Tuesday Report

Simplicity is a Virtue.

From Washington, DC,

  • USAFacts.org tells us,
    • “Defense Department data shows that 63,670 active-duty military members have passed away since 1980. Eighty-four percent of these deaths were due to accidents, illness, and suicide or self-inflicted wounds. Two-hundred and sixty military members have died from the beginning of 2026 to May 13. Thirteen of these deaths resulted from Operation Epic Fury.
    • “Detailed record-keeping about the ways in which active-duty military members die began in 1980. Historical records from The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) show that approximately 1.2 million service members died between 1775 and 1991.” * * *
    • “The US global war on terrorism began after Al Qaeda operatives carried out the September 11th attacks. The US invaded both Afghanistan and Iraq in the resulting conflict to remove the regimes of the Taliban and Saddam Hussein from power.
    • “From the onset of military operations in October 2001 to May 2026, the United States has lost 7,073 military personnel in Afghanistan and Iraq. Another 53,560 members have been wounded.” * * *
    • “The US began Operation Epic Fury on February 28, 2026 to dismantle Iran’s security infrastructure. As of May 13, thirteen US service members have died in the operation and 404 have been wounded in action.”
  • May they all rest in peace.
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz is reorganizing leadership roles at the agency, a spokesperson told Bloomberg.
    • “Rebekah Armstrong, who currently leads the agency’s office of legislation, will be the new chief of staff, spokesperson Christopher Krepich said. Before joining the administration, Armstrong worked on Capitol Hill, for health insurance lobby group AHIP, and the first Trump administration.
    • “Stephanie Carlton, who had led the agency as deputy administrator and chief of staff, will now be focused on her deputy administrator role, according to Krepich. Her portfolio will include work on clinical artificial intelligence and modernizing Medicaid quality measures, he said.”
  • Per a U.S. Office of Personnel Management news release,
    • “The US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) today issued, for public comment, a template non-disclosure agreement (NDA) for federal employees with access to sensitive government information including personally identifiable information, operational plans, personnel records, and other protected materials.
    • “The template NDA comes amid a series of recent unauthorized disclosures involving sensitive government information, including leaks related to planned immigration enforcement operations, disclosures of confidential operational details prior to a US action overseas, and the release of personal information belonging to approximately 4,500 ICE employees, including frontline enforcement personnel.
    • “The template NDA would allow agencies to use standardized confidentiality agreements for covered employees and contractors whose duties involve routine access to sensitive systems or protected information. If finalized, it would become an official government form that agencies could use as a standard part of the employee onboarding process.
    • “In much of the private sector, employees handling sensitive business or customer information are routinely required to sign confidentiality agreements, and the federal government should not be held to a lower standard,” OPM Director Scott Kupor said. “Americans should be able to trust that their personal data and sensitive government information are being handled responsibly. This proposal reinforces accountability across the federal workforce while helping agencies better protect against unauthorized disclosures.” * * *
    • “Read the proposed NDA, and accompanying Federal Register notice, here.” The public comment deadline will occur in late June 2026.
  • The American Hospital Association informs us,
    • “The AHA commented May 26 to the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice on potential changes to the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act’s premerger notification form. The AHA urged the agencies to exclude hospital mergers from any revisions to the form, reiterating its previous position, and said that changes would impose burdens that outweigh any expected benefits. The AHA highlighted how mergers can be important in helping hospitals and health systems overcome financial challenges, and that there has been no indication that hospital mergers have historically evaded FTC review. Additionally, the AHA said that new questions on the form do not weigh in on issues that typically arise in hospital mergers or use language that fits within the context of hospitals.” 

