 2022, according to Leerink Partners analysts. 
    • “But some patients are getting more of the drugs than they need, exposing them to side effects and costs they could avoid without risking their cancer recurring. Preliminary research suggests taking the drugs at a lower dose or for a shorter period could be sufficient, but drugmakers haven’t funded the studies needed to confirm the findings. 
    • “We don’t know when to stop,” said Dr. Jedd Wolchok, an oncologist focused on melanoma at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York. * * *
    • “Recalibrating care toward less treatment is a fraught undertaking. Drug companies won’t fund studies exploring whether patients can do as well with less of their products, doctors said. Some doctors and patients worry about pulling back before exhausting their best chance to beat the disease.
    • “There was this dogma that more is better,” said Dr. Mark Ratain, an oncologist at the University of Chicago. 
    • “He is trying to recruit cancer patients to study whether they could do as well with less of Merck’s Keytruda or Bristol-Myers Squibb’s Opdivo, so-called immune checkpoint inhibitors. After three years, he has found just 60 of the 260 patients he wants, and most medical centers have declined to join the trial. “It was going to be difficult to convince people,” he said.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues interviews Kofi Essel, MD, Elevance Health’s first food as medicine program director. Dr Essel “sat down with Becker’s to discuss how Elevance is building a food as medicine strategy intended to eventually touch and improve the lives of its more than 47 million members nationwide.” Check it out.
  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “The 988 lifeline routes callers to a network of more than 200 state and local call centers that are financially supported by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), as well as state and local governments. In its first year, according to a July press release from SAMHSA, the lifeline answered nearly 5 million calls, texts, and chats from people looking for help with suicide, mental health, and substance use-related crises; that’s 2 million more contacts than the lifeline received in the previous 12 months, when it was a 10-digit phone number. (That 10-digit number — 800-273-8255 — is still in operation.)
    • “So far, 1.5 years in, things seem to be going well overall, said Michele Gilbert, MPH, senior policy analyst at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington, D.C. “Luckily, the implementation of 988 has seen some real success,” Gilbert said in a phone interview. “A lot of the operations have gone relatively smoothly.”
    • “Debbie Plotnick, MSS, executive vice president for state and federal advocacy for Mental Health America, agreed. “We have seen tremendous increases in the number of people who call, and even more importantly, what has improved dramatically is the wait time to speak to an actual human being,” she told MedPage Today. “Going back a couple of years, it could have been up to, like, 2 minutes, and now it’s within 30 or 40 seconds that you are actually connected to a live human being.”
    • “That decrease in wait time may not sound like a lot, but it’s actually “huge,” Plotnick said. “If you’re at the point where you’re going to hurt yourself and you don’t know if anybody in the world cares, 2 minutes can really feel like an eternity. But now calls are being answered very quickly.” She also praised the lifeline’s addition of text and chat options, as well as special lines for veterans, for Spanish speakers, and for LGBTQ+ callers.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “The median hospital operating margin rose to 2% in November after holding steady at 1.6% in September and October, but escalating expenses — including rising drug costs — remain a concern as 2023 draws to a close, according to a Dec. 21 report from Syntellis Performance Solutions, which includes data from more than 1,300 hospitals.
    • “U.S. hospitals began the year with a median operating margin of -0.9%, but that figure has steadily increased and looks set to end the year at a healthier level around the 2% mark in December. November was the ninth consecutive month of positive operating margins. 
    • “While the median hospital margin remains far below pre-pandemic levels, it has shown significant progress in recent months as hospitals continue their recovery after more than a year of negative results. 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Drug company Bristol-Myers Squibb struck a $4.1 billion deal to buy  RayzeBio in a bet on a re-emerging cancer drug technology.
    • “RayzeBio develops radiopharmaceutical drugs, which use targeted forms of radiation that are delivered directly to cancer cells. Earlier products using the technology struggled commercially, but further research led to another wave of promising therapies that can attack tumors while limiting damage to surrounding healthy cells.  * * *
    • “Bristol said the RayzeBio deal is slated to close in the first half of 2024.”
  • and
    • AstraZeneca has agreed to buy Gracell Biotechnologies for a transaction value of $1.2 billion, as part of the former’s efforts to grow its cell therapies business.
    • The acquisition will help grow AstraZeneca’s pipeline of cell therapies for potential treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases.
    • The transaction is expected to close in the first quarter of next year, AstraZeneca said. 

Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “Senate negotiators failed Sunday to reach a deal on a framework for border-security measures that Republicans have demanded as a condition of passing new funding for Ukraine, further slimming the chances of any vote before Christmas.”Senate negotiators failed Sunday to reach a deal on a framework for border-security measures that Republicans have demanded as a condition of passing new funding for Ukraine, further slimming the chances of any vote before Christmas.
    • “The lack of a breakthrough by the self-imposed weekend deadline underscored the difficulties facing the Senate talks, even after the Biden administration signaled it was prepared to make significant concessions on immigration policy. Many Republicans not involved in the discussions have expressed skepticism in recent days about any deal, while progressive Democrats have raised concerns that the White House was bowing to conservative demands.
    • “We’ve got lots of issues to work through, in which there are many different ways to try and address and solve problems,” Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I., Ariz.) told reporters Sunday evening. “We have to choose the one that works the best and that allows us to earn the votes of both houses [of Congress] and both parties,” she said.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “Federal employees must proactively take steps to make their work travel more sustainable under new guidance from the Biden administration, which the White House said would save taxpayer money and help take on the climate change crisis. 
