Midweek Update

From Washington, DC

  • Per a House Oversight Committee press release,
    • “As part of the budget reconciliation process, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a markup today and passed budget legislation that advances President Trump’s agenda and saves American taxpayers over $50 billion. The Committee will now finalize its section of the budget legislation and transmit it directly to the House Committee on the Budget, which will compile and present the final package for consideration by the U.S. House of Representatives.”
  • Govexec provides details on the markup here.
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “Agencies are facing a roughly two-week deadline to show the Trump administration how they plan to implement coming changes for probationary employees.
    • “By May 16, agencies are expected to report their plans for adding a new “affirmative” certification requirement for probationary employees. Agencies are also expected to detail how they intend to train supervisors and HR practitioners on the coming changes, according to new guidance the Office of Personnel Management published Tuesday.
    • “The guidance outlines more detailed expectations for agencies to update how they manage probationary periods following President Donald Trump’s executive order last Thursday. That order called for the creation of “Civil Service Rule XI” and added a hurdle for probationary employees to clear before they become tenured employees. Agencies will now be required to review and actively sign off on probationary workers’ continued employment before they can reach a tenured employment status.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “House Republicans are calling on the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation to rethink its priorities under the Trump administration, including by improving transparency with providers and focusing on payment models that save the government money.
    • “In a letter sent this week by Republicans on the House Ways and Means Committee to CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz and CMMI Director Abe Sutton, lawmakers said they were “concerned” with the innovation center’s track record of creating models that often don’t improve care quality or reduce costs. 
    • “The legislators added that CMMI has also “promoted a political agenda ahead of its Congressionally mandated purpose,” like focusing on health equity instead of cost savings.” 

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • STAT News points out,
    • “Nearly 12% of Americans still smoke cigarettes, the leading cause of preventable death nationwide. Yet there are only two medications authorized by the Food and Drug Administration to help them quit — the more effective of which, varenicline, can come with unsavory side effects like nausea that make people less likely to stick with treatment.
    • “A new pill with fewer side effects could soon be available from the Washington state-based biotech Achieve Life Sciences. The company plans to file for FDA approval of its drug, called cytisinicline, in June. 
    • “Rick Stewart, Achieve’s co-founder and CEO, told STAT that he expects the drug to be approved in mid-2026 and to launch in the U.S. by the end of that year. “This will be the first new drug for nicotine dependence in nearly 20 years,” he said.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “While Johnson & Johnson isn’t the first to secure FDA approval for an FcRn-blocking antibody in myasthenia gravis, the New Jersey drugmaker is confident that a broad label will land its product an enviable market position in the long run.
    • “The FDA on Wednesday approved J&J’s nipocalimab under the brand name Imaavy as a new treatment option for generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG). The green light, which J&J says covers the “broadest population of people living with gMG,” includes patients ages 12 and older who are anti-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) or anti-muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) antibody positive.
    • “Anti-AChR and anti-MuSK antibody-positive people make up more than 90% of the total antibody-positive gMG population, J&J estimates. All told, the company figures gMG—which causes the communication between the body’s nerves and muscles to break down—affects around 700,000 people worldwide.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Medtronic has won Food and Drug Administration approval for the Omniasecure defibrillation lead, the company said Friday.
    • “The lead connects to an implantable defibrillator and treats potentially life-threatening types of irregular heart rhythm. Medtronic said Omniasecure is the world’s smallest defibrillation lead.
    • “The approval limits the use of the lead to the right ventricle. Medtronic shared data on placing the lead in the left bundle branch last week but has yet to win FDA approval in that setting.
  • MedCity News lets us know,
    • “Patients with the most severe form of a certain inherited disease have skin that is susceptible to wounds, some that never fully heal. For years, the only treatment was supportive care, including laborious and frequent changes of wound dressings covering much of the body. Biotechnology research in this disease, epidermolysis bullosa (EB), has pursued therapeutic options. A personalized treatment that Abeona Therapeutics makes from a patient’s own skin cells is now approved by the FDA, marking the agency’s third approval in this rare disorder in the past two years.
    • “The regulatory decision announced Tuesday covers the treatment of wounds in adults and children who have recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB). The therapy, known in development as prademagene zamikeracel, or pz-cel for short, will be marketed under the brand name Zevaskyn. Cleveland-based Abeona expects Zevaskyn will become available in the third quarter of this year.
    • “We have heard from the RDEB community that there is a persistent, unmet need to meaningfully heal RDEB wounds, especially those that are chronic and prone to infection,” CEO Vishwas Seshdari said during a Tuesday morning conference call. “Through a single application, Zevaskyn can provide people with RDEB the opportunity for significant wound closure and pain reduction in even the most severe wounds.”

