- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “The Medicare agency will extend a short-term program that will pay for weight-loss drugs such as Eli Lilly’s Zepbound and Novo Nordisk’s NOVO.B -4.19%decrease; red down pointing triangle Wegovy, guaranteeing access to the popular medications will continue for seniors next year.
- “The decision by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services comes after big Medicare insurers signaled that they didn’t initially plan to join a separate, longer-term payment model for the drugs that was supposed to launch at the start of 2027, throwing its future into question.
- “Instead, the interim Medicare program, which starts in July and was expected to run only until the end of 2026, will continue until the end of 2027. Under this program, the government effectively pays for the medications, rather than adding them to Medicare insurers’ drug plans, which forces the insurers to account for the cost.
- “A CMS spokeswoman said the agency was extending the short-term program “after listening to stakeholder feedback.” The change will “allow data collection that will support a more effective potential implementation” of the longer-term model.
- “The decision is good news for manufacturers such as Lilly and Novo Nordisk, which are counting on Medicare coverage to boost sales of their weight-loss drugs. Previously, Medicare Part D plans have been barred from covering weight-loss drugs, which means seniors who want to take them have had to pay several hundred dollars a month out of pocket.”
- The House Appropriations Committee did not complete voting on the Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) bill today, having taken up and passed a Military Construction and Veterans Affair bill as the first order of business. The Committee will resume considering the FSGG bill tomorrow morning at 10 am ET.
- The American Hospital Association News lets us know,
- “Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. April 21 testified in two hearings on the proposed fiscal year 2027 HHS budget, which requests $111.1 billion. In the morning, Kennedy testified before the Energy and Commerce Committee Health Subcommittee, and in the afternoon, he appeared before the Senate Appropriations Committee’s Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies. He testified last week in a pair of meetings, one at the House Ways and Means Committee and another at the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies.
- ‘While the budget request is not binding, it serves as a preliminary framework for Congress and the administration as they determine federal funding levels and the scope of health care policy this year.”
- STAT News relates
- “The Trump administration will ask states to create new plans to verify medical providers paid by federally funded health care programs as part of a broad effort to combat fraud in government programs, Mehmet Oz, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said Tuesday.
- “The administration will ask states to develop plans in the next month to revalidate providers in “high-risk” areas to determine whether they exist and have the right to provide services, Oz said at Politico’s health care summit.
- “The announcement is another step from the administration in its aggressive — and highly publicized — attacks on alleged waste, fraud, and abuse in federal health care programs. The administration has targeted certain programs and providers primarily in Democrat-led states such as Minnesota and California, though the administration’s claims have been disputed at times by state leaders.
- “We’re asking the states to own that problem,” Oz said.
- “States that don’t take the effort seriously, he said, could become targets of closer federal scrutiny.”
- The Government Accountability Office (GAO) adds,
- “GAO has designated Medicare a high-risk program due, in part, to its complexity and potential for fraud. Fraud schemes in traditional Medicare often focus on certain services, such as durable medical equipment. Fraudsters may use stolen or inappropriately obtained Medicare beneficiary identifiers to submit fraudulent claims for unneeded or never provided services.
- The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which oversees Medicare, uses data analytics on claims in traditional Medicare to identify anomalous patterns indicative of emerging fraud schemes and potentially fraudulent behaviors, such as billing spikes. CMS uses these analytics to develop leads for investigations and to inform administrative actions that can prevent potentially fraudulent payments, such as suspending provider payments. For example, in 2023 and 2024, CMS suspended payments to, and later revoked the enrollment of, 15 providers involved in a scheme that allegedly billed Medicare for more than $4 billion in urinary catheters that were never supplied. Selected private payers GAO spoke with reported using data analytics in ways similar to CMS—namely, to identify anomalous provider billing patterns to generate leads for investigations and to inform actions like payment suspensions.
- CMS estimates that from fiscal years 2022 through 2024, it prevented a total of $11.9 billion in potentially fraudulent Medicare payments by taking administrative actions on providers engaged in potential fraud.
- Here is a link to the GAO report.
- The American Journal of Managed Care tells us
- “Cancers with the highest lethality receive disproportionately lower levels of federal research support, according to a research letter published today in JAMA Network Open.
- “Outcome-weighted metrics (mortality, 5-year survival, MIR) better capture unmet need than incidence alone when assessing cancer burden and urgency.
