From Washington, DC,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Lawmakers boarded planes Thursday and headed home for the weekend, passing through security checkpoints manned by agents working without pay, as Democrats and Republicans blamed each other for the monthlong impasse over funding the Department of Homeland Security.
- “Funding for DHS lapsed on Feb. 14, held up over demands from Democrats that new restrictions be placed on Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations as a condition for funding its parent agency. Since then, lawmakers have made no progress in resolving the standoff.
- “The shutdown has forced a swath of federal workers—including Transportation Security Administration officers at airports—to continue working without pay, contributing to staffing shortages and long security lines at some airports across the country. TSA employees received partial paychecks earlier this month and are due to miss a full paycheck in coming days, just as spring break travel is kicking off.
- “Democrats again blocked a measure to fund DHS on Thursday afternoon. Earlier in the day, Republicans blocked a proposal by Democrats to fund individual parts of DHS, including the TSA and Coast Guard but not ICE.”
- Bloomberg Law relates,
- “Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Chair Bill Cassidy has a wide range of health care affordability priorities he wants to pursue in 2026, including addressing drug costs and price transparency.
- “In terms of the [health care] affordability, it is a campaign issue,” the Louisiana Republican said in an interview at an exclusive Bloomberg Government event on Tuesday.
- “You can tell Tony Fabrizio is in Donald Trump’s ear, right?” referring to the president’s longtime pollster who has released a survey that shows high drug prices top voter concerns, and many have unfavorable views of pharmaceutical companies.
- “Some policies Cassidy thinks could help with affordability are price transparency, site-neutrality in Medicare, which equalizes payments between hospitals and off-site physician offices, and pre-funding health savings accounts to help lower-income people buy insurance.
- “There are ways in which the cost of health care is affecting the average American that sometimes flies below the radar,” Cassidy continued.”
- Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
- “Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said he is opening an investigation into the FDA’s rejection of treatments for rare diseases, including ataluren, a drug used by some patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
- “Mr. Johnson, who chairs the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, announced the inquiry at a news conference March 11. He said the FDA should allow patients access to high-risk treatments with clear disclosures rather than remove those options altogether, according to a report from Spectrum News 1.”
- Federal News Network reports,
- “Federal annuitants who have been waiting for weeks on a key tax document from the Office of Personnel Management should keep an eye on their mailboxes in the coming days.
- “In an email sent Wednesday, OPM informed federal retirees who requested physical copies of their 1099-R forms that the remaining paper documents were being sent out this week, and should be delivered in the next three to five days.
- “If retirees who requested a physical copy of their 1099-R form do not receive it by March 18, they should email OPM, “so that we can look into it and help get you your form,” OPM wrote Wednesday in its message to annuitants, viewed by Federal News Network.
- “OPM Director Scott Kupor further confirmed on social media that the remaining paper tax documents would be delivered shortly. He said about 93% of annuitants have either downloaded digital copies of their documents, or already received a copy of the tax form in the mail.”
- Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, tells us,
- “Women in federal service still face retirement gaps.
- “Lifetime earnings, career interruptions and caregiving responsibilities continue to shape retirement outcomes for women in federal service.” * * *
- “While challenges exist, federal employment offers tools that women can leverage so they can prepare for retirement.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- STAT News reports,
- “The Food and Drug Administration is cracking down on telehealth companies’ marketing of compounded versions of weight loss drugs. In recent months, the agency has warned them against implying that their products are FDA approved, or that they themselves manufacture the products.
- “But those companies may not be the only ones under the microscope.
- “The telehealth companies that have been warned — with names like Lovely Meds, Hello Cake, and MEDVi — don’t directly prescribe the medications, which are not approved by the FDA or evaluated for safety and efficacy. That falls to the clinicians in medical groups affiliated with the companies. And a STAT analysis shows that cited companies can share clinical DNA.
- “Among more than 70 telehealth companies warned by the FDA in the last six months, at least 30% have publicly stated affiliations with just four nationwide medical groups: Beluga Health, OpenLoop, MD Integrations, and Telegra.