From the judicial front,

  • Federal News Network relates,
    • “The U.S. Supreme Court said Wednesday that federal employees who also are in the military reserve must be paid the equivalent of their civilian salaries when called to active duty during national emergencies.
    • “The 5-4 decision could affect hundreds of thousands of people, ensuring that they don’t suffer financially when they temporarily leave one form of government service for another.
    • “The justices ruled in an appeal filed by an air traffic controller who spent about five years on active duty in the Coast Guard at a pay rate lower than what he earns as a Federal Aviation Administration employee.”
  • Reuters reports,
    • “Genetic testing company 23andMe agreed on Tuesday to allow a court-appointed overseer to take charge of ensuring customers’ genetic data remains protected during the company’s bankruptcy, settling a dispute with several U.S. states.
    • “Those states had argued the company was not taking data security seriously enough.
    • “U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Brian Walsh approved the agreement at a court hearing in St. Louis, Missouri, ordering the appointment of a consumer protection ombudsman who will be empowered to review 23andMe’s handling of customers’ genetic information and its security policies.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CNBC reports,
    • “Aon researchers found that within two years, improved health outcomes for patients who were taking GLP-1 drugs lowers the growth rate of medical care costs. 
    • “Aon looked at medical claims data for 139,000 U.S.-based workers with employer health coverage who took GLP-1 medications between 2022 and 2024.
    • “Since 2023, GLP-1s have driven up employer spending on drugs at a faster pace than high-priced specialty drugs used to treat cancer and autoimmune conditions, according to an Evernorth study.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review considers what is driving increased use of GLP-1 drugs among children.
  • Per Cardiovascular Business,
    • “Drinking champagne may be associated with significant cardiovascular benefits, according to a new study published in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology.
    • “The study identified dozens of lifestyle changes that may help lower a person’s risk of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). Some of the changes—eating more fruit, losing weight—were straightforward, but a few of the research team’s findings were unexpected. Drinking champagne and/or white wine, for example, was linked to a reduced SCA risk. The same was also true for spending more time at a computer—though that may tell us more about education levels than screen time.
    • “These findings all come from a new exposome-wide association study (EWAS) out of China. The study’s authors explored the UK Biobank study, focusing on data from more than 500,000 patients. They then looked for associations between SCA and 125 different modifiable lifestyle factors.
    • “To our knowledge, all previous studies on the risk factors of SCA were hypothesis-driven and focused on a limited number of candidate exposure factors grounded in previous knowledge or theoretical frameworks,” wrote first author Huihuan Luo, PhD, a researcher with Fudan University in Shanghai, China, and colleagues. “This might lead to publication bias distorting summary conclusions and might increase the likelihood of false positive findings resulting from inter-related exposures. More importantly, the hypothesis-driven approach might miss important exposures or relationships beyond the predefined hypothesis. To tackle these limitations, a hypothesis-free, data-driven EWAS has emerged as a robust analytical framework for simultaneously exploring hundreds of exposures. This data-driven approach does not rely on previous knowledge and facilitates the identification of novel or underexplored associations.” * * *
    • Click here for the full study.
  • Per Medscape,
    • “People with osteoarthritis are more likely to be diagnosed with other pain-related comorbidities such as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), gout, and irritable bowel syndrome and psychological comorbidities such as depression, according to observational data presented at the World Congress on Osteoarthritis (OARSI) 2025 Annual Meeting.
    • “The study also found that all these five conditions were themselves associated with an increased risk for incident osteoarthritis, and in the case of fibromyalgia, there may be a causal association.
    • “Physiotherapist and epidemiologist Subhashisa Swain, MPH, PhD, of the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford, Oxford, England, presented an analysis of data from the multicenter European Comorbidities in Osteoarthritis (ComOA) study, which is examining electronic health records to identify associations between 61 different comorbidities with osteoarthritis and the clusters and trajectories of those comorbidities and osteoarthritis.”
  • The New York Times offers guidance on hip exercises.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Humana beat earnings expectations for the first quarter and reaffirmed its 2025 guidance on Wednesday, after medical costs came in as predicted. It’s a positive development for the insurer, which has been rocked by higher spending in privatized Medicare plans and the safety-net Medicaid program.
    • Humana attributed the results to higher Medicare and Medicaid premiums and membership growth in Medicare prescription drug plans and state contracts. Earnings were offset somewhat by an ongoing decline in Medicare Advantage membership after Humana culled underperforming plans to resuscitate margins this year.
    • “However, it’s still early in 2025, so Humana is remaining cautious when it comes to medical utilization, executives said. The payer’s outlook is also complicated by uncertainty stemming from its ongoing legal bid to improve MA quality ratings.”
