Thursday Miscellany

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “American women are giving birth at record-low rates. 
    • “The total fertility rate fell to 1.62 births per woman in 2023, a 2% decline from a year earlier, federal data released Thursday showed. It is the lowest rate recorded since the government began tracking it in the 1930s. * * *
    • “Total fertility estimates the number of children a woman would give birth to in her lifetime. The estimates don’t account for what women actually decide in later years, said Brady Hamilton, a co-author of the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics.
    • “The number of births last year was the lowest since 1979, according to provisional data. About 3.59 million children were born in the U.S. in 2023, a 2% drop compared with 3.66 million in 2022. 
    • “The figures are provisional and likely to adjust slightly when final data are released later this year.”
  • The Congressional Budget Office shared a new presentation that “provides a brief summary of CBO’s long-term projections of federal health care spending, the distribution of federal subsidies for health care, the drivers of cost growth in health care, and options for reducing federal spending on health care.”
  • The Internal Revenue Service released a fact sheet that “provides answers to frequently asked questions (FAQs) addressing the tax treatment of work-life referral services (sometimes also called caregiver or caretaker navigation services) provided by an employer to an employee. Under certain circumstances, the value of such referral services can be excluded from gross income and employment taxes as a de minimis fringe benefit.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The AP reports,
    • “It’s easier than ever for doctors to prescribe a key medicine for opioid addiction since the U.S. government lifted an obstacle last year. But despite the looser restrictions and the ongoing overdose crisis, a new study finds little change in the number of people taking the medication.
    • “Researchers analyzed prescriptions filled by U.S. pharmacies for the treatment drug buprenorphine. The number of prescribers rose last year after doctors no longer needed to get a special waiver to prescribe the drug, while the number of patients filling prescriptions barely budged.
    • “Buprenorphine, which helps with cravings, comes in a pill or film that dissolves under the tongue. It costs about $100 a month. A common version of buprenorphine is Suboxone. Nurse practitioners, physician assistants and doctors can prescribe it.
    • “People think this is a very complicated medicine and that it requires some sort of complex knowledge to use, when that’s just not the case,” said Dr. Ryan Marino of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland who has treated hundreds of people with buprenorphine. He had no role in the study.”
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “Taste dysfunction was gone 1 year after exposure to COVID-19, but smell loss remained for some people, a national cross-sectional study showed.
    • “Empirically measured taste function didn’t differ between individuals who had acute SARS-CoV-2 infection a year earlier and uninfected people, reported Shima Moein, MD, PhD, of Sensonics International in New Jersey and the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and co-authors.
    • “However, olfactory dysfunction was present in 30.3% of individuals with prior COVID-19 compared with 21% of those who had no history of COVID infection (OR 1.64, 95% CI 1.18-2.27), Moein and colleagues noted in JAMA Network Open.
    • “Long-term taste loss after COVID may reflect damage to olfactory epithelium, not taste buds, the researchers suggested. Olfactory deficits were greatest for those diagnosed with COVID when the original untyped and Alpha viral variants were prevalent.
    • “Our study sheds light on a critical yet often overlooked aspect of the COVID-19 pandemic: the pervasive impact of smell loss on affected individuals,” Moein told MedPage Today. “Despite its prevalence, smell loss has remained largely neglected by healthcare professionals and policymakers, leading to a lack of awareness and support for affected individuals.”
  • and
    • “A majority of pregnant individuals or those trying to become pregnant were interested in getting a maternal respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine once it became available, a nationwide survey found.
    • “Of 1,528 respondents, 54% said they were “very likely” to get an RSV vaccine during pregnancy, Jennifer Saper, MD, of the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago, and colleagues reported in Pediatrics.
    • “I am excited by the findings that over half of pregnant, or trying-to-be-pregnant people are interested in the RSV vaccine in pregnancy,” Saper told MedPage Today in an email. “This means to me that there are a lot of opportunities to try to protect infants against RSV.”
  • The Dana Farber Cancer Institute shares five things to know about advances in the treatment of multiple myeloma.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb will cut 6% of its workforce in a restructuring meant to save $1.5 billion in costs by the end of next year. 
    • “The layoffs will affect some 2,200 employees, the company said Thursday. It’s also trimming its pipeline of experimental medicines, consolidating its array of offices and laboratories and reducing “third party” spending.
    • “Our focus remains on strengthening the company’s long-term growth profile,” said company CEO Christopher Boerner, in a statement on the restructuring, which was announced alongside earnings for the first quarter.” 
  • and
    • “AstraZeneca’s revenue and profits grew at a rapid clip over the first three months of the year, beating Wall Street expectations as use of the British drugmaker’s flagship cancer drugs widened. 
    • “Total company revenue climbed 17% to $12.7 billion and operating profit jumped 22% to $3.1 billion, compared to the first quarter last year, the company said.
    • “Both the revenue and profit figures surpassed consensus forecasts by 7%, according to a note from Leerink Partners analyst Andrew Berens. The strong earnings were a recovery from the fourth quarter, when lower-than-expected sales and higher costs meant AstraZeneca missed profit estimates.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Evernorth’s Accredo arm will make a Humira biosimilar available to patients with no out-of-pocket costs, the company announced Thursday.
    • “Accredo is the specialty pharmacy segment within Evernorth Health Services, which also houses Express Scripts, eviCore data analytics and MDLIVE telehealth services. [Cigna owns Evernorth.] Beginning this June, the low- and high-concentration biosimilar will be produced for Evernorth’s private label distributor, Quallent Pharmaceuticals, in partnership with multiple manufacturers. * * *
    • “Most patients will be able to secure the biosimilar products for $0 out-of-pocket through the copay assistance programs offered at Quallent beginning in June, Evernorth said.”
  • and
    • “Walgreens is expanding its specialty pharmacy services to offer gene and cell therapy services, supported by a dedicated 18,000-square-foot center in Pittsburgh, the company announced Thursday.
    • “The service is part of the retail pharmacy company’s newly integrated business unit, Walgreens Specialty Pharmacy, that rolls up all its specialty pharmacy segment assets, including AllianceRx. The new business, formerly called AllianceRx Walgreens Pharmacy, is under the Walgreens U.S. retail pharmacy segment.
    • “Walgreens said its integrated model enables it to work with payers, health plans and pharma with a specialty pharmacy offering independent of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs).”
  • Beckers Health IT informs us,
    • “UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Virtual Care is shutting down, Endpoints News reported April 24.
    • “News of the closure of the company’s telehealth business came shortly after Optum employees took to social media beginning April 18 regarding a reduction in force they say occurred across the organization.
    • “Virtual care has been and will continue to be a core part of our comprehensive, integrated care delivery model designed to provide care to people where, when and how they prefer,” an Optum spokesperson told Becker’s. “We continually review the capabilities and services we offer to meet the growing and evolving needs of our businesses and the people we serve. As always, we will support affected team members with job placement resources and seek to deploy them where possible to any open roles within the company.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Mel on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Here’s a link to a the brief text of Senate bill 4811 that would allow over 100,000 reservists and National Guard members who also are federal employees to transfer from the FEHB to the lower cost Tricare Reserve Select healthcare program effective January 1, 2025.
  • Kevin Moss, writing in Govexec, points out the advantages of FEHB high deductible health plans.
  • Beckers Hospital Review alerts us,
    • “A Senate committee opened an investigation into Novo Nordisk’s list prices for Ozempic and Wegovy, Novo Nordisk’s diabetes and weight loss drugs. 
    • “In an April 24 letter to Novo Nordisk’s CEO, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions said Ozempic and Wegovy are “exorbitantly expensive,” which restricts access to the drugs for millions of Americans. 
    • “In the U.S., a four-week supply of Ozempic costs $969, and Wegovy is $1,349. That’s up to 15 times more than what Novo Nordisk charges in Canada, Europe and Japan, the letter said. 
    • “In 2023, pharmacies, clinics and hospitals spent more than $38 billion on the two products, which contain the same drug, semaglutide. They were the No. 1 pharmaceutical expense for U.S. healthcare, according to research published April 24.”
  • STAT News confirms,
    • “Spending on GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy ballooned last year and they’re set to cost the U.S. health care system and the federal government still more this year and beyond, two new reports released Wednesday show.
    • “One study from the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists found that GLP-1 treatments were a main driver of the increase in overall drug spending by health entities such as pharmacies and hospitals last year. In particular, expenditures on Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide — sold as Ozempic for diabetes and Wegovy for obesity — doubled to $38.6 billion, making the drug the top-selling medicine in 2023.
    • “The other report, by health policy research organization KFF, looked at the impact of the recent approval of Wegovy to prevent cardiovascular complications. Medicare is barred from covering drugs for weight loss purposes, but the new approval means the federal payer can now cover Wegovy when prescribed to reduce heart risks. As a result, Medicare could spend $2.8 billion in a year on the single drug, the researchers conservatively estimate.
    • “Taken together, the reports provide a window into the pressure that GLP-1 drugs could place on overall health care spending going forward, especially as more people take the medications. The treatments have been in short supply, but drugmakers are ramping up manufacturing capacity to meet the unprecedented demand from patients. The pharma companies are also seeking approval for even more indications like heart failure and sleep apnea.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved the sale of an antibiotic for the treatment of urinary tract infections in women, giving U.S. health providers a powerful new tool to combat a common infection that is increasingly unresponsive to the existing suite of antimicrobial drugs.
    • “The drug, pivmecillinam, has been used in Europe for more than 40 years, where it is often a first-line therapy for women with uncomplicated U.T.I.’s, meaning the infection is confined to the bladder and has not reached the kidneys. The drug will be marketed in the U.S. as Pivya and will be made available by prescription to women 18 and older. * * *
    • Utility Therapeutics, the U.S. company that acquired the rights to pivmecillinam, said it would be available in 2025. The company is also seeking F.D.A. approval for an intravenous version of the drug that is used for more serious infections and is usually administered in a hospital setting.
    • “Health practitioners said they were elated to have another tool in their arsenal given the growing challenge of antimicrobial resistance, which makes existing medications less effective as pathogens mutate in ways that allow them to survive a course of antibiotics.”
  • As we learned yesterday, “Day One Biopharmaceuticals drug Ojemda is now FDA-approved for advanced pediatric low-grade glioma, the most common type of brain cancer in children. The regulatory decision for Ojemda covers a broader swath of patients than a drug combination from Novartis approved for treating this childhood cancer.” MedCity News adds,
    • “Ojemda is available as an immediate-release tablet or an oral suspension, both administered once weekly. Dosing of the Day One drug is according to body surface area, which is consistent with dosing for other pediatric medications, Blackman said. Day One has set a $33,816 wholesale price for a 28-day supply. That means the annual cost of the therapy will top $440,000. Ojemda’s price is the same for all packages of the drug and will not change as a child grows and needs higher doses, Chief Commercial Officer Lauren Merendino said.
    • “The two formulations of Ojemda can be taken at home, which minimizes disruption to the lives of patients and families, Merendino said. Day One’s goal is to establish Ojemda as the physician’s first choice of therapy for pLGG. Merendino said the drug should become available in about two weeks.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Dairy cows must be tested for bird flu before moving across state lines, under a federal order issued Wednesday, as evidence mounts that the virus is more widespread than feared among cows in the United States.
