Midweek Update

Midweek Update

Photo by Thought Catalog on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The No Surprises Act regulators alert us,
    • “On October 6, 2023, the Departments and OPM issued FAQs About Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 Implementation Part 62 (FAQs Part 62). In FAQs Part 62, the Departments and OPM acknowledged the impact of the TMA III decision on QPAs and the significant resources and challenges associated with recalculating QPAs. Therefore, the FAQs stated that the Departments and OPM would exercise their enforcement discretion under the relevant No Surprises Act provisions for any plan or issuer, or party to a payment dispute in the Federal IDR process, that uses a QPA calculated in accordance with the methodology under the July 2021 interim final rules and guidance in effect immediately before the decision in TMA III, for items and services furnished before May 1, 2024, the first day of the calendar month that is 6 months after the issuance of FAQs Part 62. Under FAQs Part 62, this exercise of enforcement discretion applies to QPAs for purposes of patient cost sharing, providing required disclosures with an initial payment or notice of denial of payment, and providing required disclosures and submissions under the Federal IDR process.
    • “FAQs Part 62 stated that HHS would also exercise enforcement discretion under the relevant No Surprises Act provisions for a provider, facility, or provider of air ambulance services that bills, or holds liable, a participant, beneficiary, or enrollee for a cost-sharing amount based on a QPA calculated using the aforementioned method.”
    • The regulators have extended the safe harbor to services or supplies rendered before November 1, 2024. The regulators do not expect to further extend the safe harbor.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “As part of the government’s quest to improve American eating habits, the Food and Drug Administration is considering requiring food manufacturers to put new labels on the front of packages. The labels might flag certain health risks, such as high levels of salt, sugar or saturated fat.
    • “Don’t expect to see a warning label in your grocery store soon, because the FDA is still weighing its approach. But the agency hopes that clearer food labeling could help us make healthier choices as it tackles the rise of diet-related health problems such as Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses the new HHS rule here.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “More than two decades ago, the shocking results of a major women’s health study challenged the safety of menopause hormones, and overnight, millions of women and their doctors abandoned the drugs — a reluctance that lingers today.
    • “Now, a long-term follow-up of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) shows that the reaction was largely overblown. The new research found that for many younger menopausal women — typically those under 60 — the benefits of the drugs probably outweigh the risks for the short-term treatment of menopause symptoms, including hot flashes and night sweats.
    • “The new analysis, published in JAMA, shows that younger women starting menopause and experiencing symptoms can take hormone treatments for several years with a lower likelihood of adverse effects.
    • “Women in early menopause with bothersome symptoms should not be afraid to take hormone therapy to treat them, and clinicians should not be afraid to prescribe them,” said JoAnn Manson, chief of the division of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the paper’s first author.”
  • The New York Times informs us,
    • “Baby aspirin is routinely prescribed to people who survive heart attacks. But there’s another vulnerable group who benefit from daily low-dose aspirin: pregnant women at risk of developing pre-eclampsia, life-threatening high blood pressure.
    • “It’s a factor in up to one in 20 pregnancies in the United States, and one of the leading causes of maternal mortality nationwide. Pre-eclampsia is the top cause of maternal death among Black women, who die of pregnancy-related complications at rates almost triple those of white women.
    • “But not enough pregnant women are getting the word that low-dose aspirin can help. Now leading experts are hoping to change that.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Extensive testing of pasteurized commercially purchased milk and other dairy products from 38 states has found no evidence of live H5N1 bird flu virus, Food and Drug Administration officials said at a press briefing Wednesday.
    • “The results confirmed findings of earlier testing of a more limited number of samples and add weight to the FDA’s conclusion that pasteurized milk products are safe for consumption despite a widespread outbreak of cows infected with H5N1.
    • “These additional, preliminary results further affirm the safety of the U.S. commercial milk supply,” Donald Prater, acting director of the FDA’s Center of Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, told reporters.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Recurring feelings of anger may increase a person’s risk of developing heart disease by limiting the blood vessels’ ability to open, according to a new study supported by the National Institutes of Health. The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association (JAHA), shows for the first time that anger is linked to this vascular impairment — a precursor to the kind of long-term damage that can lead to heart attack and stroke.
    • “We’ve long suspected, based on observational studies, that anger can negatively affect the heart. This study in healthy adults helps fill a real knowledge gap and shows how this might occur,” said Laurie Friedman Donze, Ph.D., a psychologist and program officer in the Clinical Applications and Prevention Branch of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which funded the study. “It also opens the door to promoting anger management interventions as a way to potentially help stave off heart disease, the leading cause of death in this country.”
    • “While a brief spurt of occasional anger is normal and generally has a benign impact on the heart, it is recurring or frequent anger the researchers said raises concern. “If you’re a person who gets angry all the time, you’re having chronic injuries to your blood vessels,” said study leader Daichi Shimbo, M.D., a cardiologist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City. “It’s these chronic injuries over time that may eventually cause irreversible effects on vascular health and eventually increase your heart disease risk.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive notes,
    • “CVS had a significantly worse first quarter than the healthcare giant — or Wall Street — expected, after its insurance arm failed to adequately prepare for seniors’ high use of medical care, especially in inpatient facilities.
    • “The Rhode Island-based company’s health services segment — usually a reliable driver of growth — also saw its revenue and income fall in the quarter as its pharmacy benefit manager adjusted to the loss of a major contract with insurer Centene.
    • “CVS slashed its earnings expectations for 2024 on Wednesday following the results. It’s the second time the company has lowered financial expectations this calendar year.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “CVS has quietly acquired Hella Health, a startup Medicare Advantage (MA) broker based in New York City, according to a post on LinkedIn.
    • “Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Hella Health CEO and founder Rafal Walkiewicz wrote in the post that the combination allows the healthcare giant to further bolster its suite of technology platforms, especially those offered directly to the senior population.
    • “Through this combination, CVS Health will expand its multi-payer technology platform to include a wide range of insurance offerings, supported by trusted advisors and agents, to provide a simple, direct-to-consumer Medicare shopping and enrollment experience,” Walkiewicz wrote.”
  • The Leapfrog Group released its Spring 2024 Hospital Safety Grades.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “GSK on Wednesday raised its financial forecasts for the year following strong quarterly sales of its vaccines and HIV medicines. 
    • “GSK said vaccine sales surged 16% compared to the same period a year ago, a number driven by revenue totals for its shingles shot Shingrix and RSV vaccine Arexvy. New public immunization programs in Europe and other international market drove sales of Shingrix, while Arexvy continued to take more market share than Pfizer’s rival RSV shot Abrysvo.  
    • “The company now expects its 2024 sales to grow at the higher end of the 5% to 7% range it previously projected, and for annual adjusted earnings per share to climb 8% to 10%. Still, GSK warned that growth could slow later this year amid shifting seasonal patterns for vaccinations and changes in market dynamics.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DCm

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “House Democratic leaders said they would block any effort to remove Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.), moving to protect the Republican leader from retaliation by his hard-right flank following the passage of a sweeping foreign-aid package that included funding for Ukraine.”
  • This is a smart move because accord to what the FEHBlog has been reading, the Democrats are likely to retake the House of Representatives in the fall election.
  • The Journal also relates,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission is challenging hundreds of pharmaceutical patent listings in an effort to smooth the path to more affordable alternatives to brand-name drugs—including blockbusters such as Ozempic and Victoza.
      • “The crackdown is the latest assault against what the agency regards as drugmakers’ patent ploys intended to stall generic competition.
