Tuesday Tidbits
From Washington, DC,
- The Department of Health and Human Services announced today that
- “Sickle cell disease (SCD) will be the first focus of the Cell and Gene Therapy (CGT) Access Model, which was initially announced in February 2023. The model is designed to improve health outcomes, increase access to cell and gene therapies, and lower health care costs for some of the nation’s most vulnerable populations. * * *
- “Gene therapies for sickle cell disease have the potential to treat this devastating condition and transform people’s lives, offering them a chance to live healthier and potentially avoid associated health issues,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “Increasing access to these promising therapies will not only help keep people healthy, but it can also lead to savings for states and taxpayers as the long-term costs of treating sickle cell disease may be avoided.” * * *
- “For additional information see the fact sheet – PDF and CGT model page.“
- The American Hospital Association reports,
- “Paxlovid may no longer be distributed with an emergency use label after March 8, the Food and Drug Administration announced. Providers may dispense unexpired Paxlovid labeled for emergency use to patients through March 8, after which Paxlovid labeled for emergency use must be returned to the manufacturer or disposed of in accord with regulations, the agency said.
- “The FDA last May approved a new drug application for Pfizer’s Paxlovid to treat adults at high risk of progressing to severe COVID-19. Paxlovid labeled under the new drug application will continue to be authorized for emergency use to treat eligible pediatric patients, the agency said.”
- Following up on Affordable Care Act FAQ 64, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management issued today a carrier letter no. 2024-03 on contraceptive coverage and patient education.
- Reuters reports,
- “Pharmaceutical companies are due to receive by Thursday the U.S. government’s opening proposal for what are expected to be significant discounts on 10 of its high-cost medicines, an important step in the Medicare health program’s first ever price negotiations.
- “Five Wall Street analysts and two investors told Reuters they expect the negotiations over prices that will go into effect in 2026 to result in cuts ranging from the statutory minimum of 25% to as much as 60% when the final numbers are set in September.
- “The drugmakers and the government are expected to wait until then to disclose them.” * * *
- “Pharmaceutical companies and business groups have filed more than half a dozen lawsuits to stop the negotiations from taking place, saying that they are unlawful.
- “Drug companies say the law’s costs will hurt drug development programs and patients.”
- “The lawsuits have not slowed the implementation timeline.”
- Axios points out that CMS’s recent prior authorization proposed rule do not apply to prescription drug claims.
- The Federal Acquisition Regulation Council published in the Federal Register today a proposed rule
- “would prohibit contractors and subcontractors from seeking and considering information about job applicants’ compensation history when making employment decisions for certain positions. Under the proposed policy and the proposed regulatory amendments, contractors and subcontractors would also be required to disclose the compensation to be offered to the hired applicant in job announcements for certain positions.”
- The public comment period ends on April 1, 2024.
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “People who are suffering from severe pain but don’t want to risk addiction to an opioid are closer to a new option for treatment.
- “Vertex Pharmaceuticals on Tuesday reported positive study results for its closely watched non-opioid painkiller. The drug lowered the moderate-to-severe acute pain reported by study volunteers, a sign it could be the first in a new class of painkiller to be approved for use.
- “But the experimental medicine is more likely to provide an alternative to opioids, rather than supplant them, because it didn’t work better than a widely used opioid drug sold under the brand name Vicodin.
- “Vertex said it would file for approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by the middle of this year.”
- STAT News tells us,
- “Drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy — already game changers for diabetes and obesity — are being studied to treat an entirely different growing health problem: mental health illnesses, including depression and bipolar disorder.
- “Early data and anecdotes suggest that this class of GLP-1 drugs could help patients feel less depressed and anxious. The treatment may also fight the decline in cognitive and executive function that many people with mental health disorders experience, like worsening memory and losing the ability to focus and plan.
- “If further research yields positive results, it could drive even more demand for the highly popular GLP-1 treatments, which have increasingly been shown to help with problems across the body, such as heart and kidney complications. And especially if the cognitive benefits are proven out, the GLP-1 drugs would plug a critical gap in current treatments for depression, since most depression drugs help with mood, but close to none address cognitive symptoms that affect memory and attention.”
- and
- “The U.S. syphilis epidemic isn’t abating, with the rate of infectious cases rising 9% in 2022, according to a new federal government report on sexually transmitted diseases in adults.
- “But there’s some unexpected good news: The rate of new gonorrhea cases fell for the first time in a decade.
- “It’s not clear why syphilis rose 9% while gonorrhea dropped 9%, officials at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said, adding that it’s too soon to know whether a new downward trend is emerging for the latter.
- “They are most focused on syphilis, which is less common than gonorrhea or chlamydia but considered more dangerous. Total cases surpassed 207,000 in 2022, the highest count in the United States since 1950, according to data released Tuesday.”
- MedTech Dive calls attention to “four heart device trends shaping the medtech sector in 2024. Medtronic, Boston Scientific and J&J are among the medtech companies advancing treatments in cardiac care for when medicines are not enough.
- MedCity Dive discusses “How Food as Medicine is Becoming A Core Team Capability. As the food as medicine movement grows, some payers and healthcare organizations are carving out specific roles and teams dedicated to food and nutrition. Doing so can be beneficial considering the significant impact diet can have on health outcomes.”
- The Washington Post notes,
- “Older adults spend an average of three weeks every year on doctor’s appointments and other health care outside their homes, according to research published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
- “Of those 21 “health care contact days,” 17 involve ambulatory services, such as office visits with primary-care doctors or specialists, testing and imaging, procedures, treatments and therapy. The remaining four days included time spent in an emergency room, hospital, skilled nursing facility or hospice.
- “The study also found that about 11 percent of people 65 and over spend even more time — 50 or more days each year (nearly one day a week) — obtaining routine health care away from home. The research was based on Medicare data from a nationally representative sample of 6,619 people 65 and older.
- “The findings represent “not only access to needed care but also substantial time, efforts and cost, especially for older adults and their care partners,” the researchers wrote.”
- Peterson – KFF Health System Tracker offers a study comparing U.S. life expectancy to other countries.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Pfizer released its full year 2023 results and reaffirmed its full year 2024 financial guidance provided on December 13, 2023. “The fourth-quarter 2023 earnings presentation and accompanying prepared remarks from management as well as the quarterly update to Pfizer’s R&D pipeline can be found at www.pfizer.com.”
- Beckers Hospital Review reports,
- “Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare saw revenues of $17.3 billion in the fourth quarter of 2023, up from $15.5 billion over the same period in 2022, according to its financial report released Jan. 30.”
- and
- “Nonprofit Hospitals’ operating margins are far below the pre-pandemic “magic number” of 3% and are in danger of a permanent reset in the 1%-2% range, according to a Jan. 29 report published by Fitch Ratings.
- “This operating margin reset is worrying some investors, but “hospital downgrades en masse would be unlikely because many systems have built up robust balance sheets and learned to economize on capital spending to a certain degree,” Kevin Holloran, senior director and sector head at Fitch, said.