    • Biden administration officials said the move is meant to contain transmission of the virus known as H5N1 and to reduce the threat to livestock, but they maintained that the risk to humans remains low. * * *
    • “An order issued by the U.S. Agriculture Department that takes effect Monday requires every lactating dairy cow to be tested before moving across state lines. Cows carrying the virus would have to wait 30 days and test negative before being moved, officials said. Positive test results would trigger additional requirements for herd owners to disclose information, including the movement of animals, to aid epidemiologic investigations, and for laboratories and state veterinarians to report cases to the USDA.
    • “Requiring positive test reporting will help USDA better understand this disease and testing before interstate movement will limit the spread of the virus,” Mike Watson, administrator of the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, told reporters.
    • “This is an evolving situation, and we are treating it seriously and with urgency,” he said.”
  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans discusses “What Health Plan Sponsors Should Know About the Emerging Mental Health Needs of Youth.”
  • The National Cancer Institute released its latest Cancer Information Highlights.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “In a proof-of-concept study, researchers demonstrated the effectiveness of a potential new therapy for Timothy syndrome, an often life-threatening and rare genetic disorder that affects a wide range of bodily systems, leading to severe cardiac, neurological, and psychiatric symptoms as well as physical differences such as webbed fingers and toes. The treatment restored typical cellular function in 3D structures created from cells of people with Timothy syndrome, known as organoids, which can mimic the function of cells in the body. These results could serve as the foundation for new treatment approaches for the disorder. The study, supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), appears in the journal Nature.
    • “Not only do these findings offer a potential road map to treat Timothy syndrome, but research into this condition also offers broader insights into other rare genetic conditions and mental disorders,” said Joshua A. Gordon, M.D., Ph.D., director of the National Institute of Mental Health, part of NIH.”
  • A primary care expert writing in Medscape offers a commentary on the new Shield blood test available for colon cancer screening.
    • “We will need to be clear [to patients] that the blood test is not yet endorsed by the USPSTF or any major guideline group and is a second-line test that will miss most precancerous polyps. As with the stool tests, it is essential to emphasize that a positive result must be followed by diagnostic colonoscopy. To addend the cancer screening maxim I mentioned before, the blood test is not the best test for CRC, but it’s probably better than no test at all.”
  • Health IT Analytics tells us,
    • “Researchers from the University of Virginia (UVA) have developed a machine learning tool designed to assess and predict adverse outcome risks for patients with advanced heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), according to a recent study published in the American Heart Journal.
    • “The research team indicated that risk models for HFrEF exist, but few are capable of addressing the challenge of missing data or incorporating invasive hemodynamic data, limiting their ability to provide personalized risk assessments for heart failure patients.
    • “Heart failure is a progressive condition that affects not only quality of life but quantity as well,” explained Sula Mazimba, MD, an associate professor of medicine at UVA and cardiologist at UVA Health, in the news release. “All heart failure patients are not the same. Each patient is on a spectrum along the continuum of risk of suffering adverse outcomes. Identifying the degree of risk for each patient promises to help clinicians tailor therapies to improve outcomes.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Prices for surgery, intensive care and emergency-room visits rise after hospital mergers. The increases come out of your pay. 
    • “Hospitals have struck deals in recent years to form local and regional health systems that use their reach to bargain for higher prices from insurers. Employers have often passed the higher rates onto employees. 
    • “Such price increases added an average of $204 million to national health spending in the year after mergers of nearby hospitals, according to a study published Wednesday by American Economic Review: Insights. 
    • “Workers cover much of the bill, said Zack Cooper, an associate professor of economics at Yale University who helped conduct the study. Employers cut into wagesand trim jobs to offset rising insurance premiums, he said. “The harm from these mergers really falls squarely on Main Street,” Cooper said. 
    • “Premiums are rising at their fastest pace in more than a decade, driven up by persistently high inflation across the economy. Rising costs have fueled contentious negotiations that have led some hospitals and insurers to cancel contracts, leaving patients in the lurch. 
    • “Hospital mergers make the price pressures worse.” 
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Biogen has seen “encouraging early trends” in the launch of its postpartum depression pill Zurzuvae, revealing in first quarter earnings drug sales that surpassed the estimates of Wall Street analysts.
    • “Biogen said sales of Zurzuvae between January and March hit $12 million, up from $2 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 and doubling consensus estimates of $5 million to $6 million. The company didn’t, however, reveal the number of prescriptions filled for Zurzuvae, making demand for the drug difficult to track. 
    • “Zurzuvae, which was discovered by Biogen partner Sage Therapeutics and approved by the Food and Drug Administration last August, is the only pill available specifically meant to treat postpartum depression, or PPD. But its sales prospects are uncertain, as the condition often goes undiagnosed, and many who are diagnosed don’t receive treatment.”  
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “A year ago, when Novo Nordisk announced it would cut the price of multiple insulin products by up to 75%, President Biden, lawmakers, and patient groups all counted the move as a win.
    • But several months later, Novo decided to discontinue one of those products, the basal insulin Levemir.
    • “Though the insulin won’t officially be off the market until the end of this year, patients are already running into supply disruptions and insurance cutoffs, leaving them with few options. The discontinuation, which is happening only in the U.S., has now drawn alarm from some Democratic senators, who sent a letter to Novo last week demanding an explanation.
    • “The turn of events highlights a key gap in policy efforts: Even if officials can get drugmakers to cut prices, the companies can choose to just pull a drug off the market, without guaranteeing that other manufacturers will continue to make the compound.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “Humana reported $741 million in net income in the first quarter of 2024. 
    • “The company published its first quarter earnings report April 24, beating investor expectations. In Q1 2023, Humana posted $1.2 billion in net income.
    • “Total revenue in the first quarter was $29.6 billion, up 10.7% year over year. 
    • “Humana’s medical loss ratio was 88.9% in the first quarter, which the company projects will rise to about 90% for the full year.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “Cleveland Clinic’s eHospital program has expanded and now monitors 248 patient beds in ICUs and other units across the organization’s network.
    • “The eHospital program launched in 2014 as a pilot in one intensive care unit. The program is centered around a component known as the “bunker,” an operations center on Cleveland Clinic’s main campus. The operations center is staffed from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. daily by a team consisting of two critical care nurses and a physician. Their primary responsibility is to monitor patients across various ICU units within the Cleveland Clinic network.”
  • and identifies the 25 most expensive hospital drugs.
    • “Keytruda (pembrolizumab) was nonfederal hospitals’ costliest drug expense in 2023, according to research published April 24 in the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy
    • “In 2021 and 2022, COVID-19 drug Veklury (remdesivir) was the No. 1 pharmaceutical expense for the nation’s hospitals. Most medicines on the list saw modest changes from the prior year except for TNKase (tenecteplase), a cardiovascular therapy that cost hospitals 87.9% more in 2023.” 

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “Enrollees in the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) program just began seeing better coverage of in-vitro fertilization (IVF) for the first time this year. But some members of Congress are looking to take things a step further.
    • “More than 175 House and Senate Democrats are urging the Office of Personnel Management to require every FEHB carrier to expand their offerings and cover costs for both infertility treatments and medications, starting in plan year 2025.
    • “That requirement “would reflect the reality that IVF is one of the most effective treatments for families struggling with infertility, and growing in popularity, with its usage nearly doubling from 2012 to 2021,” the lawmakers, led by Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) and Sen Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), wrote in a letter to OPM Tuesday.”
  • The Congressional letter does not reflect the fact that at least one option of many large FEHB plans do cover IVF treatments and likely more plans will offer that coverage for 2025 due to competition because growing families are good FEHB customers.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services released the 2024 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention (National Strategy) and accompanying Federal Action Plan. * * * To learn more about the 2024 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention and Federal Action Plan, visit www.hhs.gov/nssp.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “a new initiative aimed to help reimagine the home environment as an integral part of the health care system. The Home as a Health Care Hub is intended to enable solutions that seamlessly integrate medical devices and health care, prevention and wellness into people’s lives and may: 
      • “Help medical device developers consider novel design approaches. 
      • “Aid providers to consider opportunities to extend care options and educate patients.
      • “Generate discussions on value-based care paradigms.
      • “Open opportunities to bring clinical trials and other evidence generation processes to underrepresented communities.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission April 23 voted 3-2 to issue a final rule that would ban as an unfair method of competition contractual terms that prohibit workers from pursuing certain employment after their contract with an employer ends. The final rule does not apply to existing agreements with executives earning more than $151,164 annually who are in policymaking positions. In addition, although the Commission recognized that it does not have jurisdiction over not-for-profit entities, it reserved the right to evaluate an entity’s non-profit status and noted that some “entities that claim tax-exempt nonprofit status may in fact fall under the Commission’s jurisdiction.” Specifically, it stated that “some portion of the 58% of hospitals that claim tax-exempt status as nonprofits and the 19% of hospitals that are identified as State or local government hospitals in the data cited by AHA likely fall under the Commission’s jurisdiction and the final rule’s purview.”
    • “The rule takes effect 120 days after publication in the Federal Register and includes model language that employers can use to communicate to workers.  The United States Chamber of Commerce has already indicated that it will file suit to challenge the final rule.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds
  • HR Dive notes,
    • “The U.S. Department of Labor said Tuesday it will publish a final rule raising the Fair Labor Standards Act’s minimum annual salary threshold for overtime pay eligibility in a two-step process. Starting July 1, the threshold will increase from $35,568 to $43,888 per year. It will then increase to $58,656 on Jan. 1, 2025.
    • “The changes will expand overtime pay eligibility to millions of U.S. workers, the agency said. DOL’s 2025 threshold represents a jump of about 65% from the Trump administration’s 2019 rule and is slightly higher than the $55,068 mark that DOL proposed in 2023.
    • “The threshold will automatically update every three years using current wage data — which would next occur on July 1, 2027 —  but DOL said in the proposed rule that updates may be temporarily delayed if the department chooses to engage in rulemaking to change its methodology or update mechanism.”
  • Per FedWeek,
    • “The inspector general’s office at OPM has posted a warning against calling a phone number once associated with the agency’s Employee Express FEHB enrollment site (888-353-9450), saying the number “is currently in use by fraudsters/bad actors who have practiced financial exploitation tactics.”
    • “This phone number was provided on U.S. Department of State human resources notices to employees and Foreign Service retirees. It may also be or have been provided on other participating federal agencies’ human resources or information. This customer service phone number is no longer in use by OPM or the federal government,” it says.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports, “Removing ovaries with a hysterectomy might increase risk of heart disease, stroke and dementia.”
    • “A removal of the ovaries before menopause and before age 46 years may cause an acceleration of the aging processes across many organs, for example, the brain, and many tissues of the body, for example, the bones,” says Dr. Walter Rocca, who is a professor of epidemiology and neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and has written studies on the topic. * * *
    • “Rocca was co-author of a 2021 Jama Network Open study that found that women under 46 who removed both of their ovaries with or without a hysterectomy had an increased risk of mild cognitive impairment and performed worse on cognitive tests 30 years later compared with women who didn’t undergo the procedure.
    • Another study Rocca co-wrote found that women who had ovaries removed before age 50 faced higher risks for several conditions years later, including heart disease and osteoporosis.