      • “At issue is what is called the Orange Book, a document published by the Food and Drug Administration that lists patents relevant to brand-name pharmaceuticals. Under a law meant to encourage generics, if a generics maker can successfully challenge listed patents, it can be granted a period of exclusivity before other generics are approved. But a challenge to an Orange Book patent, should a brand-name manufacturer decide to fight in court, also delays a generic’s approval for 30 months.
      • “The FTC says that drugmakers needlessly list oodles of extra patents in the Orange Book, delaying generic alternatives and artificially keeping prices high.”
  • HealthLeaders Media adds,
    • “Medicare Part D saved nearly $15 billion over six years with the use of “skinny label” generics, a new report says.
    • “However, the program is imperiled by a lawsuit claiming patent infringement, researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School said in a research letter published on Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine.
    • “The researchers are urging Congress to “reinforce the skinny-label pathway by creating a safe harbor that protects manufacturers engaged in skinny labeling from induced patent infringement laws.”
    • Skinny labels permit the use of generics for conditions that are not specified by brand-name drug makers and allow the cheaper generics to enter the market before the patent of the brand-name drug expires. 
  •  The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force finalized a breast cancer screening recommendation today.
    • The Task Force now recommends that all women get screened for breast cancer every other year starting at age 40 [previously age 50 for USPSTF purposes and 40 for Affordable Care Act purposes] and continuing through age 74. This is a B grade. More research is needed about whether and how additional screening might help women with dense breasts stay healthy and on the benefits and harms of screening in women older than 75. These are I statements.
  • The New York Times adds,
    • “In 2009, the task force raised the age for starting routine mammograms to 50 from 40, sparking wide controversy. At the time, researchers were concerned that earlier screening would do more harm than good, leading to unnecessary treatment in younger women, including alarming findings that lead to anxiety-producing procedures that are invasive but ultimately unnecessary.
    • “But now breast cancer rates among women in their 40s are on the rise, increasing by 2 percent a year between 2015 and 2019, said Dr. John Wong, vice chair of the task force. The panel continues to recommend screening every two years for women at average risk of breast cancer, though many patients and providers prefer annual screening. * * *
    • “Weighing in again on a hotly debated topic, the task force also said there was not enough evidence to endorse extra scans, such as ultrasounds or magnetic resonance imaging, for women with dense breast tissue.
    • “That means that insurers do not have to provide full coverage of additional screening for these women, whose cancers can be missed by mammograms alone and who are at higher risk for breast cancer to begin with. About half of all women aged 40 and older fall into this category.”
  • For Affordable Care Act preventive services coverage purposes, HHS’s Human Resources and Services Administration, not the USPSTF, is the final decision maker regarding the scope of women’s healthcare preventive services.

From the public health and medical research fronts,

  • STAT News lets us know today.
    • “Research is still being done to determine if all pasteurization techniques — there are multiple approaches — inactivate the [H5N1] virus. But the findings so far are reassuring. Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., have reported that while they could find genetic evidence of the virus in milk bought in stores, they could not grow live viruses from that milk, suggesting pasteurization kills H5N1. * * *
    • “But given the concentration of virus that researchers are seeing in milk from infected cows, they believe that raw milk — milk that has not been pasteurized — is an entirely different story.
    • “If cows that produce milk destined for the raw milk market got infected with H5N1, people who consume that milk could drink a large dose of the virus, scientists say. Thijs Kuiken, a pathologist in the department of viroscience at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, said he’s heard of concentrations that would be the equivalent of a billion virus particles per milliliter of milk. He told STAT he thought authorities should ban raw milk sales while the outbreak is underway.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Postpartum depression is a leading cause of maternal death, but its diagnosis and treatment is spotty at best, negligent at worst.
    • “Now San Diego-based start-up Dionysus Digital Health is pitching a blood test to check for the condition, even before symptoms appear. The company says it has pinpointed a gene linking a person’s moods more closely to hormonal changes. The test uses machine learning to compare epigenetics — how genes are expressed — in your blood sample with benchmarks developed during a decade of research into pregnant people who did and didn’t develop postpartum depression.
    • “Researchers at Dionysus’s academic partners, the Royal’s Institute of Mental Health Research and UVA Health, have published peer-reviewedpapers affirming their findings, and the company is partnering with the Department of Defense and the National Institutes of Health for clinical trials, with the eventual goal of making the $250 test widely available and covered by insurance.” 
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • Sleep apnea and low oxygen levels while sleeping are associated with epilepsy that first occurs after 60 years of age, known as late-onset epilepsy, according to a new study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and published in Sleep. The link was independent of other known risk factors for late-onset epilepsy and sleep apnea including hypertension and stroke. The findings may help to better understand the relationship between sleep disorders and late-onset epilepsy, as well as identify potential targets for treatment.
    • “There’s increasing evidence that late-onset epilepsy may be indicative of underlying vascular disease, or neurodegenerative disease, even potentially as a preclinical marker of neurodegenerative disease,” said Rebecca Gottesman, M.D., Ph.D., chief of the Stroke Branch at the NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), and an author on the study. “Compared to other age groups, older adults have the highest incidence of new cases of epilepsy – up to half of which have no clear cause. Sleep apnea is common among people with epilepsy, but the association is not well understood.”
  • and
    • “Researchers have discovered that the smooth muscle cells that line the arteries of people with atherosclerosis can change into new cell types and develop traits similar to cancer that worsen the disease. Atherosclerosis is characterized by a narrowing of arterial walls and can increase risk of coronary artery disease, stroke, peripheral artery disease, or kidney disorders. The findings, supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), could pave the way for the use of anti-cancer drugs to counteract the tumor-like mechanisms driving the buildup of plaque in the arteries, the major cause of cardiovascular disease.
    • “This discovery opens up a whole new dimension for our understanding about therapeutic strategies for the prevention and treatment of atherosclerosis,” said Ahmed Hasan, M.D., Ph.D., program director in the Division of Cardiovascular Sciences at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, part of NIH. “Previous research has suggested that atherosclerosis and cancer may share some similarities, but this association has not been fully described until now.”
  • The Wall Street Journal tells us,
    • “An emerging field of research called chrononutrition indicates that choosing the right foods and meal times may improve our sleep. Some key findings: Eat dinner early. Keep consistent schedules. And, yes, drink milk.
    • You already know that fruits, veggies and lean protein are good for your health. But they can boost your sleep, too. These foods are the basis for the Mediterranean diet, which research shows may improve sleep quality, reduce sleep disturbances and boost sleep efficiency—the amount of time you spend asleep when you are in bed.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Walmart is closing its network of health clinics after failing to make them profitable, in a major setback for the retail giant’s push into healthcare.”Walmart is closing its network of health clinics after failing to make them profitable, in a major setback for the retail giant’s push into healthcare.
    • “Walmart Health launched as a one-store pilot in Georgia in 2019, and has since grown to 51 centers in five states, along with a virtual care offering. Yet the network has shown recent signs of trouble: Earlier this month, Walmart decelerated its expansion plans for the centers, which offer inexpensive, fixed-cost medical services like primary and dental care.
    • “Walmart is now closing the clinics entirely due to a challenging reimbursement environment and escalating operating costs resulting in a lack of profitability, according to a Tuesday press release. * * *
    • “In the end of Walmart Health illustrates that size alone is not a recipe for success in providing health services, according to Forrester’s Trzcinski. Walmart is the largest retailer in the U.S., with revenue of $648 billion in its most recent fiscal year.
    • “Despite building out the clinics, Walmart didn’t invest in driving adoption, including through digital health and customer experience, Trzcinski said. That caused it to fall behind other retailers that are surging ahead, such as Amazon and CVS.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Eli Lilly raised its revenue forecast for the year by $2 billion as sales of its GLP-1 medicines for diabetes and obesity continue to climb rapidly amid surging demand.