- “These “white label” telehealth practices, which allow brands to quickly plug into a stable of clinicians often licensed to practice medicine across the country, have helped telemedicine companies grow rapidly. But in doing so, they are now closely tied to an industry attracting government regulators’ scrutiny.”
- Fierce Pharma adds,
- “Though it’s hard to say exactly what the future holds for mass GLP-1 compounding, the pressure is mounting from multiple angles in the U.S. as drugmakers and the FDA alike seek to crack down on the practice.
- “Now, Eli Lilly—which has already staged multiple efforts in court to protect sales of its diabetes and obesity meds Mounjaro and Zepbound from compounders, medical spas and telehealth firms—is launching a new salvo focused on the potential safety risks behind a common compounding tactic.
- Lilly cautioned Thursday that through its own testing, it has “uncovered significant levels of an impurity” in certain compounded products marketed in the U.S., which seem to stem from a chemical reaction between vitamin B12 and tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Mounjaro and Zepbound.
- “Lilly called the impurity “concerning” given what little is known about its short- or long-term effects in humans, as well as its potential to interact with the GLP-1 itself or how it is absorbed, distributed, metabolized and eliminated from the body.
- “The Indianapolis pharma stressed that tirzepatide has never been studied in combination with B12 and warned that the compounders making these products, who are beholden to different regulations than branded drugmakers are, aren’t required to monitor and report potential negative reactions to their medicines.”
- Cardiovascular Business lets us know,
- “Toro Neurovascular, a California-based medtech company focused on developing new treatments for stroke and other neurovascular conditions, has secured U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for its new Toro 88 Superbore Catheter.
- “The large-bore device was built to provide support, trackability and stability during the treatment of time-sensitive stroke patients. According to Toro Neurovascular, the company worked closely with physicians to ensure it can deliver value to care teams treating even the most challenging cases.
- “Satoshi Tateshima, MD, PhD, a professor of interventional neuroradiology at UCLA, performed the first clinical use case with the Toro 88 device in the United States.”
From the public health, medical and Rx research front,
- Cardiovascular Business reports,
- “The U.S. cardiovascular mortality rate decreased dramatically from 2000 to 2011. Since then, however, it has remained relatively unchanged, according to new findings published in JACC.
- “Cardiovascular mortality in the United States declined steadily for more than five decades; yet, progress slowed beginning around 2010,” wrote first author Adith S. Arun, BS, a research fellow with Yale New Haven Hospital and Yale School of Medicine, and colleagues. “Recent work has described this pattern as a ‘disquieting plateau,’ a period in which gains in cardiovascular outcomes have stalled despite major advances in therapies and an expanding clinical armamentarium. At the same time, national healthcare spending has reached historic levels.” * * *
- “The researchers did note that the growth in spending is somewhat expected due to an aging patient population and the high costs associated with emerging technologies. At the same time, they wrote, “the value of these technologies depends on both their clinical effectiveness and their pricing.”
- “The group also highlighted the importance of prevention efforts and lifestyle interventions as health systems look to keep healthcare costs down and potentially get cardiovascular mortality to start dropping again.
- “Click here to read the full study in JACC, the flagship journal of the American College of Cardiology.”
- Beckers Hospital Review relates,
- “West Virginia had the highest rate of fatal opioid overdoses of any state in 2024, according to a new analysis from KFF.
- “The analysis is based on finalized 2024 opioid overdose death totals from the CDC’s WONDER database, which uses ICD-10 codes to identify deaths where synthetic and prescription opioids are listed as a contributing cause. Rates are age-adjusted per 100,000 population using the 2000 U.S. standard population distribution. The data includes both deaths involving illegally manufactured and pharmaceutical fentanyl.
- “The national opioid overdose death rate was 16 per 100,000 residents in 2024. More broadly, the U.S. recorded its largest-ever annual decline in overall drug overdose deaths, with the national rate falling from 31.3 per 100,000 in 2023 to 23.1 per 100,000 in 2024.”