    • Other studies have linked the procedures to an increased risk of dementia, Parkinson’s disease and accelerated aging.
    • “Sometimes, patients push to have their ovaries out at a younger age to help with symptoms such as pelvic pain or to avoid a subsequent surgery, says Dr. Daniel Breitkopf, chair of OB-GYN at Mayo Clinic and a member of ACOG’s board of directors. He usually advises waiting.
    • “I would rather do an oophorectomy five or 10 years later so then we have five to 10 years of benefit of those ovaries on your health,” he says.” 
  • The Washington Post informs us,
    • “Viral fragments of bird flu have been identified in samples of milk taken from grocery store shelves in the United States, a finding that does not necessarily suggest a threat to human health but indicates the avian flu virus is more widespread among dairy herds than previously thought, according to two public health officials and a public health expert who was briefed on the issue.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that it had been testing milk samples throughout the dairy production process and confirmed the detection of viral particles “in some of the samples,” but it declined to provide details.
    • “The presence of genetic fragments of the virus in milk is not unexpected. Pasteurization typically works to inactivate pathogens, said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health. It generally does not remove genetic material, Nuzzo said, but typically renders pathogens unable to cause harm to people.”
    • “The greater concern, however, “is that it’s showing up in a lot more samples, meaning the infection is more widespread in dairy herds than we thought,” said one public health official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share information not yet made public.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Day One Biopharmaceuticals said Tuesday the Food and Drug Administration gave accelerated approval to its targeted pill for one of the most common forms of childhood brain tumors, pediatric low-grade glioma.
    • “The weekly pill, previously known as tovorafenib, will be marketed as Ojemda. These tumors generally regress when patients become adults, but toxic treatments are often needed to keep them at bay until then. The hope is that Ojemda can spare some children from, for example, radiation, which can devastate tumors but also healthy tissue throughout the brain and bring lifelong consequences.  * * *
    • “Day One plans to release a price Wednesday morning. 
    • “The authorization is particularly notable because industry has historically developed few drugs for children with cancer, instead focusing on adults, where there is a larger market.” 
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Neurocrine Biosciences, a drugmaker focused on the brain and nervous system, said Tuesday that one of its experimental medicines succeeded in a clinical trial evaluating it as a treatment for major depression.
    • “The medicine hit the Phase 2 trial’s main goal as well as “key secondary endpoints,” according to Neurocrine, which plans to meet with the Food and Drug Administration to discuss a path to late-stage testing. If positive results continue to pile up, the medicine could become the first of its kind to secure an approval.
    • “Eiry Roberts, Neurocrine’s chief medical officer, called the newly released data “very encouraging” and reflective of the medicine’s potential to alleviate many of the symptoms associated with major depressive disorder.”
  • HealthDay relates,
    • “The dangerous heart rhythm disorder called atrial fibrillation is becoming more common in middle-aged people, a new study warns.
    • “More than a quarter of patients at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) seeking care for A-Fib during the last decade were younger than 65, researchers found.
    • “That’s much higher than the 2% prevalence of A-Fib commonly estimated among non-seniors, researchers said.
    • “Common knowledge among cardiologists is that, in people under 65, A-Fib is extremely uncommon and not detrimental. But there really hasn’t been any data to back that up,” said lead researcher Dr. Aditya Bhonsale, a UPMC cardiac electrophysiologist.
    • “The study also found that younger patients with A-Fib were more likely to die or to be hospitalized for heart failure, stroke or heart attack.”
  • Medscape discusses four recently FDA approved therapies that “are likely to be particularly important for primary care clinicians.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Health Payer Intelligence reports,
    • “Provider markups on specialty drugs increased 2024 commercial health insurance premiums by $13.1 billion, according to research from Oliver Wyman commissioned by AHIP.
    • “Provider-administered drugs can be delivered directly to providers from a specialty pharmacy—known as white bagging—or providers can purchase the drugs from the manufacturer or distributor and store the drug until the patient needs it, also called buy and bill.
    • “In the buy-and-bill method, hospitals and physicians can add a markup to the drug, which patients are responsible for paying. Delivering drugs through white bagging is generally more affordable for patients and payers because pharmacies do not add markup charges.
  • mHealth Intelligence relates, “Though telehealth utilization resulted in improvements in some healthcare utilization and quality measures, it was also linked to a 1.6 percent increase in healthcare spending, according to new research published in Health Affairs.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “In the early days of the pandemic, as social distancing forced patients out of doctors’ offices, health care organizations scrambled to offer care online. In turn, health care accreditation organizations rushed to tweak their standards, filling a void in best practices for virtual visits.
    • “But as telehealth has matured, accreditation bodies — typically nonprofits that offer a seal of approval to organizations that pass their audits — are trying to address the nuance of digital care head-on. Today, the Joint Commission announced a new telehealth accreditation that will launch on July 1. Later that month, the National Committee for Quality Assurance plans to release its own virtual care standards, with applications for a new accreditation opening in November.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) announced,
    • ICER and NEWDIGS at Tufts Medical Center “have collaborated to publish a new white paper today that provides clear policy and market solutions to help manage the challenges of paying for gene therapies. The paper, entitled, “Managing the Challenges of Paying for Gene Therapy: Strategies for Market Action and Policy Reform,” was developed with input from a diverse set of patient advocacy groups, payer organizations, large and small biopharmaceutical manufacturers, providers, and others.”
    • “The specific policy reforms and market-based tools ICER and NEWDIGS identify in the paper are intended to help the US health system address these challenges to achieve more equitable and affordable access for patients to the growing number of gene therapies expected to be approved in the coming years. Options such as value-based pricing, value-based outcomes contracts, warranties, subscription insurance models, installment payment arrangements, and a federal carve-out benefit program are explored. For each option, the white paper analyzes the relative advantages and potential unintended consequences, along with suggestions for implementation, and an exploration of unique opportunities for combination or layered approaches.
    • “Gene therapies have the possibility to transform thousands of lives, but only if we ensure sustainable access to them for all patients,” said Sarah K. Emond, MPP, President and CEO of ICER. “It is incumbent upon the entire health care system to focus on innovative payment solutions that can address the challenges of paying for high-cost, one-time treatments. This paper should help stakeholders understand the menu of options available to move beyond responding to the high costs with reduced access, while meaningfully addressing the concerns around clinical uncertainty and budget impact.”
    • “Each condition, therapy and payer is unique, so a single solution cannot satisfy all situations,” said Mark Trusheim, Strategic Director of NEWDIGS. “With a menu of options which can be combined in a single contract or assembled from existing market offerings, each community can construct the most effective approach to ensuring appropriate patient access in their area.”
  • Reuters reports,
    • “Eli Lilly (LLY.N), said on Monday that it will acquire a manufacturing facility from Nexus Pharmaceuticals to produce injectable medicines.
    • “Lilly expects production at the facility based in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin, to begin at the end of 2025.”
    • “Soaring demand for GLP-1 agonists, a class of highly effective diabetes and obesity drugs which suppress appetite and promote a feeling of fullness, has led to constrained supply for drugmakers such as Lilly and Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “A merger between Humana and Cigna could still be in the cards according to one analyst, Bloomberg reported April 22. 
    • “The math now works for a [Cigna and Humana] fusion,” Jeffries analyst David Windley wrote April 22. Since the two companies abandoned a proposed merger in December, Cigna’s stock prices have risen by 37% and Humana is down 31%, according to Bloomberg. 
    • “Cigna could strike a deal to acquire Humana for around $420 per share, Mr. Windley wrote in a note to clients. An acquisition would add to Cigna’s growth if it does not pay more than $470 per share for the company, according to Jeffries.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “About a week ago, cybersecurity experts identified posts from the criminal group RansomHub that suggested the data from the Change Healthcare hack was up for sale.
    • “Those listings have since been pulled, according to a twitter post from Brett Callow, a threat analyst at Emsisoft. It’s unclear at present what led the group to suspend the sale, as they were seeking an additional ransomware payout from Change’s parent company UnitedHealth Group.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • American Hospital News reports
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services April 22 finalized minimum staffing requirements for nursing homes that participate in Medicare and Medicaid. As proposed in September, the final rule will require nursing homes to provide a minimum of 3.48 hours of nursing care per resident day, including 0.55 hours of care from a registered nurse per resident day and at least 2.45 hours of care from a nurse aide per resident day, as well as 24/7 onsite RN services. CMS slightly expanded the opportunity for facilities to seek exemptions from the requirements from its original proposal. AHA had urged CMS not to finalize the proposal but instead develop more patient- and workforce-centered approaches focused on ensuring a continual process of safe staffing in nursing facilities.”
  • KFF adds
    • KFF estimates that 19% of nursing facilities would meet the minimum HPRD staffing standards under full implementation of the final rule with their current staffing levels (Figure 1). Nearly 60% of facilities would meet the interim requirement of an overall requirement of 3.48 HPRD, but fewer facilities would meet the RN and nurse aide provisions that are required when the rule is fully implemented (49% and 30% respectively; data not shown).”
  • HHS’s Office for Civil Rights announced a final amendment to the HIPAA Privacy rule concerning reproductive health. The final rule
    • “Prohibits the use or disclosure of PHI when it is sought to investigate or impose liability on individuals, health care providers, or others who seek, obtain, provide, or facilitate reproductive health care that is lawful under the circumstances in which such health care is provided, or to identify persons for such activities.
    • “Requires a regulated health care provider, health plan, clearinghouse, or their business associates, to obtain a signed attestation that certain requests for PHI potentially related to reproductive health care are not for these prohibited purposes.
    • “Requires regulated health care providers, health plans, and clearinghouses to modify their Notice of Privacy Practices to support reproductive health care privacy.
    • “The Final Rule may be viewed here – PDF.
    • “View The Final Rule Fact Sheet here.”
  • AHA News adds,
    • “The rule will take effect 60 days after publication in the Federal Register and require covered entities to comply within 240 days. As requested by the AHA, OCR plans to issue a model attestation form before the compliance date.”
  • HHS’s Office of the National Coordinator of Health IT announced that
    • “Common Agreement Version 2.0 (CA v2.0) has been released. The Common Agreement establishes the technical infrastructure model and governing approach for different health information networks and their users to securely share clinical information with each other – all under commonly agreed-to rules-of-the-road. The seven designated Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) under the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement℠ (TEFCA℠) can now adopt and begin implementing the new version. Also published today is the Participant and Subparticipant Terms of Participation, which sets forth the requirements that each Participant and Subparticipant must agree to and comply with to participate in TEFCA.”Common Agreement Version 2.0 (CA v2.0) has been released.
    • “The Common Agreement establishes the technical infrastructure model and governing approach for different health information networks and their users to securely share clinical information with each other – all under commonly agreed-to rules-of-the-road. The seven designated Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) under the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement℠ (TEFCA℠) can now adopt and begin implementing the new version. Also published today is the Participant and Subparticipant Terms of Participation, which sets forth the requirements that each Participant and Subparticipant must agree to and comply with to participate in TEFCA.
