Thursday Miscellany

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill, Healthcare Dive tells us

  • “On Wednesday, lawmakers hammered CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure on a variety of healthcare issues in her first appearance before a congressional panel since being confirmed to her post.
  • “One of the hearing’s biggest themes was site neutrality, as members of the House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee queried the administrator on why the government pays hospital-owned outpatient sites more than other physician offices for the same services.
  • “Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle expressed support for enacting site-neutral payments, policies fiercely opposed by hospitals because they would lower revenue. * * *
  • “Members of the health subcommittee on both sides of the aisle suggested site-neutral payment reforms would save the government money and tamp down on provider consolidation.”

Fingers crossed.

CNBC reports

  • Medicare will cover the new Alzheimer’s treatment Leqembi for all patients eligible under the medication’s label if the Food and Drug Administration fully approves the drug in July, a federal official told members of Congress on Wednesday.
  • “The official, Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, testified before Congress Wednesday for the first time since her confirmation as administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.”

In other Rx coverage news, STAT News informs us.

  • “The drug giant Eli Lilly said Thursday that its diabetes drug Mounjaro helped patients with the condition lose 15.7% of their body weight in a clinical trial, a result that Wall Street analysts expect to pave the way for the therapy’s approval as a weight loss treatment.
  • “Mounjaro is the latest drug in a class known as GLP-1s or incretins — the same class as Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic, which has become a sensation because of its ability to help patients lose weight. Mounjaro has shown the potential to lead to even greater weight loss than Ozempic, and industry experts expect that it will eventually generate many billions of dollars in annual sales. Analysts at SVB Securities projected in December that Mounjaro sales could reach $26.4 billion by 2030.
  • “Eli Lilly on Thursday also announced quarterly earnings of $1.64 per share, adjusted for one-time items, slightly below analyst expectations, on sales of $6.96 billion. Sales were hurt because of a comparison to a year ago when the company’s Covid-19 monoclonal antibodies were still on the market. Mounjaro sales for the first quarter were $586 million, largely for people with diabetes, compared to an analyst consensus of $433.2 million.”

According to the American Hospital Association,

  • “The Food and Drug Administration yesterday approved the first fecal microbiota product taken orally to prevent recurrent C. difficile infection.
  • “Today’s approval provides patients and healthcare providers a new way to help prevent recurrent C. difficile infection,” said Peter Marks, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. “The availability of a fecal microbiota product that can be taken orally is a significant step forward in advancing patient care and accessibility for individuals who have experienced this disease that can be potentially life-threatening.”

The Mayo Clinic adds

  • Clostridioides difficile (klos-TRID-e-oi-deez dif-uh-SEEL) is a bacterium that causes an infection of the large intestine (colon). Symptoms can range from diarrhea to life-threatening damage to the colon. The bacterium is often referred to as C. difficile or C. diff.
  • Illness from C. difficile typically occurs after use of antibiotic medications. It most commonly affects older adults in hospitals or in long-term care facilities. In the United States, about 200,000 people are infected annually with C. difficile in a hospital or care setting. These numbers are lower than in previous years because of improved prevention measures.
  • People not in care settings or hospitals also can develop C. difficile infection. Some strains of the bacterium in the general population may cause serious infections or are more likely to affect younger people. In the United States, about 170,000 infections occur annually outside of health care settings, and these numbers are increasing.

Beckers Hospital Review points out,

  • “Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Co. decreased 35 drug prices April 26, according to a news release shared with Becker’s
  • “The company began selling a few dozen generics in January 2022, and since then, Cost Plus Drugs has added about 1,000 more drugs, including four brand-name drugs, partnered with three pharmacy benefit managers and teamed up with independent pharmacists to complement its mail-order pharmacy business.  

From the public health front, Mercer Consulting explains that

Ending the HIV epidemic in the United States is finally within our reach, but it will require all sectors of society, including employers, working together to ensure that the most powerful HIV prevention and treatment tools in history reach those who need them the most. – Health Action Alliance

“Mercer has joined a coalition of companies to help achieve what was once thought impossible – the end of the HIV epidemic in the US by 2030. Scientific advancements over the past four decades have made it possible to dramatically reduce new cases of HIV, which currently number nearly 35,000 per year in the United States. A key obstacle is misinformation, discrimination, and stigma around HIV. When we support people affected by HIV, we make it easier for everyone to lead healthy lives.

“Current HIV prevention and treatment tools mean it’s easier than ever for people to stay healthy and prevent the spread of the virus:

  • “Rapid, non-intrusive HIV tests can be done without needles, and results are available within 20 minutes or less.
  • “The use of PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) can prevent people without HIV from contracting the disease. It’s available as a daily pill or a shot taken every eight weeks.
  • “A range of new antiretroviral treatments (ARTs) make it possible for people with HIV to live long, healthy lives. In addition to maintaining health, people who take their ARTs as prescribed and who achieve and then maintain an undetectable viral load have effectively no risk of sexually transmitting the virus to an HIV-negative partner.”

Mercer’s article also identifies five ways to address HIV in the workplace.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Healthcare Dive reports
    • “Teladoc beat Wall Street expectations in the first quarter and raised its 2023 guidance as a result, with management citing growing demand for chronic care offerings among employers and health plans.
    • “Teladoc’s revenue grew 11% year over year to $629 million in the first quarter, the company reported aftermarket Wednesday. Despite inflationary headwinds, direct-to-consumer mental health business BetterHelp’s revenue grew 21% year over year to $279 million. BetterHelp had almost half a million users in the quarter.”
  • MedTech Dive notes
    • “Quest Diagnostics on Thursday said it agreed to pay up to $450 million to acquire Haystack Oncology, an early-stage company focused on liquid biopsy testing to detect residual or recurring cancer.
    • “The announcement came as Secaucus, N.J.-based Quest reported a 10.7% drop in first-quarter revenue to $2.33 billion, compared to a year ago, on a faster-than-expected decline in COVID-19 testing as the public health emergency approaches an end.
    • “Revenue in Quest’s base business, excluding COVID testing, rose 10% to $2.21 billion, bolstered by strong volume growth across customer types, CEO James Davis said on the company’s earnings call.

