From Washington, DC
- Roll Call reports,
- “GOP health panel leaders in the Senate on Wednesday seemed intent on quickly implementing a health savings account proposal to replace expiring health care tax credits that subsidize insurance plans used by millions of Americans, despite increased skepticism from Democrats and even some House Republicans.
- During a Senate Finance Committee hearing on health care affordability, lawmakers largely stuck to party-line questioning over skyrocketing costs for Affordable Care Act health plans, suggesting no easy compromise is imminent.”
- Fierce Healthcare tells us,
- “Democrats didn’t necessarily discount their counterparts’ ideas during the hearing but said lawmakers need to extend the subsidies as-is for at least one year to allow for significant time to actually have a back-and-forth on healthcare policy and for those policies to be implemented.” * * *
- “Ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore,, said that once a “clean” extension is in place, he and his Democratic colleagues would gladly join Republicans in curbing “insurance company abuses.” That extends to a long-discussed reform of the pharmacy benefit management industry, he said.”
- The American Hospital Association News informs us,
- “The House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health held a hearing Nov. 19 to discuss improvements to care coordination and delivery to prevent and treat chronic disease. Health care and pharmaceutical experts testified before the committee, including Michael Hoben, M.D., chief medical officer of population health services at Novant Health.”
- “The House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health held a hearing Nov. 19 to discuss improvements to care coordination and delivery to prevent and treat chronic disease. Health care and pharmaceutical experts testified before the committee, including Michael Hoben, M.D., chief medical officer of population health services at Novant Health.”
- Roll Call adds,
- “Congress’ schedule for next year is set after the Senate rolled out its 2026 calendar Wednesday, a day after the House unveiled its own version.
- “The Senate calendar, made public by Majority Leader John Thune’s office, contains a few notable differences from the schedule set by the House for the midterm election year.”
- The article identifies those differences.
- Per a U.S. Office of Personnel Management news release,
- “The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) today issued a memo to agencies announcing the launch of two new executive development programs: the Senior Executive Development Program (SEDP) and Leadership for an Efficient and Accountable Government (LEAG). These programs aim to equip Senior Executives, Senior Professionals, GS-15s, GS-14s, and their non-Title 5 equivalents with the skills and knowledge to advance the administration’s priorities and drive transformational change across federal agencies.” * * *
- “These programs are a bold step toward building a federal workforce that is agile, accountable, and ready to deliver results for the American people,” OPM Director Scott Kupor said. “By investing in our leaders, we’re ensuring they have the tools to advance President Trump’s vision for a more efficient and effective government.”
- “Read the memo here.”
- Kevin Moss, writing in Govexec, offers Open Season advice for annuitants.
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- Fierce Pharma reports,
- “Just a few months after Boehringer Ingelheim broke into the oncology space with the first drug that can target a rare tumor type in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the FDA has given its stamp of approval to a competitor in Bayer’s Hyrnuo (sevabertinib).
- “Hyrnuo, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), is specifically indicated for patients who have previously received treatment for nonsquamous NSCLC and whose tumors are confirmed to have relatively rare HER2 activating mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain (TKD).
- “The twice-daily oral med was cleared through the FDA’s accelerated approval pathway, meaning it still needs to prove its worth in a confirmatory study. Nonetheless, the FDA saw preliminary evidence of clinical benefit in Bayer’s phase 1/2 Soho-01 trial.”
- Per Radiology Business,
- “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has just granted De Novo marketing authorization for an at-home prenatal ultrasound platform that allows patients to scan themselves.
- “Israel-based Pulsenmore Ltd. announced the authorization for its Pulsenmore ES on Monday [November 3]. The product is an at-home prenatal ultrasound system physicians can prescribe to women so they can scan themselves under remote guidance via in-app instructions or a physician. Images captured are transmitted securely to the Pulsenmore app, where the provider can read them and inform the patient of any findings that might warrant an in-person visit.