    • “Workers on official business will have to prioritize taking public transit, renting electric vehicles or even riding bikes under a new memorandum from the Office of Management and Budget and a General Services Administration bulletin that updated the Federal Travel Regulation. Agencies should also consider not sending employees on business trips at all, with GSA noting, “In every case, the trip not taken is the least expensive and most sustainable.” 

From the public health front,

  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP tells us,
    • Levels of three main respiratory viruses—SARS-CoV-2, flu, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)—remain elevated or are rising, but so far hospital occupancy remains stable, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today [December 15] in its latest data updates.
    • Though levels this year are tracking behind last year at the same time, the CDC—expecting further impact from the viruses—yesterday sent an alert to health providers that underscored an urgent need to vaccinate more people against the three diseases to reduce severity and the potential impact on healthcare systems.
    • In a respiratory virus snapshot today, the CDC said COVID-19 indicators remain elevated and are increasing in some regions, such as the Midwest. The CDC said it expects the proportion of JN.1 viruses, part of the BA.2.86 family, to continue to increase. Scientists and CDC officials are closely watching JN.1, because of mounting evidence of its immune-evasive potential.
    • Meanwhile, flu activity is increasing in most parts of the country. And though RSV activity declined a bit in southeastern states, levels remain high nationally, with trends still rising in other parts of the country as hospitalizations continue to increase in older adults and young children.
  • NPR Shots discusses the use of CPR.
    • “After studying CPR for sixty years, physicians have a sense of which factors tend to be associated with survival. The first is age. I wrote before that older patients do worse with CPR, on average. But that relationship cuts both ways; younger patients sometimes do much better. In 2017, researchers studying a group of about 2,000 patients in Austria found that survival after cardiac arrest at thirty days was around 25% for patients under age 65, but only 4% for patients over 65. A study conducted in Toronto of patients aged 2 to 45 with cardiac arrest found a survival rate of 21%, while average survival for all age groups from cardiac arrest tends to be about 10%.
    • “Another factor is chronic illness. In 2014, researchers examined the effects of diseases like heart failure, cancer, cirrhosis, and kidney failure on the odds of survival in patients that received CPR. Patients with chronic illnesses were significantly less likely to survive to hospital discharge than those without them. The more severe the illness, the less likely was survival. And among the survivors, patients with a chronic illness tended to live just a few more months, while healthier patients often lived for several years. * * *
    • “When you’re young, it might make sense to choose everything, CPR and all. As you age, if you value life above all else, then perhaps you may still opt for CPR, defibrillation, intubation, and everything else a hospital can do when your heart stops, regardless of the odds of futility, or even harm. 
    • “The harm can be considerable. As I wrote in May, CPR can cause bleeding in the lungs, lacerations to the liver, and fractured ribs or sternum. Many survivors of CPR sustain damage to their brains, and may never be quite the same again. All of these outcomes become more likely with age, frailty, or chronic illness – and the likely harm of CPR may begin to outweigh its potential benefit. 
    • “If instead you hope for a gentler, quieter death at the end of your life, with minimal medical interventions, then CPR might not be for you.”
  • The article includes a picture of a person who has no noCPR tattooed on their chest.
  • In the wake of the autopsy results on actor Matthew Perry, Fortune Well discusses ketamine.
    • “What is ketamine?
      • “Ketamine is an anesthetic used by medical providers and veterinarians with some hallucinogenic effects, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. A dissociative drug similar to psychedelics like nitrous oxide, it makes users feel detached from their pain, as well as their environment, distorting perception of sight and sound.
    • “What is ketamine approved to treat?
      • “It’s been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, in low doses, for use as a short-acting anesthetic in humans and animals, and as a nasal spray (esketamine) for treatment-resistant depression in conjunction with another oral antidepressant, according to the DEA. It’s a fast-acting antidepressant, used to bridge the gap while waiting for SSRIs to kick in, which can take weeks.
    • “Can ketamine be used for depression?
      • “Ketamine is only FDA approved for use as a nasal spray in treatment-resistant depression. But it’s increasingly used “off label” for treating depression, suicidal ideation, and chronic pain, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine. An increasing number of clinics offer infusions for the treatment of depressions. Patients are monitored during and after the infusion.
    • “Is it possible to abuse ketamine?
      • “It can be used illegally to get high—via an injectable, liquid mixed with other liquids, or a powder to be snorted, mixed in drinks, or smoked. On the street it’s sometimes known by the names Cat Tranquilizer, Cat Valium, Jet K, Kit Kat, Purple, Special K, Special La Coke, Super Acid, Super K, Horse Trank, and Vitamin K. An overdose can lead to loss of consciousness and dangerously slowed breathing, according to the DEA. * * *
    • “What are signs of a ketamine overdose?

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “The House [of Representatives] voted Thursday to clear the fiscal 2024 National Defense Authorization Act and send it to President Joe Biden for his signature.
    • “The conference report was considered under suspension of the rules, which requires a two-thirds majority. The bipartisan package easily cleared that threshold on a 310-118 vote. * * *
    • “The conference report is notable for authorizing a 5.2 percent pay raise for all military personnel, the biggest in two decades, as well as an increase in troops’ basic allowance for housing payments.”
