From Washington, DC,
- The Wall Street Journal reports
- “The Senate plans two healthcare votes Thursday: one on a GOP bill that would put as much as $1,500 a year into health savings accounts in lieu of providing subsidies to cover premiums, and the second on a Democratic plan that extends ACA subsidies for three years. Neither is expected to reach the 60 votes needed to advance, but the willingness of some Republicans to consider any form of ACA extensions has opened the door to possible talks if the partisan measures fail.
- “In the House, Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) said Republicans plan to put on the floor next week a package of healthcare proposals that doesn’t include extending subsidies. But other lawmakers see an ACA extension as the only way to prevent widespread pain ahead of the 2026 midterms and get a GOP-led Congress in position to make more sweeping changes.
- “Rep. Jim Jordan (R., Ohio)—a onetime leader of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus—argued in a closed-door House Republican meeting that the party needed its own plan to temporarily extend the subsidies in tandem with more sweeping changes. If they didn’t, he warned, conservatives could be sidelined by centrists’ push to bring their own ACA extension to the floor.
- “There’s a whole list of good things that we need to put in the legislation,” Jordan said in an interview. “But we also need to recognize reality, which is the cliff is coming in 21 days, and we have members who are very concerned about that. I think we all are.”
- The Hill adds,
- “The House on Wednesday easily passed the annual defense policy bill, sending the mammoth, $900 billion measure to the Senate ahead of the year-end deadline.
- “The measure, known as the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), passed the lower chamber by a vote of 312-112. Ninety-four Democrats and 18 Republicans opposed the bill.
- “The NDAA, a traditionally bipartisan bill that lays out defense priorities for the next year, would increase pay for service members, provide some military aid to Ukraine, restrict U.S. investment in China and fully repeal sanctions on Syria, among other things.”
- Axios points out,
- “Lab testing companies including giants Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp are pressing Congress to stop hundreds of millions of dollars of Medicare cuts for diagnostic tests that are due to take effect at the end of January.” * * *
- “A 15% reduction to Medicare payments for nearly 800 lab tests is set to take effect Jan. 31, followed by additional cuts in following years.
- “The change stems from 2014 legislation that aimed to align Medicare reimbursements for lab tests more closely with commercial payments.
- “Medicare cuts that previously went into effect from the legislation cost labs nearly $4 billion over three years. Since then, the diagnostics industry has successfully argued the cuts are based on incomplete and outdated pricing information.” * * *
- “Federal budget analysts previously used the Consumer Price Index as a proxy for lab payments. That measurement showed that delaying the changes appeared to save Medicare money.
- But the analysts have changed their model and now estimate that delaying the payment cuts will add to Medicare costs.”
- Govexec tells us,
- “The heads of the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Personnel Management unveiled plans Wednesday to build a single information technology platform to manage all human capital data across the federal government.
- “In a joint memo, OMB Director Russ Vought and OPM Director Scott Kupor described a two-year plan to transition the federal government’s collection of disparate human resources networks onto a single system dubbed Federal HR 2.0.
- “For too long, the Federal Government has lacked what is taken for granted at any other organization — a single system of record for personnel management. Instead, the Federal Government spends an inordinate amount each year on numerous costly, duplicative, and outdated core human capital management (“Core HCM”) systems,” the memo said.
- “As part of the plan, the memo said OMB and OPM officials will lead efforts “to procure a modern, best-in-class commercial Core HCM system” for governmentwide adoption by fiscal 2028.”
- The Journal of Accountancy informs us,
- “The IRS provided guidance Tuesday on new tax benefits for health savings accounts (HSAs) that include allowing bronze and catastrophic plans to be considered HSA-compatible under Sec. 223.
- “The changes, which were part of H.R. 1, P.L. 119-21, commonly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, generally expand the availability of HSAs under Sec. 223 and were outlined in Notice 2026-05.” * * *
- “The IRS guidance also covered:
- “Telehealth and remote care services: H.R. 1 made permanent the ability to receive telehealth and other remote care services before meeting the HDHP deductible while remaining eligible to contribute to an HSA, effective for plan years beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2025.