- MedPage Today tells us,
- “This season’s influenza vaccine effectiveness rates against outpatient visits and hospitalizations may be lower than last season’s, according to an interim CDC analysis.
- “During the current flu season, 88% of subtyped influenza A-positive specimens have been H3N2, 93% of which have been an antigenically drifted subclade K version that’s different from the 2025-2026 flu vaccine virus.
- “These national trends were mirrored in the nation’s most populous state, California.”
- and
- “In cancer patients with brain metastases and type 2 diabetes, those using GLP-1 drugs had a 37% lower risk of death over 3 years.
- “Significant mortality benefits were linked to semaglutide and dulaglutide, but not with liraglutide.
- “The risk of all-cause mortality was consistently lower with GLP-1 drugs among patients with primary cancers of the lung, breast, and melanoma.”
- Infectious Disease Advisor informs us,
- “Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination may provide strong protection among men, highlighting its role in comprehensive disease prevention and gender-neutral control of HPV-related morbidity and mortality.”
- Health Day notes,
- “Providing support to stressed-out parents might help their children avoid obesity, a new study says.
- “Children were more likely to eat healthy and not gain weight if their parents participated in training to help manage stress, researchers reported March 6 in the journal Pediatrics.
- “We already knew that stress can be a big contributor in the development of childhood obesity,” senior researcher Rajita Sinha, director of the Yale Interdisciplinary Stress Center in New Haven, Connecticut, said in a news release.
- “The surprise was that when parents handled stress better, their parenting improved, and their young child’s obesity risk went down,” Sinha said.”
- Science points out,
- “Scientists have plenty of ideas about why aging impairs memory. Reductions in blood flow in the brain, shrinking brain volume, and malfunctioning neural repair systems have all been blamed. Now, new research in mice points to another possible culprit: microbes in the gut.
- “In a study published today in Nature, scientists show how a bacterium that is particularly common in older animals can drive memory loss. This microbe makes compounds that impair signaling along neurons connecting the gut with the brain, dampening activity in brain regions associated with learning and memory, the team found.
- “This is a tour de force,” says Haijiang Cai, a neuroscientist at the University of Arizona who studies gut-brain communication and was not involved in the work. “They define the pathway all the way from aging and bacteria … to cognitive function—it’s really impressive.” However, he and others emphasize it remains to be seen whether a similar mechanism exists in humans—and if so, how important it is compared with other drivers of cognitive decline.”
- STAT News relates,
- “Jim Wells, a biologist at the University of California San Francisco, was studying proteins on the surface of cancer cells when he noticed one that wasn’t supposed to be there. This protein, called Src, should only be tucked inside cells.
- “An accident,” he said, and a serendipitous one. Wells and his team report in Science that they have found Src on the surface of malignant cells, not healthy donor tissue. This discovery may bring scientists closer to a long-sought goal: finding an ideal immunotherapy target for solid tumors.
- “It was certainly provocative and exciting to see this cancer-associated Src kinase now presented on the cell surface,” said Kathleen Yates, a biologist at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University who did not work on the study. But, she added, it’s still too early to know how much clinical benefit there will be from targeting Src on the cell surface. “They’ve accomplished a great deal. It is an outstanding question as to whether this will be translationally impactful,” she said.”
- Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News adds,
- “After becoming the world’s first patient treated with a bespoke base editing therapy, baby KJ Muldoon is now healthy and free from the toxic ammonia buildup caused by his rare genetic metabolic disorder that initially presented a 50% mortality rate in infancy. While his story highlights the life-changing potential of gene editing, it also underscores a major challenge for the field: expanding these therapies to benefit broader patient populations.
- “KJ’s urea cycle disorder stemmed from a single disease-causing mutation that could be precisely targeted. However, many genetic disorders arise from numerous mutations scattered across a gene, making individualized corrections far too resource-intensive to scale.