  • Govexec adds that “Under a provision of the fiscal 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, federal agencies would be required to incorporate veterans’ military service when determining eligibility for paid leave.”
  • Back to Roll Call,
    • “The Senate planned to delay its holiday recess and stay in session next week as lawmakers signaled they could be close to a bipartisan border security deal that would clear a path for aid to Ukraine and Israel.
    • “The change in schedule came after several days of intense negotiations among senators of both parties and White House staff who were struggling to reach a deal on immigration policies designed to curb the flow of migrants at the southern border. Republicans have insisted on tougher border security as their price for additional Ukraine aid, part of a broader $110.5 billion supplemental funding package.
    • “We can get this done before we leave,” said Connecticut Sen. Christopher S. Murphy, the lead negotiator for Senate Democrats, after a Thursday morning negotiating session. “I just think if . . . the border is an emergency, if Ukraine is an emergency, then let’s act like it.” ***
    • “Even if the Senate can agree to a package combining border security with military aid to Ukraine and Israel, the measure is unlikely to become law this month. The House recessed for the year Thursday and Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., appeared unlikely to call the chamber back into session before January.”
  • MedPage Today reviews several drug pricing developments that the Biden Administration announced this morning.
  • What’s more,
    • “HHS released a new data strategy to enhance data capabilities and accelerate progress on cancer moonshot goals,”
  • and
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration announced voluntary commitments from leading healthcare companies to harness the potential and manage the risks posed by AI.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management on Wednesday urged supervisors at federal agencies to take a more active role in managing the performance of new federal employees, including removing those who perform poorly and improving engagement to ensure they have the tools to succeed.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control issued a health alert.
    • “to alert healthcare providers to low vaccination rates against influenza, COVID-19, and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus). Low vaccination rates, coupled with ongoing increases in national and international respiratory disease activity caused by multiple pathogens, including influenza viruses, SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19), and RSV, could lead to more severe disease and increased healthcare capacity strain in the coming weeks. In addition, a recent increase in cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) following SARS-CoV-2 infection in the United States has been reported
    • “Healthcare providers should administer influenza, COVID-19, and RSV immunizations now to patients, if recommended. Healthcare providers should recommend antiviral medications for influenza and COVID-19 for all eligible patients, especially patients at high-risk of progression to severe disease such as older adults and people with certain underlying medical conditions.
    • “Healthcare providers should also counsel patients about testing and other preventive measures, including covering coughs/sneezes, staying at home when sick, improving ventilation at home or work, and washing hands to protect themselves and others against respiratory diseases.”
  • Mercer Consulting notes,
    • “With the release in August of the first orally administered medication for postpartum depression, now is a good time to review plan coverage and overall employer support for maternal health. While there are risk factors, postpartum mental health issues can happen to anyone within a year of birth and are often made worse by a lack of social support, including from the workplace. Sadly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that mental-health conditions have become the leading cause of maternal death, contributing to nearly one in four pregnancy-related deaths.” 
  • The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation shares its five best health equity stories of 2023.
  • EHR Intelligence adds, “The Regenstrief Foundation has awarded LOINC and Health Data Standards at Regenstrief Institute a $4.4 million grant to support a global initiative to standardize social determinants of health (SDOH) data into EHR systems.”
  • The CDC reports about “Teenagers in the United States: Sexual Activity, Contraceptive Use, and Childbearing, 2015–2019.”
    • “In 2015–2019, 40.5% of never-married female teenagers (3.8 million), and 38.7% of never-married male teenagers (3.8 million) had ever had vaginal intercourse with an opposite-sex partner. For females this percentage was stable across the four time points, but for males this percentage decreased from the 2002 (45.7%) and 2011–2015 (44.2%) time points.
    • “For teen males, use of any contraception at first sex increased across the four time points, from 82.0% in 2002 to 92.1% in 2015–2019, while no consistent trend was seen for teen females.
    • “Nearly four out of five female teenagers (77.3%) in 2015–2019 used a method of contraception at first sex. Among female teenagers, ever-use of long-acting reversible contraception, which includes intrauterine devices and contraceptive implants, increased from 5.8% to 19.2% from 2011–2015 to 2015–2019.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “Results from a phase 2 trial found a drug-vaccine combination developed by Merck and Moderna cut the risk of recurrence or death in patients with severe melanomas by 49%.
    • “The experimental therapy involves an mRNA vaccine from Moderna in combination with Merck’s cancer drug Keytruda. Patients with resected stage 3 or 4 melanoma who received the combination therapy were 49% less likely to die or have their cancer return within three years, compared to those who received only Keytruda.
    • “The findings build on results from an earlier phase study that followed patients for two years, the drugmakers said in a Dec. 14 news release.” 
