From Washington, DC,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “The federal government was on course to shut down early Wednesday, as hopes of any last-minute deal evaporated and both Republicans and Democrats appeared content to trigger the first lapse in funding since President Trump’s first term.”
- The Senate voted 55-45 on accepting the House Continuing Resolution this evening. A 60 vote in favor was required due to cloture rules. Three Democrats voted in favor and Sen. Rand Paul voted against due to his disdain for continuing resolutions. Roll discusses the vote and next steps in Congress.
- Govexec adds,
- “The Trump administration is planning to furlough around 550,000 federal employees on Wednesday if Congress fails to act before government funding expires late Tuesday evening, representing an unusually low less than one-quarter of the workforce.
- “The White House is also vowing to oversee large-scale layoffs if a government shutdown occurs, though that would play out through a separate process than the one that sends home certain employees only until funding is restored. In the last 15 years, administrations have typically prepared to furlough between 35% and 40% of the federal workforce.”
- Federal News Network shares agency shutdown contingency plans.
- OPM Director Scott Kupor writes in his blog about how he spent days leading to the end of federal fiscal year.
- The NBC station in Washington, DC, reminds us,
- “Tens of thousands of government workers are preparing to leave the federal workforce Tuesday, the final day for many who took the government’s “Fork in the Road” resignation offer earlier this year.
- “Among those are as many as 60,000 retirees who will now anxiously wait for their federal retirement benefits to kick in – a process that could take months and is potentially impacted by the looming government shutdown.
- “There’s no question there’s going to be a surge. We’re doing everything we can to try and address it,” Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Director Scott Kupor told the News4 I-Team. * * *
- “Even though OPM knew months ago thousands of employees were leaving, he said their retirements can’t start processing until after they’re off the federal payroll. That’s because each department in the federal government has to wait for an employee’s final paycheck before finalizing their application and sending it to OPM.
- “Now look, it sounds crazy to me, as well,” he told the I-Team. “And so, one of the things we’re looking at is we’re trying to just basically redesign the entire process from start to finish.”
- The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
- “President Trump unveiled plans Tuesday to launch a government-run website, dubbed TrumpRx, for consumers to buy drugs directly from manufacturers, and he said Pfizer plans to offer some of its drugs on the site at a reduced rate.
- “Separately, Trump said Pfizer would offer all of its drugs to Medicaid at a reduced, “most favored nation” price, as well as introduce any new drugs to the U.S. market at the reduced prices. In return, the company gains a three-year grace period to exempt it from national-security-related tariffs, as long as the company invests in domestic manufacturing, the company said.
- “The American consumers have been subsidizing research-and-development costs for the entire planet,” Trump said in the Oval Office, flanked by top health officials and Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla.” * * *
- “Pfizer also announced a $70 billion investment on research and development and manufacturing medications in the U.S.”
- Per a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid news release,
- “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released final guidance for the third cycle of negotiations under the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program (Negotiation Program). This final guidance incorporates significant policy refinements based on public feedback, with a particular focus on increasing transparency, and implements expanded protections for orphan drugs enacted in the Working Families Tax Cuts Act (Public Law 119-21).” * * *
- “[The] final guidance addresses how drugs payable under Medicare Part B will be eligible for negotiation, requirements and process for renegotiation.”
- “The Fact Sheet for the Final Guidance for Initial Price Applicability Year 2028 and Manufacturer Effectuation of the Maximum Fair Price in 2026, 2027, and 2028 is available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/ipay-2028-final-guidance-fact-sheet.pdf.
- “Additional information about the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program can be found at: https://www.cms.gov/priorities/medicare-prescription-drug-affordability/overview/medicare-drug-price-negotiation-program.”
- Per a Department of Health and Human Services news release,
- “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Administration for Community Living (ACL) today announced $60 million in new grant awards to states, territories, tribes, and local organizations supporting older adults and Americans with disabilities. These awards will strengthen existing programs that protect health, preserve independence, and support caregivers — key priorities of the Make America Healthy Again agenda.”
- Per a National Institutes of Health news releases,
- Anthony Letai, MD, Ph.D., was sworn in [yesterday September 29, 2025] as director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
- Dr. Letai takes the helm of the world’s most prestigious cancer research agency after serving as professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and medical oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. He possesses decades of experience studying cell death in cancer, developing treatments, and identifying predictive biomarkers.
- and
- “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services today announced a doubling of funding for its Childhood Cancer Data Initiative (CCDI) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The funding surge is designed to accelerate the development of improved diagnostics, treatments, and prevention strategies.