  • The American Hospital Association News notes,
    • “The AHA April 30 released a report highlighting how hospitals and health systems continue to experience significant financial headwinds that can challenge their ability to provide care to their patients and communities. The report outlines the financial burden of heightened expenses hospitals have faced in recent years in caring for patients, as well as the increasing strain on the field.  
    • “It explains how hospitals have raised wages to recruit and retain staff amid workforce shortages and how Medicare and Medicaid continue to underpay hospitals for patient care as shortfalls worsen. Other findings include how practices of certain Medicare Advantage plans exacerbate hospitals’ financial burden, and that tariffs on medical imports could significantly raise costs for hospitals as nearly 70% of medical devices marketed in the U.S. are manufactured exclusively overseas. 
    • “This report should serve as an alarm bell that a perfect storm of rising costs, inadequate reimbursement, and certain corporate insurer practices are jeopardizing the ability of hospitals to deliver high-quality, timely care to their communities,” said AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack. “With so much at stake, policymakers must recommit to making preserving access to hospital care a national priority.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Trump’s executive order on drug prices is seen as a win for the pharmaceutical industry.
    • “Drugmakers spent millions lobbying against pharmacy-benefit managers (PBMs), blaming them for high drug prices.
    • “PhRMA funded various groups, including minority healthcare nonprofits, to criticize PBMs.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group announced Tuesday that Patrick Conway, M.D., would take the helm of its Optum division.
    • “Conway, an insurance industry and health policy veteran, was previously the CEO of Optum’s pharmacy benefit management unit, Optum Rx. He also held leadership roles at the company’s healthcare delivery arm, Optum Health.
    • “Conway will step in as CEO of Optum on May 6. His prior work includes serving as the director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which is responsible for developing critical payment models for government insurance programs.”
  • and
    • “Despite the poor financial performance of BetterHelp, whose revenue fell by 11% in Q1, Teladoc has grown its investment in virtual mental healthcare by acquiring UpLift in a $30 million all-cash transaction.
    • “The deal closed on April 30, the same day as Teladoc’s first quarter 2025 earnings call. The company fared worse than Wall Street expected in Q1, posting a net loss of $93 million, or $0.53 lost per share. Wall Street Analysts expected the company share price to decrease by $0.33.
    • “A significant upside to the acquisition is the new-found ability for BetterHelp customers to use insurance coverage for mental health services, a barrier that has kept some customers from signing up with the cash-pay mental health provider. UpLift will be included in the company’s BetterHelp reporting segment going forward, executives said.
    • “UpLift provides virtual mental health therapy, psychiatry and medication management services. It serves the health plan market and covers 100 million lives. It has a network of over 1,500 mental health providers.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Novartis will pay $800 million upfront to acquire Regulus Therapeutics, a San Diego biotechnology company that launched nearly two decades ago with plans to make drugs capable of targeting small strips of nucleic acid known as microRNA.
    • “Announced Wednesday, the acquisition will hand the Swiss pharmaceutical firm a drug prospect called farabursen, which recently completed a Phase 1b study in people with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, or ADPKD.
    • “Per deal terms, Regulus shareholders will receive $7 in cash per share, a premium of more than 100% to the stock’s closing price Tuesday. Additionally, Novartis has committed to pay an additional $7 per share via a so-called contingent value right that’s linked to the achievement of an unspecified regulatory milestone.”
  • and
    • “Sales of BridgeBio’s new heart medicine Attruby blew past analyst expectations in the first quarter, as the company built by “science nerds” took on market behemoth Pfizer.
    • “Net product revenue reached $36.7 million in the period, surpassing the consensus analyst estimate of $12.6 million. The drug won Food and Drug Administration approval in November to treat a genetic condition known as transthyretin amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy.
    • “As of April 25, Attruby had 2,072 prescriptions written by 756 prescribers, BridgeBio said Tuesday after the market closed. That momentum built on encouraging numbers released in February and helped push the company’s shares up in early trading Wednesday.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Co. has secured another partnership targeting the specialty pharmaceutical market, according to an April 28 news release shared with Becker’s
    • “EverPharm, a specialty unit-dose medication company, is joining its portfolio with Cost Plus Drugs’ pricing model, which is the drug’s manufacturing cost plus a 15% markup and a $10 shipping and labor fee. On April 16, Cost Plus Drugs launched a similar partnership with Morris & Dickson, a full-line and specialty pharmaceutical distributor. 
    • “The partnership with EverPharm will roll out in phases, the release said, with an initial focus on offering key unit-dose medicines to pharmacies and healthcare providers through the Cost Plus Marketplace.”