- “Lung cancers accounted for 151,401 deaths, exceeding pancreatic (49,211), breast (22,606), and prostate (5,219) among the cancers evaluated.
- “Mortality-to-incidence ratios highlighted extreme lethality in SCLC and pancreatic cancer (>0.85), while breast and prostate cancers showed low ratios (<0.10) consistent with higher survivorship.
- “Funding per estimated death was markedly higher for breast ($69,800) and prostate ($126,992) than pancreatic ($8,945) and SCLC ($2,818), supporting a composite allocation framework.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- Radiology Business informs us,
- “Conavi Medical, a Toronto based medtech company, received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for a next-generation hybrid imaging system capable of performing intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and optical coherence tomography (OCT) at the same time.
- “Conavi has carved out its own space in the field of intravascular imaging by developing hybrid systems that save cath labs valuable space by performing two different exams of a patient’s coronary anatomy at once. The company’s original Novasight Hybrid System gained FDA clearance in 2018.” * * *
- “Conavi hopes to start commercializing this next-generation technology and initiate a limited market release in the second half of 2026.”
From the judicial front,
- STAT News reports,
- “A judge is expected to sentence OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma to forfeit $225 million to the Justice Department on Tuesday, clearing the way for the company to finalize a settlement of thousands of lawsuits it faces over its role in the opioid crisis.
- “The penalty was agreed to in a 2020 pact to resolve federal civil and criminal probes it was facing. If the judge signs off, other penalties will not be collected in return for Purdue settling the other lawsuits.
- “After years of legal twists and turns, the settlement was approved by another judge last year and could take effect May 1. It requires members of the Sackler family who own the company to pay up to $7 billion to state, local and Native American tribal governments, some individual victims and others.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- MedPage Today reports,
- “A mobile health intervention helped pregnant patients with overweight or obesity reduce gestational weight gain (GWG), a cluster-randomized trial showed.
- “The weekly rate of GWG was significantly lower in the intervention group versus the standard care group (mean 0.25 vs 0.28 kg/week; mean between-group difference -0.03, 95% CI -0.05 to -0.01), reported Monique M. Hedderson, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente Northern California in Pleasanton, and colleagues.
- “Total GWG was also significantly lower in the intervention group, at a mean of 9.7 kg compared with 10.6 kg in the standard care group (mean between-group difference -0.87, 95% CI -1.40 to -0.34), they wrote in JAMA Network Open.” * * *
- “The Lifestyle, Eating, and Activity in Pregnancy (LEAP) intervention utilizes a smartphone app, wireless scale, and activity tracker to promote healthy eating and increased activity. As a stepped intervention, more intensity is reserved for those on track to gain more weight. All participants are given a personalized calorie target and weekly education topics, and are encouraged to track weight, activity, and diet. Step two adds two weekly personalized chat messages with a lifestyle coach/registered dietitian and step three adds biweekly telephone sessions.
- “LEAP shows “that combining clinician engagement with patient‑facing digital tools can improve gestational weight outcomes in real‑world care settings,” Hedderson said.”
- Medscape points out,
- “The American College of Physicians (ACP) has updated its guidance on screening for breast cancer in asymptomatic average-risk women using recent high-quality clinical recommendations from guideline developers from expert societies around the world.
- “Publishing in the Annals of Internal Medicine, panelists led by Amir Qaseem, MD, PhD, MHA, the ACP’s chief scientific officer and senior vice president of clinical policy, made five recommendations, taking into account age group and breast density category.
- “This updated guidance statement is based on new data and new or updated guidelines evaluated by the ACP since the publication of our 2019 guidance statement, which is over 7 years old,” Qaseem told Medscape Medical News.”
- The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patient knew about appendicitis.
- “There’s a pain in your abdomen. Is it something as simple as gas or is it appendicitis? Four physicians share what to keep in mind about appendicitis.”
- Health Day informs us,
- “The overdose-reversing drug naloxonehas been rightly hailed as a lifesaving breakthrough, saving countless lives from opioid ODs.
- “But a new study warns that the wonder drug has its limits, especially when confronted with overdoses involving the powerful new wave of synthetic opioids like fentanyl.
- “Naloxone may not fully reverse ODs caused by synthetic opioids, researchers report in the May issue of the journal Anesthesiology.
- “As a result, bystanders should be ready to give additional doses of naloxone if the first doesn’t restore an overdose victim’s breathing, researchers said.”
- Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News relates,
- “Researchers from Kindai University in Japan have developed a machine learning model that accurately predicts the origin of diverse cancer types in patients with cancers of unknown primary (CUP) by analyzing CpG-based DNA methylation. Results showed that the model correctly identified the cancer type in about 95% of cases in the test cohort and achieved 87% accuracy when applied to an independent validation cohort from 31 cases representing 17 different cancer types. The work was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting.
- “Our findings suggest that DNA-based approaches can help identify where a cancer may have started, even when the original tumor is not visible,” said Marco A. De Velasco, PhD, a faculty member in the department of genome biology at Kindai University in Japan.”
- STAT News notes,
- “BioAge Labs said Tuesday that its investigational pill for cardiovascular risk prevention significantly reduced inflammation in an early study, as more drug companies target inflammation as a way to treat a range of chronic conditions.
- “In a Phase 1 study of people with obesity and elevated inflammation levels, patients taking a 60-milligram dose of the drug, called BGE-102, experienced an 85% reduction in a measure of inflammation called high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) after one week, and the reduction was maintained three weeks out. That’s a similar effect seen in patients who took a higher 120-mg dose in the study, which the company previously reported.”
- “Additionally, 87% of patients taking the 60-mg dose achieved hs-CRP levels of less than 2 mg/liter, the threshold thought to be associated with a lower risk of cardiovascular complications.
- “High cholesterol and blood pressure have long been known contributors to heart disease, but researchers more recently identified inflammation as a risk factor as well. Companies like BioAge are betting that drugs that can effectively reduce inflammation could one day be as widely used as statins.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- :UnitedHealth Group UNH reported first-quarter results that substantially overshot Wall Street expectations and raised its annual guidance, signaling progress in its financial turnaround.
- The announcement is likely to build investor confidence in the healthcare company’s current direction, a year after UnitedHealth announced an earnings shortfall that touched off an unprecedented share meltdown for the company.
- “Former Chief Executive Stephen Hemsley returned to the top job last May, saying the company needed a reset. He has focused on retrenching and bolstering margins.” * * *
- “UnitedHealth highlighted changes made under Hemsley’s tenure, including replacing almost half the company’s top 100 executives and making substantial artificial-intelligence investments. UnitedHealth said it had struck a deal to take over Alegeus Technologies, a benefits-administration company, without disclosing the financial terms.”
- BioPharma Dive relates,
- “Flagship Pioneering has launched a new biotechnology firm that believes it’s found a way to solve the problems that have long held back genetic medicine.
- “Called Serif Biomedicines, the startup officially debuted on Tuesday armed with $50 million in funding and the ability to make what it refers to as “modified DNA” medicines.
- “According to CEO and co-founder Jacob Rubens, Serif’s drugs are designed to combine the strengths of multiple types of genetic medicines, from gene therapy to the messenger RNA and small-interfering RNA approaches popularized by companies like Moderna and Alnylam Pharmaceuticals. Its treatments consist of two components: finely tuned instructions for a therapeutic protein as well as an mRNA sequence for “co-factors” that can help the treatment get into a cell’s nucleus. They’re sent to cells with the help of fatty shells called lipid nanoparticles, which are commonly used to deliver complex medicines.”
- Adam Fein writes in his Drug Channels blog,
- “Drug Channels Institute’s (DCI’s) latest analysis reveals that PBM-affiliated specialty pharmacies continue to dominate the dispensing of specialty drugs.
- “For 2025, DCI has identified more than 1,900 dispensing locations with specialty pharmacy accreditation from one or both of the two major independent accreditation organizations. The overall number of accredited locations grew by only 3% in 2025, but is more than five times larger than the 2015 figure.
- “However, market share for the dispensing of specialty drugs remains highly concentrated. For 2025, the three largest specialty pharmacies accounted for two-thirds of total prescription revenues from pharmacy-dispensed specialty drugs. These businesses are all owned by vertically integrated organizations that also own a PBM.”
- Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
- “More Wegovy prescriptions are being written as GLP-1 weight loss drugs gain traction across retail, telehealth and direct-to-consumer channels, according to an April 20 report from Truveta Research.
- “The growth follows the FDA’s December approval of oral Wegovy (semaglutide) and other GLP-1 pills. Diverging commercialization strategies from manufacturers are also reshaping how patients access these therapies and how health systems approach formularies and metabolic care programs.”