    • “The Indianapolis drugmaker currently can’t make its drugs Mounjaro and Zepbound fast enough, indicating in an earnings statement Tuesday that sales growth will “primarily be a function of the quantity the company can produce and ship.”
    • “Lilly is expanding manufacturing and expects greater capacity in the second half of the year. Revenue from Mounjaro, which is sold for diabetes, totaled $1.8 billion in the first quarter, while Zepbound revenue hit $517 million in its first full quarter on the U.S. market as an obesity treatment.”
  • and
    • “Lilly and Novo [Nordisk] aim to maintain their current hold on the market. Both companies are testing several experimental drugs with the goal of launching oral versions or even more effective treatments than their current products.
    • “Novo is already close to completing a Phase 3 trial program testing an oral form of Wegovy. It also has in late-stage development a combination of Wegovy with a compound called cagrilintide that acts on a gut hormone called amylin.
    • “Lilly has two drugs in Phase 3: an oral GLP-1 dubbed orforglipron that is approaching key data readouts next year and an injectable treatment called retatrutide that stimulates GLP-1, GIP and a third hormone known as glucagon. Results in obesity are due in 2026.
    • “Lilly has four experimental drugs in Phase 1 or 2, while Novo has five.
    • “[Lilly and Novo] cover all the bases,” said Clive Meanwell, CEO of Metsera, a newly launched startup that has two obesity drugs in clinical testing. “Our belief is it’s going to be a portfolio play, with mix and match, with different clinical circumstances and different markets.”
    • The article discusses similar projects from other companies.
  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “CMS and the NCQA are extending the quality data submission deadline for health plans by two weeks due to “extraordinary circumstances” caused by the cyberattack on Change Healthcare in late February.
    • “Payers will now have until 5pm Eastern Time on June 28 to report their performance on Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) measures to the two organizations, according to an April 29 memo from CMS. * * *
    • “The Change Healthcare cyberattack has created unprecedented challenges to healthcare organizations across the country,” Eric Schneider, MD, EVP, Quality Measurement and Research Group at NCQA, said in a statement to Becker’s. “This disruptive incident, falling in the middle of the substantial effort and commitment required for quality reporting efforts, has significantly strained resources. Recognizing these extraordinary circumstances and in alignment with CMS, we are granting a deadline extension for the submission of HEDIS Measurement Year 2023 results.” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • MedTech Dive reports
    • “The Food and Drug Administration released a final rule on Mondaystrengthening its authority over laboratory developed tests (LDTs), advancing a policy that has drawn fierce opposition from healthcare industry groups.
    • “The rule amends agency regulations to make explicit that in vitro diagnostics are devices under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, including when the manufacturer of the IVD is a laboratory.
    • “The FDA said it will phase out its enforcement discretion approach for LDTs so that in vitro diagnostics manufactured by a laboratory will generally fall under the same enforcement policy as other tests.”
  • HHS’s Office for Civil Rights issued frequently asked questions about the final ACA Section 1557 rule issued on Friday.
  • Bloomberg lets us know,
    • “The US Department of Labor has rescinded a Trump-era rule that made it easier for small businesses and self-employed people to use cheaper association health plans that don’t comply with all the requirements of the Affordable Care Act. 
    • “The final Biden rule (RIN:1210-AC16) on association health plans was issued by the DOL’s Employee Benefits Security Administration Monday after clearing White House review, and will take effect 60 days after its April 30 publication in the Federal Register.”
  • HHS announced,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), announced $105 million in funding to support more than 100 community-based organizations working to improve maternal and infant health. HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson highlighted the news during a visit to Southside Medical Center, a new Healthy Start awardee, in Atlanta, Georgia. Georgia is the second stop on HRSA’s national Enhancing Maternal Health Initiative tour. Today’s Healthy Start funding announcement will support the health care and social needs of moms and babies in high need communities to help improve community health and tackle the unacceptable disparities in maternal and infant health outcomes. * * *
    • “For the full list of award recipients, visit the Healthy Start awards page.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “After decreasing for 27 years, the number of U.S. residents with tuberculosis has increased every year since 2020, with 9,615 cases recorded last year in the 50 states and D.C., according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”After decreasing for 27 years, the number of U.S. residents with tuberculosis has increased every year since 2020, with 9,615 cases recorded last year in the 50 states and D.C., according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “The finding was based on data from the agency’s National Tuberculosis Surveillance System, which collects information from state and local health departments.
    • Caused by bacteria, tuberculosis usually attacks the lungs and spreads easily from person to person through the air. People who have the disease can spread the bacteria when they cough, sneeze or simply talk. * * *
    • “The latest numbers reflect a 16 percent increase in U.S. tuberculosis cases from 2022 to 2023, and the highest number of TB cases in the country since 2013, the CDC report says. The tally also reflects increases in all age groups and among people born in the United States as well as those born elsewhere, although the report found a larger increase among people born outside the United States vs. U.S.-born individuals (18 percent vs. 9 percent).
    • “Despite the recent increases, the CDC report describes the incidence of TB in the United States as “among the lowest in the world.”
  • The New York Times tells us,
    • “Physical fitness among children and adolescents may protect against developing depressive symptoms, anxiety and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, according to a study published on Monday in JAMA Pediatrics.
    • “The study also found that better performance in cardiovascular activities, strength and muscular endurance were each associated with greater protection against such mental health conditions. The researchers deemed this linkage “dose-dependent”, suggesting that a child or adolescent who is more fit may be accordingly less likely to experience the onset of a mental health disorder.”
  • The CDC updated its online guidance about action to fight antimicrobial resistance.
    • Antimicrobial resistance happens when germs like bacteria and fungi develop the ability to defeat the drugs designed to kill them. That means the germs are not killed and continue to grow. Antimicrobial resistance has been found in every U.S. state and country. Addressing this threat requires continued aggressive action to:
      • Prevent infections in the first place
      • Improve antibiotic and antifungal use to slow the development of resistance
      • Stop the spread of resistance when it does develop
    • We all have a role to play, from travelers, animal owners, and care givers to patients and healthcare providers. Find out how you can help.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Inpatient volume growth across HCA Healthcare’s entire hospital portfolio and other steady gains on payer mix, length of stay and operating expenses have set the large chain on a strong trajectory for 2024, executives told investors Friday.
    • “The 188-hospital for-profit reported first-quarter net income of $1.59 billion ($5.93 per diluted share) and $17.34 billion in revenues.
    • “Those numbers are up from the $1.36 billion ($4.85 per diluted share) and $15.59 billion of the same period last year, and squarely ahead of consensus estimates of $5.09 earnings per share and $16.82 billion in revenues.”
  • and
    • “Teladoc acting CEO Mala Murthy sought to assure investors Thursday that the virtual care giant is poised for future growth even as it faces pressure in a saturated telehealth market.
    • “Following the abrupt departure of longtime CEO Jason Gorevic earlier this month, Teladoc is focused on boosting its top- and bottom-line performance as its shares have come under pressure, down more than 40% year-to-date.
    • “Teladoc is in a time of transition. And, as part of this evolution, the board of directors decided that it was time to look for a new leader for our company, someone to help us write the next chapter in our growth story,” Murthy, also Teladoc’s chief financial officer, said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call Thursday.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Increased reliance on imaging for diagnosis and efficient patient care mixed with higher volumes of patients has left hospitals scrambling to meet demand with the few radiologists they have.
