From Washington, DC
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Many seniors enjoy the perks that come with Medicare Advantage. But those extras—like dental coverage and free gym memberships—are being scaled back.
- “Insurers are cutting benefits and exiting from unprofitable markets, and Wall Street is cheering them on. Once rewarded by investors for rapid expansion in the lucrative privatized Medicare program, companies are now being applauded for showing restraint amid rising medical costs and lower government payments.” * * *
- “To be clear, major insurers aren’t exiting Medicare Advantage. Apart from Cigna, which sold its Medicare business last year, the big players are still betting on the program—some are likely to take advantage of the turmoil to increase their market share. And the market is arguably still well served and competitive, especially in densely populated areas. Even after some moderation last year, the average beneficiary this year had 42 plan options from which to choose, according to health-research nonprofit KFF.
- “As the industry pivots to leaner operations, Wall Street may regain confidence. But the era of red-hot Medicare Advantage growth is over, at least for now. While Democrats have led efforts to cut overpayments, Republicans also face mounting pressure to curb spending—especially after recent tax cuts, notes Deutsche’s [George] Hill. He warns that more regulatory shifts may be coming, including a potential overhaul of the star ratings system, which governs billions in bonus payments tied to plan quality and patient satisfaction.
- “Until that picture clears, investors will continue to reward restraint and tightly managed risk. In today’s Medicare Advantage market, and across government insurance programs, growth is taking a back seat to profitability.
- BiioPharma Dive tells us,
- “The U.S. plans to put tariffs of up to 250% on pharmaceutical imports over the next year and a half, President Donald Trump said in a Tuesday interview with CNBC.
- “Trump said he would put a “small tariff” on such imports initially but added that he would raise the duties to 150% and then 250% in “one and a half years maximum.” The president indicated that announcements of pharmaceutical tariffs, as well as duties on semiconductors, would be announced “within the next week or so.”
- Per an HHS news release,
- “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today announced the beginning of a coordinated wind-down of its mRNA vaccine development activities under the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), including the cancellation and de-scoping of various contracts and solicitations. The decision follows a comprehensive review of mRNA-related investments initiated during the COVID-19 public health emergency.
- “We reviewed the science, listened to the experts, and acted,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “BARDA is terminating 22 mRNA vaccine development investments because the data show these vaccines fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu. We’re shifting that funding toward safer, broader vaccine platforms that remain effective even as viruses mutate.” * * *
- “While some final-stage contracts (e.g., Arcturus and Amplitude) will be allowed to run their course to preserve prior taxpayer investment, no new mRNA-based projects will be initiated. HHS has also instructed its partner, Global Health Investment Corporation (GHIC), which manages BARDA Ventures, to cease all mRNA-based equity investments. In total, this affects 22 projects worth nearly $500 million. Other uses of mRNA technology within the department are not impacted by this announcement.” * * *
- “The move signals a broader shift in federal vaccine development priorities. Going forward, BARDA will focus on platforms with stronger safety records and transparent clinical and manufacturing data practices. Technologies that were funded during the emergency phase but failed to meet current scientific standards will be phased out in favor of evidence-based, ethically grounded solutions – like whole-virus vaccines and novel platforms.”
- Roll Call lets us know,
- “The Trump administration is escalating its push against what has become a key part of the way states, localities and communities respond to the overdose epidemic: harm reduction.
- “A public health approach aimed at mitigating the negative health effects associated with drug use, harm reduction aims to prevent overdoses and infectious disease transmission.
- “Methods can involve the use of opioid overdose reversal medications such as naloxone, providing sterile needles to limit the transmission of infectious diseases, test strips that detect fentanyl in drugs, and “safe consumption sites,” where people can use drugs under supervision in case they need intervention.” * * *
- “In a “Dear Colleague” letter sent to states last week, Art Kleinschmidt, principal deputy assistant secretary at SAMHSA, said he doesn’t consider naloxone a harm reduction method and as such it would continue to be funded by the government. Kleinschmidt said test kits and other services can also be funded through grants.
- “But the letter stated that federal funding can’t be used to “purchase pipes or other supplies for safer smoking kits nor syringes or needles used to inject illicit drugs” or “any other supplies to promote or facilitate drug use.”