Finally, Tammy Flanagan writing in Govexec discusses what is the best age for a federal employee to retire.

Midweek Update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Capitol Hill, Roll Call reports, “House Republicans narrowly passed legislation Wednesday pairing nearly $4.8 trillion in deficit reduction measures with a debt limit increase into next year — a move they argue should force Democrats to finally negotiate conditions for raising the nation’s borrowing limit.” Time will tell.

Politico explains why and how prescription benefit managers are playing defense on Capitol Hill.

From the U.S. healthcare business front, Healthcare Dive informs us

  • “Kaiser Permanente is acquiring Geisinger Health and forming a new nonprofit to buy and operate other value-oriented nonprofit systems, the organizations announced Wednesday.
  • “The new nonprofit, Risant Health, will operate separately from Kaiser Permanente. Geisinger will become part of Risant but maintain its own name and mission, according to a press release.
  • “Geisinger president and CEO Jaewon Ryu will be CEO of Risant as the transaction closes, subject to regulatory review. Risant will have its headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Both Kaiser and Geisinger are FEHB plan carriers. Kaiser is the third largest carrier in the FEHB Program. Healthcare Dive adds

  • “Kaiser, which reported $95 billion in revenue in 2022, plans to spend $5 billion on Risant over the next five years and add five or six health systems to Risant over that period, according to reports.
  • “Kaufman Hall said recently it expects a “new wave of transaction activity” and a growing number of cross-regional partnerships.
  • “Pennsylvania-based Geisinger has ten hospital campuses and a health plan that covers more than 500,000 members. It has more than 25,000 employees. Both Geisinger and Kaiser reported operating losses last year, as supply and labor expenses rose.

Beckers Payer Issues tells us,

  • “Humana posted a 33 percent increase in profits year over year and added more than 500,000 Medicare Advantage members in the past year, according to its first-quarter earnings posted April 26. 
  • “We’ve had a strong start to the year, with our outperformance underpinned by strong membership growth and favorable inpatient utilization trends in our individual Medicare Advantage business,” CEO Bruce Broussard said. 
  • “The company posted $1.3 billion in net income in the first quarter of 2023, up from $930 million in the first quarter of 2022.”

From the public health front,

  • The National Cancer Institute released a bevy of research articles.
  • The FEHBlog ran across this helpful Johns Hopkins article about U.S infertility statistics,
    • “For the new study, Snow and Trent analyzed data on 53,764 women who participated in the federally supported National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG). While the survey did not ask explicitly about infertility, it contained questions about sexual activity, contraception and pregnancy that were not used in previous studies to estimate infertility rates. It also collected information about sociodemographic and healthcare factors.
    • “Based on the responses, the researchers concluded that the rate of infertility varied slightly from year to year, with a low from 2006 to 2010 of 5.8% and a high between 2017 to 2019 of 8.1%. However, these fluctuations are not considered statistically significant, and the team concluded that overall fertility rates did not significantly change during the study period.
    • “In particular populations, however, infertility rates were significantly higher than average compared with the general population. Women aged 40 to 44 were about 11 times more likely to be infertile than younger women, women who did not complete high school were twice as likely to be infertile as those with higher levels of education, non-Hispanic Black women were 44% more likely to be infertile than women of other races and women who had not recently received sexual health care were 61% more likely to be infertile. Unlike previous studies, the new data did not show a higher rate of infertility for Hispanic women.
  • MedPage Today offers an interview with Dr. Atul Gawande about the importance of palliative care.
  • Medscape identifies emerging cardiovascular disease risk factors.

From the Rx coverage front

Biopharma Dive reports

  • “The Food and Drug Administration has conditionally approved a new ALS medicine in a decision likely to influence how other experimental treatments for the nerve-destroying disease are tested and reviewed.
  • “The medicine, known until now as tofersen, is only for ALS patients who have a specific genetic mutation. Estimates cited by the FDA hold that this group accounts for less than 500 of the roughly 30,000 people in the U.S. with the disease.
  • “Until Tuesday, the few therapies that had secured FDA approval did so because they were shown to help patients live a bit better or a bit longer. Tofersen, which will be sold as Qalsody, is different. It failed the key clinical trial meant to demonstrate it can slow the functional decline associated with ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • “Rather, tofersen’s approval hinged on its ability to lower levels of “neurofilament light chain,” a protein that’s drawn increasing interest from ALS researchers. It’s the first ALS drug approved based on so-called “biomarker” data, setting a precedent that could provide another, perhaps faster path to market for some developers.

Biopharma Dive adds

  • “Roche’s new eye drug Vabysmo brought in nearly $500 million during the first quarter, the company said Wednesday. The more than 500% year-over-year sales increase outpaced all other of Roche’s medicines, surpassing top-sellers like the multiple sclerosis treatment Ocrevus and hemophilia therapy Hemlibra.
  • “Vabysmo’s market launch for age-related vision loss comes as one of the first treatments for the condition, Roche’s own Lucentis, faces copycat rivals, and another, Regeneron’s Eylea, could soon.
  • “The strong growth from Vabysmo helped propel a 9% increase in pharmaceutical division sales, which contrasted with a 3% decline in first quarter revenue for the overall business due to lower COVID-19 test sales.”