    • “There are over 1,400 vacant radiologist positions posted on the American College of Radiology’s job board, according to a bulletin posted on its website. The total number of active radiology and diagnostic radiology physicians has dropped by 1% between 2007 and 2021, but the number of people in the U.S. per active physician in radiology grew nearly 10%, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. An increase in the Medicare population and a declining number of people with health insurance adds to the problem.”
  • and
    • Demand for Type 2 diabetes drug Ozempic is high across the U.S., but interest varies by state, according to research conducted by Bison Pharmacy
    • Bison Pharmacy, a Canadian-based prescription referral service, analyzed monthly volume data on Google searches for “Ozempic” and “Ozempic price” in each state. 
    • New York is at the top of the list and Mississippi is on the bottom.

Weekend Update

From Washington DC,

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports
    • “Federal regulators on Friday said that they had not yet discovered live bird flu virus in the first batch of retail milk samples they tested, a reassuring indication that the milk on store shelves remains safe despite an outbreak of the virus among dairy cows.
    • “In an online update, the Food and Drug Administration said an initial set of tests looking for live virus, not just genetic fragments, suggested that the pasteurization process was effectively neutralizing the pathogen.
    • “These results reaffirm our assessment that the commercial milk supply is safe,” the F.D.A. wrote in the update, adding that the testing efforts were ongoing.
    • “Officials also tested infant and toddler formula, which incorporate powdered dairy, and did not find the virus, the agency wrote.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced yesterday,
    • “A dose-sparing intradermal mpox vaccination regimen was safe and generated an antibody response equivalent to that induced by the standard regimen at six weeks (two weeks after the second dose), according to findings presented today at the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Global Congress in Barcelona. The results suggest that antibody responses contributed to the effectiveness of dose-sparing mpox vaccine regimens used during the 2022 U.S. outbreak(link is external).”
  • The New York Times explains how our country can improve the rate of vaccinations against Hepatitis C.
    • “Dr. Francis Collins, who headed the National Institutes of Health for decades until retiring in 2021, has been spearheading a White House initiative aimed at eliminating the disease.
    • “In an interview, he said he was motivated by memories of his brother-in-law, Rick Boterf, who died of hepatitis C just before the introduction of the new cures. An outdoorsman, Mr. Boterf endured five years of liver failure waiting for a transplant, and even that procedure wasn’t enough to save him from the destructive virus.
    • “The more I looked at this, the more it just seemed impossible to walk away,” Dr. Collins said.
    • The initiative, which was included in President Biden’s latest budget proposal, calls for about $5 billion to establish a five-year “subscription” contract. The federal government would pay a flat fee and, in return, receive drugs for every patient it enrolled for treatment. * * *
    • “Dr. Collins acknowledged that on its own, a national drug-purchasing agreement like Louisiana’s would not be sufficient to turn the tide.
    • “Anybody who tries to say, ‘Oh, it’s just the cost of the drug, that’s the only thing that’s gotten in the way,’ hasn’t looked at those lessons carefully,” he said. To that end the proposal also calls for a $4.3 billion campaign to raise awareness, train clinicians and promote treatment at health centers, prisons and drug treatment programs.”
  • The New York Times offers an in-depth look at anti-depressant medications. Here’s why an in-depth look is useful reading.
    • “Antidepressants are among the most prescribed medications in the United States. This is, in part, because the number of people diagnosed with depression and anxiety has been on the rise, and prescriptions jumped sharply among some age groups during the pandemic.
    • “Despite the prevalence of these medications, some patients have “significant misconceptions” about how the drugs work, said Dr. Andrew J. Gerber, a psychiatrist and the president and medical director of Silver Hill Hospital in New Canaan, Conn.
    • About 80 percent of antidepressants are prescribed by primary care doctors who have not had extensive training in managing mental illness.
    • “Dr. Paul Nestadt, an associate professor of psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, said patients tell him, “‘You know, Doc, I’ve tried everything.’” But often, he said, “they never got to a good dose, or they were only on it for a week or two.”

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy front,

  • Cybersecurity Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. government and its partners have slowed the swell of ransomware over the last three years, Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said Wednesday at an event.
    • “But the cyclical and persistent threat ransomware poses requires new ways of thinking, Easterly said, speaking at the Institute for Security and Technology’s annual ransomware task force event. Defenders and stakeholders have to turn the lens to software and hardware vendors, according to Easterly.
    • “There’s a lot about the villains. There’s a lot about victims. We do not talk enough about vendors,” she said.
    • “The way we are going to actually drive down the number of attacks, and the number of successful attacks, is if we go upstream and ensure that technology that is deployed and delivered is in fact prioritized to be secure,” Easterly said. “Not features, not speed to market, not driving down costs, but secure.”
  • Here is a link to a related blog post from the CISA Director on this important topic.
  • Cyberscoop adds,
    • ‘The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s vulnerability warning program has issued more than 2,000 alerts to date to organizations that are running software with vulnerabilities being exploited by ransomware gangs, the agency’s director, Jen Easterly, said Wednesday.
    • “Currently running in a pilot phase, the program is mandated by the Cyber Incident Reporting for Critical Infrastructure Act of 2022 and aims to reduce the number of ransomware attacks by getting the owners and operators of vulnerable systems to patch them before they can be infiltrated. 
    • “The warning pilot is focused on reducing the prevalence of ransomware by using our vulnerability scanning tools to let businesses know if they have vulnerabilities that need to be patched,” Easterly said at an event hosted by the Institute for Security and Technology.
    • “Easterly said that since the pilot was launched in January of last year, it has expanded to include CISA’s database of known exploited vulnerabilities as well as common misconfigurations that can be linked to ransomware attacks. 
    • “In a Thursday blog about the warning pilot, CISA found that of the more than 1,700 notifications of vulnerable devices in 2023, 49% were mitigated through either patching, taking offline, or through other measures. The blog also said organizations reduce cyber risk when using CISA’s free cyber hygiene vulnerability scanning service, which monitors the web for vulnerable devices.
    • “Organizations participating in this no-cost service typically reduce their risk and exposure by 40% within the first 12 months and most see improvements in the first 90 days,” CISA said.”

From the cyber vulnerabilities and breaches front,

  • Cybersecurity Dive tells us,
    • “UnitedHealth Group said [on April 22] it paid hackers a ransom in an attempt to protect patient information from disclosure after a cyberattack against its subsidiary Change Healthcare in Februarythe company confirmed to Healthcare Dive on Monday. 
    • “The healthcare behemoth also said patient data was compromised. UnitedHealth found files involved in the cyberattack containing protected health information or personally identifiable information that “could cover a substantial proportion of people in America,” according to a press release. 
    • “UnitedHealth also said 22 screenshots of allegedly stolen files, some containing patient health information, were posted on the dark web for about a week. The healthcare giant said it’s continuing to monitor the internet and the dark web for stolen data. * * *
    • “The company also said it would take on breach reporting and notification requirements for customers whose data may have been exposed in the attack — a big concern for provider groups.”
  • Tech Crunch reports,
    • “U.S. health conglomerate Kaiser is notifying millions of current and former members of a data breach after confirming it shared patients’ information with third-party advertisers, including Google, Microsoft and X (formerly Twitter).
    • “In a statement shared with TechCrunch, Kaiser said that it conducted an investigation that found “certain online technologies, previously installed on its websites and mobile applications, may have transmitted personal information to third-party vendors.”
    • “Kaiser said that the data shared with advertisers includes member names and IP addresses, as well as information that could indicate if members were signed into a Kaiser Permanente account or service and how members “interacted with and navigated through the website and mobile applications, and search terms used in the health encyclopedia.”
