From Washington, DC,
- Roll Call reports.
- “As the government shutdown entered its second week, Democratic lawmakers insisted the tide is shifting toward a deal as some hard-line Republicans express support for extending health insurance subsidies, despite blanket opposition from Republican leadership to any agreement in advance of reopening the government.
- “Ending the standoff appears unlikely in the short term — votes aimed at doing so Wednesday yielded similar results as before, with the GOP’s continuing resolution going down for a sixth time, 54-45. The same three Democratic caucus members — Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, Angus King of Maine and John Fetterman of Pennsylvania — voted in favor. The Democrats’ continuing resolution was also blocked.
- “As for the parameters of a potential deal, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., once again ruled out a one-year extension of the subsidies. Democrats have called for a permanent extension of the premium tax credits but asked by reporters if a two-year extension was possible, Jeffries didn’t rule it out.”
- The Wall Street Journal explains who currently gets subsidies in return for receiving coverage under the Affordable Care Act.
- Because the 2019 shutdown ended due to an air traffic controller walkout, Govexec observes,
- “The Federal Aviation Administration reported no travel delays due to staffing levels at U.S. air traffic control facilities Wednesday, following a day of some delays related to above-average absences at a handful of facilities.
- “An FAA operational plan posted about noon Eastern Time on Wednesday, the eighth day of the federal government shutdown, showed no facilities impacted by “staffing triggers.” A day earlier, the same memo showed staffing levels affected operations at major hub airports in Phoenix and Denver, as well as a smaller airport in Burbank, California.
- “Air traffic controllers are essential to the functioning of the nation’s air transportation system and must continue to work during a shutdown, though they are not paid while it is ongoing.
- “The group has not yet missed a paycheck during the current lapse in federal funding. The first impact most federal employees will see on their pay will be Friday, when electronic funding transfers are made for the pay period from Sept. 24 to Oct. 7.
- “Because Congress has not appropriated money beyond Sept. 30, they would only receive a partial paycheck. Future paychecks would not be allocated until the government reopens.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “The top senator on healthcare policy is taking a hard look at the American Medical Association’s “anti-patient and anti-doctor” handling of the healthcare system’s near-ubiquitous billing and claims processing codes.
- “Bill Cassidy, M.D., R-Louisiana, who chairs the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, chastised the nation’s leading physician association for “abusing” the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) coding system and said he will be “actively reviewing” the issue.
- “In a letter sent Monday but made public Wednesday, he accused the AMA of “charging exorbitant fees to anyone using the CPT code set, including doctors, hospitals, health plans and health IT vendors. These fees inevitably are passed on by CPT users to patients in the form of higher healthcare costs.”
- “The letter includes requests for the AMA to detail how it incorporates provider feedback into its process for finalizing codes, and for specific details on revenues and spending related to CPT codes.”
- The Wall Street Journal relates,
- “The country’s top drugmakers are set to meet in early December at the Four Seasons hotel in Georgetown with Donald Trump Jr. and senior Trump administration officials that regulate the pharmaceutical industry.
- “The host: BlinkRx, an online prescription drug delivery company that this year installed Trump Jr. as a board member. The summit will conclude with a dinner at the Executive Branch, the exclusive new club founded by Trump Jr. and his close friends, according to people with knowledge of the event and a copy of the invitation viewed by The Wall Street Journal.
- “BlinkRx stands to benefit from a shake-up of how patients buy drugs after President Trump urged pharmaceutical companies to sell their medicines directly to consumers. BlinkRx helps drugmakers do exactly that with a service that promises to set up direct-to-patient sales programs in as little as three weeks. TrumpRx, a new government website set to launch in early 2026, would funnel patients to direct-sale sites.”
- Govexec tells us,
- “The return of a quorum to the Merit Systems Protection Board may undercut the rationale behind a new Democratic bill that would enable federal employees who appeal disciplinary actions taken against them to the three-member panel to move their cases to a civil court if the quasi-judicial agency is experiencing delays.