From the miscellany front —

  • Per the American Hospital Association, “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services today announced changes to its enforcement process for the hospital price transparency rule. CMS said it will now automatically impose a civil monetary penalty if hospitals fail to submit a corrective action plan on time or fail to complete the CAP within 45 days. In addition, the agency will no longer issue a warning notice to hospitals that have not posted any machine-readable file or shoppable services list/price estimator tool, but will immediately ask the hospital to submit a CAP.”
  • The Office of Personnel Management announced
    • its OPM Data Strategy Fiscal Years 2023-2026, which lays out a vision to fully leverage OPM and agency human capital data, and to provide federal agencies, federal employees, and public users seamless access to OPM data products and services. In addition to the overarching strategy, OPM released a set of initial data dashboards to the updated OPM Data Portal at www.opm.gov/data, including FedScope datasets which can now be accessed at www.opm.gov/data/datasets. The OPM Data Portal is a redesigned OPM webpage providing increased access to OPM data products and services.
  • HIMSS posted a wrap-up page from last week’s conference.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports, “Weight-loss drugmakers are lobbying Congress to grant them access to a monster payday for their blockbuster treatments: Medicare coverage.” At last Thursday’s carrier conference, OPM pointed out a related advantage of the Medicare Part D EGWPs that the FEHBP will offer next year. Although the weight loss drugs may not be on the Medicare formulary, those drugs would be made available to FEHB annuitants via the Plan’s formulary, which can gap-fill the Medicare formulary.
  • CMS announced that the updated MMSE Section 111 GHP User Guide version 6.8 has been posted to the GHP User Guide page on CMS.gov. Refer to Chapter 1 for a summary of updates.”
  • Per Health Payer Intelligence, AHIP launched a marketing campaign targeting Pharma’s prescription drug pricing. “The payer organization stated that prescription drug pricing is out of control and explained health insurance’s role in reducing the impact.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services proposed a rule to extend ACA marketplace, Basic Health Program, Medicaid, and CHIP coverages to 580,000 DACA recipients.

From the healthcare spending and plan design fronts

  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “About a year ago, Elevance Health launched a pilot program to offer digital concierge care to members who were recovering from COVID-19 infections.
    • “Since then, the insurer has expanded that initiative to offer concierge care management to members with a number of chronic conditions, including Crohn’s disease, cancer and diabetes. Anthony Nguyen, M.D., the chief clinical officer at Elevance, told Fierce Healthcare that the program was born from a desire to be “more engaging with our members.”
    • “The challenge for not only the programs that we have, the traditional ones, as well as others in the market, is that it’s not personalized,” Nguyen said. “It is not tailored to an ‘n’ of one.”
    • “Greater personalization was built into the foundation of the program, he said. For example, concierge care deploys a nurse matching tool that connects members with a clinician who is likely to connect and resonate well with them, improving the care journey.”
  • and
    • “Healthcare spending declined dramatically in 2020 thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, but expenditures rebounded the following year, according to new data from the Health Care Cost Institute.
    • “The group released its annual look at cost and utilization trends last week, which found the average health spending for people with employer-sponsored coverage reached $6,457, up 15% from the 2020 average of $5,630. Spending declined by 4% in 2020 as utilization decreased, the researchers said.
    • “John Hargraves, director of data strategy at HCCI, told Fierce Healthcare that the 2020 data are an aberration in the long-term spending trends, which had grown steadily prior to the pandemic.
    • “It’s almost like 2020 is a missing data point in the long-term growth in the healthcare spending and use patterns that we’ve noted,” Hargraves said.”

From the telehealth and fraud waste and abuse fronts, the HHS Inspector General made available a “toolkit intended to assist public and private sector partners—such as Medicare Advantage plan sponsors, private health plans, State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, and other Federal health care agencies—in analyzing their own telehealth claims data to assess program integrity risks in their programs.”

Thursday Miscellany

Today was the belated second day of the OPM AHIP FEHB carrier conference. We learned this afternoon:

  • OPM has requested contractor proposals for its Postal Service Health Benefits Program (PSHBP) enrollment system.
  • OPM has created a new Carrier Connect system to receive PSHBP applications and benefit and rate proposals from carriers.
  • The new system will be available to receive PSHBP applications beginning June 26, 2023, and ending August 31, 2023, for the inaugural PSHBP year 2025.
  • OPM will release decisions on those applications in November 2023.
  • All cross-over enrollments to the PSHBP will become effective on January 1, 2025.

OPM also discussed its well-received initiative to allow FEHB carriers to offer integrated Medicare Part D prescription drug plans for 2024. These Part D EGWPs will be features of all PSHB plans beginning in 2025.

From Capitol Hill, Politico reports

  • “President Joe Biden immediately rejected Kevin McCarthy‘s opening debt-limit proposal, but it prompted movement elsewhere: A growing number of House Democrats want party leaders to restart negotiations.
  • “The party is still firmly behind Biden and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who declared the speaker’s pitch dead on arrival in the upper chamber, in the position that Congress should raise the debt ceiling without any conditions. But a growing contingent of Democrats are acknowledging that Biden’s blanket refusal to engage with McCarthy may need to change — especially if House Republicans manage to pass their bill as planned next week.”

A Senate Finance Committee press release informs us, “Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Chair Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) released a bipartisan framework that the Committee will use to pursue legislative solutions to modernize and enhance federal prescription drug programs, with the goal of reducing drug costs for patients and taxpayers.”

STAT News adds, “A legislative package of mostly drug pricing policies is coming together in the Senate, and these policies were not expected to be part of it, four drug lobbyists said. It seems to be an effort by Finance Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) to play catch-up, in an effort to be included in the package that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is pulling together.”

Also from Washington DC —

  • STAT News tells us
    • “President Biden will nominate oncologist Monica Bertagnolli, director of the National Cancer Institute, to lead the National Institutes of Health, three people familiar with the White House’s plans told STAT.
    • “Bertagnolli last fall became the first woman to direct NCI, the largest of the NIH’s 27 departments, amid the president’s efforts to relaunch the Cancer Moonshot with the goal of halving cancer deaths and vastly curbing new cases.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is making progress in reevaluating the incomplete grade given to screening for partner violence or abuse of older and vulnerable adults.
  • Health Leaders Media points out
    • “CMS recently released the fiscal year 2024 inpatient prospective payment system proposed rule, and with it came the annual proposed ICD-10-CM diagnosis code changes which include new codes to enhance the tracking and progression of Parkinson’s disease and more reimbursement for certain social determinates of health (SDOH).
    • “The proposed rule includes 395 additions, 12 revisions, and 25 deletions to the ICD-10-CM diagnosis code set. If finalized, these changes will take effect October 1.
    • “Of the 395 new ICD-10-CM codes, 123 of them are external cause codes to capture accidents and injuries. CMS also proposes 36 new codes for osteoporosis with current pathological pelvic fracture.”

