From Washington, DC,
- Fierce Healthcare tells us,
- “Medicare patients have increasingly checked themselves out of the hospital against the advice of medical staff since 2006, with a temporary spike in self-discharges coinciding with the COVID-19 public health emergency, according to a new claims review conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS OIG).
- “The increasing rate of acute care hospital discharges against medical advice (AMA) was prevalent across most demographics including enrollee type, hospital size, population density and medical condition, the office wrote in its review published Thursday.
- “That said, discharges AMA increases were higher among hospitals with lower quality-of-care ratings (as measured by overall hospital quality star ratings) and among dually enrolled patients and those with mental health diagnoses.
- “The HHS OIG said the rate increases are noteworthy, as Medicare patients who left AMA were more than twice as likely to be readmitted to the hospital or die within 30 days of discharge compared to those discharged to their homes.”
- Beckers Clinical Leadership informs us,
- The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics are diverging from the CDC’s vaccine recommendations, which no longer advise routine COVID-19 shots for healthy children and pregnant women.
- On Aug. 22, ACOG published clinical guidance regarding vaccination during pregnancy. The OB-GYN group reaffirmed support for COVID-19 inoculation during pregnancy, adding that data show COVID-19 vaccines protect pregnant patients and infants from COVID-19 complications.
- “Three days before, the pediatrics organization released its annual vaccine recommendations. The AAP’s 2025-26 virus season guidance says children between 6 months and 2 years old should receive a COVID-19 vaccine; the CDC advises “shared clinical decision-making” between the clinician and parent or patient.”
- The Groom Law Group opines,
- “On January 17, 2025, the ERISA Industry Committee (“ERIC”) filed suit against the Departments alleging that the 2024 {Mental Health Parity] Final Rule exceeded the Departments’ statutory authority, violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, is arbitrary and capricious, and otherwise violates the Administrative Procedure Act.
- “In light of the litigation challenging the 2024 Final Rule, the Departments announced a non-enforcement policy of the Final Rule while they reconsider the 2024 Final Rule, including whether to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking rescinding or modifying the regulation. The Departments’ announcement noted that MHPAEA’s statutory obligations, including the requirements related to [Non-Quantitative Treatment Limitations] NQTL comparative analyses, as amended by the CAA, 2021, continue to have effect. The Departments also stated that they will “undertake a broader reexamination of each department’s respective enforcement approach under MHPAEA, including those provisions amended by the CAA, 2021.”
- “Importantly, plans and issuers are still required to develop and maintain MHPAEA NQTL comparative analyses and provide them to regulators upon request. In addition, plans must also make NQTL comparative analyses available upon request to:
- “Applicable state authorities.
- “A participant or beneficiary (including a provider or other person acting as a participant’s or beneficiary’s authorized representative) who has received an adverse benefit determination related to MH/SUD benefits; and
- “Participants and beneficiaries who request the comparative analyses at any time under ERISA section 104.”
- Beckers Hospital Review helpfully explains the 340B drug program.
- “More than three decades ago, Congress created the 340B program to help safety-net hospitals and clinics expand resources and care for underserved communities.
- “By requiring pharmaceutical companies to offer deep discounts on outpatient drugs, the program has become a hallmark resource to help health systems support vulnerable patients. In recent years, however, the program has drawn scrutiny from federal lawmakers as several drugmakers have introduced alternative rebate and drug pricing models, raising questions about the direction of the program.
- “Hospitals have also faced increased scrutiny in recent years over how they are utilizing 340B savings. This intensified after a Senate report published in April found some of the largest health systems were exploiting the system. According to the report, Cincinnati-based Bon Secours Mercy Health and Cleveland Clinic generated hundreds of millions of dollars by acquiring discounted 340B drugs and then charged patients significantly higher prices. Both health systems defended their participation in the 340B program, telling Becker’s they operated the program in compliance with federal rules.”
- Check it out.
From the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) front,
- MedPage Today reports,
- “The PCSK9 inhibitor evolocumab (Repatha) got the FDA’s blessing for cardiovascular protection, with or without a history of cardiovascular disease (CVD).
- “Evolocumab is now indicated for the wider pool of adults at increased risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) — namely cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, stroke, unstable angina requiring hospitalization, or coronary revascularization — 10 years after it first hit the market.
- “The drug keeps its older LDL cholesterol-lowering indication in adults with hypercholesterolemia, adults and children with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, and individuals with homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia.”
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “Less than three weeks after lifting a pause on the use of Valneva’s chikungunya vaccine Ixchiq, the FDA has done an about-face, banning the use of the shot in the United States.
- “On Friday [August 22], the agency suspended Valneva’s license “based on serious safety concerns,” citing 21 hospitalizations and three deaths, including one from encephalitis directly attributed to the live-attenuated vaccine. With the decision, the price of the French company’s shares has plummeted by 22%.