- “MSPB had been without a quorum since the spring when the Supreme Court temporarily permitted President Donald Trump’s firing of Democratic board member Cathy Harris. The justices are scheduled during their current term to consider a related case, which could expand the president’s power to remove leaders of historically independent agencies with leaders from both parties, over the firing of Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic member of the Federal Trade Commission.
- “The Senate on Tuesday, however, confirmed the nomination of James Woodruff to be a member of the MSPB. He was considered in an en bloc package of nominees that was approved in a 51-47 party-line vote.
- “Woodruff joins Henry Kerner, who is also a Republican and had been the board’s sole member following Harris’ removal and the end of Democratic MSPB board member Raymond Limon’s term in February. No more than two members of the panel can be from the same political party.”
- Healthcare Dive informs us,
- “The top lobby for pharmacy benefit managers has named Adam Kautzner, the head of major PBM Express Scripts, as chair of its board.
- “As board chair, Kautzner will oversee the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association’s strategy, including defense of the drug middlemen amid growing scrutiny of their role in rising drug costs.
- “The PCMA has also created a new council to represent its mid-market clients, a segment of its membership that’s been growing, the lobby said Tuesday. The council will be represented by a new seat on the PCMA’s board to be held by Jeff Park, president of drug pricing platform Waltz Health.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- Fierce Pharma points out,
- “More than 10 years after bringing one of the first idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) drugs to market, Boehringer Ingelheim is freshening up its leadership in the rare lung disease space with a newly approved treatment option.
- “Jascayd’s Oct. 7 FDA approval makes it the first new therapy for IPF in more than a decade, following in the footsteps of the company’s own Ofev and Roche’s Esbriet, which won their respective FDA nods back in 2014. Together, those two medicines make up the current therapeutic market for IPF in the U.S.
- “With a tolerability edge over the older treatments and proven benefits in lung function, Boehringer’s new option could “shape the future of IPF treatment,” Martin Beck, head of the company’s inflammation disease area, told Fierce Pharma in an interview.”
- BioPharma Dive adds,
- “Lexeo Therapeutics on Tuesday said the Food and Drug Administration appears willing to review, and potentially approve, its experimental rare disease gene therapy more quickly than previously anticipated.
- “According to the company, the agency has “indicated openness” to an accelerated approval filing for its treatment — a gene therapy called LX2006 for the neurodegenerative condition Friedreich’s ataxia — that’s based on pooled data from ongoing studies as well as results from a planned pivotal trial.”
From the judicial front,
- Reuters reports,
- “A federal appeals court on Monday rejected Novo Nordisk’s (NOVOb.CO) challenge to the U.S. government’s program that gives its Medicare health insurance plan the power to negotiate lower drug prices, the latest in a barrage of lawsuits brought by drugmakers to fail.
- “The Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court’s ruling dismissing the Danish drugmaker’s challenge to the program and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ selection of six of its insulin products for price negotiations.
- “A unanimous three-judge panel rejected Novo’s constitutional challenges to the program, which was part of Democratic former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, and said the law specifically bars courts from reviewing the drugs selected.
- “A Novo Nordisk spokesperson said the company was assessing its options to appeal the ruling.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP informs us,
- “Today the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updated its measles data for the country, showing a total of 1,563 cases in 2025, an increase in 19 cases since last week. This is the most cases seen in the United States since 2000, the year measles was officially declared eliminated.
- “Twenty-seven percent of cases have been in children under the age of 5, and 92% of patients are unvaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status. CDC officials have confirmed 44 outbreaks, which account for 87% of confirmed infections.”
- and
- “An international team of researchers today reported promising results from a phase 1 trial of a novel vaccine designed to protect against typhoid fever and non-typhoidal Salmonella infections.
- “The team, led by investigators from the University of Maryland (UM) School of Medicine, reported that the trivalent (three-strain) Salmonella conjugate vaccine (TSVC) produced a strong immune response, and was safe and well-tolerated, in a small group of healthy US adults. The findings from the trial were published today in Nature Medicine.
