Happy Halloween!!
From Washington, DC
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “President Trump’s demand that Republican senators bypass Democrats to reopen the federal government risked upsetting delicate negotiations on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers were finally making progress toward a deal to end the monthlong impasse and head off more pain for American households.
- “Optimism had been growing among Republican and Democratic senators involved in talks over recent days, with hopes that a resolution could be reached in the week ahead, people familiar with discussions said.
- “But Trump’s new demand in a social-media message late Thursday to eliminate the Senate filibuster rule could complicate the path forward. Meanwhile, food aid is at risk of lapsing for millions of people, the nation’s airports are increasingly snarled, and Affordable Care Act health-plan enrollees are confronted with sharply higher premiums.”
- Time will tell.
- “In remarks Friday on his way to Florida, Trump didn’t mention his filibuster demand but reiterated that he was willing to talk with Democrats if they would provide votes to reopen the government.
- “Let them open up the country, and we’ll meet,” he said. “It’s so easily solved.”
- “A White House spokeswoman said that if Democrats don’t work with Republicans to reopen the government, then the “nuclear option” of ending the filibuster will need to be used.
- “Senate Republicans are set to return to Washington on Monday night to face a loyalty test on whether they will side with Trump on killing the filibuster or try to seal the deal with bipartisan talks.
- “Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R., S.D.) has pledged to protect the longstanding rule. A spokesman said Friday that his position hadn’t changed.”
- The U.S. Office of Personnel Management has posted its 2026 FEHB plan and PSHB plan comparison tools.
- Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, tells us “what federal employees need to know about Medicare enrollment.” She provides “an updated guide to timing, parts, costs and coordination so you don’t get stuck with penalties or surprises at 65.”
- OPM announced on October 30, 2025,
- “two new online tools designed to make retirement services faster, and easier for federal retirees. These improvements are part of OPM’s broader effort to modernize its Retirement Services operations and enhance the customer experience through expanded self-service options. Beginning today, retirees can:
- “Securely download their 1099-R tax forms without logging into Retirement Services Online, offering a faster, paperless option for accessing tax documents.
- “View current retirement processing times to better understand the expected timeline for the completion of their retirement benefit applications.
- “These new self-service tools are another step toward delivering the efficient, transparent, and customer-focused experience federal retirees deserve,” OPM Director Scott Kupor said. “By expanding digital access and improving automation, we’re giving retirees more control over their information and freeing up our team to focus on complex cases that require extra care.”
- “two new online tools designed to make retirement services faster, and easier for federal retirees. These improvements are part of OPM’s broader effort to modernize its Retirement Services operations and enhance the customer experience through expanded self-service options. Beginning today, retirees can:
- The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services today finalized the 2026 Medicare Part B Physician Fee Schedule. According to Bloomberg, “the Trump administration took a series of steps Friday to revise the Medicare program’s operations and cut down on perceived wasteful spending on skin treatments.”
- “For a fact sheet on the CY 2026 Physician Fee Schedule final rule, visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/calendar-year-cy-2026-medicare-physician-fee-schedule-final-rule-cms-1832-f.
- “For a fact sheet on the Medicare Shared Savings Program changes in the CY 2026 PFS final rule, visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/calendar-year-cy-2026-medicare-physician-fee-schedule-final-rule-cms-1832-f-medicare-shared-savings.
- “To view the Ambulatory Specialty Model (ASM), visit: https://www.cms.gov/priorities/innovation/innovation-models/asm.
- “To view the CY 2026 PFS final rule, visit: https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2025-19787.”
- Healthcare Dive informs us,
- “Federal regulators have greenlit eight drugmaker proposals to enact rebates in 340B, upending how savings in the massive drug discount program are normally divvied out to providers.
- “The approvals were disclosed by the Health Resources and Services Administration, the HHS agency that oversees 340B, on Thursday. They include frequently prescribed drugs manufactured by companies like Bristol Myers Squibb and Johnson & Johnson, two drugmakers that sued the government after it blocked them from implementing their own 340B rebate plans.
- “Hospital groups slammed the model approvals as benefiting drugmakers at their expense, with America’s Essential Hospitals calling it a “clear case of the fox guarding the hen house.”
- Roll Call adds,
- “Lawmakers impatient with the lack of progress on a key health care issue — the long-debated need for changes to what’s known as the 340B drug pricing program — say they are closing in on legislation aimed at what they say are abuses in the program.” * * *
- “Lawmakers argue the program incentivizes practices that drive up health care costs. A report released last month by the Congressional Budget Office found the program’s design encourages prescription of higher-cost drugs and promotes increased vertical integration among facilities.