- “In a release, Valneva called (PDF) the FDA’s decision “sudden,” after the regulator had lifted a previous halt on the use of the vaccine in older adults on August 6. The company added that the agency’s move came after it received four reports of side effects from its Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), each happening outside of the U.S. The reports included one user who was hospitalized for two days.
- “Valneva believes all cases describe symptoms consistent with those previously reported during clinical trials and post-marketing experience, particularly among the elderly individuals for whom the vaccine’s prescribing information includes warnings and precautions,” the company said in its statement.”
- MedTech Dive relates,
- “Boston Scientific has recalled carotid artery stents because of a manufacturing defect that has led to additional interventions to recover the devices.
- “The Food and Drug Administration, which shared information about the recall Friday [August 22], said the company reported six cases that required additional intervention as of July 29.
- “Boston Scientific told customers not to use affected Carotid Wallstent Monorail Endoprosthesis devices last month. The recall affected 26,570 devices, 1,333 of which are in the U.S.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Washington Post reports,
- “A rare human case of a flesh-eating parasite known as New World screwworm has been confirmed in a Maryland resident as the Trump administration is trying to prevent the resurgence of an insect largely eradicated from livestock decades ago.
- “The case was confirmed Aug. 4 in a person who had traveled to the United States from El Salvador, said Andrew Nixon, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services.
- “The resident has recovered without evidence of infecting other humans or animals, state health officials said in a statement Monday.
- “A recent New World screwworm outbreak in Central America has raised concerns that it could spread to the United States and devastate the cattle industry. But state and federal health officials said the Maryland case is not cause for alarm, and plans for a new sterile fly production facility in South Texas aim to tamp down global threats from the pest.
- “The risk to public health in the United States from this introduction is very low,” Nixon said.
- Livestock are not at particular risk due to the Maryland case, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association said.”
- STAT News points out,
- “In a milestone for the newly resurgent field of xenotransplantation, a 39-year-old brain-dead person in China has become the first human to receive a lung from a pig. With consent from the person’s family, researchers took the organ from a CRISPR’d pig, trimmed it, and stitched it into their chest, where it remained for nine days.
- “The procedure was intended to test whether pigs that have been gene-edited to make their organs less recognizable to the human immune system — and thus less prone to rejection — could one day be used to supply hospitals for transplants. In the past few years, surgeons in the U.S. have transplanted pig hearts and kidneys into both living patients and people who had been declared clinically dead because they lacked brain function. Last year, doctors in China became the first to attempt a similar procedure with a liver from a pig. This is the first time anyone has tried it with a lung.
- “The clinical need for donor lungs is enormous. According to the Global Observatory on Donation and Transplantation, 8,236 lung transplants were performed worldwide in 2024, an increase of 6% over the previous year, but tens of thousands more patients remain on waitlists. The results of the experiment, which were published Monday in Nature Medicine, are exciting, experts told STAT, because they suggest that lung xenotransplantation could, one day in the future, become an option for patients. But they also point to how much more work has to be done before that day can arrive.”
- Per MedPage Today,
- “People who carried the Alzheimer’s disease APOE4 risk gene had a lower risk of developing dementia if they followed a Mediterranean diet, an observational study of healthcare professionals suggested.
- “Adherence to the Mediterranean diet more effectively modulated dementia-related metabolites in APOE4 homozygotes than in people with lower genetic risk, wrote Dong Wang, MD, ScD, of Mass General Brigham in Boston, and colleagues in Nature Medicine.
- “We found that greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was associated with a lower risk of dementia and slower cognitive decline in the overall study population,” said co-author Yuxi Liu, PhD, also of Mass General Brigham.
- “The protective association was most pronounced among individuals carrying two copies of the APOE4allele, where each one-unit increase in the Mediterranean diet score was associated with approximately a 35% lower risk of dementia,” Liu told MedPage Today. “These findings suggest that adherence to the Mediterranean diet may mitigate the elevated genetic risk conferred by APOE4.”
- Health Day notes,
- “Pediatricians should screen children annually for mental or developmental issues, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends in a new clinical report.
- “The recommendation comes in response to a mental, emotional and behavioral health crisis that’s been brewing among America’s youth, the AAP says.
- “Up to 1 in 5 children in the U.S., including kids as young as 2, are living with a mental or behavioral health problem like depression, anxiety, ADHD or suicidal thoughts and feelings, according to the report published online today in the journal Pediatrics.
- “And in 2020, suicide became the second-leading cause of death among kids aged 10 to 14 and the third-leading among 15- to 24-year-olds. AAP said the rate increased 41% between 2000 and 2017.
- “The AAP argues that pediatricians are in the best position to spot early concerns and get children the help they need.”
- The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about taking naps.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Beckers Hospital Review reports,
- “Philadelphia-based Thomas Jefferson University, owner of Jefferson Health, recorded an operating loss of $196 million (-1.2% operating margin) in fiscal 2025, down from an operating income of $1.3 million (0% margin) in 2024, according to its Aug. 22 financial report.