- “Experts are hopeful the complementary tool can expand access to vital prenatal care, offering expectant mothers an added layer of reassurance.” * * *
- “Learn more about the system here.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP reports,
- “A pair of new Pew Research Center surveys finds that while nearly two-thirds of US adults view childhood vaccines as effective, confidence in their safety and in vaccine policy is increasingly shaped by political affiliation. At the same time, changes to federal COVID-19 vaccine recommendations appear to have had little impact on willingness to receive an updated shot.
- “In a nationally representative survey of more than 5,100 adults, 63% say they are extremely or very confident that routine childhood vaccines are effective at preventing serious illness.” * * *
- “A separate Pew survey examined whether recent changes to US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) vaccine guidelines have influenced Americans’ decisions to receive an updated COVID-19 vaccine.
- “According to the survey, the new recommendations have had little effect on public uptake. A majority of adults (59%) say they do not plan to receive the updated vaccine, similar to 2024 levels. Thirteen percent of respondents had already received the vaccine as of late October, and just 26% say they want to get it.”
- and
- “The results of a large clinical trial, published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, show that researchers are making progress on experimental mRNA flu shots, even if they aren’t yet ready to be rolled out to consumers.
- “In the study, people randomly assigned to receive a flu shot made with modified mRNA were 29% less likely to be diagnosed with a lab-confirmed case of influenza by the end of winter than people given a conventional flu shot.
- “The experimental mRNA vaccine prevented 60% to 67% of flu infections, while the conventional vaccine prevented 44% to 54% of infections, said Kelly Lindert, MD, vice president of clinical research and development at Pfizer and senior author of the new study.
- “Authors of the study, which was funded by Pfizer, tested the experimental mRNA vaccine in more than 18,000 adults age 18 to 64 during the 2022-2023 flu season.
- “This really is exciting and promising,” said Bill Hanage, PhD, a professor of epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health., who was not involved in the new study. The modified mRNA vaccine “is plainly capable of protecting for at least a season and doing so better than the one with which it was being compared.” * * *
- “Mild to moderate side effects were much more common in those who received the mRNA shot, however.
- “Researchers will need to reduce the number of side effects to make mRNA shots palatable, Hanage said.
- “While there’s no evidence of an excess of really serious adverse events, there are clearly more of the moderate and not-pleasant adverse events,” Hanage said. “For many folks, this has been their dominant memory of COVID shots, and people will be reluctant to get vaccines on an annual basis which make them feel rotten.”
- Yale New Haven Health System discusses what causes lung cancer in non-smokers.
- JAMA Network lets us know,
- “Annual lung cancer screening (LCS) reduces LC mortality and is recommended by the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF). Recent state-level data showed LCS uptake is low (9%-31%), but true nationally representative estimates are lacking. This study estimated the current national prevalence of up-to-date LCS and deaths prevented and life-years gained from LCS at current and 100% screening uptake.” * * *
- “Only approximately 1 in 5 eligible individuals in the US underwent LCS in 2024. Increasing current uptake to 100% could increase deaths prevented and life-years gained 3-fold. Efforts to increase uptake include improving awareness of LCS recommendations and access to LCS facilities, and targeting subgroups in whom LCS maximizes life-years gained. Unscreened eligible individuals in this study with fewer comorbidities had similar life-years gained because they were less likely to die of comorbid causes. Revisiting current eligibility recommendations is warranted. In 2023, the American Cancer Society eliminated the years-since-quit requirement and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network followed suit in 2025″
- Per Cardiovascular Business,
- “Financial incentives appear to double consistent hypertension medication use, according to a study led by NYU Langone Health and presented as a late-breaker at the American Heart Association (AHA) 2025 Scientific Sessions.