- “Moving forward, SAMHSA funds will no longer be used to support poorly defined so-called “harm reduction” activities; rather, SAMHSA is providing guidance to state agency leadership and to grantees through new award terms and conditions that provide clarity on what supplies and services previously defined under the umbrella of harm reduction can be supported with SAMHSA funding,” Kleinschmidt wrote.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The American Hospital Association News informs us,
- “Patients in the hospital for surgeries had better outcomes in 2024 than they did in 2019, according to a new report released today by the AHA and Vizient.
- “The significant improvement aligned not only with better performance on patient safety metrics — such as reductions in infections and falls — but also with marked declines in three major surgical patient safety indicators: severe bleeding, sepsis and respiratory failure. * * *
- “The new findings build on a report AHA released in collaboration with Vizient last year showing that hospitals and health systems performed better on key patient safety and quality measures in the first quarter of 2024 than they did before the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, hospitals’ efforts to improve safety led to 200,000 Americans hospitalized between April 2023 and March 2024 surviving episodes of care they wouldn’t have in 2019.”
- MedPage Today reports,
- “Unhealthy alcohol use is a leading cause of death and serious illness among U.S. adults.
- “In new draft guidance, the USPSTF reaffirmed that all adults should be screened for unhealthy alcohol use and [newly] recommended brief behavioral counseling interventions when appropriate.
- “The task force found insufficient evidence to make the same recommendation in adolescents.”
- The public comment period ends on September 2, 2025.
- Healio adds,
- “Testing for hepatitis C virus infection every 6 to 12 months — or even more frequently — among people who inject drugs could be a beneficial, cost-effective strategy, according to a study published in JAMA Health Forum.“
- USPSTF recommends hepatitis c screening for adults aged 18 to 79 without known liver disease.
- “Most adults need to be screened only once. Persons with continued risk for HCV infection (e.g., PWID) should be screened periodically. There is limited information about the specific screening interval that should occur in persons who continue to be at risk for new HCV infection or how pregnancy changes the need for additional screening.”
- The JAMA Health Forum study fills in the screening interval information gap.
- “Most adults need to be screened only once. Persons with continued risk for HCV infection (e.g., PWID) should be screened periodically. There is limited information about the specific screening interval that should occur in persons who continue to be at risk for new HCV infection or how pregnancy changes the need for additional screening.”
- Per STAT News,
- “Nathan Young, a community neurologist at the Mayo Clinic, recently saw a patient whose diagnosis he couldn’t quite nail down. Parkinson’s seemed a likely possibility, but Young was concerned she might instead have a rare neurological disorder called progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP, which can progress much more rapidly.
- “I opened a can of worms,” said Young: He ordered a PET scan of the patient’s brain, but the radiology report only confused matters. Instead of ruling out PSP, it suggested yet a third diagnosis: Alzheimer’s.
- “Normally at this point, Young would call in other specialists as reinforcements, including Mayo’s renowned experts. But this time he had something different to help: a new AI tool called StateViewer.”
- “Developed by Mayo’s Neurology AI program, StateViewer takes scans like the one Young ordered — they’re called FDG-PET scans, named for the radioactive tracer they use — and spits out a report of similar brains that have been scanned in Mayo’s clinical and research networks. The output: a differential diagnosis of nine potential types of dementia. In development over the last several years, StateViewer hit the rails at all three Mayo campuses four months ago, and it’s been run thousands of times on patients’ brain scans.”
- and
- “Vertex Pharmaceuticals said Monday afternoon that its next-generation non-opioid pain reliever failed to significantly outperform placebo in a Phase 2 trial.
- “The experimental drug, codenamed VX-993, is similar to the company’s recently approved pill Journavx but could potentially be given at higher doses and formulated as an IV infusion. The hope is that it could thus provide superior relief or offer an alternative to IV opioids. But after Monday’s results, the company said it would discontinue efforts to develop the drug as a single-agent medicine for acute pain.”
- “We do not plan to advance VX-993 as monotherapy in acute pain, because we do not expect that it will be superior to our [existing] NaV1.8 inhibitors,” said CEO Reshma Kewalramani during a Monday afternoon earnings call with investors, using a scientific shorthand for the class of drugs. She noted that the company will continue a trial testing the drug in patients with diabetes who have chronic nerve pain.”