- “Direct primary care (DPC) service arrangements: Beginning Jan. 1, 2026, an otherwise eligible individual enrolled in certain DPC service arrangements may contribute to an HSA. In addition, they may use their HSA funds tax-free to pay periodic DPC fees.”
- “The IRS is seeking comments on Notice 2026-05 by March 6, 2026.”
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “For more than two years, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission has been taking certain drugmakers to task over their alleged listing of “improper” patents in an FDA registry, a practice the agency says thwarts generic competition.
- “Now, after several prior wins with the effort, the agency is celebrating once again as Teva has agreed to remove more than 200 patents from FDA records, according to a Dec. 10 announcement.
- “Following pressure from the FTC, Teva has asked the FDA to delist patents on certain products for asthma, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and for epinephrine autoinjectors, the FTC said. The removals from the FDA’s Orange Book registry will “pave the way for greater competition for generic alternatives” to more than 30 products, the agency explained.” * * *
- “The AHA Board of Trustees has engaged WittKieffer to conduct a national search for Pollack’s successor as part of a planned transition. Pollack will remain fully engaged until the transition is complete.
- “Recognizing Pollack’s commitment to the association, the AHA Board last month voted to bestow on him the title of AHA President and CEO Emeritus for when the transition is complete.”
- The American Medical Association announced,
- “AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack today announced his plans to retire by the end of 2026. A 43-year veteran of the association, Pollack has served as its chief executive for the past decade.
- “Under Pollack’s leadership, the AHA steered hospitals through the COVID-19 pandemic, securing critical resources and regulatory flexibility to keep hospitals and health systems open and caring for patients during the most challenging public health crisis of recent time. Pollack launched bold initiatives to strengthen the health care workforce, advance quality and patient safety, and fortify cybersecurity defenses through partnerships with the FBI and other government agencies.
- Per a Department of Justice news release,
- “United States Attorney David Metcalf announced today that Recovery Centers of America (RCA) has agreed to pay $1,000,000 to resolve allegations that it failed to comply with provisions of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) that are designed to prevent the diversion of controlled substances for illegal uses, and an additional $1,000,000 to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act (FCA) by billing the government for drug and alcohol treatment services that it failed to adequately provide.
- “The United States’ allegations under the CSA arise from audits and investigations the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) conducted at RCA facilities in Pennsylvania and Maryland between 2019 and 2024. Based on those audits and investigations, the United States contends that RCA dispensed controlled substances in an unlawful manner, that certain controlled substances were missing from the company’s records, and that the company failed to comply with additional recordkeeping requirements of the CSA.
- “In addition, the United States alleges that, at certain facilities during a period from 2017 through 2019, RCA violated the FCA by billing the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program and Medicaid for the care of beneficiaries to whom it failed to provide and document the requisite treatment services.” * * *
- “The resolution obtained in this matter was the result of a coordinated effort among the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the DEA, the Office of Personnel Management Office of Inspector General, and the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General.
- “The matter was handled in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Peter Carr and Charlene Keller Fullmer and former auditor Dawn Wiggins.
- “The claims resolved by the settlement are allegations only; there has been no determination of liability.“
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- BioPharma Dive reports,
- “The Food and Drug Administration has cleared the first medicine under its new National Priority Voucher program, approving a U.S.-manufactured version of a decades-old antibiotic.
- “GSK originally developed the drug, Augmentin XR, and won FDA approval for it in 2002. The British company then struck a deal in 2010 to sell its U.S. penicillin business, including its Augmentin franchise, to the generic drugmaker Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories. A Bristol, Tennessee, plant that was part of that deal is now operated by USAntibiotics, which won the priority voucher.
- “FDA Commissioner Martin Makary trumpeted the approval as a boon for crucial supply chains of medications that often end up in shortages. The move “will strengthen domestic manufacturing and increase our national security,” Makary said in a statement Tuesday.”
- Fierce Pharma adds
- “The FDA has issued its stamp of approval to a new, cell-based option to treat Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS), marking the first therapy of its kind for the rare disease and making Italy’s Fondazione Telethon the first nonprofit to usher a gene therapy across the regulatory finish line in the U.S.
- “Branded as Waskyra, the drug is specifically indicated for children 6 months and older, as well as adults who have a mutation in the WAS gene. To be eligible for the ex vivo gene therapy, patients must have no available human leukocyte antigen-matched related stem cell donor and be cleared for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, the FDA said in its Dec. 9 announcement.
