Midweek update
From Washington, DC –
- STAT News informs us,
- “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday it’s too early to tell whether a new version of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that has triggered some international concern will actually prove to be disruptive.
- “In a preliminary statement about the BA.2.86 subvariant, the CDC also revealed that updated Covid-19 vaccines should be available across the country as early as mid-September, earlier than previous estimates have placed the start of the fall booster campaign.
- “The vaccines, made by Pfizer, Moderna, and Novavax, must first be authorized by the Food and Drug Administration and recommended by the CDC’s expert vaccine panel, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, and the CDC itself. The three manufacturers have said they have doses at the ready for when the FDA and CDC sign-offs come.”
- The National Institutes of Health announced,
- “An international research team has generated the first truly complete sequence of a human Y chromosome, the final human chromosome to be fully sequenced. The new sequence, which fills in gaps across more than 50% of the Y chromosome’s length, uncovers important genomic features with implications for fertility, such as factors in sperm production. The study, led by the Telomere-to-Telomere (T2T) Consortium, a team of researchers funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of the National Institutes of Health, was published today in Nature.”
- Levita Magnetics, “whose mission is to help more patients get access to better surgery,” tells us,
- “U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave Levita clearance for its MARS™ platform.
- “The Levita MARS system is a first-of-its-kind minimally invasive surgical platform aimed at the high-volume abdominal surgery market. Harnessing the power of both magnets and machines, MARS reduces the number of incisions and enables surgeons to have complete control during laparoscopic procedures, all in a compact footprint designed to fit into existing operating rooms.
- “Building on the success of its first commercial product, the Levita Magnetic Surgical System®, Levita designed MARS to deliver the same patient benefits as Magnetic Surgery®, while empowering surgeons with increased control of surgical instruments and providing an efficient way for hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) to incorporate this new technology.”
From the public health front,
- Ovia Health released a white paper “externally validating Ovia’s preterm birth reduction programming.
- STAT News discusses steps being taken to cure a “severe shortage of doctors who actually specialize in treating obesity” in the United States.
- “To ensure that all 115 million Americans with obesity have access to care, the field should focus on empowering primary care providers to treat “simple obesity,” or uncomplicated cases, said Kimberly Gudzune, medical director of the American Board of Obesity Medicine. “That, hopefully, prevents the development of some of the complications.”
- “And this work begins in medical school and residency. For instance, [Juliana] Simonetti [,an obesity doctor at the University of Utah,] has proposed a one-month elective course on obesity at the University of Utah School of Medicine, and Freshwater has been working with the Obesity Medicine Association to incorporate education into training programs nationwide, including the local family medicine residency in Boise.”
From the Rx coverage front,
- BioPharma Dive points out,
- “A closely watched, experimental Roche medicine may be helping lung cancer patients live longer, spurring renewed optimism about an emerging class of immunotherapy treatments.
- “The data come from an interim analysis of a Phase 3 trial pairing the drug, tiragolumab, with a marketed Roche immunotherapy called Tecentriq in patients with non-small cell lung cancer. Roche completed the analysis in February, but never publicly disclosed its findings, which were inadvertently released on its website Tuesday night and discovered by Wall Street analysts. The company is expected to provide the final study results either late this year or early next.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “CVS Health has launched a new segment that aims to work with drugmakers to bring additional biosimilars to market.
- “The new, wholly owned subsidiary, called Cordavis, aims to develop a biosimilar portfolio with the goal of expanding access to these drugs across the country. Increased uptake of biosimilars can drive down costs of pricey brand drugs that otherwise lack market competition, CVS said.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Forbes delves into Amazon’s recently expanded Amazon Clinic product.
- “With Amazon Clinic, one of the world’s biggest technology companies is looking to infuse the black box of healthcare pricing with some actual transparency. Login to the site and you’ll see that a person who tests positive for Covid-19 in Wyoming can pay $35 for a message-based conversation with a doctor, who will respond within an hour and 45 minutes. Or $40 to get a response in 30 minutes. A video visit costs $74 with a wait time of around an hour and 30 minutes.
- “Amazon isn’t directly providing the medical services. Instead, the tech giant has contracted with four different startups to provide message and video appointments for around 30 medical conditions. The result is a dynamic marketplace where customers can see pricing, wait times and the typical number of prescription refills upfront. “If you want the lower cost provider, you can choose that. If you are actually prioritizing the speed at which someone is getting back to you, you can prioritize that as well,” Nworah Ayogu, chief medical officer and general manager of Amazon Clinic tells Forbes. “We think really being able to surface different options for different customers lets them choose what’s important to them.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Most Americans support the idea of value-based care but don’t understand or resonate with the term, according to new research from United States of Care.
- “USofCare is a self-described nonpartisan think tank focused on building a more equitable healthcare system. Its latest research relied on (PDF) virtual focus groups with a dozen participants, a national survey that reached 1,000 respondents and a “ReMesh” session, or an AI-driven feedback collection platform that engaged 100 participants more deeply.”