    • ?Notably, CA v2.0 includes enhancements and updates to require support for Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources® (FHIR®) Application Programming Interface (API) exchange, which will allow TEFCA Participants and Subparticipants to more easily exchange information directly between themselves and will enable individuals to more easily access their own health care information using apps of their choice via TEFCA. These enhancements and updates mark a huge step forward for TEFCA as it meets the promise of seamless nationwide exchange at scale. Visit HealthIT.gov to view a list of key concepts that have evolved from Common Agreement v1.1 to v2.0.”
  • Federal News Network shared the results of survey of federal employee attitudes toward the push to return to office.
    • “Of the 6,300 survey respondents, about 30% said they work entirely remotely, 6% work entirely in-person and 64% were working on a hybrid schedule — a mix of in-person work and telework.
    • “Over half of employees said senior leadership at their agency had not clearly explained the purpose of returning to the office. More than a third were in strong disagreement.”
  • From MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration approved Lumicell’s breast cancer imaging tool, the company said Thursday.
    • “Lumicell developed the Lumisystem imaging technology to enable surgeons to detect residual cancer in the breast cavity after performing a lumpectomy to remove the tumor.
    • “An FDA advisory committee voted in March that the benefits of Lumisystem outweigh the risks, with one expert predicting the system will have the biggest impact on surgeons who have higher re-excision rates.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times asks and considers,
    • Bird Flu Is Infecting More Mammals. What Does That Mean for Us?
    • H5N1, an avian flu virus, has killed tens of thousands of marine mammals, and infiltrated American livestock for the first time. Scientists are working quickly to assess how it is evolving and how much of a risk it poses to humans. * * *
    • “I never let my kids go to a state fair or animal farm, I’m one of those parents,” Dr. Lakdawala said. “And it’s mostly because I know that the number of interactions that we increase with animals, the more opportunities there are.”
    • “Should H5N1 adapt to people, federal officials will need to work together and with their international counterparts. Nationalism, competition and bureaucracy can all slow down the exchange of information that is crucial in a developing outbreak.
    • “In some ways, the current spread among dairy cows is an opportunity to practice the drill, said Rick Bright, the chief executive of Bright Global Health, a consulting company that focuses on improving responses to public health emergencies. But the U.S. Agriculture Department is requiring only voluntary testing of cows, and is not as timely and transparent with its findings as it should be, he said.
    • “Dr. Rosemary Sifford, the department’s chief veterinarian, said the staff there were working hard to share information as quickly as they can. “This is considered an emerging disease,” she said.
    • “Government leaders are typically cautious, wanting to see more data. But “given the rapid speed at which this can spread and the devastating illness that it can cause if our leaders are hesitant and don’t pull the right triggers at the right time, we will be caught flat-footed once again,” Dr. Bright said.
    • “If we don’t give it the panic but we give it the respect and due diligence,” he added, alluding to the virus, “I believe we can manage it.”
  • MedPage Today discusses the ready availability of human vaccines for the H5H1 avian flu virus should the need arise.
  • Precision Vaccinations reminds us,
    • “In April 2024, the United States observes the 15th Annual Oral Cancer Awareness Month, which emphasizes the significance of preventing human papillomavirus (HPV)- related oral cancers [with HPV vaccines].
  • HealthDay tells us,
    • “The right diet may be the best medicine for easing the painful symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), new research shows. 
    • “In the study, two different eating plans beat standard medications in treating the debilitating symptoms of the gastrointestinal disease. One diet was low in “FODMAPs,” a group of sugars and carbohydrates found in dairy, wheat and certain fruits and vegetables, while the second was a low-carb regimen high in fiber but low in all other carbohydrates.
    • “Published April 19 in the journal Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the findings suggest that patients should first try dietary changes before moving to drugs for relief.”
  • MedScape informs us,
    • “A new three-phase screening protocol that incorporates a PSA test, a four-kallikrein panel, and an MRI scan appears to improve the prostate cancer detection rate among men invited to participate in a single screening compared with those not invited, according to preliminary findings from the Finnish ProScreen randomized clinical trial.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “UnitedHealth’s results beat Wall Street expectations on an adjusted basis, with the company noting that overall care patterns in the first quarter were“consistent with the company’s expectations.” Nothing to worry about here, executives repeatedly told investors, who promptly sent UnitedHealth’s stock soaring and hospital shares tanking. Then on Thursday, Elevance offered more relief, saying that costs were running as expected while raising its full-year earnings guidance.
    • “Various monthly surveys are also showing a moderation in hospital volumes. TD Cowen’s survey, for instance, found that 305 hospitals reported only 1% year-over-year revenue growth in March, which was far weaker than 11% growth in February. Analysts led by TD Cowen’s Gary Taylor suggested that we could be at the start of a reversal of hospitals’ outperformance over managed care companies. 
    • “Investors will find out more this week as providers including Universal Health and HCA Healthcare, two large hospital chains, report earnings. HCA might still deliver solid results, as improvements in labor cost pressures and pricing should still positively influence earnings, notes UBS analyst A.J. Rice. 
    • And in any case, stabilization of healthcare utilization isn’t the same as a sharp drop-off. UnitedHealth and Elevance earnings may have signaled to investors that their views on providers were perhaps a bit too rosy, but they didn’t exactly demonstrate that cost pressures have eased. UnitedHealth noted that while it was no longer seeing the “aggressive acceleration” in medical utilization the industry saw in 2023, it hasn’t yet seen a major “step down.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group provided an update late Monday on its analysis of the data accessed in the cyberattack on Change Healthcare, and said it identified files that contain personal and health information.
    • “The company said that the personal health information (PHI) and personally identifiable information (PII) found in the files “could cover a substantial proportion of people in America.” However, UHG said it has not yet uncovered evidence that full medical histories or doctors’ charts were among what was stolen.
    • “UnitedHealth added that with the complexity of the review, it will likely take months of further analysis to identify and notify impacted customers. In the meantime, it’s offering two years of credit monitoring and identity theft protection to anyone who has been effected by the breach.
    • “In addition, the company has also offered to make notifications and conduct required administrative steps on behalf of providers and customers.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb is turning to a manufacturing startup to help produce cancer cell therapies faster, announcing Monday a partnership with the South San Francisco, California-based Cellares.
    • “The deal, which reserves Cellares’ production capacity for Bristol Myers’ use, is worth up to $380 million in upfront and milestone payments. Cellares will handle technology transfer of certain Bristol Myers cell therapies to its automated manufacturing platform, dubbed the Cell Shuttle.
    • :Bristol Myers currently sells two so-called CAR-T cell therapies, Breyanzi for lymphoma and Abecma for multiple myeloma, and has several others in development. In a statement, Lynelle Hoch, head of the pharmaceutical company’s cell therapy unit, said the Cellares deal would help it meet demand for CAR-T therapies “now and in the future.”

Weekend Update

From Washington, DC,

  • The Government Accountability Office posted a report on public health preparedness.
    • “Health and Human Services was initially charged with coordinating the federal response to a 2022 global outbreak of mpox—a smallpox-related virus.
    • “State and local jurisdictions cited challenges in the federal response such as difficulty accessing and using vaccines and tests, which may have led to unnecessary suffering. We added HHS’s leadership and coordination of public health emergencies to our High Risk List earlier in 2022 due to similar issues in past responses.
    • “We recommended that HHS adopt a coordinated, department-wide program that incorporates input from external stakeholders to identify and resolve challenges.”
  • FedSmith offers its take on OPM’s benefit administration letter about tightening FEHB eligibility oversight.
    • “OPM will use its newly completed FEHB Master Enrollment Index (MEI) to run queries that can spot certain enrollment irregularities in existing enrollments. If any are found that raise questions, OPM will notify agencies to review those enrollments.”
    • In the FEHBlog’s view, the Master Enrollment Index will not be reliable until OPM starts using the HIPAA 820 electronic enrollment roster transaction which will allow carriers to reconcile individual enrollments with premiums received.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports on ongoing efforts to create a global pandemic preparedness accord.
    • “The United States has signaled its support for a legally binding agreement, including leveraging its purchasing power to expand access to medicines around the world. But the United States, like many European Union countries, is the object of mistrust because it is the seat of the powerful pharmaceutical industry, which is reluctant to relax control over manufacturing know-how.”
  • Fortune Well discusses how to keep your water bottle clean.
    • “Like many people, Carl Behnke regularly totes a water bottle around throughout his day. From the office to the gym and back home again, Behnke is rarely without it. But Behnke is also an associate professor in the school of hospitality and tourism management at Purdue University, and when he discovered a “biofilm” on the inside of his water bottle while cleaning it, it got his wheels turning. “I realized I probably wasn’t as diligent about cleaning my water bottle as I should be,” he explains. “And that made me curious: if someone who knows about food safety isn’t diligent, what about everyone else?”
    • “That question led to a study, conducted by Behnke and a cohort of academics and scientists into how reusable bottle contamination levels are affected by usage and cleaning behaviors. The group set about to measure contamination levels of water bottles, and to understand how those levels are affected by usage and cleaning behaviors. If you’re regularly drinking water from a reusable bottle, their findings might prompt you to reconsider your own water bottle handling practices.  * * *
    • “Dr. Yuriko Fukuta, assistant professor of medicine—infectious diseases at Baylor College of Medicine, agrees. “We’re constantly touching our water bottles with our mouths and hands, so it’s easy to transmit bacteria to them, and then it just grows,” she says “In some cases, this can make you sick, especially if you have a weaker immune system.” * * *
    • According to Fukuta, your best bets are bottles with a wide mouth, which make them easy to clean and dry, those with a built-in straw that keeps your hands away if possible.
    • If your goal is to keep your water bottle from turning into a germy breeding ground, the simplest approach is Behnke’s, which he changed after conducting the research. “I rinse my bottle once a day,” he says, “and wash it once a week, using good detergent, a bottle brush, and a spray of Clorox bleach.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Providers and drugmakers are once again at odds over the 340B drug discount program: this time, over a rule finalized by the Biden administration on Thursday making changes to its dispute resolution process.
    • “The final rule, which will become effective in mid-June, is meant to make dispute resolution more accessible and efficient, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration, or HRSA, the agency that oversees 340B. Along with lowering barriers to enter the process, the rule requires parties to make a good faith effort to resolve disputes before bringing them to arbiters and creates an appeals process if either party doesn’t like the result.
    • “Provider groups the American Hospital Association and 340B Health said the rule should streamline the arbitration process and preserve the integrity of the controversial program. Meanwhile, pharmaceutical lobby PhRMA said the new process “panders to 340B hospitals” while ignoring drugmakers’ concerns.”
  • KFF lets us know,
    • Federal data from 2019 shows just 4% of potentially eligible enrollees participated in the program, a figure that appears to have held steady through 2023, according to a Mathematica analysis. About 12,000 physicians billed Medicare under the CCM mantle in 2021, according to the latest Medicare data analyzed by KFF Health News. (The Medicare data includes doctors who have annually billed CCM at least a dozen times.)
    • “By comparison, federal data shows about 1 million providers participate in Medicare.
    • Even as the strategy has largely failed to live up to its potential, thousands of physicians have boosted their annual pay by participating, and auxiliary for-profit businesses have sprung up to help doctors take advantage of the program. The federal data showed about 4,500 physicians received at least $100,000 each in CCM pay in 2021. * * *
    • “This program had potential to have a big impact,” said Kenneth Thorpe, an Emory University health policy expert on chronic diseases. “But I knew it was never going to work from the start because it was put together wrong.”
