From Washington DC
- As the shutdown drags on, the Senate remains in session for Committee business and floor voting this week, while the House of Representatives remains out of session.
- The Wall Street Journal reports
- “Democratic senators again urged President Trump to get involved directly in talks to end the government shutdown as the impasse entered a crucial week, with the lapse set to become the longest ever while pain for American households and travelers is deepening.
- “Lawmakers indicated late last week that they were finally making progress on talks to reopen the government and begin discussions about how to address expiring enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies, which are set to leave millions of Americans with sharply higher health-insurance bills. Democrats, who have repeatedly blocked a GOP measure to reopen the government, have made talks on healthcare a condition of voting to end the shutdown.
- “Some travelers experienced abnormally long delays Sunday as a result of staffing shortages at major airports. Flights into Newark Liberty International Airport were delayed over three hours on average, according to Federal Aviation Administration data. People flying out of Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport were warned that wait times could exceed 90 minutes.”
- The Journal also offers advice to folks who are in the market for an Affordable Care Act plan during this open enrollment period.
- Modern Healthcare explains,
- “Doctors who treat Medicare beneficiaries are getting a 2.5% raise next year under a regulation the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued Friday.
- “The 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule final rule implements provisions from the tax law President Donald Trump enacted in July, which mandated a pay hike and reversed a multiyear trend of reimbursement cuts. CMS also spells out its plans for an “efficiency adjuster” that will reduce some payments, a lower back pain and heart failure payment model, and new flexibilities for telehealth coverage.
- “The actions we are taking will improve seniors’ access to high-quality, preventive care that will help them to live longer, healthier lives,” CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz said in a news release.
- STAT News adds,
- “Medicare on Friday followed through with its earlier proposal to reduce payment for surgeries, outpatient procedures, and other services it believes can be done more efficiently starting in 2026.
- “The controversial move represents a significant change to how thousands of physician services are priced under Medicare. It’s a blow to the powerful physician lobby that has long controlled how procedures are priced and could help ensure more equitable pay among specialists and primary care doctors.
- “The so-called efficiency adjustment assumes that advances in technology and standardized workflows have cut down the time and expense necessary to perform certain procedures — changes that reimbursement hadn’t accounted for. Those services will see a 2.5% cut to reimbursement beginning Jan. 1, 2026, while time-based services like office visits or behavioral health therapy will not. Telehealth and certain maternity services will also be unaffected.” * * *
- “In response to comments on the proposal, Medicare will not apply the efficiency adjustment to payment codes that are new for 2026.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “A Food and Drug Administration official who resigned on Sunday was sued by a Canadian pharmaceutical company, which accused him of soliciting a bribe and tanking its stock with false statements as part of a revenge campaign against a former colleague.
- “Dr. George Tidmarsh was hired in July by FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary to lead the agency’s drug division, a top role regulating much of the country’s pharmaceutical industry that gave Tidmarsh a prominent perch in the Department of Health and Human Services headed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
- “Drugmaker Aurinia Pharmaceuticals filed a lawsuit in federal court in Maryland Sunday evening detailing its accusations against an official at an agency that this year has faced upheaval and uncertainty in the form of DOGE cuts, leadership departures and a slew of new policies.
- “A lawyer for Tidmarsh, Joseph Galda, said that he didn’t solicit a bribe.” * * *
- “Secretary Kennedy expects the highest ethical standards from all individuals serving under his leadership and remains committed to full transparency,” the spokeswoman said.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- NPR Shots reports,
- “In April, the future was looking bleak for an experimental Alzheimer’s drug called valiltramiprosate, or ALZ-801.
- “Researchers had just released topline results of a study of more than 300 people age 50 or older, who were genetically predisposed to Alzheimer’s. Overall, those who got the drug did no better than those given a placebo.
- “But in September, a closer look at the results revealed benefits for a subgroup of 125 people who had only mild memory problems when they started taking the drug.
- “Those participants, initially diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment rather than mild dementia, “showed very meaningful responses,” says Dr. Susan Abushakra, chief medical officer of Alzheon, the drug’s maker.
- “By one measure, the drug slowed cognitive decline by 52% in people with mild cognitive impairment. That result appears comparable with benefits from the two Alzheimer’s drugs now on the market: lecanemab and donabemab.”
- Further studies are underway.
- Medscape discusses ongoing advances in anti-obesity medication and separately notes
- “Analysis of 35,213 patients with stage II-III colon cancer revealed that recurrence risk drops below 0.5% at 6 years post-surgery, supporting a practical definition of cure. Women showed a significantly lower recurrence risk with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.58.” * * *
- “From a scientific perspective, we still face challenges in the definition of cure in the adjuvant colon cancer setting. When answering patients’ questions about cure, we should use a restrictive definition of relapse-free survival, considering local and/or distant recurrence; this should be reported in adjuvant studies as a relevant secondary endpoint. In the setting of colon cancer, this leads us to advocate for 6 years after surgery free of relapse as constituting cure,” the authors of the study wrote.”
- JAMA discusses “What to Know About the New Blood Pressure Guidelines” for adults released in August 2025.
- “Some things haven’t changed in the new high blood pressure (BP) guideline for adults released this August by the American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology. The definitions of normal, elevated, and stage 1 and 2 hypertension are the same, for example. And the recommended first-line antihypertensives are unchanged from the 2017 guideline.
- “But many updates with the potential to change patient care were included in the new guideline, which incorporates the latest data and emphasizes both earlier treatment and tighter control of BP.
- “With heart health, brain health, kidney health…overall we have really great evidence that lower blood pressure is better,” said guideline coauthor Sadiya S. Khan, MD, MSc. “Start blood pressure treatment earlier and get to lower targets.”
- “Plus, there’s much more attention on prevention in the new guideline—meaning recommendations even for people with normal BP.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports
- “The gloves are off in the obesity-drug fight. But Novo Nordisk NOVO.B might be swinging so hard it risks losing its balance.
- “The maker of Ozempic has been losing ground to Eli Lilly LLY and a crop of copycat GLP-1 makers such as Hims & Hers Health HIMS. Novo’s new chief executive, Mike Doustdar, deserves credit for shaking up a once-stodgy Danish pharma with a move fast and break things mindset. He inherited a company rapidly ceding share, and his response has been urgent: layoffs to free up cash for reinvestment, and a dealmaking spree that included the acquisition of Akero Therapeutics, a company with a liver-disease treatment, for up to $5.2 billion.
- Now, Novo’s bid to regain its footing has taken a form unthinkable under past leadership: an unsolicited $9 billion offer to pry Metsera MTSR, the developer of a monthly injection, away from Pfizer PFE, which had agreed to buy it in a deal valued at up to $7.3 billion. It is a bold move for a company that mostly shied away from dealmaking under past leadership.
- In this case it also looks like a move born of frustration, one that is now making Novo investors uneasy. The stock skidded Thursday and Friday as investors questioned how confident the pharma company is in its own obesity-drug pipeline, said Will Sevush, a healthcare strategist at Jefferies.
- On Friday, Pfizer sued Novo and Metsera, alleging that under the terms of the Pfizer-Metsera agreement, the offer from Novo can’t qualify as superior. Pfizer might have a point.” * * *
- “Even so, Pfizer—which had recently been fending off an activist investor as patents on key drugs expire and Covid revenue fades—still has time to decide it is better to negotiate than fight. Metsera seems to be using Novo’s offer as leverage to extract a sweeter deal, and under the merger terms, Pfizer has until Tuesday to counterbid. Given how valuable GLP-1 drugs have become, a small bump in price could be worth it.”
- TechTarget unveils a patient survey about their attitudes towards the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare.