In studies news

  • Health Affairs informs us
    • “Hospitals must disclose their cash prices, commercial negotiated rates, and chargemaster prices for seventy common, shoppable services under the hospital price transparency rule. Examining prices reported by 2,379 hospitals as of September 9, 2022, we found that a given hospital’s cash prices and commercial negotiated rates both tended to reflect a predetermined and consistent percentage discount from its chargemaster prices. On average, cash prices and commercial negotiated rates were 64 percent and 58 percent of the corresponding chargemaster prices for the same procedures at the same hospital and in the same service setting, respectively. Cash prices were lower than the median commercial negotiated rates in 47 percent of instances, and most likely so at hospitals with government or nonprofit ownership, located outside of metropolitan areas, or located in counties with relatively high uninsurance rates or low median household incomes. Hospitals with stronger market power were most likely to offer cash prices below their median negotiated rates, whereas hospitals in areas where insurers had stronger market power were less likely to do so.”
  • The All of Us Program offers its research roundup.

From the U.S. healthcare business front, Fierce Healthcare reports

  • “Express Scripts is rolling out new programs that aim to better support independent pharmacies in rural areas.
  • “The pharmacy benefit management giant said Thursday that the IndependentRx Initiative is designed to build on a slew of recently announced updates to its model that put a focus on greater transparency. The PBM said it will boost reimbursement to independent pharmacies that are the only location within 10 or more miles of an Express Scripts customer.
  • “This includes growing incentive-based programs that pay for performance, such as when a pharmacy dispenses 90-day prescriptions to improve medication adherence.
  • “The PBM added that these pharmacies will have greater opportunities to participate in its retail pharmacy network.”

From the telehealth front, mhealth Intelligence observes

  • “Published in the American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, new data shows that patient retention rates following the implementation of telehealth for opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment were higher than those for in-person care.
  • “According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), about 2.7 million people in the US have OUD, and overdoses appeared to have increased during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • “However, the pandemic allowed physicians to explore new methods of providing care, including telehealth. To assess the efficacy of treating OUD through telehealth, a digital provider of medication-assisted treatment (MAT), Ophelia Health, conducted a study that assessed patient 180-day and 365-day retention rates.”

From the miscellany front

  • The Wall Street Journal offers its occasional Future of Healthcare series.
  • Kaiser Family Foundation provides a resource to answer “Key Questions About Implementation of the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program.”
  • Here’s a final HIMSS report from the last day of the conference.

Midweek Update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC —

Roll Call brings us up to date on the debt ceiling issue. “House Republicans unveiled legislation Wednesday to pair their favored spending cuts and energy and regulatory policies with a debt limit increase lasting through early next year.” “Measure viewed as a ‘conversation starter’ with government cash crunch seen as early as June.”

The Wall Street Journal informs us that the U.S. Supreme Court extended its stay of an injunction restricting sales of an abortion pill from midnight tonight to midnight Friday.

  • “The justices have three primary options. They could grant the emergency requests and leave mifepristone on the market indefinitely during litigation, which could preserve the status quo for many months. They could leave the pill in place temporarily and agree to review the case in full, even though lower courts aren’t done reviewing it. Or they could deny the emergency appeals outright.” 

As anticipated, Health Affairs Forefront has posted here and here helpful articles explaining the final 2024 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters released earlier this week.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Beckers Payer Issues tells us,
    • Elevance Health posted double-digit revenue growth and beat investor expectations in the first quarter of 2023, according to the company’s earnings report published April 19.
    • “Elevance Health is off to a strong start in 2023, driven by our continued focus on whole health and advancing health beyond healthcare,” President and CEO Gail Boudreaux said.
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • Mark Cuban is creating an independent pharmacy network to “serve patients more widely” after pitching the idea to local pharmacy owners in February. 
    • Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Co. has operated as a mail-order, online pharmacy since January 2022, but with its latest endeavor, the business is looking to expand access to its portfolio of more than 1,000 prescription drugs.
    • The collaboration between independent pharmacies and Cost Plus Drugs includes a “Team Cuban Card,” which acts like an insurance card at pharmacy checkouts. 
    • Independent pharmacists interested in partnering with Cost Plus Drugs were asked to complete an interest form with the company detailing the type of pharmacy they run and how patients access the services offered. So far, Cost Plus Drugs has 36 affiliate locations, with five in Florida, seven in Indiana, six in New Jersey and 18 in Texas. The company said it will add new sites every month.
    • This is part of a larger movement to prevent more local pharmacy closures, Mr. Cuban told Becker’s
  • STAT News reports
    • Because Johnson & Johnson is the largest healthcare company in the world, its financial fortunes tend to be a bellwether for the industry at large. And parsing J&J’s positive results from the last quarter, released yesterday, analysts see hope that the pharmaceutical business is in good shape despite a difficult macroeconomic environment.

From the HIMSS conference —

  • Med City News shares a conference presentation by “Glen Tullman — CEO of care navigation company Transcarent, as well as former CEO of Allscripts and Livongo. Mr. Tullman discussed what he thinks the future of healthcare will look like during the HIMSS conference in Chicago. He laid out five predictions, including an increased focus on consumer expectations and more investment in AI.”
  • Fierce Healthcare points out
    • Companies like Best Buy and VillageMD are disrupting the traditional healthcare industry by bringing a more consumer-centric approach to providing medical services.
    • During a keynote address Wednesday morning at HIMSS23, executives at these so-called “disrupters” shared their vision for the future of care delivery.
  • You will find HIMSS links to its sessions here and here.

From the Rx and medical test coverage front —

  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research issued a white paper
    • Evaluating Best Practices and Potential Reforms for White Bagging, Brown Bagging, and Site of Service Policies that Seek to Address High Markup in Drug Prices
      • — White bagging, brown bagging, and site of service policies developed by payers can reduce significant markup costs for clinician-administered drugs but have sparked concerns and legislative action related to their impact on patients and providers —
      • — White paper evaluating best practices and potential policy reforms was informed by input from a diverse set of hospitals, provider groups, and payers.
  • Medscape delves into the debate over the optimal time period for using weight loss drugs.
  • The Wall Street Journal examines new blood tests that offer early detection of cancers and Alzheimer’s Disease.
    • “Questions include who should be getting them, and what patients should do about positive results.”