    • “He said most doctors’ offices are not set up for monitoring patients at home. “This is very time-intensive and not something physicians are used to doing or have time to do,” Thorpe said.”
  • Reg Jones offers “A Refresher Course on FEGLI Life Insurance” in FedWeek.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control reports today,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare continues to decrease across most areas of the country. This week, 2 jurisdictions experienced high activity compared to 1 jurisdiction experiencing high activity the previous week. No jurisdictions experienced very high activity. 
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed influenza are decreasing. Emergency department visits with COVID-19 and RSV remain stable at low levels.  
    • “Nationally, COVID-19, influenza, and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week. 
    • “Nationally, the COVID-19 wastewater viral activity level, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, remains low.” 
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Despite Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approval of seven next-generation antibiotics to fight infections caused by resistant “gram-negative” bacteria, clinicians frequently continue to treat antibiotic-resistant infections with older generic antibiotics considered to be less effective and less safe, according to a study by researchers at the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Clinical Center. Researchers examined the factors influencing doctors’ preference for newer antibiotics over traditional generic agents to shed light on the decision-making processes among clinicians when treating patients with challenging bloodstream infections caused by gram-negative bacteria and significant comorbidities.
    • “The study revealed that at a considerable proportion of hospitals, particularly smaller facilities located in rural areas, staff were reluctant to adopt newer antibiotics. Researchers identified a large cost disparity between older and newer classes of antibiotics; the newer drugs can cost approximately six times more than the older medications, which could disincentivize prescribing.
    • “Researchers also highlight that next-gen agents are prescribed more often at hospitals where lab results that show the medications are effective against a patient’s bacterial infection are reported to prescribers. Scientists suggest that earlier and more widespread availability of such lab testing might improve use. Additionally, authors recommend that future public health policies and economic strategies on further development and use of similar antibiotics should be designed to identify and overcome additional barriers.
    • “Gram-negative bacteria are a class of bacteria resistant to multiple drugs and increasingly resistant to most antibiotics. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, they are able to find new paths of resistant and pass along genetic material that enables other bacteria to become drug resistant.”
  • The American Hospital Association News adds,
    • “In clinical trials involving 220,000 patients at 59 HCA Healthcare hospitals, algorithm-driven computerized alerts helped clinicians better identify the appropriate antibiotic for 28% of patients with pneumonia and 17% of patients with urinary tract infections, according to studies funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published April 19 in JAMA. To reduce antibiotic resistance, physicians treating patients with a low risk for antibiotic-resistant bacteria were prompted to give standard-spectrum antibiotics.”In clinical trials involving 220,000 patients at 59 HCA Healthcare hospitals, algorithm-driven computerized alerts helped clinicians better identify the appropriate antibiotic for 28% of patients with pneumonia and 17% of patients with urinary tract infections, according to studies funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published April 19 in JAMA. To reduce antibiotic resistance, physicians treating patients with a low risk for antibiotic-resistant bacteria were prompted to give standard-spectrum antibiotics.
    • “Pneumonia and urinary tract infections are two of the most common infections requiring hospitalization and a major reason for overuse of broad-spectrum antibiotics,” said Sujan Reddy, M.D., medical officer in CDC’s Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion. “The INSPIRE trials have found a highly effective way to help physicians follow treatment recommendations to optimize antibiotic selection for each patient. These trials show the value of harnessing electronic health data to improve best practice.”
  • Health IT Analytics tells us,
    • “Artificial intelligence (AI)-driven tools can improve the skin cancer diagnostic accuracy of clinicians, nurse practitioners and medical students, according to a study published last week in npj Digital Medicine.
    • “The researchers underscored that AI-based skin cancer diagnostic tools are developing rapidly, and these tools are likely to be deployed in clinical settings upon appropriate testing and successful validation.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Alvotech and U.S. commercial partner Teva have signed a “long-term agreement” with an unspecified company to boost access to their biosimilar version of AbbVie’s blockbuster drug Humira, Alvotech said Friday. An Alvotech spokesperson declined to provide specifics.
    • “The deal comes seven weeks after the Food and Drug Administration approved Alvotech’s biosimilar, Simlandi, which the agency previously rejected multiple times. For patients to receive treatment, Alvotech and Teva must first cut deals with drug wholesalers, pharmacies and insurers that negotiate prices before agreeing to cover the therapy.
    • “CVS Health, whose pharmacy benefit manager is the country’s largest by prescription claims, removed Humira from its national formularyon April 1. Wall Street analysts have already reported substantial declines in Humira prescriptions over the last few weeks, when compared to the same period in 2023.”
  • According to Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Change Healthcare has reinstated 80% of the functionality for its claims, payment and pharmacy services following a February ransomware attack, the company said.
    • “Those three areas represent most of Change Healthcare’s customers and continue to be restored, according to an April 16 earnings call from parent company UnitedHealth Group.
    • “Now we’ve still got work to do,” said Roger Connor, CEO of OptumInsight, the UnitedHealth unit that includes Change, during the call. “We’ve got another set of products coming online … in the coming weeks, but pleased with that progress.”
  • The AHA News reports,
    • “Patients went out-of-network 3.5 times more often to see a behavioral health clinician than a medical/surgical clinician in 2021, and up to 20 times more often for certain behavioral health visits, according to a new study by RTI International. For example, patients went out-of-network 8.9 times more often to see a psychiatrist, 10.6 times more often to see a psychologist, 6.2 times more often for acute behavioral inpatient care, and 19.9 times more often for sub-acute behavioral inpatient care.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Social media is displacing physicians as the trusted authorities on whether patients should take one of the medicines. People are not only deciding to take a weight-loss drug—called GLP-1s— based on posts by friends and influencers but sometimes also skipping their doctor to go with one mentioned online.
    • “The virtual word-of-mouth can come across as authentic and accessible. People say they appreciate the tips and support they get from other online users. But many influencers and friends on social media play up all the pounds a person lost while playing down side effects that can be nasty, such as painful headaches and bouts of vomiting. Some omit the risks altogether.
    • “Unlike company drug advertisements, social-media posts don’t have to describe a drug’s side effects, suggest other resources or tell people to speak with their doctors.”
  • Ruh roh. This is why health plans are offering coaching services to these folks.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The U.S. National Guard Association informs us,
    • “More than 100,000 drilling National Guardsmen and Reservists who are full-time federal employees would be eligible to purchase TRICARE Reserve Select health care under legislation introduced in both the House and Senate last week.
    • “Most drilling Guardsmen and Reservists have been able to buy low-cost TRS for more than 15 years. But the 2008 law that created the current program excluded these service members from the more-expensive Federal Employees Health Benefits program. This exclusion includes the Guard and Reserve’s dual-status technicians. And while a provision in the fiscal 2020 National Defense Authorization Act lifts this prohibition, the change does not take effect until 2030.
    • “The Servicemember Healthcare Freedom Act of 2024 would allow federal employees to enroll in TRS once the legislation is enacted. The bill was introduced by Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and co-sponsored by Sens. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., Tina Smith, D-Minn., and John Fetterman, D-Pa., in the Senate. Reps. Jen Kiggans, R-Va., and Andy Kim, D-N.J., introduced the measure in the House. Kim is the Democratic co-chair of the House National Guard and Reserve Caucus.
    • “The legislation affects roughly 113,000 Guardsmen and Reservists, according to a fact sheet from Blumenthal’s office. This figure includes approximately 67,000 Guard and Reserve dual-status technicians, who must be drilling service members to maintain their full-time employment.
    • “Cost is often the big difference between TRS and FEHBP. For example, the widely used FEHBP Blue Cross Basic Option costs $150 a month for a single adult, per Blumenthal’s office. The same TRS coverage is $51.95 a month. The average family of four spent $657.04 each month on health care though FEHBP last year, according to the same fact sheet. Family plans through TRS cost $246.87 a month. * * *
    • “TRS also provides continuity of care during service members’ mobilizations and demobilizations.”
  • The Office of Personnel Management issued a press release about a “New Benefits Administration Letter to Promote the Integrity of the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.” This was the action discussed in Federal Times and Federal News Network articles that the FEHBlog discussed yesterday. The press release adds,
    • “OPM has proposed legislation in its FY2025 Congressional Budget Justification which would enable OPM consistent access to funds from the Employee Health Benefits Fund to build a Central Enrollment system for the FEHB Program. Current FEHB eligibility determination and enrollment is highly decentralized and requires cooperation between nearly 100 employing offices responsible for determining eligibility and enrolling more than 8 million members. These benefits are delivered by 68 health insurance carriers in 2024.     
    • “Since 2022, and following passage of the Postal Service Reform Act, OPM began developing the Postal Service Health Benefits Program to include a centralized enrollment platform. The PSHB accounts for more than 20 percent of current FEHB enrollees. If funded, OPM could extend this same central enrollment system to all FEHB enrollments, which would allow OPM to manage and make consistent all FEHB enrollments and remove individuals who cease to be eligible for the program. ”   
  • OPM also should provide carriers with HIPAA 820 electronic enrollment rosters to systematically reconcile premiums to individual enrollees, thereby assuring that each enrollee is paying the appropriate premium.
  • WTW, a major consulting firm, posted an article about the final 2025 notice of benefits and payment parameters which calls attention to a point on which the FEHBlog has not yet focused.
    • CMS adopted a rule to remove the regulatory prohibition on issuers from including routine non-pediatric dental services as an essential health benefit (EHB). This change would allow states to update their EHB-benchmark plans to add routine adult dental services as an EHB, removing regulatory and coverage barriers to expanding access to adult dental benefits. 
    • If a self-insured [or any FEHB] plan adopts a state benchmark plan that covers non-pediatric dental as an EHB and that plan covers non-pediatric dental, then the plan could not impose annual or lifetime dollar limits on that coverage (unless the coverage meets the requirements to be an excepted benefit or limited scope dental).
  • The American Hospital Association News reports,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission, Justice Department and Department of Health and Human Services April 18 launched HealthyCompetition.gov, an online portal for the public to report potentially unfair and anticompetitive health care practices. The FTC and the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division plan to review complaints for the appropriate agency to investigate if it raises sufficient concern under antitrust laws or HHS authorities.”
  • HR Dive tells us,
    • “The U.S. Supreme Court held Wednesday that employees challenging discriminatory transfers at work do not need to prove they suffered “significant” harm under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; instead, they need only prove harm was done. 
    • “To demand ‘significance’ is to add words to the statute Congress enacted,” the high court ruled in Muldrow v. City of St. Louis. “It is to impose a new requirement on a Title VII claimant, so that the law as applied demands something more than the law as written. That difference can make a real difference for complaining transferees.”
    • “In the case, a police sergeant alleged she was transferred out of the intelligence division because of her sex and given less “prestigious” duties, a worse schedule and fewer job perks.”
  • The U.S. Census Bureau reports,
    • “The percentage of adults age 65 and older covered by both private health insurance and Medicare decreased from 47.9% in 2017 to 39.6% in 2022, reflecting older adults’ increased reliance on Medicare coverage alone.