- “When 340B hospitals acquire or open new outpatient clinics, such as infusion centers or specialty medicine practices, those clinics also become eligible for the program. Critics say the hospitals collect discounts on drugs offered at those clinics and then sell them at full price to insured patients.
- “Our goal is to make health care more affordable, but 340B is making employer-sponsored insurance, which pays for the health care for 150 million people, less affordable,” Senate HELP Chair Bill Cassidy, R-La., said.” * * *
- The [rebate] pilot [mentioned above] could increase pressure on Congress to pass 340B legislation after debating it for several years, said Darbin Wofford, deputy director of health care for Third Way’s economic program. But action is doubtful with Congress in the throes of a government shutdown.
- “It’s unlikely we see movement for any 340B policy in Congress this year, but there are opportunities next year and in the following Congress,” Wofford said.
- The American Hospital Association News reminds us,
- “Individuals and families can enroll in or change their health coverage options through the Health Insurance Marketplace beginning tomorrow through Jan. 15. The AHA offers resources to help people choose the best coverage for themselves and their families.”
- “Individuals and families can enroll in or change their health coverage options through the Health Insurance Marketplace beginning tomorrow through Jan. 15. The AHA offers resources to help people choose the best coverage for themselves and their families.”
- Beckers Payer Issues points out six things to know about this ACA marketplace open enrollment period.
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP tells us,
- “Seven new illnesses and two additional deaths have been reported multistate Listeria outbreak tied to prepared pasta meals, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said yesterday in updates.
- “A total of 27 people in 18 states have been infected with the outbreak strain of Listeria monocytogenes, with 25 hospitalizations and 6 deaths. One pregnancy-associated infection resulted in fetal loss. Deaths have been reported in Hawaii, Illinois, Michigan, Oregon, Texas, and Utah.
- “The illness-onset dates range from August 6, 2024, to October 16, 2025. Patient ages range from 4 to 92 years, with a median age of 74 years. Two thirds of patients are women.”
- The Washington Post reports,
- “Most children should not receive prescription fluoride, Food and Drug Administration officials said Friday as they announced measures to restrict sales of the cavity-fighting drug.
- “The agency said children under 3 and older children not at high risk for tooth decay should avoid ingestible fluoride, which is often sold as tablets or drops. It sent letters to manufacturers warning them not to market the products to such children.
- “Fluoride tablets are often prescribed to children who live in communities that do not put the tooth-strengthening mineral in its water supply. But Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has led the Trump administration’s efforts to crack down on fluoride, including revisiting the decades-old recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to fluoridate water.“ * * *
- “The American Dental Association recommends prescription fluoride to children ages six months and older who are considered high risk for tooth decay and have little fluoride in their drinking water.
- “Scott Tomar, a spokesman for the ADA on community water fluoridation, said the FDA recommendations were not too different then the association’s guidance.”
From the judicial front,
- Govexec relates
- In a lawsuit filed in Delaware Chancery Court, Pfizer said Novo Nordisk’s offer can’t be considered superior because it isn’t reasonably likely to be completed on the terms proposed.,
- “A federal judge in Boston ruled Friday that the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s plan to pause a food assistance program for 42 million people was illegal — but gave the Trump administration until Monday to respond to her finding before she decides on a motion to force the benefits be paid despite the ongoing government shutdown.
- “At nearly the same time Friday, a Rhode Island federal judge in a similar case brought by cities and nonprofit groups ordered USDA to continue payments and granted a request for a temporary restraining order.
- “In Massachusetts, in a Friday afternoon order, District Court of Massachusetts Judge Indira Talwani said she would continue to take “under advisement” a coalition of Democratic states’ request to force the release of funds from a contingency account holding about $6 billion.
- “Her ruling came a day before a cutoff of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, benefits to low-income households [due to the government shutdown].”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Drugmaker Pfizer on Friday sued obesity-drug developer Metsera and Novo Nordisk, seeking to block Metsera from terminating its multibillion-dollar merger deal with Pfizer after Novo Nordisk made an unsolicited takeover bid.
- “In a lawsuit filed in Delaware Chancery Court, Pfizer said Novo Nordisk’s offer can’t be considered superior because it isn’t reasonably likely to be completed on the terms proposed.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- Beckers Clinical Leadership lets us know,
- “Respiratory syncytial virus activity is starting to tick up across the country, marking the start of virus season, according to data tracked by epidemiologists and public health experts.