- “The results for the year ended June 30 include 11 months of Lehigh Valley Health Network activity, according to the report. Jefferson merged with the Allentown, Pa.-based health system on Aug. 1, 2024. On a 12-month pro forma basis, Jefferson’s operating loss was $197 million.
- “Due to the Lehigh Valley Health Network acquisition, Jefferson saw significant increases to its operating revenue and operating expenses in 2025. Revenue rose 57.6% year over year to $15.8 billion. Operating expenses rose 59.5% year over year to $16 billion.
- “Jefferson attributed the unfavorable financial results in 2025 primarily to the Jefferson Health Plan, pharmacy trend and organizational inflationary pressures.”
- Health Leaders Media tells us,
- “Rural health systems and hospitals are struggling to stay open and don’t have the resources on hand to treat more of their patients.
- “Telemedicine platforms can enable small providers to connect with specialists at larger organizations, giving them the opportunity to treat more patients rather than transferring or referring them elsewhere.
- “Larger health systems can also use the technology to create a hub-and-spoke platform that allow them to market their specialists and services to other hospitals.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “AbbVie has bought a psychedelic compound from a little-known drug company, in a deal that could be worth north of $1 billion.
- “The acquisition, announced Monday, makes AbbVie one of the few large pharmaceutical firms to significantly invest in an area of drug development that many on Wall Street expect to become quite lucrative. Analysts at RBC Capital Markets recently wrote the psychedelic space is “approaching a tipping point” as larger studies near completion. Just last week, the small biotechnology company Reunion Neuroscience announced plans to push its main drug, which boosts certain brain proteins that interact with psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin, into late-stage testing.
- “That news came less than two months after U.K.-based Compass Pathways disclosed data from a relatively large study wherein patients with hard-to-treat depression were given a version of a psychedelic compound found in many mushroom species. Gilgamesh Pharmaceuticals also unveiled positive results this year, from a mid-stage clinical trial focused on a drug that works similarly to Reunion’s.”
- Fierce Healthcare adds,
- “BeOne Medicines is monetizing its stake in Amgen’s first-in-class lung cancer drug Imdelltra for up to $950 million.
- “Royalty Pharma will pay BeOne $885 million upfront for certain royalty payments from Amgen tied to ex-China sales of its DLL3 T-cell engager Imdelltra.
- “Within the next 12 months, BeOne has an option to sell additional royalty rights to Royalty for up to $65 million.
- “The royalties represent “a significant portion” of “tiered mid-single digit” payments based on Imdelltra’s annual sales above $1.5 billion, BeOne said in an Aug. 25 securities filing. Royalty, in a separate release, said the royalty level is about 7%.”
- and
- “With a buyout of scPharmaceuticals worth up to $360 million, MannKind is looking to dive into the large and growing field of cardiometabolic treatments.
- “Endocrine and orphan lung disease-focused MannKind will shell out $5.35 per share—plus a contingent value right (CVR) of $1.00 per share—to buy scPharmaceuticals and Furoscix, the latter company’s on-body infuser that delivers furosemide.
- “The total deal value of $360 million represents a 31% premium to scPharmaceuticals’ Aug. 22 closing price, according to a Monday press release.
- “With the deal, MannKind will add scPharmaceuticals’ Furoscix to its lineup of marketed products. The 2022-approved drug is an on-body infuser that delivers generic furosemide as a self-administered, subcutaneous loop diuretic to help relieve the fluid retention and swelling that accompany heart failure and other conditions.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “Terumo plans to acquire OrganOx, a maker of organ preservation devices, in a roughly $1.5 billion deal that will allow the Tokyo-based medical device maker to enter the transplantation sector.
- “OrganOx’s liver perfusion system supplies oxygenated blood, medications and nutrients to the donor organ near body temperature. The device allows functional assessment of the organ to support the decision on whether to transplant.
- “U.K.-based OrganOx launched the system in 2022 in the U.S., where it competes with an organ preservation device from TransMedics Group. Called Metra, OrganOx’s system is also approved in the U.K., European Union, Australia and Canada.”
- and covers the key medtech issues to watch in the final months of the year.
- Fierce Healthcare adds,
- “As fitness trackers get artificial intelligence updates, Google developed an AI-powered personal health coach for the Fitbit app. Built with Gemini, the AI-based health coach combines a fitness trainer, a sleep coach and a health and wellness advisor.
- “We set out to build a new kind of coach: world-class expertise that’s always available whenever you need it. It constantly adapts based on your personal health and wellness metrics and is uniquely tailored to your goals and real-life circumstances,” said Andy Abramson, head of product at Fitbit.
- “Fitbit will roll out a preview of the personal health coach as part of Fitbit Premium in the redesigned app available with the latest Fitbit trackers, Fitbit smartwatches and Pixel Watches.
- “The health coach can build personalized fitness plans, with detailed workout suggestions and metric targets that focus on weekly progression. The coach can adjust workout plans based on real-time data and daily insights.”