    • “Kaiser said it subsequently removed the tracking code from its websites and mobile apps. ***
    • “Kaiser spokesperson Diana Yee said that the organization would begin notifying 13.4 million affected current and former members and patients who accessed its websites and mobile apps. The notifications will start in May in all markets where Kaiser Permanente operates, the spokesperson said.
    • “The health giant also filed a legally required notice with the U.S. government on April 12 but made public on Thursday confirming that 13.4 million residents had information exposed.”
  • Help Net Security informs us,
    • “More organizations hit by ransomware gangs are starting to realize that it doesn’t pay to pay up: “In Q1 2024, the proportion of victims that chose to pay touched a new record low of 28%,” ransomware incident response firm Coveware has found.
    • “Victim organizations are increasingly able to withstand an encryption attack and restore operations without the need for a decryption key, they said, and the stolen data is often leaked or traded even after the victims have paid the ransom, which repeatedly proves that paying up is no guarantee.
    • “LockBit was found to still be holding the stolen data of victims that had paid a ransom, and we have also seen prior Hive victims that had paid the extortion, have their data posted on the Hunters International leak site (a reboot / rebrand of Hive),” the company said, noting that “future victims of data exfiltration extortion are getting more evidence daily that payments to suppress leaks have little efficacy in the short and long term.”

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • Cybersecurity Dive lets us know,
    • “Global median dwell times — measured as the time that hackers remain undetected inside a targeted environment — have fallen to their lowest levels in more than a decade, according to the annual M-Trends report from Google Cloud’s Mandiant, released Tuesday. 
    • “Organizations were able to detect intrusions within a median of 10 days in 2023, compared with 16 days in 2022. Notably the largest improvements came in the Asia-Pacific region, where median dwell times fell to nine days in 2023, compared with 33 in 2022.  
    • :Zero-day vulnerabilities are a hot target for espionage actors as well as financially motivated threat groups. Zero-day usage rose 50% in 2023, compared with the prior year.”
  • and
    • “The majority of companies, 4 in 5, have suffered a cyberattack that wasn’t fully covered under their cyber insurance policy, according to an analysis by cyber risk quantification firm CYE.
    • “On average, each insurance gap left more than three-quarters of a breach uncovered, CYE said in a report released Wednesday. The research, which analyzed 101 breaches across various sectors, revealed an average of $27.3 million in uncovered losses per incident.
    • “This study underscores how many companies rely on cyber insurance to cover the losses incurred as a result of cyber incidents and are then taken by surprise when they find that their insurance only covers a small portion,” Nimrod Partush, vice president of data science at CYE, said in a press release.” 
  • Here is a link to Dark Reading’s latest CISO Corner.
  • SC Media considers whether the Change Healthcare case finally will make providers do a business impact analysis.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Perhaps the most convoluted provision in the Affordable Care Act is its individual non-discrimimination clause, Section 1557. The Obama Administration issued an implementing rule. The Trump Administration replaced the Obama Administration’s rule, and today the Biden Administration has replaced the Trump Administration rule.
    • Of note, “[f]or the first time, the Department will consider Medicare Part B payments as a form of Federal financial assistance for purposes of triggering civil rights laws enforced by the Department, ensuring that health care providers and suppliers receiving Part B funds are prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, sex and disability.”
    • HHS will refer FEHB and FEDVIP complaints to OPM.
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Medtronic said Friday that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a new spinal-cord implant that relieves chronic pain, a bid to expand into a patient population that relies heavily on medications like opioids.
    • “The new device works by delivering an electrical pulse to the spinal cord, interrupting pain signals before they reach the brain in patients suffering from back, cervical and nerve damage. While earlier versions of the device provided a constant level of stimulation, Medtronic’s new product can read signals from nerve fibers and automatically adjust the intensity — a feature designed to avoid uncomfortable jolts when a patient sneezes, coughs or laughs.
    • “It’s like listening for whispers at a rock concert,” David Carr, a Medtronic vice president, said in an interview. * * *
    • “Medtronic’s Inceptiv contains a lithium battery that can be recharged through the skin, and two leads with electrodes — some to read the signals from nerve fibers, and others to deliver the electrical pulse. The device can adjust the level of stimulation 50 times a second, according to the company.
    • “Inceptiv is “the world’s smallest and thinnest fully implantable” spinal-cord stimulator, Medtronic said.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved a new gene therapy for hemophilia, clearing Pfizer’s Beqvez for certain people with the less common “B” form of the bleeding condition.
    • “Beqvez is for adults with moderate to severe hemophilia B who currently use drugs to prevent bleeds or have repeated, spontaneous bleeding. Eligible individuals also must be tested to determine whether they have antibodies that neutralize Beqvez’s effects.
    • “Pfizer set the treatment’s list price at $3.5 million, a company spokesperson confirmed. That matches the cost of Hemgenix, the other available gene therapy for hemophilia B. Pfizer will offer insurers a warranty providing “financial protections” if Beqvez doesn’t work or its effects don’t last, the spokesperson wrote in an email, without providing details.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control lets us know today,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare continues to decrease across most areas of the country. This week, 0 jurisdictions experienced high activity compared to 1 jurisdiction experiencing high activity the previous week. No jurisdictions experienced very high activity. 
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed influenza are decreasing. Emergency department visits with COVID-19 and RSV remain stable at low levels.  
    • “Nationally, COVID-19, influenza, and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week. 
    • “Nationally, the COVID-19 wastewater viral activity level, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, remains low.” 
  • American Hospital Association News adds,
    • “Adults age 65 and older are encouraged to receive an updated dosage of the COVID-19 vaccine, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced April 25. The update provides protection against the JN.1 and other circulating variants of the virus, and should be administered at least four months following the previous dosage. The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended the additional dose in February.”
  • On a related note, the CDC reports today
    • H5N1 bird flu is widespread in wild birds worldwide and is causing outbreaks in poultry and U.S. dairy cows with one recent human case in a U.S. dairy worker.
    • While the current public health risk is low, CDC is watching the situation carefully and working with states to monitor people with animal exposures.
    • CDC is using its flu surveillance systems to monitor for H5N1 activity in people.
  • Medscape tells us,
    • “The glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist semaglutide (Wegovy) not only induced weight loss but also improved knee pain in people with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and obesity, according to results from the STEP 9 study reported at the World Congress on Osteoarthritis (OARSI 2024).
    • “From baseline to week 68, the mean change in knee pain assessed using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC) pain score was a reduction of 41.7 points for semaglutide and a decrease of 27.5 points for a matching placebo. The estimated treatment difference of 14.1 points between the groups was statistically significant (< .001).
    • “As for weight loss, this also fell by a significantly greater amount in the people treated with semaglutide vs those given placebo, with respective reductions of 13.7% and 3.2% from baseline, with an estimated 10.5% greater weight loss with semaglutide.
    • “The interesting thing is whether there’s a specific action of GLP-1 receptor agonists on the joint, not through the weight loss but by itself,” principal study investigator Henning Bliddal, MD, DMSc, told Medscape Medical News ahead of reporting the results at OARSI 2024.”
  • The National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) Director writes in her blog,
    • “In Alzheimer’s disease, a buildup of sticky amyloid proteins in the brain clump together to form plaques, causing damage that gradually leads to worsening dementia symptoms. A promising way to change the course of this disease is with treatments that clear away damaging amyloid plaques or stop them from forming in the first place. In fact, the Food and Drug Administration recently approved the first drug for early Alzheimer’s that moderately slows cognitive decline by reducing amyloid plaques. Still, more progress is needed to combat this devastating disease that as many as 6.7 million Americans were living with in 2023.