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • MedPage Today reports,
    • “The FDA’s vaccine advisors will meet Thursdayopens in a new tab or window to vote on whether an XFG monovalent vaccine should be preferred for COVID-19 shots for the 2026-2027 season.
    • “The Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) will also discuss what circumstances would warrant a non-JN.1 lineage variant — such as BA.3.2, also called “Cicada” — for next season’s vaccines.
    • “In an FDA briefing documentopens in a new tab or window, the agency noted that in the U.S., descendants of the JN.1 variant of Omicron remain prominent and have diversified into multiple lineages, including XFG, NB.1.8.1, and LF.7.”
  • Fierce Pharma relates,
    • “More than three years after Gilead Sciences’ hepatitis D drug bulevirtide was rebuffed by the FDA due to manufacturing and delivery concerns, the treatment has since redeemed itself by scoring a green light in the U.S.
    • “Just before the Memorial Day weekend, the FDA signed off on Gilead’s Hepcludex as the first treatment for chronic hepatitis D virus infection in the United States, granting the entry inhibitor an accelerated approval in adults without cirrhosis or with compensated cirrhosis—a complication of long-term liver inflammation that leads to progressive scarring of the organ.
    • “The FDA cleared the therapy based on data from Gilead’s late-stage MYR301 study, in which Hepcludex helped patients achieve statistically significant improvements in a combined virologic and biochemical response at 48 weeks versus a control group that received delayed treatment, the company explained in a release.” 
  • STAT News adds,
    • “People in the food world didn’t know what to expect when the Trump administration appointed a little-known Florida attorney as the FDA’s top food official in 2025. 
    • “They knew Kyle Diamantas worked at Jones Day representing food, beverage, and tobacco-industry clients. They saw the picture of him and Donald Trump Jr. holding giant, dead wild turkeys after a hunt. He had no experience in public health, in medicine or science, or in government.
    • The credentials didn’t scream qualified. And Diamantas was stepping into a center rocked by DOGE layoffs and a defiant resignation by former leader Jim Jones. 
    • “But more than a year later, leaders in the food industry, public health groups, and FDA career staffers have found that Diamantas exceeded expectations. As Diamantas takes the reins at the FDA, STAT spoke with more than 10 of these stakeholders, as well as former FDA commissioners and Diamantas’ former colleagues. They all described him as thoughtful and serious, someone who does his homework before meetings and listens to the experts in the room. 
    • “Crucially, Diamantas has earned the trust of key career staff. That simple quality was a rarity among top leaders working at former commissioner Marty Makary’s FDA.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • Cigna Healthcare, writing in Linked In, points out everyday mental health signs that we overlook and their impact.
    • Missed early signs show up later with consequences: “Normal stress” that’s dismissed tends to surface downstream in productivity, quality, mistakes, and relationship friction.
    • Early detection is pattern-based, not crisis-based: Small changes that persist for days often precede visible performance issues and escalation.
    • Benefits can operationalize early support at scale: Integrated benefits can spot non-obvious patterns and route people to the right support earlier, helping reduce escalation and making costs more predictable.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know “what doctors want patients to know about pancreatic cancer.”
    • “Pancreatic cancer is a challenging form of cancer. It is notoriously difficult to detect early and often requires treatment across physician specialties.”
  • MedCity News reports,
    • “While conversations around GLP-1s typically center on adults, a new report sheds light on prescribing trends among adolescents and offers recommendations for how employers can manage coverage and care.
    • “The Nomi Health report, shared with MedCity News exclusively, analyzed four years of GLP-1 prescription claims data for adolescents ages 12 to 17 enrolled in a national population of self-insured employer health plans from 2022 through 2025. 
    • “It found that during this time period, GLP-1 adoption among adolescents rose more than 60% and total spend increased 111% from $857,000 to $1.8 million. In addition, scripts per member rose 30%, and cost per member increased 32%.” * * *
    • “Nomi Health provided several recommendations for how employers can act based on these findings:
      • “Analyze adolescent GLP-1 claims across at least four years to gain a better understanding of prescribing and cost trends.
      • “Check that the correct support is in place, such as behavioral counseling and lifestyle support alongside medications.
      • “Plan ahead for the gap. Rising obesity prevalence, coupled with low treatment rates, could drive significant future costs, making it important to model the impact before it becomes a surprise in the budget.”
  • Cardiovascular Business adds,
    • “New research presented at Heart Rhythm 2026 suggests taking GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1-RAs) may reduce the risk of atrial fibrillation (AFib) and improve survival through mechanisms that extend beyond weight loss alone.
    • Kenneth Bilchick, MD, MS, director of electrophysiology research and a professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Virginia, presented those findings at the conference. He then spoke to Cardiovascular Business for a video interview. 
    • “Bilchick said GLP-1 drugs have an anti-inflammatory effect, which may what led to the lower AFib rates in GLP-1 patients.
  • Health Day relates,
    • “Quitting smoking might protect your future brain health, a new study says.
    • “People who quit smoking had a lower risk of developing dementia, especially if they didn’t gain excess weight afterward, researchers reported May 20 in the journal Neurology.
    • “People often worry about what happens after they quit smoking — including weight gain and associated metabolic changes,” said lead researcher Hui Chen, dean of psychological and behavioral sciences at Zhejiang University School of Medicine in Hangzhou, China.
    • “What we found is that quitting is still associated with better brain outcomes but maintaining your weight may help preserve those benefits,” Chen said in a news release.”
  • Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News notes,
    • “Researchers at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and Nantes Université in France have designed 3D-printed scaffolding trays that will reportedly allow scientists to produce larger versions of functional human gut organoids twice as fast as previous methods—and these organoids grow their own nerve cells.
    • “This improved technology could help accelerate production of human mini-organ tissues that are large enough to be useful in patching damage or restoring diminished functions of a person’s small intestine, stomach, or colon. Such tissues also would be valuable for future disease studies and to more accurately evaluate organ damage risks linked to oral medications, according to the investigators.”
    • Details of the study “Large-scale and innervated functional human gut tissues for transplantation via transient spheroid confinement” appear in Nature Biomedical Engineering.

