Midweek update

Photo by Dane Deaner on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • Politico reports,
    • “The Senate Finance Committee is releasing the next in its parade of legislation targeted at pharmacy benefit managers — an industry that Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill argue drives up the cost of drugs.
    • “Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) — along with Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and ranking member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) — plan to unveil legislation that would require PBMs, which manage prescription drugs for health insurers, to report a broader range of data about their business practices. The lawmakers seek comment on their proposal.
    • “The bill would require PBMs to submit annual reports to the Medicare drug plans that detail information about the treatments the plan covers, the discounts PBMs negotiate with drugmakers on medicines and the fees they collect.
    • “It’s the latest in a plan from Wyden and Crapo, who released a roadmap in April of PBM-focused legislation they want the committee to pursue.”
  • The Senate Finance Committee adds,
    • “Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) today announced that the committee will mark up legislative proposals to modernize and enhance federal prescription drug programs on Wednesday, July 26th at 2 p.m. The committee package will focus on addressing pharmacy benefit manager practices that have grown increasingly complex and opaque in recent years at the expense of patients and taxpayers.”
  • The American Hospital Association further informs us,
    • “The House Education & Workforce Committee July 12 voted 39-0 to pass legislation (H.R. 4509) that would require off-campus hospital outpatient departments to obtain a separate unique health identifier and include it on all claims for services billed to commercial group health plans or their enrollees. The legislation would prohibit the health plan from paying the claim and the hospital from collecting payment from the plan enrollee if the claim excludes the identifier, and impose civil monetary penalties on hospitals that violate the requirement. * * *
    • “In other action, the committee also passed bills that would strengthen price transparency requirements for commercial group health plans (H.R. 4507); require that the plans’ contracts with service providers allow the employer/plan fiduciary to access all de-identified claims and encounter data (H.R. 4527); and require the plans to further report to the employer/fiduciary their financial arrangements with pharmacy benefit managers (H.R. 4508).”

From the public health front —

  • Beckers Clinical Leadership and Infection Control tells us,
    • “After identifying a new COVID-19 omicron subvariant — EU.1.1, a descendant of XBB.1.5 — in late June, its growth has slowed, according to the CDC. 
    • “Right now, the subvariant accounts for only 1.1 percent of cases in the U.S., data shows. Nationwide, hospitalizations and deaths both continue to decline. The CDC’s most recent data shows that hospitalizations decreased by 0.8 percent as of July 1, and deaths decreased by 9.1 percent in the same one-week period.
  • CNN reports
    • Childhood cancer diagnoses in the US have been trending up for more than a decade, according to a study published Tuesday in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
    • There were 14,381 new childhood cancer diagnoses in the US in 2019: about 177 new cases for every 1 million children and teens up to age 19. Incidence rates have dropped since reaching a peak in 2016 but are still about 8% higher than they were in 2003, when there were about 165 new cases for every 1 million children and teens.
    • “Overall, cancer is very rare in children and adolescents, and the increases were small,” said Dr. David Siegel, a pediatric oncologist and an epidemiologist with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s cancer division who was the lead author of the study. “Past studies have also reported increased survival rates. So the combination of increases in incidence and decreases in deaths means that there are more and more cancer survivors that need long-term care and resources.”
  • The U.S. Census Bureau issued a report examining “Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Disability by Health Condition.”
    • “The data show patterns in health-related disability among adults age 40 and older and key differences by sex, race and Hispanic origin.
      • “Among findings:
      • “Women were more likely than men to have health conditions that limited their daily activities.
      • “Asian (non-Hispanic) adults reported the lowest rates (17.2%) of disability-related health conditions.
      • “Black (non-Hispanic) adults (31.8%) and those reporting Other or multiple-race non-Hispanic identity (42.9%) were among those with higher rates.
  • The All of Us Program released its July 2023 Medical Minutes.