    • Recent findings from a study in mice, supported in part by NIH and reported in Science Translational Medicine , offer another potential way to clear amyloid plaques in the brain. The key component of this strategy is using the brain’s built-in cleanup crew for amyloid plaques and other waste products: immune cells known as microglia that naturally help to limit the progression of Alzheimer’s. The findings suggest it may be possible to develop immunotherapies—treatments that use the body’s immune system to fight disease—to activate microglia in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s and clear amyloid plaques more effectively.
    • In their report, the research team—including Marco Colonna , Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and Jinchao Hou, now at Children’s Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine in Zhejiang Province, China—wrote that microglia in the brain surround plaques to create a barrier that controls their spread. Microglia can also destroy amyloid plaques directly. But how microglia work in the brain depends on a fine-tuned balance of signals that activate or inhibit them. In people with Alzheimer’s, microglia don’t do their job well enough.  * * *
    • [O]verall, these findings add to evidence that immunotherapies of this kind could be a promising way to treat Alzheimer’s. This strategy may also have implications for treating other neurodegenerative conditions characterized by toxic debris in the brain, such as Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and Huntington’s disease. The hope is that this kind of research will ultimately lead to more effective treatments for Alzheimer’s and other conditions affecting the brain.
  • NIH announced
    • “One injected dose of an experimental malaria monoclonal antibody was 77% effective against malaria disease in children in Mali during the country’s six-month malaria season, according to the results of a mid-stage clinical trial. The trial assessed an investigational monoclonal antibody developed by scientists at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and results appear in The New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “A long-acting monoclonal antibody delivered at a single health care visit that rapidly provides high-level protection against malaria in these vulnerable populations would fulfill an unmet public health need,” said Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of NIH.”
  • and
    • “In a new analysis of genetic susceptibility to kidney cancer, an international team of researchers has identified 50 new areas across the genome(link is external) that are associated with the risk of developing kidney cancer. These insights could one day be used to advance our understanding of the molecular basis of kidney cancer, inform screening efforts for those at highest risk, and identify new drug targets. The study was led by scientists at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Berkeley Public Health informs us,
    • “Does paying more to have your outpatient surgery done at a hospital, rather than at a freestanding surgical center, lead to better care? A new study led by James C. Robinson, professor of health economics at UC Berkeley School of Public Health, says no.
    • “In an investigation published in the April issue of The American Journal of Managed Care, Robinson and his team found that the higher prices typically charged by hospitals for four common surgeries were not justified by higher quality, as measured by the rate of post-surgical complications.
    • “The researchers analyzed more than 2 million national Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance claims from 2019-2020 for patients aged 18 to 65 who received a colonoscopy, knee or shoulder arthroscopy, or cataract removal surgery, and calculated the prices and rates of complications for each procedure.
    • “They found large differences in price, but very little difference in the rate of post-surgery complications.”
  • Health IT Analytics tells us about the top twelve ways that artificial intelligence will be used in healthcare.
  • HR Dive offers a tracker of state and local laws requiring employers to disclose pay or pay ranges.
    • “Pay disclosure laws have taken several forms. Some require employers to provide the minimum and maximum pay, or a pay range, for a given job upon the request of an applicant. Others mandate this practice without requiring candidates to ask first. The latest wave of laws now require employers to include this information in all applicable job postings.”
  • Per Biopharma Dive,
    • “U.S. Humira sales fell 40% year over year during the first three months of 2024, to about $1.8 billion, as biosimilar copycats put pressure on AbbVie’s top-selling drug, the company said Friday in its first quarter earnings report.
    • “The declines were “in line” with what the company had anticipated for its inflammatory disease drug, AbbVie commercial chief Jeffrey Stewart said in a call with investors. Humira now faces 10 copycat competitors in the U.S., the first of which launched Jan. 31, 2023.
    • “Stewart said the company also expected a recent decision by CVS Health, whose pharmacy benefit manager is the country’s largest by prescription claims, to remove Humira from its national pharmacy effective April 1. Although that has meant Humira’s market share dropped from 96% to 81% over two weeks, Stewart said some of the shift went to other branded medicines, like AbbVie’s products Skyrizi and Rinvoq.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues points out,
    • Centene reported nearly $1.2 billion in net income in the first quarter and a more than 18% decrease in Medicaid membership year over year, according to its first-quarter earnings posted April 26.
    • Total revenues in the first quarter were $40.4 billion, up 3.9% year over year.
    • Total net earnings in the first quarter were nearly $1.2 billion, up 2.9% since the same period last year.
    • The company raised its year-end adjusted EPS guidance to at least $6.80.
    • The company’s medical loss ratio was 87.1% in the first quarter and 87% during the same period last year.”
  • According to Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The new year is “off to a good start,” for Community Health Systems, which reported a somewhat narrowed $41 million net loss (-$0.32 per diluted share) and a solid uptick in operating revenues for its first quarter.
    • “The 71-hospital for-profit system had logged a $51 million net loss during the same period last year, which, at the time, CHS attributed to a bump in Medicare Advantage patient volume.
    • “After excluding adjustments related to impairment losses and business transformation costs, the company landed at a net loss of $0.14 per share, which was about in line with consensus estimates.
    • “However, CHS shared a rosier picture when it came to operating revenues. Its three-month net of $3.14 billion beat estimates by about $50 million and was a 1% increase over last year.”
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Universal Health Services delivered first quarter earnings results Wednesday that beat analysts’ estimates on stronger than expected revenue and volume metrics across its behavioral health and acute service lines.”Universal Health Services delivered first quarter earnings results Wednesday that beat analysts’ estimates on stronger than expected revenue and volume metrics across its behavioral health and acute service lines.
    • “UHS increased its same facility net revenues for its acute care and behavioral care service lines by 9.6% and 10.4%, respectively, during the first quarter of 2024 compared to the same period last year.
    • “However, the operator could suffer a “material” financial hit should the operator fail to lower a March $535 million judgment against a subsidiary, UHS disclosed in its earnings report. The for-profit health system is currently appealing the judgment in post-trial motions, said CFO Steve Filton during the earnings call.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “American women are giving birth at record-low rates. 
    • “The total fertility rate fell to 1.62 births per woman in 2023, a 2% decline from a year earlier, federal data released Thursday showed. It is the lowest rate recorded since the government began tracking it in the 1930s. * * *
    • “Total fertility estimates the number of children a woman would give birth to in her lifetime. The estimates don’t account for what women actually decide in later years, said Brady Hamilton, a co-author of the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics.
    • “The number of births last year was the lowest since 1979, according to provisional data. About 3.59 million children were born in the U.S. in 2023, a 2% drop compared with 3.66 million in 2022. 
    • “The figures are provisional and likely to adjust slightly when final data are released later this year.”
  • The Congressional Budget Office shared a new presentation that “provides a brief summary of CBO’s long-term projections of federal health care spending, the distribution of federal subsidies for health care, the drivers of cost growth in health care, and options for reducing federal spending on health care.”
  • The Internal Revenue Service released a fact sheet that “provides answers to frequently asked questions (FAQs) addressing the tax treatment of work-life referral services (sometimes also called caregiver or caretaker navigation services) provided by an employer to an employee. Under certain circumstances, the value of such referral services can be excluded from gross income and employment taxes as a de minimis fringe benefit.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The AP reports,
    • “It’s easier than ever for doctors to prescribe a key medicine for opioid addiction since the U.S. government lifted an obstacle last year. But despite the looser restrictions and the ongoing overdose crisis, a new study finds little change in the number of people taking the medication.