- Cardiovascular Business points out,
- “A surgeon at Cleveland Clinic has performed the world’s first robotic-assisted heart surgery of its kind, using CardioPrecision’s CoreVista Robot Enabling Platform to implant Corcym’s Perceval Plus aortic heart valve through a small incision in the patient’s neck.
- “The successful operation, known as AVATAR (Advanced Videoscopic Aortic valve surgery by Transcervical Approach using Robot assistance), was performed by Marijan Koprivanac, MD, a cardiovascular surgeon with Cleveland Clinic’s Heart, Vascular and Thoracic Institute. Other robotic techniques for aortic valve replacement have already been in use, including the robotic aortic valve replacement procedures developed at the WVU Heart and Vascular Institute, what sets this approach apart is the fact that everything is done through that small incision in the neck.
- “Combining the artificial heart valve with this new surgical technology means patients should experience less pain and time in the hospital following heart surgery,” Koprivanac said in a statement. “In fact, we believe that this may be one of the least invasive surgical heart valve replacement options now available.”
- Per Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News,
- “Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an incurable neurological disorder affecting motor neurons (MNs), which are nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control voluntary muscle movement and breathing. Many ALS clinical trials, including those testing promising drugs, have fallen short of expectations, commonly because the extent of the disease can vary, and not all patients respond the same way to medications.
- “Scientists at Case Western Reserve University now report new insights into one type of ALS, that may point towards a therapeutic approach for different types of the disorder. The team studied inducible pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-motor neurons (MNs) carrying the P56S mutation in a protein called vesicle-associated membrane protein-associated protein-B (VAPB), which is responsible for a familial form of ALS. Their findings provided evidence that the mutation activates integrated stress response (ISR) via mitochondrial dysfunction in motor neurons and also indicated that pharmacological inhibition of ISR using ISRIB helped to rescue ALS-associated phenotypes in both VAPB P56S and patient-derived IPSC-MNs.
- “Although the research centered on this rare form type of ALS, the investigators are optimistic the positive results could provide clues for potentially treating the devastating disorder more broadly. Study lead Helen Cristina Miranda, PhD, an associate professor of genetics and genome sciences at Case Western Reserve’s School of Medicine, suggested, “This work could help lay the foundation for genetically informed clinical trials.”
- “Miranda and colleagues reported on their study in EMBO Molecular Medicine, in a paper titled “Convergent activation of the integrated stress response and ER–mitochondria uncoupling in VAPB-associated ALS,” concluding, “This is the first study to mechanistically connect a known ALS mutation with ISR activation, highlighting the potential for mutation-specific therapeutic targeting and patient stratification in ISR-modulating clinical trials.”
- The National Institutes of Health announced a “new study to test if mothers’ diet prevents early sign of food allergy in babies. NIH trial to assess if eating peanuts, eggs during pregnancy, breastfeeding protects infants.”
- “The study, called Expecting Mother’s Study of Consumption or Avoidance of Peanut and Egg (ESCAPE), will be led by Kirsi Järvinen-Seppo, M.D., Ph.D., chief of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology and Founders’ Distinguished Professor in Pediatric Allergy at University of Rochester Medicine. Results are expected in 2029.
- “More information about the trial, including contacts for people who are interested in participating, is available at ClinicalTrials.gov under study identifier NCT06260956.”
- NIH Research Matters covers the following topics this week: “Treating CoQ10 deficiency | Specialized blood vessels in organoids | Fat-fueled neurons.”
- Beckers Hospital Review identifies “seven new drug shortages and discontinuations, according to drug supply databases from the FDA and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.”
- CIGNA, writing in LinkedIn, discusses the importance of access to mental health services.
- “Virtual care appointments have emerged as a valuable tool in providing mental health services, particularly in remote or underserved areas. Connecting with mental health professionals via telephone, video calls, and even smart phone apps, make it easier to access care without the need for travel. Additionally, virtual care often reduces wait times, providing quicker access to necessary care.
- “Community-based mental health programs are another effective approach. These programs use the strengths and resources of local communities to provide support and care. Community health workers, peer support groups, and local organizations can play a vital role in delivering mental health services and promoting mental well-being.