- “Routine CDC tracking on respiratory virus trends is on pause amid the federal government shutdown, now approaching its fifth week. However, data from the PopHIVE project at Yale School of Public Health in New Haven, Conn., shows that ED visits for RSV among children under 4 are on the rise.”
- Per Medscape,
- “Impaired glymphatic function — the brain’s waste clearance system — could help explain how cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors may drive dementia.
- “In a large UK Biobank study, MRI markers of disrupted cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and glymphatic flow predicted future dementia and were closely linked to vascular risk factors, including high blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, and arterial stiffness.
- “Discovered just over a decade ago, the glymphatic system depends on the efficient circulation and drainage of CSF. When this process is impaired, the brain’s ability to clear amyloid, tau, and other toxins diminishes, potentially accelerating the development of dementia.
- “The study shows, with very convincing data, that these markers predict dementia risk, and also that the markers relate to cardiovascular risk factors,” study author Hugh S. Markus, MD, professor of stroke medicine in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, UK, told Medscape Medical News.
- “This offers a novel way in which one might be able to target or treat dementia. If one could improve glymphatic flow, one could then reduce the risk of dementia.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Parkinson’s disease is the fastest-growing neurodegenerative disease in the world. But it’s also one of the most preventable, according to Dr. Ray Dorsey, neurologist at Atria Health and Research Institute in New York and co-author of a new book, “The Parkinson’s Plan: A New Path to Prevention and Treatment.”
- “A progressive nervous-system disorder, Parkinson’s primarily impacts movement. As dopamine-producing brain cells die, movement becomes affected, resulting in tremors, muscle stiffness, slowed movement and impaired balance.
- “Some doctors like Dorsey say most cases appear to be caused by environmental factors. A study in the journal Brain last year found that only 13% of Americans carry a genetic risk factor for the disease.
- “The vast majority of Americans have no known genetic cause or risk factor for their disease,” says Dorsey. “So the principal cause of disease lies not with us, but outside of us, in our environment, in chemicals in our food, water and air.”
- “Other doctors say conversations about preventing Parkinson are missing the mark.
- “We’re very much oversimplifying if we say, ‘If we just get rid of that particular pollutant we are going to prevent Parkinson’s,’ ” says Dr. Brad Racette, chair of neurology and senior vice president at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix. “We will probably have a measurable effect on the number of cases, but I think the key message is it’s not as simple as a single pollutant is causing an individual’s Parkinson’s.”
- The article “offers some of the ways that doctors like Dorsey recommend to potentially reduce your risk of developing Parkinson’s disease.” For example
- “Research the area near your home. Try not to move to an area near a golf course or Superfund site. A May JAMA Network Open study found that people who live within one mile of a golf course have a 126% increased risk of developing Parkinson’s.
- “Superfund sites aren’t well marked, but you want to avoid living too close to one since toxic chemicals leak into the soil and eventually the surrounding air. The Environmental Protection Agency has a database to search for sites and environmental firms can test your air.”
- Per MedPage Today,
- “Moderate exercise of about 17 metabolic equivalent task (MET)-hours per week significantly reduced the risk of digestive system cancers (DSCs) and DSC mortality.
- “Optimal risk reduction occurred at about 50 MET-hours per week.
- “After factoring in consistency, physical activity equivalent to 16.9 MET-hours/week had the same effect on DSCs as 50 MET-hours/week.”
- Here is a link to an MET calculator.
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “Tucked into its latest earnings report, Eli Lilly disclosed that it has removed from its research pipeline an experimental drug for pain.
- “The drug, which Lilly in-licensed several years ago, works by inhibiting a protein called P2X7. This protein helps regulate molecules that trigger inflammation and amplify pain signals. Blocking P2X7, Lilly had hoped, would be an effective way to treat conditions like osteoarthritis, chronic lower back pain and the nerve pain that often accompanies diabetes.
- “However, data from mid-stage tests “did not meet our high internal bar for success,” according to Lilly spokesperson Ashley Hennessey. While the company is “assessing next steps for the program, including possible additional indications,” for now, the drug is out of its pain pipeline.
- “It’s at least the second Lilly pain program to get axed this year. A drug named mazisotine, designed to boost a pain-relieving protein known as SSTR4, was shelved this summer.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “For the third straight quarter, AbbVie has jacked up its revenue forecast for 2025. The Illinois drugmaker has raised its guidance by $400 million, now expecting sales to reach $60.9 billion.
- “The estimate is $1.9 billion higher than AbbVie’s projection from the start of the year, another indication that the company continues to be surprised by the performance of immunology stalwarts Skyrizi and Rinvoq and that it has rebounded from the 2023 loss of patent protection in the United States for Humira, the first drug ever to generate more than $20 billion in annual sales.