    • “Dual coverage rates decreased almost every year during that period, except from 2020 to 2021, while rates of Medicare coverage alone significantly increased during the same period, from 37.6% to 44.8%, according to a new analysis of data from the 2023 Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC)
    • “Much of the increase in the share of older adults relying solely on Medicare was driven by a drop in the share of those also receiving private coverage.”
  • Although OPM waited much too long to allow FEHB plans the opportunity to offer Part D EGWPs, OPM to its credit has not followed the lead of many private employers which leave their retirees to Medicare alone.
  • The Social Security Administration has made available an interview with its new Commissioner Martin O’Malley who discussed his top priorities: “1) Reduce call wait times, 2) Issue faster disability decisions, 3) Resolve inequities in overpayments and underpayments.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “The CDC and FDA are warning about a multistate outbreak of Salmonella typhimuriumopens in a new tab or window infections linked to fresh basil sold at Trader Joe’s stores in over two dozen states.
    • “Twelve cases have been reported across seven states as of April 17, including one hospitalization. Exposure to fresh organic basil from Trader Joe’s prior to illness was confirmed in seven of eight individuals with additional case information.
    • “Miami-based Infinite Herbs, which makes the basil, has agreed to a voluntary recall, and the herbs have been pulled from store shelves.
    • “If you already bought organic basil from Trader Joe’s and removed it from the packaging or froze it and cannot tell if it was Infinite Herbs-brand, do not eat or use it and throw it away,” the FDA said in its statementopens in a new tab or window.
    • “The product was sold in a 2.5-oz clamshell-style container at Trader Joe’s stores in Washington, D.C., and 29 statesopens in a new tab or window, with most east of the Mississippi River. Cases have been reported in Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.
    • “An investigation is ongoing to determine whether additional products are linked to the illnesses, the FDA noted.”
  • The NIH Director, in her blog, pointed out,
    • “Pregnancy and childbirth are often thought of as joyful times. Yet, we know that mental health conditions including perinatal depressionanxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are common complications during and after pregnancy, and this is contributing to a maternal health crisis in this country.
    • “Now, a trio of NIH-supported studies reported in the journal Health Affairs show that diagnosis and treatment of mental health conditions such as anxiety, depression, and PTSD during pregnancy and in the first year after giving birth rose significantly in Americans with private health insurance from 2008 to 2020. While these are encouraging signs of increasing mental health awareness and service use, these studies also showed that this increase hasn’t happened equally across all demographic groups and states, making it clear there’s more work to do to ensure that people from all walks of life have access to the care they need, regardless of their race, ethnicity, geographic location, financial status, or other factors. * * *
    • “It will be important to learn in future studies more about those who may still not be receiving the mental health care they need. The researchers report plans to look deeper into changes that have taken place at the state level and the impact of the pandemic and the rise of telehealth since 2020. Other recent NIH-supported research suggests that relatively straightforward interventions to reduce postpartum anxiety and depression can be remarkably effective. The key step will be not only identifying interventions that work, but also figuring out how to deliver effective treatments to the people who need them.”
  • According to BioPharma Dive,
    • “Cerevel Therapeutics, a biotechnology company in the midst of being acquired by AbbVie, on Thursday said a Parkinson’s disease treatment it’s developing succeeded in a late-stage clinical trial.
    • “The treatment, called tavapadon, helped keep the disease’s disruptive motor fluctuations at bay, extending the total time of symptom control by just over one hour, compared to a placebo. This difference in “on” time was statistically significant, Cerevel said.
    • “Tavapadon also significantly reduced the amount of “off” time that treated study participants experienced, meeting a secondary goal of the Phase 3 study. People with Parkinson’s often cycle between these “on” and “off” periods as the effects of mainstay drugs like levadopa and carbidopa wane. In Cerevel’s study, tavapadon was given as an adjunctive therapy, meaning it was added on top of levadopa.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The nation’s largest coalition of obstetricians issued an urgent warning Thursday calling on doctors to expand testing for syphilis during pregnancy amid a surge of cases in recent years.
    • “The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists updated its recommendations, advising a routine blood screening at the first prenatal visit and screenings in the third trimester of pregnancy and at birth. This contrasts with previous recommendations, which called for testing in the third trimester exclusively for individuals living in communities with high syphilis rates and for those at risk of syphilis exposure during pregnancy.
    • “We’re always trying to create healthier families, and some of the diseases that we can easily diagnose and treat are things that we should prioritize, especially when they can be devastating to a baby,” said Laura E. Riley, chair of the obstetrician coalition’s immunization work group. Riley helped write the guidance. * * *
    • “In April 2023, the Food and Drug Administration announced a shortage of penicillin in the United States attributed to increased demand.
    • “To combat the ongoing shortages, the FDA granted temporary approval for a French drug, Extencilline, which is used for syphilis treatment but is not FDA-approved. While the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act prohibits importing unapproved drugs into the United States, the secretary of Health and Human Services can authorize temporary importation and distribution of such drugs to address shortages until domestic production returns to normal levels.
    • “Riley said the updated guidance from the obstetricians group is essential because it makes physicians aware of the alternative treatment for syphilis amid the shortage.
    • “In June 2023, the maker of penicillin, Pfizer, said it would prioritize making the drug available, with the shortage expected to be relieved within the next few months of this year.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues relates,
    • “Elevance Health posted $2.2 billion in net income during the first quarter, a nearly 13% increase compared to the same period last year, according to the company’s earnings report published April 18.
    • “First quarter results reflect disciplined execution of our strategic initiatives during a dynamic time for our industry,” President and CEO Gail Boudreaux said. “We are making significant progress expanding Carelon’s capabilities, scaling our flywheel for enterprise growth, and delivering results for all stakeholders. Given the solid start to the year, we have increased our outlook for full year earnings.”
    • “Total revenues in the first quarter were $42.6 billion, a 1% increase year over year.
    • “Total expenses in the first quarter were $39.6 billion, a 0.2% increase.
    • “Net income was $2.2 billion in the first quarter, up 12.9% from the same period last year. 
    • “Elevance raised its full-year earnings outlook to $37.20 in earnings per share.”
  • Modern Healthcare lets us know,
    • “CVS Health is opening Oak Street Health primary care clinics at its retail pharmacy stores — a move that hasn’t always worked out for competitors.
    • “CVS acquired primary care provider Oak Street last May for $10.6 billion and announced plans to add 50 to 60 Oak Street clinics in 2024. Most of those clinics are expected to be standalone locations, including some located in closed CVS stores. But CVS also is piloting a setup that replaces much of the retail space in existing stores with clinics.
    • “Walgreens executives say they remain confident in the VillageMD investment, although the focus has shifted away from expansion and more toward ramping up profitability in VillageMD’s strongest markets.
    • “CVS may have a different experience. Its expansion plan for Oak Street has a slower pace than what Walgreens tried, said Jack Slevin, vice president of healthcare services equity research at Jefferies. CVS’ model is dedicating a lot of space to the Oak Street clinics and pharmacy operations, which would allow for more patient volume, he said.
    • “[CVS is] giving them enough space that it feels like a true Oak Street location,” Slevin said. “If you look at the Walgreens strategy on the square footage side, it was very much more bolting on a smaller Village practice to a Walgreens store that was going to look very much the same.”
  • The FEHBlog also ran across the following consulting firm opinion pieces that are worth a gander:
    • A Brown and Brown paper on the role of employers in advancing health equity.
    • A RAND paper discussing why employers delay coverage for FDA newly approved drugs.
      • FEHBlog takeaway :”The FDA has steadily increased the speed at which it approves new drugs over the last two decades. In 2023, the agency approved 55 new drugs, up from 21 in 2003. The great majority of drugs are now approved through its accelerated program, leaving the FDA wide open to criticism that its standards are too low and that it is simply acting as a rubber stamp for pharmaceutical companies. Under the accelerated program, the FDA grants approval for the drug to be put on the market and later grants full approval after clinical trials confirm a drug’s effectiveness.”
    • A McKinsey Health Institute paper on improving mental health services for children.
      • “As part of the McKinsey Health Institute’s (MHI’s) Conversations on Health series, Erica Coe and Kana Enomoto, coleaders at MHI, discussed this challenge and how to prioritize the mental health needs of children and adolescents with Zeinab Hijazi, PsyD, the global lead on mental health at UNICEF.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Federal Times and Federal News Network discuss OPM’s plans to tighten internal controls over family member eligibility in the FEHBP. OPM’s actions will shift the burden of monitoring family member eligibility from the FEHB plans to employing agencies, which is where the responsibility belongs.
  • OPM also should be filling the greatest internal control gap in the FEHB – the fact that OPM does not allow carriers, which bear the insurance risk, to reconcile premium payments to individual enrollees. A cost effective solution is available by implementing the HIPAA 820 electronic enrollment roster transaction which systematically generates such reconciliations.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Alvotech and Teva on Tuesday won Food and Drug Administration approval for Selarsdi, the second biosimilar poised to challenge Johnson & Johnson’s blockbuster psoriasis drug, Stelara.
    • “The FDA cleared Selarsdi for treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis and active psoriatic arthritis in adults and children who are at least 6 years old. The companies said they expect to begin selling the medicine on or after Feb. 21, 2025, a delayed introduction due to a legal settlement with J&J.
    • “The two companies are likely to enter the market after Amgen, which won approval for an interchangeable biosimilar called Wezlana in October. Amgen is also subject to a legal settlement, and the company has said its product will launch no later than Jan. 1, 2025.”
  • Healthcare Dive had the time to report on the CBO report on Medicare Accountable Care Organizations which the FEHBlog noted yesterday.
    • “Accountable care organizations led by independent physicians save Medicare more money than other types of ACOs, according to a new Congressional Budget Office review of existing research.
    • Independent physician-led ACOs have clear financial incentives to reduce hospital care to lower spending, while hospital-led ACOs — which earn more revenue when patients are admitted — do not, the CBO found. Hospitals also have less direct control over what services patients receive.
    • “ACOs with a larger proportion of primary care providers also saved Medicare more money, along with ACOs whose initial spending was higher than their peers in the same region, according to the report.”
  • The FEHBlog’s primary care provider practices in such an ACO.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A pill taken once a week. A shot administered at home once a month. Even a jab given at a clinic every six months.
    • “In the next five to 10 years, these options may be available to prevent or treat H.I.V. Instead of drugs that must be taken daily, scientists are closing in on longer-acting alternatives — perhaps even a future in which H.I.V. may require attention just twice a year, inconceivable in the darkest decades of the epidemic.
    • “This period is the next wave of innovation, newer products meeting the needs of people, particularly in prevention, in ways that we didn’t ever have before,” said Mitchell Warren, executive director of the H.I.V. prevention organization AVAC.
    • “Long-acting therapies may obviate the need to remember to take a daily pill to prevent or treat H.I.V. And for some patients, the new drugs may ease the stigma of the disease, itself an obstacle to treatment.”
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • “Eli Lilly reported positive results for its obesity drug Zepbound in obstructive sleep apnea, giving the medication a new edge in the highly competitive obesity market.
    • “The results also pave the way for Zepbound to potentially become the first approved treatment for obstructive sleep apnea, or OSA, a common disorder characterized by breathing interruptions during sleep.