From the miscellany front —

  • Fierce Healthcare informs us, as the FEHBlog expected,
    • The federal No Surprises Act “appears” to be effectively protecting patients from the most frequent sources of unexpected medical bills, though several coverage gaps such as those relating to ground ambulance services are still leaving some patients with hefty bills, according to a new qualitative report.
    • To get a read on the consumer protection legislation after a full year of implementation, researchers from the Urban Institute and Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms, with backing from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, interviewed 32 regulators and stakeholders representing consumers, payers, hospitals, billing companies and other relevant industry subsectors.
    • These informants “largely agreed that consumers are being well protected from surprise balance bills covered under the law,” researchers wrote in the report.
  • Health Payer Intelligence notes
    • Many consumers would be interested in a type of account that was like a health savings account (HSA) in its construction but able to be attached to plans other than high deductible health plans (HDHPs), a survey from Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) stated.
    • “We decided to test enrollee interest in a new type of health account similar to an HSA. Like an HSA, the new health account could be funded by both workers and employers, could be invested in the stock market, and would be portable from job to job. Earnings would grow tax free, and contributions would be capped,” the EBRI researchers explained.
    • “Unlike an HSA, this new health account would not have to be paired with a high-deductible health plan; it could be paired with any health plan.”
  • “AHIP released the latest version of its comprehensive, biennial reportHealth Coverage: State-to-State 2023, which analyzes health coverage and health insurance provider industry employment for all 50 states and the District of Columbia.”

Tuesday’s Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From the public health front

The Wall Street Journal reports

  • Americans seeking messenger RNA vaccines for Covid-19 for the first time will get one, updated shot targeting both the Omicron variant and the original strain of the virus under new moves rolled out Tuesday by federal health officials. 
  • The Food and Drug Administration also authorized a second booster of the updated shots for people at high risk of Covid-19, specifically people 65 years and older or people who have weak immune systems.
  • The agency’s actions mark the latest tweaks to Covid-19 vaccines, and could be followed up by further efforts to simplify the complicated vaccination regimen, perhaps by enshrining plans for a once-a-year shot for most people.
  • “The agency believes that this approach will help encourage future vaccination,” said Dr. Peter Marks, head of the FDA’s division that oversees vaccines. “Covid-19 continues to be a very real risk for many people, and we encourage individuals to consider staying current with vaccination.”

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force maintained its I or incomplete grade for “visual skin examination by a clinician to screen for skin cancer in adolescents and adults.” In other words, USPSTF concluded that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of this screening examination.

The Department of Health and Human Services made available a readout from the Secretary’s roundtable on Black maternal health.

  • One critical action the Administration has taken to move the needle was implementing the state option to extend Medicaid’s postpartum coverage from two months to twelve months, a lifesaving opportunity made possible by President Biden’s American Rescue Plan (ARP) and made permanent by the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023), which President Biden signed into law earlier this year. So far, 31 states and DC have signed on. Congresswoman Robin Kelly – who also sponsors the MOMMA’s Act, which aims to prevent maternal mortality – helped champion this extension. 
  • Participants who lead community organizations helped shine a light on what effective, scalable solutions can look like, and the outcomes speak for themselves.
  • Jennie Joseph shared that by removing barriers to care for women at higher risk for maternal mortality and morbidity, her organization has never had a mother or baby die in 25 years, and of the 1,200 patients served since 2020, only five babies were born premature.
  • Aza Nedhari remarked that her organization’s Home Visitation Program, which provides expectant and new parents with culturally congruent comprehensive home visiting services during pregnancy and postpartum, has supported over 2,000 families and has facilitated a zero percent mortality rate since 2015.

From the obesity treatment front

Healthcare Dive tells us.

  • Telehealth giant Teladoc Health is expanding its physician-based care product for employers to weight management and prediabetes, as interest explodes in drugs meant for diabetes control that are being more frequently prescribed for weight loss, resulting in nationwide shortages.
  • The medications, called GLP-1 drugs, include Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic, which has been at the center of a national conversation about health, weight loss and medication access as more people, especially celebrities, use the drug to lose weight.
  • The provider-based program, which includes access to a Teladoc-employed doctor for a personalized care plan, along with daily coaching with digital tools, will become available for diabetes prevention and weight management in the third quarter, the company told Healthcare Dive.

Beckers Payer Issues adds.

  • UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty told investors [last week] it is “good news” that there are innovations being made in weight management. 
  • “We need to get focused on the facts and reality of this marketplace. We need to really be clear about which patients really do benefit from these medicines and make sure we properly understand how they’re going to use those medicines,” Mr. Witty said. “So there’s a lot still to learn, I think, as these things progress through their final phases.”

From the interoperability front

  • HIMSS reports on its sessions held today.
  • The American Hospital Association relates.
    • About 84% of hospitals had posted a machine-readable file containing rate information by the end of first-quarter 2023, up from 65% the previous quarter, according to a report released today by Turquoise Health. The report also found that 183 commercial health insurers representing over 95% of U.S. commercially insured lives were publishing machine-readable files of their in-network negotiated rates and out-of-network allowed amounts, up from 68 in July 2022.

From the U.S. healthcare business front

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • Hospitals are joining the gig economy. 
    • Some of the nation’s largest hospital systems including Providence and Advocate Health are using apps similar to ride-hailing technology to attract scarce nurses. An app from ShiftKey lets workers bid for shifts. Another, CareRev, helps hospitals adjust pay to match supply, lowering rates for popular shifts and raising them to entice nurses to work overnight or holidays.
    • The embrace of gig work puts hospitals in more direct competition with the temporary-staffing agencies that siphoned away nurses during the pandemic. The apps help extend hospitals’ labor pool beyond their employees to other local nurses who value the highly flexible schedules of gig work. 
    • The shift is among many ways hospitals are revamping hiring, schedules and pay to give nurses more control and to fill staffing gaps created by persistent labor shortages. Vacancies are straining many hospitals’ operations despite recent hiring gains at hospitals and reports of softer demand from some temporary-staffing companies.
  • Healthcare Dive informs us
    • Pharmacists are arguing they should play a more active role in care teams by being allowed to practice the full scope of their license, according to comments at the HIMSS conference in Chicago.
    • Nearly half of U.S. counties have shortages of primary care providers, with just one of those doctors for every 1,500 people, while 61% of those counties have a high volume of retail pharmacy locations that could help make up the deficit, according to new data from health IT network Surescripts.
    • But pharmacists at HIMSS say they need access to a greater range of medical data to get there.
  • OPM held a session on this topic on the first day of its FEHB carrier conference on March 29.
  • Beckers Payer Issues reports
    • CVS Health has named Brian Kane as executive vice president and president of Aetna, effective September 1.
    • Mr. Kane will report directly to CVS President and CEO Karen Lynch. He is replacing Daniel Finke, who is stepping down for health reasons, according to an April 17 news release.