- “Financial incentives clearly worked during the study—people in the rewards group took their medication much more consistently,” said John A. Dodson, MD, MPH, principal investigator and lead author of the study in a statement. Dodson is the director of NYU Langone’s Geriatric Cardiology Program and an associate professor in the Department of Medicine’s Leon H. Charney Division of Cardiology at NYU Langone Health.” * * *
- “Researchers found that about 71% of patients in the rewards group opened their blood pressure medication on 80% of days. But the control group only opened the bottles on about 34% of days. Interestingly, both groups saw similar drops in blood pressure, with average systolic pressure falling by 6.7 mm Hg in the rewards group and 5.8 mm Hg in the control group.
- “We were surprised that this didn’t lead to significantly better blood pressure control,” Dodson said. “It’s unclear whether participants opened the bottles without taking the medication, or if other untracked factors, like different medications or lifestyle behavior, affected their blood pressure.”
- “Also, once the rewards ended, so did improvements in blood pressure, as medication habits returned to pre-study noncompliance levels.
- “Dodson said the team was also surprised that adherence to medication dropped when the rewards ended. He said this shows how complex behavior change really is.”
- Incentives can be complicated.
- Per Health Day,
- “The risk for hearing loss is significantly higher for patients with type 2 diabetes versus controls, according to a review published in the November issue of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.”
- “The risk for hearing loss is significantly higher for patients with type 2 diabetes versus controls, according to a review published in the November issue of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.”
- Per MedPage Today,
- “Overall cesarean birth rates decreased from 2012 to 2021, but racial disparities for Black women widened.
- “Cesarean delivery can be vital but can also contribute to undue morbidity and mortality.
- “Strategies to target racial disparities in cesarean delivery are warranted.”
- Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News relates,
- “Typically, bone marrow research relies heavily on animal models and oversimplified cell cultures in the laboratory. Now, researchers from the Department of Biomedicine at the University of Basel and University Hospital Basel have developed a realistic model of bone marrow engineered entirely from human cells. Derived using human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and macro-scale porous hydroxyapatite scaffolds, the engineered vascularized osteoblastic niche (eVON) model may become a valuable tool not only for blood cancer research, but also for drug testing and potentially for personalized therapies. The researchers suggest the novel system could reduce the need for animal experiments for many applications.
- “The research team, headed by Professor Ivan Martin, PhD, and Andrés García-García, PhD, reported on their achievement in Cell Stem Cell. In their paper, titled “Macro-scale, scaffold-assisted model of the human bone marrow endosteal niche using hiPSC-vascularized osteoblastic organoids,” the team stated, “The described eVON model addresses some of the current limitations in the development of uniform, durable, and reproducible human organoids toward enhanced relevance in disease modeling and drug screening.”
- Per an NIH news release,
- “Researchers gained new insights into the changes in the brains of young athletes that may lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
- “The findings suggest that repetitive head impacts cause brain changes much earlier than previously thought.”
- Fierce Pharma informs us,
- “In its mission to grow the reach of its pyruvate kinase (PK) activator Pyrukynd (mitapivat), Agios Pharmaceuticals has come up short of producing an unequivocal win in the key indication of sickle cell disease (SCD).
- “Attempting to capture a “broad assessment” of the potential benefits of the drug across “multiple aspects of the disease,” the company ran the 52-week Rise Up study, with primary endpoints assessing hemoglobin responses and the annualized rate of sickle cell pain crises (SCPCs) compared to placebo. The study further examined five secondary endpoints, including other biomarker responses, patient fatigue and the annualized rate of hospitalizations for SCPCs.
- “Rise Up met one primary endpoint by demonstrating an improved hemoglobin response, Agios said on Wednesday, with 40.6% of patients on the drug meeting hemoglobin response criteria, versus 2.9% on placebo. On the other primary measure, however, Pyrukynd showed a “reduction” in SCPCs but did not ultimately achieve statistical significance.”
From the U.S. public health front,
- MedCity News explains how forward-thinking health plans are designing utilization management systems that are clinically sound, operationally efficient, and aligned with enterprise goals.
- Healthcare Dive reports,
- “Cleveland Clinic finished the quarter ended Sept. 30 on a high note, growing its operating income more than 375% year over year to total $206.2 million.