From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Eli Lilly LLY agreed to acquire three vaccine developers in deals valued at up to nearly $4 billion combined, the company said Tuesday.
    • “The deals mark a new push by the weight-loss drug market leader into infectious-disease prevention.
    • “The details
      • “Indianapolis-based Lilly has agreed to acquire Curevo, LimmaTech Biologics and Vaccine Company, confirming an earlier report in The Wall Street Journal. 
      • “Curevo is developing a shingles vaccine that Lilly believes could be as effective as the current standard but with reduced side effects, said Daniel Skovronsky, Lilly’s chief scientific and product officer. Lilly could pay up to $1.5 billion in cash for Curevo, including an undisclosed upfront payment and a potential subsequent payment if a certain milestone is met. 
      • “LimmaTech is developing vaccines against bacterial pathogens including Staphylococcus aureus. Lilly agreed to pay up to $780 million in cash for LimmaTech, including an undisclosed upfront payment and additional payments for certain clinical and regulatory milestones.
      • “Vaccine Company is developing a vaccine against Epstein-Barr virus. Lilly agreed to pay up to $1.55 billion in cash, including an undisclosed upfront payment and potential clinical and commercial milestone payments.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Trinity Health is outperforming some of its large Catholic peers, reporting $200 million of operating income (1% operating margin) over the nine-month period ended March 31, 2026, according to a recent filing. 
    • “The tally reflects a 5.4% year-over-year rise in both operating revenue and operating expenses ($20 billion and $19.8 billion, respectively), and is a narrow, $2.1 million improvement over the prior year’s nine-month operating income.” * * *
    • “Trinity’s steady operating gain places the nonprofit ahead of the country’s other 11-figure faith-based systems with offset fiscal years: CommonSpirit Health and Ascension. The former recently disclosed a $743 million adjusted operating loss (-2.4% operating margin) across three quarters, a decline that excludes the substantial on-paper costs of an early contract termination. Ascension’s operations, while broadly on the upswing, also posted a nine-month loss of $203 million (-1.1% operating margin).” 
       
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “PacificSource Health Plans, a nonprofit health plan offering coverage in four states in the Pacific Northwest, is exiting the Affordable Care Act market next year and ending all operations in Montana.
    • “PacificSource is the latest insurer to flee the exchanges as rising costs and policy turbulence make it more difficult for smaller payers to remain operational.
    • “As a not-for-profit organization, PacificSource is making difficult decisions to ensure we can continue fulfilling our mission and serving members for the long term amid growing pressures across the healthcare industry,” a spokesperson told Healthcare Dive.”
  • Modern Healthcare informs us,
    • “WakeMed Health & Hospitals rejected an unsolicited proposal from UNC Health to combine.
    • “The proposal followed Atrium Health’s May 1 announcement it plans to merge with WakeMed.
    • “A UNC Health spokesperson said the Chapel Hill, North Carolina-based system submitted a proposal to WakeMed for a “broader partnership” May 5.
    • “WakeMed, which is based in Raleigh, North Carolina, reviewed the proposal but felt the partnership with Atrium was the best path forward, a WakeMed spokesperson said. 
    • “Combined, WakeMed and UNC Health would control 80% of the healthcare market in Wake County. We have heard from numerous stakeholders, including the state treasurer, that maintaining robust competition is important for our rapidly growing region,” the WakeMed spokesperson said.” 
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review news release,
  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “Health tech companies Wheel and b.well Connected Health are partnering to offer turnkey infrastructure for next-generation AI-first virtual care.
    • “AI-first healthcare experiences and consumer-centered care models are driving innovation in healthcare. Consumer health data is widespread and embedded in daily life, with information available from apps, wearables, devices and medical records. At the same time, retailers and pharmacies are becoming care access points, while life sciences companies are going direct-to-consumers. And the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is pushing forward initiatives to open up patients’ access to health data.
    • “Wheel’s partnership with b.well gives AI-native companies, retailers, life sciences companies, payers, health systems and consumer health brands a faster, more complete way to compete in the consumer-driven healthcare race, according to the two companies.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Olympus said Tuesday it has agreed to buy Israel-based BioProtect for $270 million to expand its product portfolio in oncology and urology. 
    • “BioProtect makes a balloon spacer system that separates the prostate from other structures during cancer radiation treatment.
    • “The transaction is expected to increase patient access to BioProtect’s technology through Olympus’ global reach and relationships with healthcare providers.”

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