
Happy belated Flay Day!
From Washington, DC
- The House of Representatives is on a District work break this week. The Senate is on a shortened week of Committee business and floor voting due to the Juneteenth holiday this Thursday.
- The Senate is taking up two post Scott Kupor reported nominations this week.
- The Daily Caller explains,
- The Senate’s confirmation of Trump nominees as of June 5 outpaced the Biden administration by 16 nominees and the first Trump administration by 33 nominees, according to information compiled by the Senate GOP leadership-aligned Senate Republicans Communications Center (SRCC).
- Still, nearly 100 nominees are awaiting floor consideration, according to the Senate executive calendar.
- The backlog is due in part to Senate Democrats placing blanket holds on hundreds of Trump nominees, requiring the Senate to use finite floor time to confirm each civilian nominee individually through multiple roll call votes. As a result, nearly 60% of the votes taken in the Senate during the 119th Congress have been related to nominations, according to the SRCC.
- Roll Call summarizes other Senate work during this short workweek here.
- The Supreme Court will be issuing opinions on Wednesday June 18 this week.
- Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, asks “Think you’re ready to tap your TSP? Here’s what you might be missing. Before touching your Thrift Savings Plan funds, make sure you understand the rules—and the risks—you might not have planned for.”
From the public health and medical research front.
- STAT News reports,
- “Sarepta Therapeutics said Sunday that it was halting shipments of its Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy for patients who can no longer walk, following the death of a second [male] person who received the treatment.
- “Sarepta disclosed the first patient death — a 16-year-old boy — in March. Both occurred from acute liver failure, a side effect that has been seen with other gene therapies. The company said both patients were non-ambulatory, meaning their disease had progressed to the point they relied on a wheelchair. Most children with Duchenne lose the ability to walk by adolescence.
- “The company said early Sunday it was working with experts to come up with an enhanced immunosuppressive regimen that could make the therapy, called Elevidys, safer for non-ambulatory patients. It said it would talk with the Food and Drug Administration about the the proposed regimen.
- “Sarepta also said it was pausing dosing in an ongoing clinical trial of Elevidys, called ENVISION, that’s focused on older ambulatory and non-ambulatory patients.”
- Per Fortune Well,
- “Researchers at the University of California San Francisco have identified the U.S. regions, as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where dementia occurs most often.
- “The large and comprehensive study, published in JAMA Neurology, examined data on more than 12.6 million veterans 65 and older enrolled in the Veterans Health Administration system; only 2% were women.
- “Researchers found the highest incidence in the Southeast (North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida) and the lowest in the Mid-Atlantic states (Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, New Jersey, Washington D.C.).”
- The Washington Post informs us,
- A common genetic variant is linked to a doubled dementia risk for older men, a recent analysis in Neurology suggests.
- The study used data from Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE), which followed elderly patients in the United States and Australia with no history of cardiovascular disease, dementia or cognitive decline between 2010 and 2017.
- Researchers focused on 12,174 Australians of European ancestry over age 70, and looked for variants in the HFE gene. The gene is critical to regulating the body’s iron levels, and variants are common among people of European descent.
- Those who carry two copies of the p.C282Y variant in the HFE gene can develop hemochromatosis, a condition that causes iron overload in the body, and resulting conditions such as liver cirrhosis, liver cancer, frailty, arthritis and dementia.
- One in 3 people carry a gene variant called H63D, and 1 in 36 carry two copies, John Olynyk, a professor at the Curtin Medical Research Institute in Perth, Australia, says in a news release about the new study.
- “Having just one copy of this gene variant does not impact someone’s health or increase their risk of dementia. However, we found having two copies of the variant more than doubled the risk of dementia in [previously healthy] men, but not women,” Olynyk says.
- NPR offers “Advice for trying GLP-1 drugs for weight loss from a doctor who’s been there.”
- The New York Times reports,
- “Many older people embrace vaccines. Research is proving them right.
- “Newer formulations are even more effective at preventing illnesses that commonly afflict seniors — perhaps even dementia.”
- and
- “Many Falls Are Preventable. These Tips Can Help. Small changes and good habits make a difference.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- When Officer Chelsea Johnston came across a wanted felon one evening in May, Johnston jerked her cruiser in front of him, sprinted after him and tackled him to the ground. Still catching her breath, Johnston motioned for someone to step out of the cruiser: Joy Bogese.
- “Thank God,” the man said. “It’s you.”
- Bogese, who served time for financial crimes that fed a heroin addiction, now spends many of her evenings in a police cruiser as a recovery specialist helping people with addiction get into treatment. The man asked Bogese to help him get into a drug-treatment program at the local jail, where Bogese occasionally facilitates groups.
- She is part of a growing effort in Chesterfield County’s [Virginia] fight against addiction. In this county of nearly 400,000, overdose deaths have dropped by half in a single year—about double the decline of the rest of the country—to levels seen before the crisis began in 2015.
- The precipitous drops have astounded public officials and health-policy experts, who have traveled across the country in an attempt to learn the formula and replicate it. Governors, members of Congress and sheriffs from as far away as Alaska have all come through, along with an acting U.S. drug czar.
- Per Medscape,
- “A prospective study found that increased consumption of olive oil was associated with a reduced risk for breast cancer, particularly oestrogen receptor–negative (ER−) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2–negative (HER2−) breast cancers. A systematic review revealed that case-control studies more frequently reported this protective association, whereas prospective studies did not report any association.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Kauffman Hall points out,
- Mehmet Oz, MD, the new CMS Administrator, in a Senate confirmation hearing, expressed support for exploring multi-year products for Medicare Advantage. While his remarks were made in the context of avoiding unnecessary member churn and associated elevated broker commissions, there are much broader ramifications of transitioning from single-year to multi-year health plan products. His remarks have sparked interest in the industry to explore this idea further.” * * *
- “Multi-year health plan products have the potential to change a lot about how healthcare business models work today. Given the inherent complexity, it is likely to be a slow journey towards the destination. Even so, incumbent health insurers and risk-bearing providers would be well-advised to start strategizing and building / experimenting with prototypes to manage their risk of being disrupted by multi-year-native health plan innovators. The new administration has already shown that it can move with alacrity and is not afraid to be disruptive in the process. The shift to multi-year plans could come sooner than expected. Or it may not. But in any case, it is better to be prepared.”
- The FEHB Program was offered on a multi-year basis for two years in the 1980’s although an Open Season was held between the two years in which there were no benefit changes.
- The Washington Post reports, “Nurse practitioners step in as geriatrician ranks shrink. Nurse practitioners are not trying to replace doctors — they’re trying to meet patients’ needs, wherever those patients are, an expert said.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “Chris Scoggins is taking the helm of Abbott’s diabetes business at a busy time for the company and the diabetes tech industry. Scoggins was promoted to Abbott’s executive vice president of diabetes care in December. Since then, Abbbott has collaborated with insulin pump firms Tandem Diabetes Care and Sequel Med Tech to integrate its planned glucose-ketone sensor with their devices.
- “Scoggins spoke with MedTech Dive about the company’s strategic approach ahead of the American Diabetes Association’s Scientific Sessions in June.”
- The article includes the interview.