- “Today’s approval is a transformative milestone for patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, offering the first FDA-approved gene therapy that uses the patient’s own genetically corrected hematopoietic stem cells to treat the disease,” director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) Vinay Prasad, M.D., said in a release.”
- and
- “A new guidance document issued by the FDA this week offers recommendations for how makers of prescription biosimilars and biologic reference products should approach promotional advertising and labeling for those meds.
- The document (PDF) finalizes a draft guidance issued by the agency in April 2024 and replaces a previous guidance on the topic that was initially published in 2020.
- Differences from last year’s draft version are minimal, including only an addition in the introduction that its recommendations “apply regardless of the medium of the communication (e.g., paper, digital)” and a few extra lines about considerations for comparisons between biosimilars and their reference products, along with “editorial changes for consistency, readability, and clarity,” per the FDA.”
- Per Beckers Health IT,
- “The FDA has qualified the first AI-based drug development tool to support metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis clinical trials.
- “The cloud-based tool, AI-Based Histologic Measurement of NASH (AIM-NASH), is designed to assist pathologists in assessing liver biopsy images, according to a Dec. 8 news release. It evaluates disease activity by scoring steatosis, hepatocellular ballooning, lobular inflammation and fibrosis according to the NASH Clinical Research Network scoring system.
- “AIM-NASH uses AI to analyze digital images of liver tissue, but human pathologists remain responsible for interpreting the results. They review the entire slide and AIM-NASH output before accepting or rejecting the scores.”
- BioPharma Dive notes,
- “Vinay Prasad and two other officials within the Food and Drug Administration office regulating many genetic medicines have outlined a stricter approval framework for the next CAR-T cell therapies developed for cancer. In an article published Monday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the trio wrote that newer CAR-T treatments need to extend survival, or the time before a type of event occurs, in randomized, controlled trials. The control groups in those studies must also take into account the existing standard treatments, including other approved CAR-T therapies, and prove superior unless “adequately justified and discussed” with the FDA. The new protocol represents a higher approval bar for CAR-T therapies, which, historically, have been cleared based on their ability to induce responses in single-arm studies.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP reports,
- “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) today said the United States has 1,912 confirmed measles cases so far in 2025, an increase of 84 cases since last week and a bad sign as holiday gatherings, travel, and indoor activities is set to pick up in the final weeks of the year.
- “In January 2026, the United States is at risk of losing its measles elimination status because of ongoing transmission chains from a West Texas outbreak that began early last year and sickened roughly 800 people. The country first gained elimination status in 2000.
- “Eighty-eight percent of cases in the United States this year are outbreak-associated, and there have been 47 outbreaks recorded. Last year, 16 outbreaks were reported during 2024 and 69% of cases (198 of 285) were outbreak-associated.
- “Currently Utah, Arizona, and South Carolina are seeing large outbreaks that since Thanksgiving have pushed state totals well past 100 cases. Those outbreaks have been marked by exposures at schools and churches in communities with low vaccination levels.”
- STAT News relates,
- “Federal health officials on Wednesday [December 10] expanded an outbreak of infant botulism tied to recalled ByHeart baby formula to include all illnesses reported since the company began production in March 2022.
- “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said investigators “cannot rule out the possibility that contamination might have affected all ByHeart formula products” ever made.
- ‘The outbreak now includes at least 51 infants in 19 states. The new case definition includes “any infant with botulism who was exposed to ByHeart formula at any time since the product’s release,” according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The most recent illness was reported on Dec. 1.
- “No deaths have been reported in the outbreak, which was announced Nov. 8.
- “Previously, health officials had said the outbreak included 39 suspected or confirmed cases of infant botulism reported in 18 states since August. That’s when officials at California’s Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program reported a rise in treatment of infants who had consumed ByHeart formula. With the expanded definition, the CDC identified 10 additional cases that occurred from December 2023 through July 2025.”
- and
- “While extensive studies have found Covid-19 vaccines to be safe, effective, and to have saved millions of lives during the pandemic, these shots come with a rare but real risk of inflamed heart muscle, or myocarditis. Scientists on Wednesday reported that they have identified a pair of immune signals they believe drive these cases — and offered early evidence that these signals can be blocked.