  • Bloomberg Prognosis informs us,
    • “Obesity researchers are only beginning to explore what happens after people lose weight with GLP-1 drugs such as Wegovy or Zepbound. Most trials of the drugs have only lasted a year or so. While some type of long-term drug therapy is likely to be needed — just as it is with other diseases like high blood pressure — exactly what form it will take is a big unknown, says Robert Kushner, an obesity doctor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
    • “This whole idea of maintenance is a huge black hole,” Kushner told my colleague Madison Muller in a recent interview. “We’re going into this area but we don’t have the long-term game figured out.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “For researchers involved with sleep disorders, developing a pharmacologic treatment for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a bit like searching for the holy grail. P K Schweitzer and colleagues have published the results of the randomized MARIPOSA study assessing a combination of two medicinal products known as AD109, one of the products having an antimuscarinic effect (aroxybutynin), and the other a noradrenergic effect (atomoxetine), in treating this condition. These molecules increase the activity of the dilator muscles in the upper airways by activating the genioglossus muscle with a synergic effect on the upper respiratory tract during sleep. * * *
    • [T]hese results herald important scientific benefits if we consider that Colin Sullivan’s original 1981 research paper, which ushered in the CPAP era, presented the results of just five participants. 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “A year and a half of treatment with the new Alzheimer’s drugs has been shown to reduce the chance of progression to mild stage dementia by about 10%. This benefit comes with notable risks, including small patches of brain bleeding and swelling, which can cause falls and confusion and may require stopping the drug. And there are other barriers. The new Alzheimer’s therapies are very expensive—one year of lecanemab therapy is priced at $26,500. They are difficult to deliver, require an extensive work-up to determine eligibility and involve intensive monitoring for side effects. As many as 8 million Americans are estimated to be living with mild cognitive impairment, but only about 8% to 17.4% will meet all the criteria to take one of these drugs, according to a study published last month in the journal Neurology.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Merck Consulting looks back at top benefit trends from 2023 that it expects to carry over into 2024.
  • Beckers Hospital Review explains
    • “Healthcare leaders have been talking about the transition to value-based care for years, but without significant movement away from fee for service. That could all change in the next three years.
    • “The current economic climate, with tightening margins and increased costs, is pushing health systems to finally make a move.
    • “We will continue to see margin pressure resulting from reimbursement rates not keeping pace with inflationary trends that are escalating staffing and supply chain costs,” said Cliff Megerian, MD, CEO of University Hospitals in Cleveland. “As a result, you will see health systems optimizing their operations, which may include footprint re-evaluation, increasing focus on value-based care and greater utilization of digital technology, such as remote monitoring and telehealth services.”
    • “Dr. Megerian also sees more partnerships and expanded services as the growth mechanism for health systems instead of the traditional brick-and-mortar projects and acquisitions.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Most insurer markets are highly concentrated, including many regions where a single payer dominates at least half of the market share, according to a new analysis from the American Medical Association.
    • “The AMA [hardly a neutral observer] released an updated look at concentration in payer markets and found that across product lines, 73% of metropolitan statistical areas were highly concentrated in 2022. In most (90%) regions, a single payer owns a 30% market share, and in 48% of markets, one payer controls at least 50% of the share.
    • “In 11% of markets, a single insurer has a 70% or higher market share, according to the report.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Private equity firm KKR is in talks to buy a 50% stake in healthcare data analytics firm Cotiviti from Veritas Capital, according to The Wall Street Journal. 
    • “The deal, which sources familiar said could be finalized in the coming weeks, would value the health technology company at about $11 billion. Veritas acquired Cotiviti in a take-private deal valued at $4.9 billion in 2018
    • “If the purchase is finalized, it would also rate among the largest U.S. private equity deals announced this year, according to the WSJ.” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • STAT News informs us,
    • “The Senate health care committee will consider a sweeping bill next week meant to combat the opioid epidemic, according to four lobbyists and a congressional aide familiar with the legislation. 
    • “The proposal would reauthorize a number of programs first created by the SUPPORT Act, an addiction-focused bill that Congress first passed in 2018. Many of those programs’ authorizations expired earlier this year, however, leading addiction treatment advocates to fret that lawmakers — and specifically the committee’s chairman, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) — no longer view the issue as a priority.    
    • “If passed, the legislation would mark Capitol Hill’s first major action this year on the addiction crisis. Current data shows that roughly 110,000 Americans are dying of drug overdoses each year. Roughly 85,000 of those overdoses involve opioids.” 
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “Today, United States Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is launching the 5-for-5 Connection Challenge, calling on Americans to take five actions over five days to build more connection in their lives. Dr. Murthy recently issued this challenge to students across the country on his “We Are Made to Connect” College Tour, which concluded just last week. Now, as we enter the holiday season, the 5-for-5 Connection Challenge aims to inspire people of all ages to build, strengthen, and prioritize their relationships.
    • “For the next two weeks, from December 4th – December 15th, the Surgeon General will encourage people to take five actions over five days that express gratitude, offer support to, or ask for help from people in their lives. These types of actions are outlined in the Surgeon General’s Advisory on Our Epidemic of Loneliness – PDF as some of the ways that people can catalyze social connection. As outlined in the Advisory, social connection can advance physical, mental, and cognitive health, and it is even associated with a decreased risk of mortality.”
  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration is evaluating the potential for plastic syringes made in China to suffer problems such as leaks and breakages.
    • “Officials began the investigation after receiving information about quality issues associated with “several Chinese manufacturers of syringes” that made them concerned that some devices “may not provide consistent and adequate quality or performance.”
    • “The FDA is advising consumers and healthcare providers to check where syringes are made and “consider using syringes not manufactured in China, if possible.” The advice applies to plastic syringes used for injecting fluids into, or withdrawing fluids from, the body.”

In FEHB Open Season news, Govexec offers helpful, last-minute advice from Kevin Moss.

From the public health and medicare research front,

  • U.S. News and World Report points out,
    • “After a period of limited change, COVID-19 activity is increasing again especially in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions,” the CDC said in a report published Friday.