- “Ben Kleinstiver, PhD, associate investigator at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and co-author of the NEJM study describing KJ’s case, told GEN that insertion of large DNA sequences at programmable locations in the genome holds tremendous promise as a generalizable medicine that could treat patients regardless of their underlying disease-causing mutations. His team has recently taken one step closer to making large gene insertions safer for therapeutic applications.
- ‘In the new study published in Nature titled, “Immune evasive DNA donors and recombinase license kilobase-scale writing,” Kleinstiver and colleagues, in collaboration with Full Circles Therapeutics, have developed a circular single stranded DNA donor (ssDNA) that enables kilobase-scale integration while remaining non-toxic to cells.”
From the HIMSS Conference 2026,
- Fierce Healthcare reports,
- “The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is ramping up major federal interoperability initiatives on several fronts.
- “As part of this interoperability work, the Trump administration unveiled in July a sweeping health tech initiative that aims to modernize Medicare and advance next-generation digital health for patients, including conversational artificial intelligence, digital IDs and easier ways to access health data.
- “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is spearheading an API-focused data exchange framework to enable sharing of patient medical records through a new initiative called the CMS Aligned Network. This work is meant to accelerate data sharing at a faster pace than can be achieved through regulations alone, according to Amy Gleason, acting administrator, U.S. DOGE Service, and strategic advisor to the CMS.”
- The Wall Street Journal adds.
- “Microsoft MSFT is betting on healthcare as a path to become more competitive in artificial intelligence. The company’s biggest push yet: a new tool it describes as an AI concierge doctor—one that can access your medical records and health data, with your consent.
- “The company on Thursday unveiled Copilot Health, a feature within the Copilot app that lets the chatbot dispense personalized healthcare advice informed by the user’s disease history, test results, medications, doctors’ visit notes and biometric data as recorded by wearable devices.
- “Health data imported into the feature will be encrypted and firewalled from the rest of the app to address the privacy concerns of handing over one’s medical records to a generative AI platform, Microsoft AI Chief Executive Mustafa Suleyman said in an interview.
- “It’s something that Microsoft is uniquely placed to do with our scale, with our regulatory experience, with the kind of trust and confidence that people have in our security and the history that we have as a mature, stable player,” Suleyman said.”
From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “North Dakota rural hospitals are showing they don’t need the help of a large health system to provide more primary care while driving down costs.
- “In 2023, more than 20 critical access hospitals formed the Rough Rider High-Value Network, seeking to share data and collective resources to standardize care and improve financial performance.
- “It’s been less than three years, but the network’s early results are a good sign for the concept given the pressure on margins at all hospitals, and especially those in far-flung communities. Rural providers in five other states have since banded together in similar coalitions of independent hospitals while many of their peers join larger health systems.”
- Beckers Health IT relates,
- “More than 80% of physicians use artificial intelligence in their professional practice — more than double the share in 2023, according to a March 12 survey from the American Medical Association.
- “AMA polled 1,692 U.S. physicians across various specialties, practice settings and career stages about their use and perception of AI. Responses were collected between Jan. 15 and Feb. 2. About 38% of participants practiced in group settings and 24% in hospitals.”
- Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review news release,
- “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of oveporexton (Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.) for narcolepsy type 1.
- “This preliminary draft marks the midpoint of ICER’s eight-month process of assessing this treatment, and the findings within this document should not be interpreted to be ICER’s final conclusions.
- “Register for ICER’s Early Insights Webinar
- “On March 24, as part of ICER’s Early Insights Webinar Series, ICER’s Senior Vice President of Research, Foluso Agboola, MBBS, MPH, will present the initial findings of this draft report. This webinar is exclusively available to all users of the ICER Analytics platform; registration for the webinar is now open.
- “Submit a Public Comment
- “The Draft Evidence Report and Draft Voting Questions are now open to public comment. All stakeholders are invited to submit formal comments by email to publiccomments@icer.org, which must be received by 5 PM ET on April 7, 2026. * * *
- “ICER’s Patient Portal and Manufacturer Engagement Guide provide additional detail on what types of information may be most informative to the report.”