- “President Trump in 2019 established the CCDI to collect, generate, and analyze childhood cancer data. Its budget will rise from $50 million to $100 million, giving the federal government stronger data for this effort. The initiative will also bring in private-sector partners to apply advanced artificial intelligence to speed up cures for pediatric cancer.
- “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, and National Cancer Institute (NCI) Director Anthony Letai joined President Trump at the White House today to discuss their commitment to eradicating childhood cancer and to mark the signing of the president’s executive order, Unlocking Cures for Pediatric Cancer with Artificial Intelligence.“
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- FDA Director Marty Makary, MD, announced today,
- “As part of the FDA’s broader strategy to combat the crisis of youth vaping, we are launching an initiative to increase voluntary compliance from retailers—including vape shops, convenience stores and gas stations—that play a key role in the distribution of both legal and illegal products into American communities.” * * *
- “We have received questions from retailers about which tobacco products are legal to sell, so we’re mailing materials to more than 300,000 retailers nationwide containing:
- “A list of the 39 vapes and 20 nicotine pouch products that can be legally marketed in the United States, which features QR codes linked to the FDA real-time digital versions of these lists (www.fda.gov/authorizedecigs and www.fda.gov/authorizednicotinepouches);
- “Information on accessing FDA’s new Searchable Tobacco Product Database, a database of over 17,000 tobacco products—covering all categories, such as cigarettes, cigars, hookah, and e-cigarettes—that may be legally marketed in the United States; and
- “New tobacco retailer education materials, including a wall calendar of reminders focused on retailer requirements such as only selling tobacco products to those 21 and older and requiring a photo ID check of anyone under 30.” * * *
- “Mailings will begin this fall. Retailers looking to order additional free materials—including a digital age verification calendar—can do so via FDA’s Tobacco Education Resource Library.”
- The American Hospital Association News tells us,
- “The Food and Drug Administration today issued a request for public comment on a series of questions regarding current approaches to evaluating artificial intelligence-enabled medical device performance in real-world applications. This includes approaches to detect, assess and mitigate performance changes over time to help assure the devices remain safe and effective throughout their life cycle. The FDA is accepting comments at www.regulations.gov until Dec. 1. The notice follows a request by the Office of Science and Technology Policy issued Sept. 26 that seeks feedback on federal regulations that hinder AI development, deployment or adoption.”
- “The Food and Drug Administration today issued a request for public comment on a series of questions regarding current approaches to evaluating artificial intelligence-enabled medical device performance in real-world applications. This includes approaches to detect, assess and mitigate performance changes over time to help assure the devices remain safe and effective throughout their life cycle. The FDA is accepting comments at www.regulations.gov until Dec. 1. The notice follows a request by the Office of Science and Technology Policy issued Sept. 26 that seeks feedback on federal regulations that hinder AI development, deployment or adoption.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “The Food and Drug Administration has expanded its early alert communication initiative to cover potentially high-risk removals or corrections for all medical devices, the agency said Monday.
- “Officials announced a pilot of the initiative late last year. Since then, the agency has issued early alerts shortly after companies have told customers about issues with certain medical devices.
- “The FDA said the pilot was successful, leading it to expand the program beyond the initial five therapeutic areas and include potentially high-risk safety events of all medical devices.”
- BioPharma Dive points out five FDA decision to watch for in the fourth quarter of 2025. “The agency is set to decide by the end of the year whether to approve an obesity pill, a new kind of kidney disease drug and a long-awaited heart medicine.
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- STAT News interviews “Lilly’s head scientist [about] its GLP-1 pill, Alzheimer’s strategy, and finding promising ideas and startups. CSO Daniel Skovronsky’s long-term vision: ‘We’re trying to invest in the babies’”
- Biopharma Dive reports,
- “Metsera’s top obesity drug succeeded in a Phase 2 trial, helping enrollees treated with the highest dose lose an average of 14 percentage points more of their body weight than placebo recipients after 28 weeks, the company said Monday.
- “Interim results from a separate trial also showed that a step-up, or “titrated,” dosing regimen limited the kind of gastrointestinal side effects that often lead people to stop taking GLP-1 drugs for obesity. That finding suggested Metsera’s drug, MET-097i, could have a tolerability profile “better than tirzepatide,” which Eli Lilly sells as Zepbound for weight loss, wrote Leerink Partners analyst David Risinger in a Tuesday client note.