From the tidbits/miscellany department

  • The National Association of Letter Carriers calls attention to the fact that the Postal Service has issued Postal Service Health Benefits Program fact sheets for Postal employees and annuitants.
  • The Drug Channels blog makes ten predictions about how the Inflation Reduction Act will impact market access and drug channels.
  • Govexec predicts expanded childcare options and higher pay for childcare workers based on an executive order that the President signed today.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

The HIMSS conference is being held this week in Chicago. The HIMSS organization is providing the publich with morning and afternoon session updates.

From the regulatory front, the Department of Health and Human Services released the final 2024 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters which is applicable to qualified health plans in the marketplaces.

From the US healthcare business front

  • Healthcare Dive reports
    • Hospital and health system merger and acquisition activity remained consistent in the first quarter of 2023 with 15 healthcare industry transactions, a slight drop from 17 in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to a new report from hospital consultancy Kaufman Hall. The 15 transactions comprised $12.4 billion in total transacted revenue, down from the high of $12.7 billion in 2018.
    • Mergers and acquisitions are trending toward cross-regional partnerships, and the size of the smaller party in mergers is increasing to between $250 million and $750 million in annual revenue, according to the report.
    • Realignment of for-profit health system portfolios continued in the first quarter of 2023, particularly for high financial and operational performing health systems.
  • AHIP issued a report finding that hospital markups on specialty drugs cost patients thousands of dollars.
  • Beckers Hospital CFO Reports identifies 22 US hospitals that are cutting care.
  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us that
    • UnitedHealthcare’s plans to implement a gold-card program in 2024 might cut another 10 percent of its prior authorization volumes on top of a 20 percent reduction that will roll out this summer, UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson said during UnitedHealth Group’s April 14 earnings call, which was transcribed by Seeking Alpha.
    • The payer plans to implement the national gold-card program in early 2024 for care provider groups that meet eligibility requirements, according to a March 29 company news release. The gold-card status applies for most UnitedHealthcare members across commercial, Medicare Advantage and Medicaid. 
    • Qualifying care provider groups “will follow a simple notification process for most procedure codes rather than the prior authorization process,” according to the release. 

From the public health front, Medpage Today reports

  • Chronic pain continued to affect more than one in five U.S. adults, new CDC survey data showed.
  • During 2021, an estimated 51.6 million adults (20.9%) had chronic pain lasting 3 months or longer, and 17.1 million (6.9%) had high-impact chronic pain — pain severe enough to restrict daily activities — reported S. Michaela Rikard, PhD, of the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and co-authors.
  • Pain prevalence was higher in adults who were American Indian or Alaska Native, who identified as bisexual, or who were divorced or separated, the researchers said in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

From the Rx coverage front, the Institute for Clincical and Economic Research released a Final Evidence Report on Lecanemab for Alzheimer’s Disease.

  • — Independent appraisal committee voted that currently available evidence is not adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for lecanemab when compared to supportive care —
  • — Using best estimates from current data, ICER analyses suggest lecanemab would achieve common thresholds for cost-effectiveness if priced between $8,900 – $21,500 per year —
  • — Manufacturers should release all patient-level data to help patients, clinicians, researchers, and regulators understand more about the link between amyloid reduction and cognitive outcomes

Lecanemab is an FDA approved drug that the CDC is considering for Medicare coverage beyond clinical testing. The VA has agreed to cover FDA marketing label uses for the drug in its patient population which overlaps with FEHBP.

From the medical research front, a National Institutes of Health study outlines “opportunities to achieve President Biden’s Cancer Moonshot goal of reducing cancer death rates in the United States. Accelerated progress is needed to achieve Cancer Moonshot goal of cutting the age-adjusted cancer death rate by at least 50% over 25 years, NIH study says.”

  • The study was conducted by researchers in NCI’s Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, the Center for Cancer Research, and their collaborators, using data from NCI’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. The researchers examined trends in age-standardized cancer incidence, survival, and mortality rates from 2000 to 2019 for all cancers combined, as well as for the six cancers that together account for 57% of cancer deaths: lung, colorectal, pancreatic, breast, prostate, and liver. They then projected the overall cancer death rate in 2047 based on the assumption that current trends would continue.
  • According to their analysis, because of decreasing cancer incidence and improvements in survival, age-adjusted death rates from all cancers combined declined by 1.4% per year from 2000 to 2015 and by 2.3% per year from 2016 to 2019. These declines reflect substantial reductions in deaths from lung cancer (-4.7% per year during 2014–2019), as well as colorectal cancer (-2.0% per year during 2010–2019) and breast cancer (-1.2% per year during 2013–2019).
  • Trends in prostate, pancreatic, and liver cancer death rates have been less promising. Death rates from prostate cancer had declined strongly (-3.4% per year during 2000–2013), but the decline has slowed (to -0.6% per year during 2013–2019). Death rates from pancreatic cancer have been increasing (0.2% per year during 2006–2019). Death rates from liver cancer, which had been increasing for decades, recently began to decline (-0.5% per year during 2016–2019). Death rates from all other cancer types combined have declined (-1.7% per year during 2016–2019).

Late Week Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

Dear FEHBlog readers — The FEHBlog wrote a quick blog post for Thursday but overlooked hitting the publish button, so here are the two items from Thursday and the remainder from Friday.