    • “Federal health officials are likely watching the increase given that they expect a “moderate” winter wave of coronavirus and this could be the start of it. Holiday gatherings and travel are also typically followed by an increase in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.
    • “COVID-19 vaccination rates, meanwhile, have been disappointing for many.
    • “CDC Director Mandy Cohen told Congress this week that about 16% of Americans have gotten the updated COVID-19 vaccine.
    • “That’s not enough,” Cohen said.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “So far this year, the CDC estimates there have been at least 1.8 million illnesses, 17,000 hospitalizations, and 1,100 deaths from flu in the U.S. 
    • “Influenza A continues to be the dominant strain in circulation, making up around 82% of cases, while influenza B is only accounting for around 18%. 
    • “Louisiana and South Carolina are still reporting the highest levels of flu activity in the country. 
    • “Nine states are experiencing high activity levels, but less than the two states above, including: California, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Colorado, Florida and Tennessee. 
    • “Cases are also high in New York City and Puerto Rico.”
  • The Journal of the American Medical Association presented the following study results:
    • Question  Is smoking still decreasing among US adults and do the trends vary by age, income, and race and ethnicity?
    • Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 353 555 adults responding to the 2011 to 2022 National Health Interview Surveys, adults younger than 40 years had dramatic declines in smoking prevalence during the last decade, especially among those with higher incomes. In contrast, relatively slow declines were observed among adults aged 40 to 64 years, with no decrease in smoking among those 65 years or older.
    • Meaning  These findings suggest that the precipitous decline in smoking among younger adults should be maintained, but that additional efforts are required to further reduce smoking in older adults.”
  • The American Medical Association explains “What doctors wish patients knew to improve their mental health.”
  • Per Endocrinology Advisor, “Decreased mortality risk is associated with concomitant reductions in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and body weight among patients with type 2 diabetes, according to study results published in Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare profiles ten women of influence in U.S. healthcare. Check it out.
  • BioPharma Dive reports
    • “Roche on Monday agreed to acquire biotechnology company Carmot Therapeutics in a deal that bulks up the Swiss pharmaceutical giant’s pipeline with a group of weight loss drugs in early clinical testing.
    • “Roche will pay $2.7 billion upfront for the Berkeley, California-based Carmot. Roche could owe as much as $400 million more in future payments to Carmot shareholders, among them The Column Group and RA Capital, if certain milestones are met. The companies expect the acquisition to close next year.
    • “The deal hands Roche a trio of drugs in human testing for obesity, an area of pharmaceutical research that has been catalyzed by the success of weight loss medicines like Wegovy and Zepbound. Their progress has fueled a gold rush among large drugmakers, a number of which are either advancing in-house medicines or inking deals to acquire new prospects.”
  • and
    • “The Food and Drug Administration granted conditional approval to Eli Lilly’s oral cancer drug Jaypirca in two types of blood cancer, expanding its use from a rare type of lymphoma to people with leukemia and lymphoma patients who have previously received two other treatments, the company said Friday.
    • “Jaypirca is the fourth of a group of drugs called BTK inhibitors, a class that includes AbbVie and Johnson & Johnson’s Imbruvica and AstraZeneca’s Calquence. It gained approval earlier this year and posted $42 million in sales through Sept. 30.
    • “With this approval, Jaypirca can now be used in chronic lymphocytic leukemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma after patients have been treated with AbbVie and Roche’s Venclexta and another BTK inhibitor. Lilly said a Phase 3 trial meant to confirm Jaypirca’s accelerated approval has already met its primary goal.”
  • HR Dive discusses “Why EAPs go unused despite growing mental health awareness; Many factors contribute to the historic underutilization of employee assistance programs, despite their value as an access point to quality care.”
  • Medscape offers an infographic on how doctors grade their EHR systems while MedCity News explains how improved coding quality by healthcare providers can prevent denials and improve cash flow.
  • Health Payer Intelligence adds,
    • “Payers are investing in healthcare IT resources to support cost optimization and improve member experience, according to a study from EY-Parthenon and KLAS Research.
    • “As payers face operational and financial pressures, they are turning to healthcare IT solutions for help. Researchers sought to understand what strategies payers prioritize, how much they spend on healthcare IT resources, and what future investments look like.
    • “The study findings reflect responses from over 100 executives across payer entities serving commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid populations. Around 70 percent of respondents were traditional payers; the remaining were provider-sponsored, third-party administrators, and management services organizations.”
  • According to Healthcare Dive,
    • “A merger between major health insurers Cigna and Humana would go through the wringer of an intense antitrust review, but could come out finalized, experts say.
    • “Though, to receive the regulatory green light, a combined company would probably have to emerge looking different from the Cigna and Humana of today. * * *
    • “Gaining regulatory approval — especially if a challenge further ties up the process in the courts — could set a deal’s finalization back by a year or more. But, due to a lack of direct competition between the two, Cigna and Humana could be allowed to combine, creating a healthcare powerhouse with roughly $300 billion in annual revenue.”
  • and
    • “For-profit hospital chain HCA Healthcare’s Houston affiliate announced last week it completed its acquisition of 11 free-standing emergency departments from SignatureCare Emergency Centers. 
    • “HCA Houston Healthcare, which operates a network of 13 hospitals and nine outpatient surgery centers, now has 26 free-standing emergency departments in the area in addition to hospital-based emergency rooms, according to a Friday press release.