- “The investigators say the findings are encouraging and provide a strong foundation for evaluating the vaccine in children. Typhoid fever and invasive non-typhoidal Salmonella (iNTS), which causes severe bloodstream infections, are leading causes of illness and death in children in Africa.
- “A single vaccine that protects against both could be a game-changer for global pediatric health,” UM School of Medicine Dean Mark Gladwin, MD, said in a university press release.”
- MedPage Today notes,
- “Receipt of the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine was associated with decreased risks of severe outcomes, according to an observational cohort study of U.S. veterans.
- “Looking at COVID-associated outcomes in nearly 300,000 veterans at 6 months, the estimated vaccine effectiveness was 29.3% against emergency department visits, 39.2% against hospitalizations, and 64% against deaths, reported Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, of the VA St. Louis Health Care System, and colleagues.
- “Overall, vaccine effectiveness for a composite of the three outcomes was 28.3%, with a risk difference per 10,000 people of 18.2 (95% CI 10.7-27.5), they noted in the New England Journal of Medicine.
- “The severity of SARS-CoV-2 infections has waned since 2020, and uncertainty about the value of annual COVID shots helped drive down adult vaccination rates to 21% during the 2024-2025 season.”
- “The severity of SARS-CoV-2 infections has waned since 2020, and uncertainty about the value of annual COVID shots helped drive down adult vaccination rates to 21% during the 2024-2025 season.”
- The Washington Post lets us know how to stop the No. 1 killer of Americans long before any symptoms. Cardiovascular disease experts propose a new approach to treating heart disease, focusing on atherosclerosis prevention and early detection.
- To improve your heart health, consider following the American Heart Association’s checklist, said Neha Pagidipati, a cardiovascular disease prevention expert with the American College of Cardiology.
- The AHA’s “Life’s Essential 8” include:
- Eating better. Recommendations include whole foods, lots of fruits and vegetables, lean protein, nuts, seeds, and using olive or canola oil for cooking.
- Staying active.
- Quitting tobacco and vaping.
- Getting healthy sleep. For most adults, this is seven to nine hours of sleep each night.
- Managing weight.
- Controlling cholesterol. LDL, or “bad” cholesterol, should be 100 milligrams per deciliter or lower, Nissen said.
- Managing blood sugar. If you have diabetes, pay attention to your hemoglobin A1C levels, which should be below 5.7 percent.
- Managing blood pressure. For most people, blood pressure should be below 120/80, Nissen said.
- Medscape adds,
- “Many people with obesity have chronic pain due to joint stress and inflammation. Speaking to these patients about modifiable lifestyle factors — like diet and exercise — can help improve their pain severity and quality of life.
- “In a new study published in the European Journal of Nutrition, patients with overweight or obesity who followed a 3-month weight-loss dietary intervention cut chronic musculoskeletal pain scores in half — independent of adiposity changes.”
- NBC News reports,
- “Short bursts of purposeful activity — such as walking around the block or lifting small weights — may be the best way to get in the habit of exercising. Bite-sized bits of exercise also improve heart and muscle fitness, a study published Tuesday in BMJ Sports Medicine found.
- “Less than half of adults in the United States get enough aerobic activity and less than a quarter get the recommended amount of both aerobic and muscle-strengthening exercise.
- “When people are asked why they don’t exercise, the answers are almost always the same, no time and no motivation,” Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, a doctoral student in clinical research at the University of Oviedo in Spain, who led the study, said in an email.”
- Per Health Day,
- “Memantine improves social impairments in youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), according to a study published online Oct. 1 in JAMA Network Open.
- “Gagan Joshi, M.D., from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and colleagues examined the safety and efficacy of memantine for treating social impairments in youths with ASD in a 12-week placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial. The study population included 42 youths aged 8 to 17 years with ASD without intellectual disability who initiated treatment. The intention-to-treat efficacy analysis included 35 youths (16 treated with memantine and 19 with placebo).”