    • “Researchers analyzed prescriptions filled by U.S. pharmacies for the treatment drug buprenorphine. The number of prescribers rose last year after doctors no longer needed to get a special waiver to prescribe the drug, while the number of patients filling prescriptions barely budged.
    • “Buprenorphine, which helps with cravings, comes in a pill or film that dissolves under the tongue. It costs about $100 a month. A common version of buprenorphine is Suboxone. Nurse practitioners, physician assistants and doctors can prescribe it.
    • “People think this is a very complicated medicine and that it requires some sort of complex knowledge to use, when that’s just not the case,” said Dr. Ryan Marino of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland who has treated hundreds of people with buprenorphine. He had no role in the study.”
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “Taste dysfunction was gone 1 year after exposure to COVID-19, but smell loss remained for some people, a national cross-sectional study showed.
    • “Empirically measured taste function didn’t differ between individuals who had acute SARS-CoV-2 infection a year earlier and uninfected people, reported Shima Moein, MD, PhD, of Sensonics International in New Jersey and the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and co-authors.
    • “However, olfactory dysfunction was present in 30.3% of individuals with prior COVID-19 compared with 21% of those who had no history of COVID infection (OR 1.64, 95% CI 1.18-2.27), Moein and colleagues noted in JAMA Network Open.
    • “Long-term taste loss after COVID may reflect damage to olfactory epithelium, not taste buds, the researchers suggested. Olfactory deficits were greatest for those diagnosed with COVID when the original untyped and Alpha viral variants were prevalent.
    • “Our study sheds light on a critical yet often overlooked aspect of the COVID-19 pandemic: the pervasive impact of smell loss on affected individuals,” Moein told MedPage Today. “Despite its prevalence, smell loss has remained largely neglected by healthcare professionals and policymakers, leading to a lack of awareness and support for affected individuals.”
  • and
    • “A majority of pregnant individuals or those trying to become pregnant were interested in getting a maternal respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine once it became available, a nationwide survey found.
    • “Of 1,528 respondents, 54% said they were “very likely” to get an RSV vaccine during pregnancy, Jennifer Saper, MD, of the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago, and colleagues reported in Pediatrics.
    • “I am excited by the findings that over half of pregnant, or trying-to-be-pregnant people are interested in the RSV vaccine in pregnancy,” Saper told MedPage Today in an email. “This means to me that there are a lot of opportunities to try to protect infants against RSV.”
  • The Dana Farber Cancer Institute shares five things to know about advances in the treatment of multiple myeloma.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb will cut 6% of its workforce in a restructuring meant to save $1.5 billion in costs by the end of next year. 
    • “The layoffs will affect some 2,200 employees, the company said Thursday. It’s also trimming its pipeline of experimental medicines, consolidating its array of offices and laboratories and reducing “third party” spending.
    • “Our focus remains on strengthening the company’s long-term growth profile,” said company CEO Christopher Boerner, in a statement on the restructuring, which was announced alongside earnings for the first quarter.” 
  • and
    • “AstraZeneca’s revenue and profits grew at a rapid clip over the first three months of the year, beating Wall Street expectations as use of the British drugmaker’s flagship cancer drugs widened. 
    • “Total company revenue climbed 17% to $12.7 billion and operating profit jumped 22% to $3.1 billion, compared to the first quarter last year, the company said.
    • “Both the revenue and profit figures surpassed consensus forecasts by 7%, according to a note from Leerink Partners analyst Andrew Berens. The strong earnings were a recovery from the fourth quarter, when lower-than-expected sales and higher costs meant AstraZeneca missed profit estimates.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Evernorth’s Accredo arm will make a Humira biosimilar available to patients with no out-of-pocket costs, the company announced Thursday.
    • “Accredo is the specialty pharmacy segment within Evernorth Health Services, which also houses Express Scripts, eviCore data analytics and MDLIVE telehealth services. [Cigna owns Evernorth.] Beginning this June, the low- and high-concentration biosimilar will be produced for Evernorth’s private label distributor, Quallent Pharmaceuticals, in partnership with multiple manufacturers. * * *
    • “Most patients will be able to secure the biosimilar products for $0 out-of-pocket through the copay assistance programs offered at Quallent beginning in June, Evernorth said.”
  • and
    • “Walgreens is expanding its specialty pharmacy services to offer gene and cell therapy services, supported by a dedicated 18,000-square-foot center in Pittsburgh, the company announced Thursday.
    • “The service is part of the retail pharmacy company’s newly integrated business unit, Walgreens Specialty Pharmacy, that rolls up all its specialty pharmacy segment assets, including AllianceRx. The new business, formerly called AllianceRx Walgreens Pharmacy, is under the Walgreens U.S. retail pharmacy segment.
    • “Walgreens said its integrated model enables it to work with payers, health plans and pharma with a specialty pharmacy offering independent of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs).”
  • Beckers Health IT informs us,
    • “UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Virtual Care is shutting down, Endpoints News reported April 24.
    • “News of the closure of the company’s telehealth business came shortly after Optum employees took to social media beginning April 18 regarding a reduction in force they say occurred across the organization.
    • “Virtual care has been and will continue to be a core part of our comprehensive, integrated care delivery model designed to provide care to people where, when and how they prefer,” an Optum spokesperson told Becker’s. “We continually review the capabilities and services we offer to meet the growing and evolving needs of our businesses and the people we serve. As always, we will support affected team members with job placement resources and seek to deploy them where possible to any open roles within the company.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Mel on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Here’s a link to a the brief text of Senate bill 4811 that would allow over 100,000 reservists and National Guard members who also are federal employees to transfer from the FEHB to the lower cost Tricare Reserve Select healthcare program effective January 1, 2025.
  • Kevin Moss, writing in Govexec, points out the advantages of FEHB high deductible health plans.
  • Beckers Hospital Review alerts us,
    • “A Senate committee opened an investigation into Novo Nordisk’s list prices for Ozempic and Wegovy, Novo Nordisk’s diabetes and weight loss drugs. 
    • “In an April 24 letter to Novo Nordisk’s CEO, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions said Ozempic and Wegovy are “exorbitantly expensive,” which restricts access to the drugs for millions of Americans. 
    • “In the U.S., a four-week supply of Ozempic costs $969, and Wegovy is $1,349. That’s up to 15 times more than what Novo Nordisk charges in Canada, Europe and Japan, the letter said. 
    • “In 2023, pharmacies, clinics and hospitals spent more than $38 billion on the two products, which contain the same drug, semaglutide. They were the No. 1 pharmaceutical expense for U.S. healthcare, according to research published April 24.”
  • STAT News confirms,
    • “Spending on GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy ballooned last year and they’re set to cost the U.S. health care system and the federal government still more this year and beyond, two new reports released Wednesday show.
    • “One study from the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists found that GLP-1 treatments were a main driver of the increase in overall drug spending by health entities such as pharmacies and hospitals last year. In particular, expenditures on Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide — sold as Ozempic for diabetes and Wegovy for obesity — doubled to $38.6 billion, making the drug the top-selling medicine in 2023.
    • “The other report, by health policy research organization KFF, looked at the impact of the recent approval of Wegovy to prevent cardiovascular complications. Medicare is barred from covering drugs for weight loss purposes, but the new approval means the federal payer can now cover Wegovy when prescribed to reduce heart risks. As a result, Medicare could spend $2.8 billion in a year on the single drug, the researchers conservatively estimate.