    • “The SignatureCare centers will be re-branded to HCA Houston ER 24/7. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
  • and
    • “Rural hospital chain Lifepoint Health and Ascension Saint Thomas announced a joint venture last week to co-own Highpoint Health, a four-hospital system in Tennessee currently operated by Brentwood, Tennessee-based Lifepoint.
    • “The hospitals and care sites will be co-branded with Ascension Saint Thomas, but will be majority-owned and operated by Lifepoint, according to the release. The companies declined to comment on the cost of the buy-in.
    • “The health systems have partnered before. Ascension Saint Thomas partnered with Kindred Rehabilitation Services, a Lifepoint business unit, in 2022 to jointly own Ascension Saint Thomas Rehabilitation Hospital in Nashville.” 

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Senate Finance Committee announced,
    • Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., will convene a committee hearing on Tuesday, December 5, 2023 titled “Drug Shortages: Examining Supply Challenges, Impacts, and Policy Solutions from a Federal Health Program Perspective.” The hearing will take place at 10:00 a.m. in Room 215 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • The American Hospital Association News notes,
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health Nov. 29 held a hearing  to explore how medical devices and hospitals are using artificial intelligence and what Congress should consider as AI in health care evolves.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration’s top scientist Namandjé Bumpus will assume the role of principal deputy commissioner when longtime agency leader Janet Woodcock retires from that role in early 2024, according to an announcement Thursday.
    • “Among Bumpus’ priorities when she assumes the role will be “creating a new model” for the FDA’s Office of Regulatory Affairs, the branch that conducts inspections, monitors drug imports, and issues recalls, market withdrawals and safety alerts, Commissioner Robert Califf said in a memo to agency staff.”
  • Sequoia reminds us,
    • “Beginning in 2024, group health plans and carriers will be required to include all covered items and services in their self-service internet-based price comparison tool, as required under the Transparency in Coverage (TIC) Final Rules.
    • “As background, plans must provide participants and beneficiaries with out-of-pocket cost estimates via a user-friendly online self-service tool (and by paper upon request). The intent of this requirement is to provide individuals with real-time cost-sharing information to support making informed health care decisions. Implemented in two phases, the first phase of the price comparison tool required the first 500 items and services (as defined by the DOL) to be published in the tool effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, and the second phase will require all other services covered by the plan to be included in the tool effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2024.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control announced,
    • CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics released two reports today examining provisional mortality data from 2022. While analysis shows the number and rate of suicides increased for the second year in a row from, overall life expectancy at birth increased by just over a year. This increase regains some of the 2.4 years of life expectancy lost between 2019 and 2021.
    • The findings are featured in two new reports, “Provisional Life Expectancy Estimates for 2022” and “Provisional Estimates of Suicide by Demographic Characteristics: United States, 2022. * * *
    • “The increase of 1.1 years in life expectancy from 2021 to 2022 primarily resulted from decreases in mortality due to COVID-19, heart disease, unintentional injuries, cancer, and homicide. Declines in COVID-19 mortality accounted for approximately 84% of the increase in life expectancy. * * *
    • “The percentage increase in the number of suicides was greater for females (4%) than males (2%), but the provisional 2022 suicide number for males (39,255) was nearly four times that of females (10,194).”
  • Health Day points out,
    • “The prevalence of a highly mutated COVID variant has tripled in the past two weeks, new government data shows.
    • “Now, nearly 1 in 10 new COVID cases are fueled by the BA.2.86 variant, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Monday.
    • “The variant is spreading the fastest in the Northeast: Just over 13% of cases in the New York and New Jersey region are blamed on BA.2.86. * * *
    • “So far, preliminary data on the variant suggests it does not trigger more severe illness than previous variants, the WHO said in a recent risk evaluation, but the international agency still noted a recent and “substantial rise” in BA.2.86 cases.
    • “The CDC also noted that BA.2.86 variant poses a “low” public health risk.”
  • and
    • “Personal trainers can help people increase their strength and their fitness.
    • “Could a “brain coach” be just as useful in preventing Alzheimer’s’ disease?
    • “A new study suggests that personalized health and lifestyle changes can delay or even prevent memory loss for older adults at high risk of Alzheimer’s or dementia.
    • “People who received personal coaching experienced a 74% boost in their thinking and memory tests compared with those who didn’t receive such attention.
    • “This is the first personalized intervention, focusing on multiple areas of cognition, in which risk factor targets are based on a participant’s risk profile, preferences and priorities, which we think may be more effective than a one-size-fits-all approach,” said co-lead researcher Dr. Kristine Yaffe, vice chair of research in psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).”
  • Healio informs us,
    • “One in four adults relied solely on medications to manage chronic pain, highlighting an opportunity to increase use of nonpharmacologic therapies, particularly in men, older adults and those with public insurance, according to researchers.
    • “Findings from this study contribute important information about use of over-the-counter pain relievers, prescriptions nonopioids and exercise, which were found to be some of the most common pain management therapies used by adults with chronic pain,” Stephanie Michaela Rikard, PhD, a health scientist at the CDC, told Healio.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Cigna and Humana are in talks for a combination that would create a new powerhouse in the health insurance industry.
    • “The companies are discussing a stock and cash deal that could be finalized by the end of the year, assuming the talks don’t fall apart, according to people familiar with the matter.”
  • and
    • “A law designed to protect patients from surprise medical bills is contributing to the financial distress of some medical-service providers, which say lengthy billing disputes and payment delays with insurers are hurting their ability to stay afloat. 