From the Rx coverage front

  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • Major pharmacy benefits manager CVS Caremark is partnering with drug discounter GoodRx on a joint program to bring down out-of-pocket drug costs, the companies announced Wednesday.
    • Commercially insured customers will be able to pay GoodRx’s discounted pricing when filling commonly prescribed generic prescriptions at in-network pharmacies. The payments will be automatically applied to their deductibles and out-of-pocket limits.
    • The program, called Caremark Cost Saver, will be available for tens of millions of CVS Caremark clients’ members at in-network pharmacies starting January 2024.
  • Per Beckers Payer Issues,
    • ‘About two-thirds of patients who take popular weight loss drugs end their regimen within a year, according to a Prime Therapeutics study released July 11.
    • ‘Prime, a pharmacy benefit manager owned by 19 Blue Cross Blue Shield companies, analyzed pharmacy and medical claims of 4,255 patients who took GLP-1 receptor agonists — such as Ozempic and Wegovy — for weight loss in 2021. The study found only 32 percent of patients continued their weight loss treatment after one year. 
    • “The majority of patients aren’t getting the value of the product and there’s waste, especially with an expensive therapy,” Patrick Gleason, PharmD, Prime’s assistant vice president for health outcomes and a co-author of the analysis, told Reuters. “I was a little bit surprised by the persistency rate.”
  • STAT News delves into how Medicare Advantage plans are approaching the FDA’s approval of the infused Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi. The most illuminating part of the article concerns the Mayo Clinic.
    • As a condition of coverage, Medicare rolled out a new patient registry to collect more information from physicians prescribing Leqembi. Information is supposed to be submitted every six months. Physicians who had previewed the registry said it appeared to function, though many clinics are still finalizing protocols for prescribing Leqembi.
    • “I’m not sure it’s sufficiently detailed to answer the [coverage with evidence development] questions that the [national coverage decision] put forth. We and others would need to collect more detailed information to understand the true benefits and risks of the medicine,” said Ronald Petersen, the director of the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.
    • Mayo Clinic isn’t prescribing Leqembi yet, as it’s planning to launch an Alzheimer’s treatment clinic in October, Petersen said. He said there has been interest from patients, but it “hasn’t been a landslide.”
    • Petersen is hoping to start a new research study at Mayo Clinic to do more detailed monitoring on patients. To start, Mayo physicians will likely only agree to treat patients in the geographic area close to the facility so they can oversee the follow-up appointments.
    • “We’d be more than happy to share our data with broader communities or merge it with data from CMS. It is incumbent upon all of us to share data to learn from each other what works,” Petersen said.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • MedPage Today points out
    • “Private equity acquisitions of U.S. physician practices have risen dramatically over the last decade, driving up consumer prices in the process, according to a new report.
    • “In 2012, there were 75 private equity deals for physician practices across a range of specialties; in 2021, there were 484, marking a more than six-fold increase, Richard Scheffler, PhD, of the University of California Berkeley, and colleagues found.
    • “Over the entire period, the largest number of deals occurred in dermatology (376), ophthalmology (276), gastroenterology (120), and primary care (118), collectively accounting for 81% of the activity, Scheffler and colleagues wrote in the report, a joint effort by the American Antitrust Institute, the Nicholas C. Petris Center on Health Care Markets and Consumer Welfare at the University of California Berkeley, and the Washington Center for Equitable Growth.”

In telehealth news,

  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “While payers should cover telehealth, where these services are the most valuable still requires investigation, according to a study in Information Systems Research.
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services made the rules about telehealth usage more flexible during the COVID-19 pandemic, and some lawmakers want to make those changes permanent. But that should not mean giving providers carte blanche approval in using the new technology, nor should payers cover all uses of telehealth, suggests a study by researchers with the University of Texas.
    • “Telehealth should not be regarded as a one-size-fits-all solution to virtualize healthcare,” the study said.
    • “Despite that, however, the study also states that “insurance plans should expand their telehealth coverage to include more providers and close the healthcare access divide in rural locations, which can reduce subsequent hospitalizations and unnecessary costs.”
    • “The authors argue that telehealth’s benefits can be seen in treating conditions and diseases with “high virtualization potential” such as mental health, skin problems, metabolic conditions and musculoskeletal diseases. However, telehealth did not significantly reduce visits to specialists or emergency departments for circulatory, respiratory or infectious diseases.
    • “Indranil Bardhan, Ph.D., one of the authors of the study, said in a press release that “people believed that telehealth would be the next big thing, the future of healthcare. But our research shows that its impact is not as straightforward as people might think. It’s more nuanced.”