- and
- “More women are choosing to freeze their eggs, but fewer are returning to use them, according to a study published online Aug. 29 in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
- “Mabel B. Lee, M.D., from the University of California, Los Angeles, and colleagues assessed national trends in planned oocyte cryopreservation, subsequent oocyte utilization, and outcomes of oocyte warming cycles. The analysis included data from the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology Clinic Outcome Reporting System (2014 to 2021).”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “Medical practice network OneOncology has acquired GenesisCare USA of Florida and is relaunching the practice as SunState Medical Specialists.
- “The deal adds more than 100 physicians, including urologists, oncologists and surgeons, at 104 clinics throughout Florida to OneOncology’s portfolio, according to a Wednesday news release.
- “GenesisCare USA of Florida was part of GenesisCare, an Australia-based cancer treatment provider that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2023. The company, which was backed by private equity firm KKR and China Resources Capital, entered the U.S. in 2020 when it acquired 21st Century Oncology.
- “As part of bankruptcy proceedings, GenesisCare sought to restructure with about $1.7 billion in debt and separate U.S. operations from those in Australia and Europe. It emerged from the bankruptcy process in 2024 and trimmed its U.S. footprint to Florida and North Carolina markets.
- “OneOncology, which is majority owned by TPG Capital, said the latest Florida deal builds on the company’s previous investments in urology. It plans to invest in upgraded technology at SunState Medical and expand access to clinical services such as advanced radiation therapies and interventional radiology, according to the release.”
- BioPharma Dive tells us,
- “Having closed a nine-figure fundraising round, a newly launched biotechnology company hopes to rewire the immune system with drugs aimed at a special kind of nerve cell.
- “Nilo Therapeutics debuted Wednesday, equipped with $101 million from a Series A financing that was co-led by the venture capital firms DCVC Bio, Lux Capital and The Column Group. Alexandria Venture Investments and the Gates Foundation also contributed to the round.
- “The fresh money, according to Nilo, will go toward growing the biotech’s research and development team, advancing its preclinical drug programs, and establishing laboratories in New York City. Nilo formed through a collaboration between The Column Group and three Ivy League scientists — Charles Zuker, of Columbia University; Ruslan Medzhitov, of Yale University; and Stephen Liberles, of Harvard University.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare
- “As pharma giant Eli Lilly builds out its direct-to-consumer care site, LillyDirect, the company has tapped virtual primary care company HealthTap to join its small lineup of independent care providers.
- “Consumers who come to LillyDirect in search of specific treatments or Lilly-manufactured medications, such as GLP-1s, can find educational materials on common health conditions and access recommendations for in-person or virtual care.
- “LillyDirect has been building out its network of independent care providers for a slew of healthcare conditions and specialities, including diabetes, obesity, cancer, dermatology, autoimmune, sleep apnea and migraine.
- “HealthTap will be listed as a provider for treating type 1 and type 2 diabetes on the LillyDirect site.”
- and
- “Allara Health, a virtual women’s health provider, has expanded to all 50 states.
- “The provider, specializing in women’s hormonal, metabolic and reproductive health, was in 30 states at the start of the year. Alongside news of the expansion, Allara has also published clinical outcomes data that demonstrate improvements in patient health in a health impact report.
- “The retrospective analysis included nearly 1,500 patients who either had a PCOS diagnosis or were being seen for other hormonal or metabolic care. It found that in the first nine months of care, patients with a body mass index (BMI) in the obese range (equal to or greater than 30) achieved a 5% mean BMI reduction. A 5% weight reduction is considered clinically significant, the report said.
- “The analysis also found that after 10 months, two-thirds of prediabetic patients had normalized their A1C levels, and 77% of diabetics reduced their A1C levels out of the diabetic range. Patients with a high level of insulin resistance saw a 12% reduction in those levels.”
- and
- “Amazon Pharmacy is rolling out kiosks stocked with prescription medications to help patients get their meds immediately after appointments.
- “The kiosks will launch across One Medical locations in Los Angeles starting December 2025. Expansion to additional One Medical offices is expected soon after. The kiosks will contain commonly prescribed meds like antibiotics, inhalers and blood pressure medications. Controlled substances and medications requiring refrigeration are not available.”