    • “The No Surprises Act, which took effect last year, aims to protect patients from surprise medical bills from out-of-network healthcare providers when there are disagreements over reimbursements between insurers and providers. Previously, providers often billed patients to make up for the amounts insurers were unwilling to pay. 
    • “Numerous healthcare businesses, some owned by private equity, said the legislation is contributing to delays and reductions in payments by insurance companies, hurting their cash flows and earnings. A handful of major healthcare-service providers already have filed for chapter 11 protection this year, specifically naming the law as a major reason for their bankruptcies. These include physician-staffing companies Envision Healthcare and American Physician Partners as well as helicopter-ambulance operator Air Methods.”
  • and
    • “There are five tech companies valued at over $1 trillion. In healthcare, the closest contender is  Eli Lilly
    • .”This year it became the first big pharmaceutical to surpass a market capitalization of $500 billion thanks to the popularity of its obesity and diabetes medications and, to a lesser extent, its experimental Alzheimer’s drug. But hanging over Lilly and rival  Novo Nordisk is a reality that puts the brakes on big pharma’s ascent: the patent cliff.
    • “There are several reasons why there isn’t a big pharma company in the trillion-dollar club, but the boom-and-bust nature of drug development is high on the list. Unlike Apple, which hypothetically can make huge margins off the iPhone for perpetuity, U.S. drug companies have a limited period from which to profit from their innovation. As their patents expire and generic competitors enter the market, sales plunge. Pharma executives, overly focused on short-term growth, don’t often prepare their companies for that.”
  • FEHBlog notes on the Journal articles,
    • Cigna and Humana are undoubtedly aware of the firebreathing nature of anti-trust enforcers in the federal government. Cigna is focused on the commercial market while Humana currently is pulling out of that market to focus on government business. Time will tell.
    • Out-of-network doctors and air ambulance companies flying the pirate flag can avoid No Surprises Act problems by joining health plan networks.
    • Lilly’s recent growth has been impressive.
  • Reuters tells us,
    • “UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday forecast 2024 profit broadly in line with Wall Street expectations, indicating that medical costs are likely to remain elevated for the health insurance giant.
    • “The healthcare sector has this year seen a recovery in demand, especially among older patients who started returning to doctors’ clinics and hospitals for procedures they had delayed during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Healthcare insurers could get a slight respite from rising medical costs next year. Global costs are expected to rise 9.9% year over year in 2024, down from a 10.7% increase in 2023, according to a new survey from consultancy WTW released on Tuesday.
    • “However, that decline might not last long. Nearly three-fifths of insurers surveyed anticipate higher medical cost growth over the next three years as new medical technologies, overuse of care and members’ poor health habits drive increased spend.
    • “Many insurers told WTW they are leaning on deductibles, contracted provider networks and telehealth options to manage costs. Others are excluding coverage for healthcare such as fertility treatments or gender re-affirming care.”
  • Beckers Hospital CFO Report identifies the states with the most rural hospital closures.
    • “Since 2005, 104 rural hospitals have closed and more than 600 additional rural hospitals — 30% of all rural hospitals in the U.S. — are at risk of closing in the near future, according to the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to this development,
    • “Mayo Clinic’s board of trustees has given the green light to an initiative dubbed “Bold. Forward. Unbound.,” which involves a $5 billion redesign of Mayo Clinic’s downtown Rochester, Minn., campus. 
    • “The redesign will introduce new facilities that incorporate innovative care approaches and digital technologies, according to a Nov. 28 news release from Mayo, with a pivotal element of these being specialized “neighborhoods.” According to the health system, the neighborhood concept will offer patients a centralized location for all required services related to their specific condition, eliminating the need for navigating between different departments.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Accountable care organizations do not positively influence treatment and outcomes for chronic mental health conditions for Medicare patients, according to a study in Health Affairs.
    • “For patients newly enrolled in ACOs, they saw no improvements in their depression and anxiety symptoms after one year. These patients were also 24% less likely to have their depression or anxiety treated than patients unenrolled in ACOs, and 9.8% less likely to have an evaluation and management visit for depression or anxiety with a primary care clinician.
    • “Since mental health conditions in Medicare patients are often underdiagnosed and undertreated, some have suspected that mental health illnesses are ideal conditions for ACOs to handle, but the study found that there were no significant differences in any other measures of mental health treatment.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review also names the winners of Forbes 30 under 30 in healthcare for 2024.


 

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The House passed legislation on Tuesday to keep federal funding flowing into early 2024, after Democrats stepped in to rescue a plan opposed by many Republicans to avert a government shutdown at the end of the week.
    • “A coalition of Democrats and mainstream Republicans overcame the opposition of G.O.P. conservatives to approve the bill under special expedited procedures that required a supermajority. That approach, hatched by Speaker Mike Johnson, amounted to a gamble that a substantial number of Democrats would rally to help pass a package that Mr. Johnson’s own party was unwilling to back.
    • “The vote was 336 to 95, clearing the two-thirds threshold required for passage. In the end, 209 Democrats and 127 Republicans joined to pass the bill. Ninety-three Republicans opposed it, as did two Democrats.
    • “Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the majority leader, told reporters that he wanted the Senate to vote on the bill “as soon as possible.”
