Tuesday’s Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From our Nation’s capital, the Wall Street Journal reports

President Biden said Tuesday he would nominate Julie Su, the No. 2 official at the Labor Department, to lead the agency, maintaining continuity within a department that played a prominent role in averting a rail strike last year.

Ms. Su, the current deputy secretary, was widely seen as the leading candidate to succeed departing Secretary Marty Walsh. Asian-American lawmakers and advocacy groups threw their support behind her, lobbying Mr. Biden to tap his first Asian-American cabinet secretary. Ms. Su, age 54, is Chinese-American.

The nomination now heads over to the Senate for its approval. The Secretary of Labor, the HHS Secretary, and the Treasury Secretary / IRS form the agencies responsible for the overseeing the Affordable Care Act.

From the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) front —

Endpoint News informs us

Pfizer and BioNTech are seeking full [FDA marketing] approval for their Omicron-targeted bivalent Covid shot, and they’re following an FDA advisory committee’s advice on “harmonizing” vaccine compositions.

The partners have filed a supplemental BLA for their Omicron BA.4/BA.5-adapted bivalent Covid-19 vaccine as both a primary dose or a booster for patients over the age of 12. That means unvaccinated children and adults could skip the original primary series and receive a bivalent shot first.

The move is in response to an FDA Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) vote last month, intended to clear up confusion around varying primary and booster dose formulations and utilize vaccines that better target currently circulating strains of Covid.

MedPage Today relates

In two somewhat close votes, an FDA panel of outside experts recommended the agency approve Pfizer’s respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine for older adults, despite concerns over the potential risk for Guillain Barré syndrome.

By a tally of 7-4 for safety and efficacy (with one abstention in each case), the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) said the evidence favors the RSV prefusion F protein vaccine (RSVPreF) — which carries a proposed trade name of Abrysvo — for reducing RSV-related lower respiratory tract infections in adults 60 and up.

However, VRBPAC members showed reservations ranging from the largely health study population, rather than the more vulnerable group of older adults who need the vaccine most, to the limited number of events for the main outcomes.

The Wall Street Journal reports

Federal regulators approved a drug to treat a debilitating disease using data collected about patients over decades, creating an opening for researchers of other rare conditions who often struggle to prove their treatments work.

The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday approved Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s drug Skyclarys, or omaveloxolone, for treating the neurological disorder Friedreich’s ataxia in adults and adolescents age 16 and older.

The FDA last year said results from a single clinical trial didn’t sufficiently demonstrate the drug slows the progression of a disease that causes progressive damage to the spinal cord, muscle weakness, and movement problems and often kills people by age 35Instead of running another trial, Reata submitted additional data including an analysis from a so-called natural history study that has continued to collect information about patients for more than two decades.

“Data created by patient communities can be regulatory grade,” said Annie Kennedy, chief of policy, advocacy and patient engagement at the EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases, a nonprofit advocacy group. “This approval is proof of that principle.”

MedPage Today adds

The FDA issued an import alert Tuesday to clamp down on the illegal importation of xylazine, an animal tranquilizer showing up more and more in illicit drugs.

“This action aims to prevent the drug from entering the U.S. market for illicit purposes, while maintaining availability for its legitimate uses in animals,” the agency said in a press release.

Veterinarians legitimately use drug products containing xylazine to sedate large animals such as horses and deer, but it is not safe for use in people and may cause serious and life-threatening side effects, the FDA noted. However, “it has been identified as a contaminant found in combination with opioids such as illicit fentanyl, and in combination with other illicit products that contain stimulants such as methamphetamine and cocaine. People who use illicit drugs may not be aware of the presence of xylazine.”

From the U.S. healthcare front —

The American Health Association points out

Hospitals continue to experience the same challenges that made 2022 the worst financial year since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, including higher labor expenses and lower patient volumes, according to the latest report on hospital finances from Kaufman Hall. Hospital operating margins fell from -0.7% in December 2022 to -1% in January 2023, following persistent negative margins throughout last year. Notably, drug expenses have increased 12% compared to YTD 2020. 

“While we have seen a stabilization in operating margins over the past several months, the trendline continues to show that hospitals will be in a tough spot financially for the foreseeable future,” said Erik Swanson, senior vice president of data and analytics for Kaufman Hall. “With future COVID surges possible and challenging financial months ahead for hospitals, managing cash on hand will be critical to weathering the storm.”

The Wall Street Journal explains how doctors are diagnosing patients with artificial intelligence.

From the mental health care front —

  • The Kaiser Family Foundation provides good news about the rapidly growing use of the 988 National Suicide Prevention and Crisis Hotline. “Since the launch of 988, Lifeline has received over 2.1 million contacts—consisting of over 1.43 million calls, over 416,000 chats, and more than 281,000 texts.” But, of course, the KKF study also notes some problems.
  • MedCity News tells us about a newly formed collaboration consisting of Bicycle Health, Wellpath and the Federal Bureau of Prisons that will provide virtual opioid use disorder services to those living in the Bureau’s residential reentry centers in 42 states.
  • STAT New discusses the downfall of Mindstrong, a mental health care tech / app company.
  • The Washington Post offers an intriguing look at how the human brain ages.