Wednesday afternoon, the Affordable Care Act regulators issued ACA FAQ 59 about the Braidwood Management decision. The FAQs expressly endorsed OPM’s informal administration action last Friday using FEHB Act Section 8902(d) to endorse the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendations that the decision rejected because they had no federal government endorsement. The FEHBlog wonders why HHS hasn’t pulled this page out of OPM’s playbook.

Wednesday night, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (2-1 decision) stayed a portion of the abortion pill injunction on statute of limitations grounds in a 42-page opinion. The Fifth Circuit opinion allows the abortion pill to stay on the market with reinstated in-person medical visit prerequisites and without delivery by mail. The Attorney General has stated that he will ask the Supreme Court to weigh in. Axios reports that the Supreme Court would decide quickly.

Axios was correct because the Wall Street Journal reported that today

  • The Supreme Court temporarily blocked lower court orders that would have limited access to the abortion drug mifepristone beginning Saturday, preserving the pill’s availability while the justices weigh the Biden administration’s emergency request to leave current Food and Drug Administration approvals in place during a continuing legal battle with antiabortion groups.
  • In a pair of orders Friday, Justice Samuel Alito, who oversees emergency matters for the lower courts that limited or suspended approval of the widely used abortion pill, gave the antiabortion groups until noon Tuesday to file briefs in response to appeals by the FDA and Danco Laboratories LLC, which makes the branded version Mifeprex.
  • The temporary orders expire at 11:59 p.m. Wednesday, suggesting a high court decision on whether and to what extent mifepristone will remain available during litigation may come by then.

In other judicial news, the American Hospital Association informs us

  • The U.S. Supreme Court today unanimously reversed a 9th Circuit decision that impliedly stripped federal district courts of jurisdiction over constitutional challenges to the Federal Trade Commission structure, procedures and existence. Ruling in the FTC case and another case involving the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Supreme Court said, “The statutory review schemes set out in the Securities Exchange Act and Federal Trade Commission Act do not displace a district court’s federal-question jurisdiction over claims challenging as unconstitutional the structure or existence of the SEC or FTC.”
  • As a result of this decision, parties may bring claims in federal court alleging that “the structure, or even existence, of an agency violates the Constitution” without having to first go through costly and time-consuming administrative proceedings before the SEC or FTC.

Turning now to the federal employment front –

  • Govexec tells us
    • Office of Management and Budget guidance released Thursday tasks agencies with developing a new system to monitor their “organizational health and organizational performance” on an ongoing basis. With the new system comes an expectation that federal agencies will rely less on telework and remote work, although that must be balanced with the need to compete for talent with private sector employers who continue to offer similar workplace flexibilities, wrote OMB Deputy Director for Management Jason Miller in a blog post accompanying the memo.
  • Federal News Network reports OPM’s implementation of the Postal Service Health Benefits Program.

From the public health front

  • The Centers for Disease Control begins to bring down the curtain on its now bi-weekly review of its Covid statistics and updates us on the bird flu situation.
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced granting emergency use authorization to an improved Covid test.
  • The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation offers various perspectives on achieving joyful, healthy births for all, a worthy goal.
  • Medscape identifies troubling trends in colorectal cancer data recently released by the American Cancer Society.

From the regulatory front —

  • Mercer Consulting offers advice on the recent instructions concerning RxDC reporting for the 2022 reference year due June 1.
  • Healthcare Finance tells us
    • The Office of Civil Rights is providing a 90-day transition period for healthcare providers to come into compliance with the HIPAA Rules regarding telehealth, according to the Department of Health and Human Services OCR. 
    • The transition period will be in effect beginning on May 12 and will expire at 11:59 p.m. on August 9.
    • OCR said it would continue to exercise its enforcement discretion and not impose penalties on covered providers for noncompliance during the 90- day transition period. 
    • During the public health emergency, providers did not have to be licensed in the state where the patient was located. They were allowed to treat patients in other states. 
    • Also, under the PHE, non-HIPAA-compliant platforms were allowed as long as they were not public facing.
    • Both of these flexibilities are coming to an end with the PHE on May 11, with providers now getting a 90-day grace period.
    • Other telehealth provisions expire at the end of 2023 and 2024

From the Rx coverage front —

  • Fierce Healthcare informs us that Cigna’s Express Scripts unveiled two new programs on Thursday, Copay Assurance and ClearCare Rx, which reminds the FEHBlog of OPM’s transparent pharmacy pricing program.
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research (ICER) published an
    • Evidence Report on Treatments for Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis [liver inflammation]
      • — Evidence suggests that both resmetirom and obeticholic acid improve liver histology without evidence yet demonstrating improved long-term outcomes; obeticholic acid has more concerning side effects —
      • — Current evidence suggests that resmetirom would achieve common thresholds for cost-effectiveness if priced between $39,600 – $50,100 per year, while obeticholic acid would achieve these thresholds if priced between $32,800-$40,700 per year —
      • — At the April 28 virtual public meeting, ICER’s independent appraisal committee will review the evidence, hear further testimony from stakeholders, and deliberate on the treatments’ comparative clinical effectiveness, other potential benefits, and long-term value for money —

From the U.S. healthcare business front

  • Beckers Payer Issues reports, “UnitedHealth Group posted revenues of $91.9 billion in the first quarter of 2023, up 15 percent from $80.1 billion over the same period last year, according to the company’s earnings report released April 14.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review ranks 29 physician specialties by annual compensation.

Midweek update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From our Nation’s capital —

  • STAT News reports
    • “Senators are slightly delaying their latest legislative push on health care, but as they do, a clearer picture is emerging about what’s in — and out — of the mix.
    • “The Senate health committee was expected to mark up legislation related to generic drugs, pharmacy benefit managers, and some leftovers from the Food and Drug Administration’s user fee agreements next week, but leaders are planning to reschedule the meeting, several sources told STAT.
    • “But 17 health care industry lobbyists and Senate staffers said Democratic leadership is targeting relatively low-hanging fruit that is bipartisan, and already has established history in legislation [i.e., a $35 copay on insulin in the commercial market]”.
  • Beckers Payer Issues tells us that “the Justice Department has decided to seek a stay pending appeal of a Texas federal judge’s ruling that struck down an ACA provision requiring insurance companies to provide coverage for preventive services, CNN reported April 11.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services proposed a HIPAA privacy rule change “to strengthen its protections by prohibiting the use or disclosure of protected health information (PHI) to investigate, or prosecute patients, providers, and others involved in the provision of legal reproductive health care, including abortion care.” The public comment period will end sixty days after April 17, 2023, the day on which the proposed rule will be published in the Federal Register.