    • “In one year-long Phase 3 study that looked at patients with obesity who were not on PAP therapy, a form of ventilation, those taking Zepbound experienced a reduction of 25.3 events per hour on the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), a measure of the number of times breathing stops and becomes restricted while sleeping. That compares with a reduction of 5.3 events in patients on placebo, Lilly said in a press release Wednesday.
    • “In another Phase 3 study in patients who were on PAP therapy, those on Zepbound had a reduction of 29.3 events per hour on the AHI, compared with a reduction of 5.5 events in patients on placebo.
    • “Severe OSA is defined as having over 30 events per hour, and moderate OSA is defined as 15 to 30 events per hour.”
  • CNBC adds,
    • “Most doses of Eli Lilly’s highly popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes counterpart Mounjaro will be in short supply through the second quarter of this year due to increased demand, according to an update on the Food and Drug Administration’s drug shortage database.
    • “A previous update said some doses of both treatments would have limited availability through April.
    • “The new update suggests that the insatiable demand for a buzzy class of weight loss and diabetes drugs is still trouncing supply, even as Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk work to increase production of those treatments.” 
  • The Associated Press informs us,
    • “For decades, patients seeking medication for pain have had two choices: over-the-counter drugs like aspirin or powerful prescription opioids like oxycodone.
    • “Opioid prescriptions have plummeted over the last decade as doctors have become more attuned to the risks of addiction and misuse during the country’s ongoing drug epidemic.
    • “Vertex Pharmaceuticals recently reported positive results for a non-opioid painkiller, one of several medications the Boston-based drugmaker has been developing for various forms of pain. Patients taking the drug after surgery experienced more pain relief than those getting a placebo, although the drug didn’t meet a secondary goal of outperforming treatment with an opioid.
    • The AP interviews Vertex’s chief scientist Dr. David Altshuler about the company’s research and development plans.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “In recent months, parts of the U.S. have reported outbreaks of pertussis, or whooping cough. While some regional outbreaks are expected each year, health officials are underscoring the importance of boosters in adults to protect infants from severe illness, NBC News reported April 17.  * * *
    • “The TDap vaccine is recommended for children 11 and older who have not received the DTaP series. Adults should receive a Tdap booster dose every 10 years, according to the CDC. 
    • “Anyone who comes to see [a] new baby should have had a recent inoculation with Tdap vaccine to provide a cocoon of protection around that baby,” William Schaffner, MD, professor of infectious diseases at Nashville, Tenn.-based Vanderbilt University Medical Center, told NBC News.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “Steward Health Care is on the clock. 
    • “The Dallas-based healthcare network has until the end of the month to prove to lenders it has the cash on hand to begin repaying its significant debts — or it could face bankruptcy proceedings. 
    • “Demonstrating solvency could be a tall order because the health system owes a lot of parties a significant amount of money, according to analysts familiar with the system. 
    • “Should Steward fail, it would be one of the largest provider bankruptcies in decades, said Laura Coordes, professor of law at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University.” 
  • MedTech Dive notes, “Abbott looks to ‘highly productive’ device pipeline for future growth. CEO Robert Ford highlighted new and upcoming products throughout the earnings call, calling the recently approved Triclip valve a “billion-dollar opportunity.”
  • According to BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental drug designed to improve brain function in people with nerve-degrading disorders has failed a mid-stage study that tested it against Parkinson’s disease.
    • “The trial enrolled almost 90 participants, who once a day were given either a placebo or a drug from Sage Therapeutics called SAGE-718. Summary results released Wednesday showed no significant difference between the two groups in how their mental abilities changed over the course of six weeks, as measured by a scale clinicians use evaluate cognition. * * *
    • “Sage is still testing SAGE-718 across three additional trials that should have data this year. One, codenamed “Lightwave,” is focused on people with mild cognitive impairment and mild dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease. The other two, “Surveyor” and “Dimension,” are investigating whether the drug can help Huntington’s disease patients with cognitive impairment.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out and names ten of twenty most popular drugs are in shortage.

OPM Director Resigns

OPM Headquarters a/k/a the Theodore Roosevelt Building

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network reports,
    • Kiran Ahuja, director of the Office of Personnel Management, will be stepping down from her position in early May, OPM announced Tuesday. * * *
    • Ahuja decided to leave the position due to ongoing health concerns and a recent death in the family, an agency spokesperson said. Once Ahuja vacates her position as the top-most OPM official in the coming weeks, OPM Deputy Director Rob Shriver will begin serving as acting director. * * *
    • “Kiran leaves an incredible legacy as a strong and indefatigable champion of the 2.2 million public servants in the federal workforce,” OPM’s Shriver said in a statement. “Under Kiran’s leadership, OPM has bounced back stronger than ever and partnered with agencies across government to better serve the American people. Kiran represents the very best of the Biden-Harris administration, and I am honored to call her a dear colleague and friend.”
  • Here are links to today’s relevant House of Representatives Committee hearings — one “Examining Health Sector Cybersecurity in the Wake of the Change Healthcare Attack” and the other “ERISA’s 50th Anniversary: the Path to Higher Quality, Lower Cost Health Care.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “President Joe Biden’s administration will help 50 countries identify and respond to infectious diseases, with the goal of preventing pandemics like the Covid-19 outbreak that suddenly halted normal life around the globe in 2020.
    • “U.S. government officials will offer support in the countries, most of them located in Africa and Asia, to develop better testing, surveillance, communication, and preparedness for such outbreaks in those countries.
    • “The strategy will help “prevent, detect and effectively respond to biological threats wherever they emerge,” Biden said in a statement Tuesday.
    • “The Global Health Security Strategy, the president said, aims to protect people worldwide and “will make the United States stronger, safer, and healthier than ever before at this critical moment.”
  • The Congressional Budget Office issued a report about past performance and future directions of Medicare Accountable Care Organizations.
  • One Digital tells us,
    • “The 2023 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection window opens on April 30, 2024 and ends June 4, 2024. Private-sector employers with 100 or more employees or federal contractors with 50 or more employees must submit workforce demographic data. The EEO-1 Component 1 report is a mandatory annual data collection. Covered employers must submit data by job category and sex and race or ethnicity to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). Updates to the data collection will be posted to the EEOC’s dedicated EEO-1 Component 1 website.
    • “The 2023 EEO-1 Component 1 Instruction Booklet and 2023 EEO-1 Component 1 Data File Upload Specifications are available on the EEOC’s dedicated EEO-1 Component 1 website. Employers must file their information through the EEO-1 Component 1 Online Filing System (OFS) either through manual data entry or data file upload. The EEO-1 Component 1 online Filer Support Message Center (i.e., filer help desk) will also be available on Tuesday, April 30, 2024, to assist filers with any questions they may have regarding the 2023 collection.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Value Penguin lets us know,
    • “Some much-needed good news for U.S. citizens: Between the first quarters of 2021 and 2023, the national age-adjusted death rate fell by 17.7%, according to the latest ValuePenguin study.
    • “Our study also looked at death rates by cause and the leading causes by state. Perhaps unsurprisingly given increased vaccination access and herd immunity, COVID-19 deaths fell most precipitously over that time. Deaths from most other causes showed a decline, too.”
  • HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research released a Medical Expenditure Panel Survey with the following highlights
    • “In 2021, the top 1 percent of the population ranked by their healthcare expenditures accounted for 24 percent of total healthcare expenditures, while the bottom 50 percent accounted for less than 3 percent.
    • “Persons in the top 1 percent expenditure tier had an average of $166,980 in healthcare expenditures in 2021, nearly $30,000 higher than in 2019 or 2018. In 2020, persons in the top 1 percent expenditure tier had average expenditures that were more than $20,000 higher than in 2019 or 2018.
    • “Persons aged 65 and older and non-Hispanic Whites were disproportionately represented in the top expenditure tiers. 
    • “Inpatient stays accounted for about 26 percent of healthcare expenses for persons in the top 5 percent expenditure tier.
    • “More than three-quarters of aggregate expenses for persons in the top 5 percent expenditure tier were paid for by private insurance or Medicare.
    • “Among adults in the top 5 percent expenditure tier, 78.1 percent had two or more priority conditions.”
  • MedPage Today relates,
    • “Independent reviewers confirmed a causal relationship between the first mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and myocarditis, and also determined that, more broadly, intramuscular shots can cause a series of shoulder injuries.
    • “At the same time, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) committee rejected a causal relationship between the Pfizer-BioNTech BNT162b2 and Moderna mRNA-1273 (Comirnaty and Spikevax, respectively) mRNA COVID vaccines and female infertility, Guillain-Barré syndrome, Bell’s palsy, thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS), and myocardial infarction.”
  • According to the University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP,
    • “A study yesterday in JAMA Internal Medicine demonstrates that 22% of hospitalized adults aged 50 years or older with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection experienced an acute cardiac event—most frequently acute heart failure (16%). Moreover, 1 in 12 of infected patients (8.5%) had no documented underlying cardiovascular disease.
    • “RSV is associated with annual totals of up to 160,000 US hospitalizations, 10,000 deaths, and $4 billion in direct healthcare costs among adults age 65 years or older.
    • “Despite evidence of considerable RSV-associated morbidity, mortality, and health care expenditure, the potential severity of RSV infection in adults has historically been underappreciated by public health professionals and clinicians,” the authors write. RSV is rarely tested for in the clinical settings, and symptoms usually mirror other respiratory diseases, they add.” 
  • and
    • “New research conducted at US primary and urgent care sites shows that antibiotics didn’t provide any benefit for patients with a cough caused by an acute lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI).
    • “In fact, the findings, published yesterday in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, show that receipt of an antibiotic was associated with a small but significant increase in the duration of cough overall compared with those who didn’t receive an antibiotic. Even for those patients with a confirmed bacterial infection, the time until illness resolution was the same whether or not the patients received an antibiotic.
    • “Patients who received an antibiotic also had a higher overall disease severity over the entire course of their illness compared with those who didn’t.
    • “The study authors say the results of the Enhancing Antibiotic Stewardship in Primary Care (EAST-PC) study, which is the largest observational study to date on LRTIs in US primary and urgent care settings, are yet another indication that clinicians should be more prudent about using antibiotics for LRTIs.”
  • BioPharma Dive informs us,
    • “An antipsychotic drug from Intra-Cellular Therapies appears to also work as an add-on therapy for depression, according to clinical trial results the New York-based biotechnology company released Tuesday.
    • “The large trial enrolled almost 500 patients with major depression and hit its main goal as well as “key secondary endpoints,” the company said in a statement. It found that, over a six-week period, depressive symptoms significantly declined in study volunteers given Intra-Cellular’s drug plus antidepressants compared to those given a placebo and antidepressants.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “UnitedHealth estimates costs from the Change Healthcare cyberattack could reach $1.6 billion this year, executives said on Tuesday. However, the managed care giant maintained its full-year earnings guidance, suggesting the financial fallout from the attack on the massive claims clearinghouse may be less serious than feared.
    • “The hit comes from direct response efforts like recovering Change’s clearinghouse platform and paying higher medical costs after its insurance arm suspended some utilization management processes, in addition to the loss of Change’s revenue.
    • “In the first quarter alone, the cyberattack cost UnitedHealth $872 million, according to financial results posted Tuesday.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “Rising medical cost trends aren’t going down, but they are stabilizing, UnitedHealth Group executives say. 