- “Integrating mental health services into primary care is also promising. By training primary care providers to recognize and address mental health issues, individuals can receive holistic care that addresses both their physical and mental health needs. This integration can help improve overall health outcomes.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- BioPharma Dive reports,
- “Pfizer and other large pharmaceutical companies are taking seriously President Donald Trump’s demand that drugmakers make more of their medicines available direct to consumers in the U.S. at lower cost, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said Tuesday.
- “We have serious discussions in the industry,” Bourla told investors on a conference call Pfizer held to discuss its earnings for the second quarter. “I’m connected very often individually with all the major companies, and they are all ready to roll up their sleeves and execute something like that.”
- MedTech Dive relates,
- “Alcon has agreed to buy implantable lens maker STAAR Surgical for about $1.5 billion in total equity value, the companies said Tuesday.
- “Alcon, which will purchase all outstanding shares of STAAR for $28 per share in cash, expects STAAR’s refractive surgery offerings to complement Alcon’s laser vision correction business.
- “BTIG analyst Ryan Zimmerman said Alcon is getting “a solid deal” given STAAR’s setbacks in the China market. The company is betting on a recovery in China and the longer-term health of lens-based refractive surgery, said the analyst.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Shares of Hims & Hers tumbled 12% in after-hours trading Monday after the company’s second-quarter revenue missed Wall Street analysts’ expectations.
- “The company faces headwinds in its compounded GLP-1 drug business after pharma giant Novo Nordisk pulled the plug on a monthlong collaboration to make its weight loss drug Wegovy available on the telehealth company’s platform. The company had to off-board GLP-1 subscribers from the branded version of the drug, executives said.
- “Hims & Hers continues to sell compounded semaglutide, the active ingredient in Novo’s Wegovy and Ozempic drugs, and these generic versions are more affordable than the branded drugs.
- “Analysts, however, seem pleased by what they see as strong results and the online health and wellness company’s growth plans, including international expansion, new hormone health offerings and building out standalone lab testing.”
- and
- “Online therapy provider Talkspace continues to make big investments in artificial intelligence, seeing opportunities to improve the experience for patients and cut down on paperwork for providers.
- “Talkspace connects people via an app with therapists who provide counseling remotely, either over the phone, by video chat or by text.
- “The company is building out foundational large language models specifically for behavioral health using its internal, de-identified clinical data sets, as it claims to have the “largest behavioral health datasets in the industry,” consisting of millions of therapeutic interactions on the Talkspace platform over the past 12 years.
- “Unlike existing, horizontal, general-purpose LLMs, we are working closely with mental health clinicians experienced with evidence-based therapeutic frameworks,” CEO Jon Cohen, M.D., told investors during the company’s second-quarter earnings call Tuesday. “Talkspace behavioral health LLMs are being developed specifically to understand the language complexity and workflows of mental health delivery. Once up and running, these behavioral health LLMs will be an integral part of how we provide higher-quality care to our Talkspace members.”
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “Virtual behavioral health provider Cerebral announced Tuesday it had acquired Resilience Lab, which offers therapy and medication management through its online platform. The deal, which closed last week, includes Resilience’s clinician development program aimed at training and supporting early-career therapists.
- “The combined organization will be led by Cerebral CEO Brian Reinken under the Cerebral brand, with Resilence Lab Co-founder Marc Goldberg holding the president role, according to a spokesperson. Dr. Carl Marci will join the company as chief medical officer, and Resilience Lab Co-founder Christine Carville will serve as chief clinical officer. Cerebral representatives declined to disclose financial details of the deal.”
- and
- “Quest Diagnostics has completed its acquisition of some clinical testing assets from Spectra Laboratories, a subsidiary of dialysis company Fresenius Medical Care.
- “Under the agreement, Quest will provide dialysis-related clinical testing to independent clinics formerly served by Spectra Laboratories.
- “As part of a separate deal with Fresenius, Quest said in a Tuesday news release it expects to complete the acquisition of select dialysis-related water testing assets by the end of the year. It also said it plans to start providing comprehensive dialysis-related laboratory services for centers operated by Fresenius in the U.S. The transition of services is slated to be completed by early next year.”