- “The announcement comes one week after Pfizer reached a deal to acquire Metsera for $4.9 billion. The buyout puts Pfizer back in the chase to develop obesity drugs, a market that could be worth more than $100 billion a year in sales by the next decade.”
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “Two clinical trials of Merck’s pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) drug Winrevair were so conclusive that the studies were halted within the last year because the efficacy of the treatment was assured.
- “Tuesday, Merck reported results from the phase 3 Hyperion study, which showed that Winrevair, when combined with background therapy, achieved its primary endpoint by reducing the risk of clinical worsening events by 76% compared with placebo in recently diagnosed adults.”
- Per MedPage Today,
- “Gabapentin prescribing rose sharply in recent years, with the generic drug becoming the fifth most dispensed product in retail pharmacies in 2024, a CDC analysis showed.
- “From 2010 to 2024, prescriptions jumped from 79.5 to 177.6 per 1,000 people, according to Gery Guy Jr., PhD, of the CDC National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and co-authors.
- “The number of persons who received gabapentin soared from 5.8 million in 2010 to 15.5 million in 2024, Guy and colleagues reported in Annals of Internal Medicine. That represented an increase from 18.9 per 1,000 people in 2010 to 46.9 per 1,000 people in 2024.” * * *
- “Gabapentin is approved for seizures and postherpetic neuralgia; gabapentin enacarbil is approved for restless legs syndrome. Despite limited indications, gabapentin and its cousin pregabalin are widely prescribed off-label for various other pain syndromes.
- “Common side effects of gabapentin include drowsiness, dizziness, blurry or double vision, and difficulty with coordination and concentration. In 2019, the FDA warned about serious breathing problems that may occur in patients using gabapentin or pregabalin who have respiratory risk factors. These factors included taking opioids or other drugs that depress the central nervous system, conditions like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease that reduce lung function, and older age.”
- Per Health Day,
- “An invisible storm might rage for years inside the bodies of people at risk for rheumatoid arthritis, prior to any joint pain occurring, a new study says.
- “These folks experience dramatic immune system changes long before they feel symptoms, researchers reported in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
- “Overall, we hope this study raises awareness that rheumatoid arthritis begins much earlier than previously thought and that it enables researchers to make data-driven decisions on strategies to disrupt disease development,” senior researcher Mark Gillespie, an assistant investigator at the Allen Institute in Seattle, said in a news release.”
- Pulmonary Advisory informs us, “Asthma risk in women has significant associations with body mass index (BMI), body roundness index (BRI), and white blood cell count (WBC), according to study findings published in BMC Pulmonary Medicine.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Cardinal Health CAH is building a flagship pharmaceutical distribution center in Indianapolis to keep up with its growing customer base and the shifting needs of drug companies.
- “The planned 230,000 square-foot plant is the healthcare company’s latest step in a 10-year plan to modernize and expand its distribution network. Pharmaceutical distribution remains Cardinal’s most lucrative business, and it is continuing to gain customers. The Dublin, Ohio, company added more than $10 billion of new business in the last fiscal year, said Debbie Weitzman, chief executive of Cardinal’s pharmaceutical and specialty solutions business.
- “That comes with it a lot of volume that we need to be prepared for,” she said.”
- Fierce Healthcare relates,
- “Millie, a California-based hybrid women’s health clinic, is expanding its offerings with perimenopause and menopause care.
- “The offering, available in person and virtually, includes hormone therapy, nonhormonal treatments, vaginal treatments and lifestyle strategies. Millie currently has two clinics in the Bay Area.
- “The company, which launched in 2022, was originally focused on maternity care. Staffed with nurse-midwives and doulas, Millie provides care for low-risk pregnancies out of its clinic. Millie also partners with hospitals, where its providers support labor and deliver babies. Midwives drive lower caesarean section rates and higher patient satisfaction scores and can help fill crucial gaps in obstetrics care. As of 2024, more than a third of U.S. counties were designated maternity care deserts.
- “In 2023, Millie introduced preconception counseling and gynecology offerings, recognizing that optimizing these areas of health can support better maternal and overall health outcomes. It has now further expanded its continuum of care with menopause care, since many of its patients are becoming parents in their late 30s and navigating postpartum and perimenopause at the same time.”
- Beckers Hospital Review shares “the days cash on hand at 40 health systems as of June 30, according to their most recent financial reports.”
- Beckers Payer Issues offers eight things to know about catastrophic health claims.