From the public health front —

  • MedPage Today informs us
    • Fentanyl adulterated with xylazine is an “emerging drug threat” in the U.S. and requires immediate action, the Biden administration warned.
    • “This is the first time in a nation’s history that a substance is being designated as an emerging threat by any administration,” said Rahul Gupta, MD, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), during a phone call with reporters late Tuesday afternoon. “And it couldn’t come at a more critical time.”
  • ABC News reports
    • The number of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the United States shows “no signs of slowing,” new federal data shows.
    • A total of 2.53 million cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis were recorded in 2021, according to a new report published Tuesday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • That’s a 5.8% increase from the 2.39 million cases reported in 2020 and a 7% increase from five years ago when 2.37 million STIs were recorded in 2017.
    • “I’d like people to understand that this data actually impacts them whether they think it does or not and it’s because STIs happen to everyone, regardless of socioeconomic, religious, political lifestyle,” Dr. Kameelah Phillips, an OBGYN in New York City, told ABC News. “I’d like them to really understand that routine testing at their health care office is super important … gonorrhea doesn’t care who you are.”
    • While certain STIs did not reach pre-pandemic levels, others — such as syphilis — are recording the highest numbers seen in more than 70 years.

From the mental healthcare front —

  • Benefits Pro highlights a survey finding that
    • 21% of workers at ‘high mental health risk’ and unaware of available [employer sponsored] counseling.
    • Employees often do not know the range of resources available to them in their benefits packages and are often unaware of counseling included in the company’s employee assistance program, according to a TELUS survey.

Federal agencies and the Postal Service sponsor EAPs, but the FEHBlog is unaware of OPM creating a connection between those programs and the FEHBP.

From the Rx coverage front —

  • Drug Channels offers a report on specialty pharmacies which informs us that “Drug Channels Institute (DCI) estimates that in 2022, retail, mail, long-term care, and specialty pharmacies dispensed about $216 billion in specialty pharmaceuticals prescriptions. That’s an increase of 12% from the 2021 figure.”  
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research released
    • Protocol outlining how we will conduct our third annual assessment of how well major insurers’ prescription drug coverage policies align with a set of fair access standards developed by ICER with expert input from patient advocates, clinician specialty societies, payers, pharmacy benefit managers, and life science companies, and
    • Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of exagamglogene autotemcel (“exa-cel”, Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics) and lovotibeglogene autotemcel (“lovo-cel”, bluebird bio) for sickle cell disease.  The draft report represents the midpoint in ICER’s eight month long review process.

From the medical research developments front

  • STAT News reports, “A Parkinson’s ‘game changer,’ backed by Michael J. Fox, could lead to new diagnostics and, someday, treatments.” It’s a heartening medical research story about Mr. Fox’s productive efforts.
  • Medscape reports
    • Phototherapy is a safe, effective, noninvasive, and inexpensive way of boosting cognition for patients with dementia, new research suggests. It may be “one of the most promising interventions for improving core symptoms” of the disease.
    • A new meta-analysis shows that patients with dementia who received phototherapy experienced significant cognitive improvement compared to those who received usual treatment. However, there were no differences between study groups in terms of improved depression, agitation, or sleep problems.

Weekend update

Photo by Eric Heininger on Unsplash

Congress remains on a District / State work break which concludes next Monday following the Easter and Passover holidays.

OPM has rescheduled the second day of the 2023 OPM AHIIP carrier conference for April 20, 2023 from 11 am to 4:15 pm ET.

From the public health front —

  • NPR Shots discusses the simple intervention that may keep Black moms healthier — daily home-administered blood pressure readings.
    • Blood pressure is just one way to measure a person’s health, but during pregnancy and soon after, it’s a critical metric. Unchecked, high blood pressure can contribute to serious complications for the pregnant woman and baby, and increase the risk of death.
  • Politico tells about new efforts underway to solve the crisis in mental health problems among children and adolescents that accompanied the Covid pandemic.
    • Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) plans to introduce three bills aimed at improving mental health care for kids, one of his aides told POLITICO. One bill, set to be reintroduced soon, would create grants for children’s mental health services and make them more accessible. Another would help gather more accurate national data on mental health and children, and the third would focus on the mental health of kids in foster care.
    • And children’s health providers tell government leaders it’s now critical that the federal government step up support for an overburdened system, arguing for increased funding for graduate medical education programs and boosted government reimbursement rates for mental health services.

From the Rx coverage front —

  • USA Today discusses challenges related to using the new generation of weight loss drugs. “Drugmakers are working hard to convince Americans they need their next-generation weight loss medications. But many come with side effects – and the fact we don’t really know what happens long-term.”
  • The Wall Street Journal offers an essay about potential uses for inhalable therapies beyond asthma.
    • “We’re pushing the boundaries of delivery,” said Philip Santangelo, a professor of biomedical engineering at Emory University. 
    • Respiratory diseases that spread through the air are a key target. Dr. Santangelo and colleagues are developing inhalable drugs that use an RNA-editing tool known as CRISPR-Cas13 and messenger RNA to kill viruses such as Covid-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus or RSV. Using nebulizers that dispense medicine as mist via a mask, they have tested the delivery of some of the medicines on rhesus monkeys, cows, horses and pigs. The tests in pigs showed that getting the drugs to the lungs reduces the severity and spread of infections, Dr. Santangelo said. 

From the medical research front —

  • Forbes reports, “Researchers have uncovered an unusual way some cancer cells make nutrients they need to grow, a discovery that could hold the key to starving one of America’s deadliest cancers [pancreatic] with a drug we already possess and raising hopes for a powerful new treatment against a disease that is often caught late and has one of the lowest survival rates of any cancer.”
  • Fortune Well discusses new developments in cancer testing via blood studies.