- Researchers sifted through previous Covid vaccine studies and identified a pair of immune signaling molecules, or cytokines, present at higher levels in the blood of vaccine recipients with myocarditis: CXCL10 and interferon-gamma (IFN-γ). The authors found that these signals could also be triggered in the lab when immune cells were exposed to the Pfizer and Moderna Covid vaccines, or when mice were inoculated.
- “Scientists found that using antibodies to block CXCL10 and IFN-γ reduced signs of cardiac stress in vaccinated mice and in cardiac spheroids, three-dimensional growths of human cells meant to mimic some aspects of the heart’s structure and function. The authors also found they could block the cytokines’ effects with genistein, a compound found in soybeans and other legumes that has been linkedto reduced inflammation.
- “The findings, published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, come as messenger RNA vaccines face scrutiny from the Trump administration and some lawmakers. That has forced researchers studying these shots to strike a tricky balancing act between reporting new insights on adverse events while making clear that the shots are safe overall.
- “I want to emphasize this is very, very rare. This study is purely to understand why. In those rare cases, what’s going on? People talk about it, and here we provide a mechanism,” said Joe Wu, director of Stanford Cardiovascular Institute and the study’s senior author.”
- Medscape tells us,
- “As women age, they face several health risks related to the menopause transition. Treating these risk factors, which include obesity and high blood pressure, can reduce the risks for diabetes, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and other health problems.
- “These risks also can be driven by age-related changes that occur around the time of menopause, said Marie K. Christakis, MD, MPH, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and menopause and mature women’s health at the University of Toronto in Toronto, during a presentation at the Diabetes Canada and Canadian Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism (CSEM) Professional Conference 2025.
- “Women at midlife are in what I term a cardiovascular storm,” she said. “More than 42% of American women between ages 40 and 59 years have a BMI over 30, and the prevalence of obesity is higher among women between ages 40 and 59 years. Generally, menopause occurs naturally between ages 46 to 54 years, and central adiposity is a particular issue.”
- MedPage Today notes,
- “In a large phase III trial of adjuvant treatment for early-stage breast cancer, the investigational oral drug giredestrant reduced the risk of invasive disease recurrence by 30% versus standard endocrine therapy.
- “Among more than 4,000 patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive disease, 3-year invasive disease-free survival (IDFS) rates reached 92.4% with the next-generation oral selective estrogen receptor antagonist and degrader (SERD), as compared with 89.6% with standard of care (HR 0.70, 95% CI 0.57-0.87, P=0.0014).”
- “The findings of the lidERA Breast Cancer trial mark the first benefit with a novel endocrine agent in early breast cancer in 20 years, not since the approval of aromatase inhibitors (AIs) in the 2000s, said Aditya Bardia, MBBS, MPH, of the University of California Los Angeles.
- “Overall, the results support giredestrant as a potential standard endocrine option for patients with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer,” said Bardia, who presented the findings here at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.”
- Fierce Pharma adds,
- “Pfizer has rolled out detailed trial data suggesting Tukysa could be part of a new first-line treatment to delay the progression of HER2-positive breast cancer.
- “The current standard of care for the disease includes induction chemotherapy in combination with Roche’s Herceptin and Perjeta, followed by a chemo-free maintenance phase with the two HER2 antibody drugs. Now, Pfizer has shown that adding Tukysa during the maintenance stage can improve patient outcomes.
- “Specifically, addition of Tukysa to first-line maintenance therapy significantly reduced the risk of progression or death by 35.9%, according to investigator-assessed results from the phase 3 HER2CLIMB-05 trial, which were presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Patients who received the Pfizer small molecule went 8.6 months longer without tumor progression, reaching 24.9 months at the median.
- and
- “A year after a clutch of major pharmas threw their weight behind a new campaign devoted to addressing the serious health disparities facing Black breast cancer patients, “Care for HER” has been shown to have a tangible positive impact on patients’ lives.
- “Touch, The Black Breast Cancer Alliance and Unite for HER—the two nonprofit organizations behind the program—presented a study about that impact at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on Wednesday.