- “Total revenue climbed to $4.5 billion, fueled largely by higher patient volumes, strong demand for outpatient services and favorable Medicare Advantage delegated premium and risk agreements that took effect at the beginning of the year.
- ‘Still, like many of its peers, the Ohio-based academic medical center is contending with rising costs. Operating expenses rose 10.2% year over year to total $4.1 billion as inflation and higher patient volumes pushed up spending on labor and pharmaceuticals.”
- Per Beckers Hospital Review,
- “New York City-based NYU Langone Health reported an operating income of $482.8 million on $15.4 billion in revenue for the fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2025, maintaining a steady operating margin of 3.1%, according to financial documents published Nov. 17.
- “The financial results represent a 9.6% increase in operating revenue compared to the prior year, when the seven-hospital system posted a $431.4 million operating gain on $14 billion in revenue. Growth was driven by a 5% increase in inpatient discharges, a 10.8% increase in outpatient surgical volume and a 3.4% rise in emergency department visits, according to the system.”
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “Facing the fact that Lundbeck’s unexpected offer for Avadel Pharmaceuticals was sweeter, Alkermes has come back to the negotiating table with a higher bid it believes can seal the deal.
- “Alkermes and Avadel have reached an accord on a new offer that would see Alkermes pay up to $22.50 per Avadel share to acquire the company, according to a Nov. 19 press release. The upgraded bid features $21 per Avadel share in cash as well as a $1.50 per share contingent value right (CVR) tied to the potential FDA approval of Avadel’s narcolepsy drug Lumryz in idiopathic hypersomnia by the end of 2028.
- “All told, the souped-up bid values Avadel at $2.37 billion, contingent upon the Lumryz milestone paying out, Alkermes said in its release.”
- and
- “Amid the pharma industry’s breakneck onshoring push this past year, North Carolina has been a major beneficiary as investment announcements rolled in from the likes of Roche, Biogen and Amgen. Now, Novartis is ready to significantly boost its presence in the state.
- “Wednesday, the Swiss pharma giant rolled out a plan to establish a “flagship manufacturing hub” in the Tar Heel State. While Novartis already operates a gene therapy production site in Durham, the company plans to expand that site and add two more in the same city. In addition, Novartis plans to establish a new plant in Morrisville, North Carolina, the company said in a Nov. 19 announcement.
- “Specifically, the company plans to build two new facilities in Durham for biologics and sterile packaging, according to the release. Novartis’ new site in Morrisville will specialize in solid dosage tablets and capsules, including packaging capabilities.”
- and
- “With a $140 million investment, Moderna will bring its drug product manufacturing to the United States, joining a parade of drugmakers looking to strengthen their supply chains and reduce exposure to potential tariffs on U.S. pharmaceutical imports.
- “Moderna’s project centers on the buildout of a new facility at its manufacturing campus in Norwood, Massachusetts, 20 miles south of its headquarters in Cambridge. The new plant will allow the company to execute end-to-end clinical and commercial stage production of its mRNA medicines.
- “By onshoring drug product manufacturing to our campus in Norwood, Massachusetts, we have completed the full manufacturing loop under one roof in the U.S.,” Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said in a Nov. 19 press release. “As an American company committed to building and producing in America, we are proud to strengthen our domestic footprint while bringing meaningful new jobs to the community.”
From the artificial intelligence front,
- Beckers Health IT identifies ten “big” AI themes for healthcare as we head toward 2026.
- MedTech Dive reports,
- “Philips said Monday it has collaborated with Edwards Lifesciences to develop a tool that uses artificial intelligence to help physicians visualize and navigate mitral transcatheter edge-to-edge repair, or TEER, procedures.
- “Called DeviceGuide, the technology tracks the repair device in real time as it moves through the heart. Philips said the system marks a shift in the use of AI from diagnostic imaging and patient monitoring into support for clinical decision-making during live procedures.
- “DeviceGuide is available in some European markets through a limited release and has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration for review, a Philips spokesperson said in an email.”