  • The American Academy of Pediatrics News announced,
    • “The advisory was issued after the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) received 22 reports of high blood lead levels (BLLs) in children who consumed recalled fruit pouches that contain high levels of lead. The recall includes WanaBana brand apple cinnamon fruit puree pouches, Schnucks brand cinnamon applesauce pouches and Weis brand cinnamon applesauce pouches.”
  • ICD Monitor points out that “the new Healthcare Common Procedural Coding System (HCPCS) codes were released on Nov. 6. These codes include supplies, medications, implants, surgeries, etc. The latest release contained 553 changes and updates to the coding system . . . .
  • The Acting NIH Director Lawrence Tabak released his farewell issue of the NIH Directors blog.
    • “I congratulate Dr. Monica Bertagnolli as she takes the helm as the next permanent NIH director. Dr. Bertagnolli—an outstanding physician scientist—is a strong leader who will bring fresh, bold new ideas to NIH and the biomedical research enterprise. I know she’ll be in good hands thanks to the outstanding staff across NIH and the leadership in the Department of Health and Human Services. I look forward to supporting her efforts and continuing to ensure that NIH research optimizes health for all people.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • MedPage Today informs us that early detection is the key to longer survival rates for people afflicted with pancreatic cancer.
  • NPR tells us,
    • “If your hearing begins to decline, your risk of falling may rise.
    • “Research shows older adults with mild hearing loss are at a greater risk — more than double — of falling. Though it’s not exactly clear how hearing loss increases the risk, it’s known that falls are the top cause of death from injury among people 65 and older.
    • “Now, new evidence shows that restoring hearing through the use of hearing aids may be protective, especially when people wear them consistently. That’s according to a study published this summer in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Millions of adults struggle for years with chronic low-back pain—a disabling ailment that has no easy fix.
    • “Common causes include injury, arthritis and degenerative changes in the spine. It tends to start at midlife with the natural wear and tear of aging. But often there is no clearly identifiable physical cause, leaving patients to veer from one ineffective treatment to another—including highly addictive prescription opioids.
    • “Now, researchers are working on personalized treatment plans that can address physical, emotional and psychological traits in individual patients that influence the pain they are experiencing. Physical therapy, exercise, diet and lifestyle choices often play a role. Some research is also looking at ways to retrain the brain to think differently about pain.
    • “To be sure, low-back pain can be a sign of something life-threatening, such as cancer, or a severe spine condition that requires surgery. As a result, chronic low-back pain needs to be fully evaluated. But once “red flags” are eliminated, doctors need a more precise way to determine what will work for individual patients, says Dr. Matt Mauck, a researcher and pain-medicine physician at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill’s UNC Pain Management Center.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review “posted its revised Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of sotatercept (Merck & Co) for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH).”
    • “This Evidence Report will be reviewed at a virtual public meeting of the Midwest CEPAC (Midwest CEPAC) on December 1, 2023. The Midwest 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.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans announced,
    • “A new survey report from the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans reveals U.S. employer coverage and considerations surrounding glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) drugs, which have historically been used to treat diabetes. These drugs were also found to cause weight loss and have been subsequently used to treat obesity.
    • “Among survey respondents, 76% provide GLP-1 drug coverage for diabetes, 27% provide coverage for weight loss, and 13% are considering covering for weight loss.
    • “In 2023, the average representation of GLP-1 drugs used for weight loss in employers’ total annual claims was 6.9%, according to survey respondents. Those who are covering GLP-1 drugs are relying heavily on utilization management (79%) to control costs. A less common approach (32%) is step therapy. Fourteen percent of employers have no cost control mechanism in place.
    • “Though GLP-1 drugs have a high price tag, they currently represent only 6.9% of annual claims, according to survey respondents,” said Julie Stich, CEBS, Vice President of Content at the International Foundation. “Employers can take this information into account when designing long-and short-term benefit strategies.”
  • Bloomberg reports,
    • Cigna Group is taking a page from billionaire Mark Cuban’s playbook to sell medicines for a set markup, the latest sign that companies that manage drug benefits are responding to pressure from upstart competitors.
    • “Next year Cigna’s Express Scripts subsidiary will offer employers and health plans the option to pay pharmacies up to 15% above their wholesale costs, plus an extra fee for dispensing the medicines. Employers now typically pay pharmacies based on an average discount, which can result in them paying more for drugs than a pharmacy charges.”
  • Reuters notes,
    • “Elevance Health (ELV.N) and Cigna Group’s (CI.N) Express Scripts unit on Monday settled the last pending claim in a long-running contract dispute, clearing the way for Elevance to appeal the dismissal of its $14.8 billion lawsuit accusing Express Scripts of overcharging it for prescription drugs.”
  • The Albany Times-Union reports that Empire Blue Cross is changing its name to Anthem Blue Cross.
    • “The company retains the Blue Cross Blue Shield name and remains part of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, which serves one in three insured Americans. * * *
    • “Empire joined Anthem in 2006, and the new name represents the next stage in the company’s journey to merge with the national brand, benefiting from combined resources and capabilities of its parent company and affiliates, company executives said.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • BeMe, a digital behavioral health app aimed at teenagers, has inked several partnerships with major payers, including $1.5 million in investment from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas (BCBSKS).
    • “Through the investment, BeMe’s platform will be made available to 20,000 teenagers across the Sunflower State. Executives said in an announcement that tools like BeMe will become increasingly critical as youth mental health issues continue to worsen.”