- “The research centers ran a survey of 57 participants in the Care of HER program, all Black women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer, 93% of whom said they’d used the program’s resources.”
- Per Cardiovascular Business,
- “Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) is a viable treatment option for patients with diabetes undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), according to new findings published in The American Journal of Cardiology.[1]
- “While IVL has demonstrated favorable procedural and clinical outcomes in general populations with calcified lesions, its performance in patients with diabetes mellitus remains insufficiently characterized,” wrote senior author Jose M. Montero-Cabezas, MD, PhD, a cardiologist with Leiden University Medical Center in The Netherlands, and colleagues. “Given the unique anatomical and pathophysiological features of coronary artery disease in diabetic patients, such as medial calcification, longer lesion length, and more frequent multivessel disease, there is a clear need to specifically evaluate the efficacy and safety of IVL in this higher-risk population.”
- “Montero-Cabezas et al. tracked data from nearly 600 patients who underwent PCI with IVL from May 2019 to September 2024. All data came from the BENELUX-IVL registry, an international database open to all IVL patients. Patients with missing data were excluded.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Healthcare Dive reports,
- “CVS plans to launch a first-of-its-kind healthcare engagement platform, banking that perennial gripes about poor access and navigation will incentivize both consumers and rival companies to sign on.
- “The platform will include data and services offered by CVS’ different health businesses — and those of participating industry partners. The goal is to create an integrated healthcare experience for consumers, hopefully enhancing their experience with the industry, lowering costs and improving outcomes, CVS executives said Tuesday during the healthcare giant’s investor day in Hartford, Connecticut.
- “CVS is also banking that the platform will also be a source of revenue by driving consumers to CVS products and services they might not know about otherwise.”
- Kaufman Hall announced,
- “Hospital volumes remained strong in October, while average length of stay declined, translating to a dip in net revenue per discharge. Bad debt and charity care continue to rise, and staffing levels are tightening.
- “The recent issue of the National Hospital Flash Report covers these and other key performance metrics.”
- The American Journal of Managed Care lets us know,
- “As states and federal programs accelerate the shift to value-based care, a new national survey suggests clinicians face a widening gap between policy expectations and the tools available to meet them.
- “Tracking patient progress emerged as the biggest barrier—more than insurance—for mental health and primary care clinicians adapting to outcome-based payment models, according to October 2025 survey findings released by Twofold Health, an artificial intelligence (AI) clinical notetaking platform.”
- Per an Institute of Clinical and Economic Review news release,
- “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of sibeprenlimab (Voyxact®, Otsuka Holdings Co., Ltd.), atacicept (Vera Therapeutics, Inc.), and delayed-release budesonide (“Nefecon”, Tarpeyo®, Calliditas Therapeutics AB) targeting abnormal complexes of immunoglobulin for IgA nephropathy.
- “This preliminary draft marks the midpoint of ICER’s eight-month process of assessing this treatment, and the findings within this document should not be interpreted to be ICER’s final conclusions.
- “On December 17, as part of ICER’s Early Insights Webinar Series, ICER’s Chief Medical Officer, David Rind, MD, will present the initial findings of this draft report. This webinar is exclusively available to all users of the ICER Analytics platform; registration for the webinar is now open.
- “The Draft Evidence Report and Draft Voting Questions are now open to public comment. All stakeholders are invited to submit formal comments by email to publiccomments@icer.org, which must be received by 5 PM ET on January 14, 2026.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “Teleflex has struck deals to sell its acute care, interventional urology and OEM businesses for a combined $2.03 billion, the company said Tuesday.
- “Montagu and Kohlberg, two private equity firms, are buying the OEM business for $1.5 billion. Intersurgical, an anesthesia and respiratory care medtech company, is buying the acute care and interventional urology businesses for $530 million.
- “Needham analysts said in a note to investors that the total sale price is at the low end of their estimates. Yet RBC Capital Markets analysts told investors they view the update positively.”
- * * * “Selling the units will leave Teleflex focused on its vascular access, interventional and surgical businesses. The company picked the businesses as the focus of its ongoing operations because they serve attractive, primarily hospital-focused end markets. Teleflex framed the split as a way to simplify its operating model and manufacturing footprint.”