- “Clearly, the momentum is there,” AbbVie CEO Rob Michael said on a Friday conference call. “We’ve beaten and raised in every quarter in 2025.”
- “The new forecast reflects expectations that Skyrizi sales will reach $17.3 billion in 2025, which is a $200 million increase from AbbVie’s previous estimate based on the drug’s market share gains in psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), chief financial officer Scott Reents said.”
- and
- “For the last several quarters, Gilead Sciences’ earnings calls have been colored by anticipation for the launch of the California drugmaker’s long-acting HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) option. This week, Gilead had a chance to share some early returns on the med’s market debut after its FDA approval five months ago.
- “Since Yeztugo’s U.S. launch in June, the drug has garnered $54 million in sales, Gilead reported on Thursday, with $39 million generated specifically during the third quarter. The company has already secured 75% U.S. payer access for Yeztugo, some three months ahead of its original targeted timeframe of six months post-launch, with 90% expected by the end of the first half of 2026, Gilead said in its third-quarter earnings presentation (PDF).
- “Gilead expects $150 million to come from Yeztugo this year, but Citi analysts call this guidance “conservative,” citing broad update and rapid payer coverage as “hallmarks of a strong launch” that the drug has already demonstrated, the analysts wrote in a note to clients.
- “On the flip side, Mizuho analysts note that the Yeztugo’s quarterly haul was a “slight miss.”
- Radiology Business reports,
- “Hospital giant Intermountain Health has reached a deal to acquire a nearly 40-year-old private radiology practice in Las Vegas, the two announced Thursday.
- “The Salt Lake City-headquartered nonprofit is buying Steinberg Diagnostic Medical Imaging for an undisclosed sum, with the integration taking place sometime after Jan. 1. SDMI opened its first office in 1988 and today commands a team of over 550 employees and affiliates, including approximately 30 radiologists.
- “Intermountain is growing in southern Nevada and believes adding SDMI and its 12 outpatient imaging centers will help “enhance patient access to high-quality, cost-effective care.” Acquiring the practice also will allow the hospital system to provide more “coordinated and integrated imaging,” said Eric Liston, chief clinical shared services officer.
- “As the number of people with chronic and complex health conditions continues to grow, ease of access to high-quality imaging services is more important than ever,” he said in a statement Oct. 30.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Elevance Health’s Anthem plans are cracking down on hospitals or outpatient facilities that offer services using out-of-network providers.
- “Beginning Jan. 1 in 11 states, Anthem will impose an administrative penalty equal to 10% of the allowed amount on a facility’s claims that include out-of-network providers. These facilities will also be at risk of termination from Anthem’s provider network, per a notice from the insurer sent out earlier this month.
- “Ariel Bayewitz, vice president of health economics at Elevance Health, told Fierce Healthcare in an interview that the policy was designed in response to provider behavior under the No Surprises Act (NSA) independent dispute resolution (IDR) process. He said the insurer has seen a consistent pattern of IDR being used as a “back-door payment channel” for pricey, nonemergent procedures.” FEHBlog note — Smart move.
- and
- “Online therapy provider Talkspace reported another strong quarter with 25% revenue growth, driven by its expanding payer business, with net income of $3.3 million, up 73% from the same period in 2024.
- “The company brought in $59.4 million in revenue in Q3, driven by a 42% year-over-year increase in payer revenue, or insurance-covered sessions, to reach $45 million. Talkspace’s direct-to-consumer business, however, continued to decline, with $4.6 million in revenue, down 23% year-over-year. The company’s direct-to-enterprise revenue was $9.3 million, down 1% year-on-year.
- “The company reported adjusted EBITDA of $5 million, an improvement from $2.4 million adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter of 2024.
- “The company completed 432,000 insurance-covered mental health sessions in Q3, up 37% year-over-year, and active payer members increased 29% in Q3 to 129,000, Ian Harris, Talkspace’s chief financial officer, said during the company’s third-quarter earnings call.“
- Per Healthcare Dive,
- “Healthcare executives see digital health and virtual care as key technologies to improve patient experience, but determining returns from these investments is unclear, according to a survey published this week by healthcare consultancy Sage Growth Partners.
- “Nearly 60% of respondents said their health system offered virtual primary care and remote patient monitoring. Additionally, half said they offered telehealth for stroke care.
- “But fewer than 30% earned significant ROI from most of their virtual care offerings, according to the survey. Plus, many executives said they would need to invest funds to shift to a new virtual care platform in the next few years.”