    • “CEO Andrew Witty told investors April 16 that pent-up demand and increased health system capacity following the COVID-19 pandemic drove rising costs through 2023, but the trend was a “one-off.” 
    • “We don’t see anything like that. We see much more stabilization. We haven’t seen a step-down from that trend, but we certainly see that kind of sustained activity without aggressive acceleration,” Mr. Witty said. 
    • “Every major insurer reported rising costs in the Medicare Advantage population in the last months of 2023. While a few insurers, including Humana and CVS Health, cut their 2024 earnings guidance based on the trend, UnitedHealth Group maintained it can weather the storm. 
    • “The company reported its first-quarter earnings April 16. UnitedHealthcare’s medical loss ratio was 84.3% in the first quarter, compared to 82.2% the year prior and down from 85% in the fourth quarter of 2023.”
  • and
    • “UnitedHealth Group plans to bring Change Healthcare back stronger than it was before it suffered the largest cyberattack in the history of the U.S. healthcare system. 
    • “On an April 16 call with investors, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty said it is “important for the country” that UnitedHealth Group owns Change. 
    • “Without UnitedHealth Group owning Change Healthcare, this attack likely would still have happened. It would have left Change Healthcare, I think, extremely challenged to come back,” Mr. Witty said. “Because it is a part of UnitedHealth Group, we’ve been able to bring it back. We’re going to bring it back much stronger than it was before.” 
  • Medscape offers a slideshow on 2023 physician compensation.
  • Beckers Payer Issues notes,
    • “Elevance Health will enter a partnership with private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice to develop advanced primary care models. 
    • “The joint effort will operate across multiple states and commercial, individual, Medicare and Medicaid markets, according to an April 15 news release. The payer-agnostic platform will serve more than 1 million members, the companies said. 
    • “The deal is financed primarily “through a combination of cash and our equity interest in certain care delivery and enablement assets of Carelon Health,” according to the news release. The two companies did not disclose the financial terms of the deal, and it is not expected to have a material impact on Elevance’s 2024 earnings. 
    • “The partnership will bring together two CD&R assets, digital platform Apree Health and Florida-based provider group Millennium Physician Group, and Carelon Health. Several Carelon Health clinics, part of Elevance Health, will provide care to members with chronic and complex conditions.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “About nine months after the FDA fully approved an Alzheimer’s drug for the first time, the medicine is trudging through insurance barriers and hesitations from potential patients, the Chicago Tribune reported April 12. * * *
    • “One of its manufacturers, Eisai, predicted 10,000 patients would begin treatment by the end of March. Eisai executives have since backed away from that forecast, but they say sales are increasing, according to the Tribune
    • “CMS covers Leqembi, and so do about 75% of commercial plans in the U.S., a spokesperson for the drugmaker said. But, for the upwards of 6 million Americans who are diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, the medication has not made a splash as patients worry about side effects and contraindications.”
  • and
    • “Multiple April bankruptcy court filings revealed that Camp Hill, Pa.-based Rite Aid has plans to shutter 53 additional locations across nine states after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and shared it will close 154 locations last October. 
    • “The “notice of additional closing stores” filings, obtained by Becker’s, revealed the stores are located in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, California, Massachusetts, Michigan, Virginia and Maryland.” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Biden administration has now ended many of the policies that previously dictated agencies’ health and safety responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. But for federal employees, the administration is still offering some on-the-job flexibility for the foreseeable future.
    • “One of the few remaining policies from a series of 2021 executive orders lets federal employees still take up to four hours of paid administrative leave to get COVID-19 vaccine booster shots, the Office of Personnel Management said in an April 12 memo.
    • “The administration strongly encourages federal employees to get recommended doses of updated COVID-19 vaccines even when receiving those vaccines is not a job requirement,” OPM Director Kiran Ahuja said in the memo addressed to agency heads. “Vaccines remain the best tool we have in our toolbox to combat COVID-19. They are safe, effective and free.”
    • “For federal employees, the offered administrative leave will cover the time it takes to get the COVID-19 booster shot, as well as feds’ travel time to and from the vaccination site. As is standard, employees should get approval from their supervisors before taking leave for this purpose, OPM said. Four hours is the maximum OPM is allotting, but federal employees should only take off as much time as they actually need to get the shot.”
  • OPM should take the same approach with cancer screening services, such as colonoscopies and mammographies.
  • The American Hospital Association News reports,
    • “The Change Healthcare cyberattack was a significant event that caught many off guard, said the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, reiterating the agency’s commitment to supporting impacted hospitals. Brooks-LaSure stated the Administration is listening to stakeholders and when possible, facilitating solutions, noting the importance of meeting the needs of providers.
    • “In addition, Brooks-LaSure celebrated important improvements CMS made to promote greater transparency for prior authorization criteria. CMS took steps earlier this year finalizing new regulations to streamline and reduce burden associated with the prior authorization process in Medicare Advantage and fee-for-service and managed care programs for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program.  
    • “CMS continues to hear from patients and providers over some commercial insurer prior authorization denials and delays, Brooks-LaSure said, noting that the volume of frustration has “just exploded.” The private sector, she said, has an opportunity to step up with solutions of their own to address concerns.
    • “I’ve told the health plans this: it doesn’t have to all be regulated [by the federal government], there may be things that they can do,” Brooks-LaSure said.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “AHIP’s chief executive criticized the hospital lobby’s response to the Change Healthcare cyberattack as “opportunistic” and “maintaining the status quo.”
    • “AHIP President and CEO Mike Tuffin pointed to comments that hospital lobbyists made to the media about the hack being “another talking point” to prevent health systems from implementing site-neutral payments, as well as an industry association’s opposition to cybersecurity mandates.
    • “Insisting on maintaining the status quo simply makes the healthcare system a more inviting target for the ever-more sophisticated hacking operations targeting the sector,” Mr. Tuffin wrote in the April 12 article. “Instead of taking a constructive leadership role in what can be done to protect consumers and the system moving forward, the hospital lobby chooses to use the moment to point fingers and shirk responsibility.”
    • “Rather than “playing politics,” all industry stakeholders should be focusing on preventing and preparing for future healthcare cyberattacks, he said.”
  • HR Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced on Monday its final rule implementing the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, clarifying that abortion is included under “pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions” that are protected under the PWFA.
    • “EEOC said this interpretation of the law’s text is “consistent with the Commission’s and courts’ longstanding interpretation of the same phrase in Title VII.” It also noted that employees are entitled to the law’s provisions even if they have not worked for an employer for a specific length of time.
    • “EEOC had originally slated the rule for publication at the end of 2023, but the commission’s deadline passed without a rule in place. The rule is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register Friday, and will take effect 60 days after publication, approximately mid-June.”
  • The Government Accountability Office released a report on selected States regulation of pharmacy benefit managers.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post considers why
    • “Rural Americans ages 25 to 54 — considered the prime working-age population — are dying of natural causes such as chronic diseases and cancer at wildly higher rates than their age-group peers in urban areas, according to the report. * * *
    • “The USDA researchers analyzed mortality data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from two three-year periods — 1999 through 2001, and 2017 through 2019. In 1999, the natural-cause mortality rate for rural working-age adults was only 6 percent higher than that of their city-dwelling peers. By 2019, the gap had widened to 43 percent.” * * *
    • “The USDA’s findings were shocking but not surprising, said Alan Morgan, CEO of the National Rural Health Association. He and other health experts have maintained for years that rural America needs more attention and investment in its health care systems by national leaders and lawmakers.”
  • “MedPage Today editor-in-chief Jeremy Faust, MD, talks with Monica Bertagnolli, MD, the 17th director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), about the day-to-day work at the NIH on pandemic preparedness, the importance of looking for new approaches to testing, and the status of long COVID research.”
  • Healio points out,
    • “Physical activity patterns that included vigorous exercise, housework or walking were associated with lower stroke risk.
    • “Watching TV and commuting were linked to higher risk for stroke.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Low- to moderate-intensity physical exercise in patients with severe mental illness is linked to improved medication adherence, regardless of medication type or duration of illness, new research shows.
    • “The positive association between adherence and moderate physical activity emphasizes that physical activity improves overall health and functional status. Promoting physical activity can be a valuable and integrated strategy that can be easily implemented into our routine clinical practice,” said study investigator Rebecca Silvestro, MD, Department of Psychiatry, Università degli studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli in Naples, Italy.
    • “The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2024 Congress.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “The number of new prescriptions written for biosimilar versions of the Humira rheumatoid arthritis treatment, one of the best-selling medicines in the U.S., surged to 36% from just 5% during the first week of April, thanks to the expanding reach that CVS Health has over the prescription drug market.
    • “The big jump was attributed to one particular biosimilar called Hyrimoz, which is manufactured by Sandoz, a former unit of Novartis that is a leading supplier of generic and biosimilar medicines. However, Hyrimoz is jointly marketed with Cordavis, a new subsidiary that CVS created last August specifically to sell any number of biosimilar medicines in the U.S.
    • “This connection is crucial to the sudden jump in Hyrimoz prescriptions. How so? On April 1, CVS Caremark, which is one of the largest pharmacy benefit managers in the U.S., removed Humira from its major national formularies for health plans that cover about 30 million lives. Formularies are the lists of medicines that are covered by health insurance.
    • “The move quickly shifted market share to Hyrimoz. During the week ending March 29, the number of new prescriptions written for the biosimilar was about 640, but rose to nearly 8,300 in the week ending April 5, according to a report to investors by Evercore ISI analyst Elizabeth Anderson. That pushed the share for all Humira biosimilars to 36%, with Hyrimoz contributing 93% of the growth.”
  • Health Leaders Media discusses three ways that independent physician practices can maintain their independence.
  • According to BioPharma Dive,
    • “Roche’s new dual-acting blood cancer drug Columvi combined with chemotherapy helped people with a type of lymphoma live longer than people given Rituxan and chemo, the company said Monday. The data could help Roche persuade the Food and Drug Administration to convert Columvi’s conditional OK into a full approval.
    • “Roche didn’t disclose full data from the Phase 3 “Starglo” trial in people with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma whose disease advanced after initial treatment and who weren’t eligible for stem cell transplants. The results will be presented at an upcoming medical meeting, the company said.
    • “Columvi is a new type of drug called a “bispecific” antibody that triggers an immune response to cancer cells. A competitor developed by Genmab and AbbVie has also gained accelerated approval and could have confirmatory data later this year, while the FDA rejected a bispecific from Regeneron because its confirmatory trial isn’t far enough advanced.”
  • MedTech Dive reports,
    • “Abbott is recalling thousands of Heartmate II and Heartmate 3 left ventricular assist systems because biological material can build up and obstruct the devices, making them less effective at pumping blood, the Food and Drug Administration said Monday.
    • “Reports of 273 injuries and 14 deaths have been linked to the problem, with the material typically taking two or more years to accumulate, according to the recall notice. The FDA identified the action as a Class I recall, the most serious type.
    • “Heartmate devices are used to support patients with severe left ventricular heart failure who are awaiting a heart transplant, or the device can be permanently implanted when a transplant isn’t an option. In February, Abbott told customers in an urgent correction letter there is no need to return any products to the company.”