    • “Taken together, the reports provide a window into the pressure that GLP-1 drugs could place on overall health care spending going forward, especially as more people take the medications. The treatments have been in short supply, but drugmakers are ramping up manufacturing capacity to meet the unprecedented demand from patients. The pharma companies are also seeking approval for even more indications like heart failure and sleep apnea.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved the sale of an antibiotic for the treatment of urinary tract infections in women, giving U.S. health providers a powerful new tool to combat a common infection that is increasingly unresponsive to the existing suite of antimicrobial drugs.
    • “The drug, pivmecillinam, has been used in Europe for more than 40 years, where it is often a first-line therapy for women with uncomplicated U.T.I.’s, meaning the infection is confined to the bladder and has not reached the kidneys. The drug will be marketed in the U.S. as Pivya and will be made available by prescription to women 18 and older. * * *
    • Utility Therapeutics, the U.S. company that acquired the rights to pivmecillinam, said it would be available in 2025. The company is also seeking F.D.A. approval for an intravenous version of the drug that is used for more serious infections and is usually administered in a hospital setting.
    • “Health practitioners said they were elated to have another tool in their arsenal given the growing challenge of antimicrobial resistance, which makes existing medications less effective as pathogens mutate in ways that allow them to survive a course of antibiotics.”
  • As we learned yesterday, “Day One Biopharmaceuticals drug Ojemda is now FDA-approved for advanced pediatric low-grade glioma, the most common type of brain cancer in children. The regulatory decision for Ojemda covers a broader swath of patients than a drug combination from Novartis approved for treating this childhood cancer.” MedCity News adds,
    • “Ojemda is available as an immediate-release tablet or an oral suspension, both administered once weekly. Dosing of the Day One drug is according to body surface area, which is consistent with dosing for other pediatric medications, Blackman said. Day One has set a $33,816 wholesale price for a 28-day supply. That means the annual cost of the therapy will top $440,000. Ojemda’s price is the same for all packages of the drug and will not change as a child grows and needs higher doses, Chief Commercial Officer Lauren Merendino said.
    • “The two formulations of Ojemda can be taken at home, which minimizes disruption to the lives of patients and families, Merendino said. Day One’s goal is to establish Ojemda as the physician’s first choice of therapy for pLGG. Merendino said the drug should become available in about two weeks.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Dairy cows must be tested for bird flu before moving across state lines, under a federal order issued Wednesday, as evidence mounts that the virus is more widespread than feared among cows in the United States.
    • Biden administration officials said the move is meant to contain transmission of the virus known as H5N1 and to reduce the threat to livestock, but they maintained that the risk to humans remains low. * * *
    • “An order issued by the U.S. Agriculture Department that takes effect Monday requires every lactating dairy cow to be tested before moving across state lines. Cows carrying the virus would have to wait 30 days and test negative before being moved, officials said. Positive test results would trigger additional requirements for herd owners to disclose information, including the movement of animals, to aid epidemiologic investigations, and for laboratories and state veterinarians to report cases to the USDA.
    • “Requiring positive test reporting will help USDA better understand this disease and testing before interstate movement will limit the spread of the virus,” Mike Watson, administrator of the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, told reporters.
    • “This is an evolving situation, and we are treating it seriously and with urgency,” he said.”
  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans discusses “What Health Plan Sponsors Should Know About the Emerging Mental Health Needs of Youth.”
  • The National Cancer Institute released its latest Cancer Information Highlights.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “In a proof-of-concept study, researchers demonstrated the effectiveness of a potential new therapy for Timothy syndrome, an often life-threatening and rare genetic disorder that affects a wide range of bodily systems, leading to severe cardiac, neurological, and psychiatric symptoms as well as physical differences such as webbed fingers and toes. The treatment restored typical cellular function in 3D structures created from cells of people with Timothy syndrome, known as organoids, which can mimic the function of cells in the body. These results could serve as the foundation for new treatment approaches for the disorder. The study, supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), appears in the journal Nature.
    • “Not only do these findings offer a potential road map to treat Timothy syndrome, but research into this condition also offers broader insights into other rare genetic conditions and mental disorders,” said Joshua A. Gordon, M.D., Ph.D., director of the National Institute of Mental Health, part of NIH.”
  • A primary care expert writing in Medscape offers a commentary on the new Shield blood test available for colon cancer screening.
    • “We will need to be clear [to patients] that the blood test is not yet endorsed by the USPSTF or any major guideline group and is a second-line test that will miss most precancerous polyps. As with the stool tests, it is essential to emphasize that a positive result must be followed by diagnostic colonoscopy. To addend the cancer screening maxim I mentioned before, the blood test is not the best test for CRC, but it’s probably better than no test at all.”
  • Health IT Analytics tells us,
    • “Researchers from the University of Virginia (UVA) have developed a machine learning tool designed to assess and predict adverse outcome risks for patients with advanced heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), according to a recent study published in the American Heart Journal.
    • “The research team indicated that risk models for HFrEF exist, but few are capable of addressing the challenge of missing data or incorporating invasive hemodynamic data, limiting their ability to provide personalized risk assessments for heart failure patients.
    • “Heart failure is a progressive condition that affects not only quality of life but quantity as well,” explained Sula Mazimba, MD, an associate professor of medicine at UVA and cardiologist at UVA Health, in the news release. “All heart failure patients are not the same. Each patient is on a spectrum along the continuum of risk of suffering adverse outcomes. Identifying the degree of risk for each patient promises to help clinicians tailor therapies to improve outcomes.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Prices for surgery, intensive care and emergency-room visits rise after hospital mergers. The increases come out of your pay. 
    • “Hospitals have struck deals in recent years to form local and regional health systems that use their reach to bargain for higher prices from insurers. Employers have often passed the higher rates onto employees. 
    • “Such price increases added an average of $204 million to national health spending in the year after mergers of nearby hospitals, according to a study published Wednesday by American Economic Review: Insights. 
    • “Workers cover much of the bill, said Zack Cooper, an associate professor of economics at Yale University who helped conduct the study. Employers cut into wagesand trim jobs to offset rising insurance premiums, he said. “The harm from these mergers really falls squarely on Main Street,” Cooper said. 
    • “Premiums are rising at their fastest pace in more than a decade, driven up by persistently high inflation across the economy. Rising costs have fueled contentious negotiations that have led some hospitals and insurers to cancel contracts, leaving patients in the lurch. 
    • “Hospital mergers make the price pressures worse.” 
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Biogen has seen “encouraging early trends” in the launch of its postpartum depression pill Zurzuvae, revealing in first quarter earnings drug sales that surpassed the estimates of Wall Street analysts.
    • “Biogen said sales of Zurzuvae between January and March hit $12 million, up from $2 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 and doubling consensus estimates of $5 million to $6 million. The company didn’t, however, reveal the number of prescriptions filled for Zurzuvae, making demand for the drug difficult to track. 
    • “Zurzuvae, which was discovered by Biogen partner Sage Therapeutics and approved by the Food and Drug Administration last August, is the only pill available specifically meant to treat postpartum depression, or PPD. But its sales prospects are uncertain, as the condition often goes undiagnosed, and many who are diagnosed don’t receive treatment.”  
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “A year ago, when Novo Nordisk announced it would cut the price of multiple insulin products by up to 75%, President Biden, lawmakers, and patient groups all counted the move as a win.
    • But several months later, Novo decided to discontinue one of those products, the basal insulin Levemir.
    • “Though the insulin won’t officially be off the market until the end of this year, patients are already running into supply disruptions and insurance cutoffs, leaving them with few options. The discontinuation, which is happening only in the U.S., has now drawn alarm from some Democratic senators, who sent a letter to Novo last week demanding an explanation.
    • “The turn of events highlights a key gap in policy efforts: Even if officials can get drugmakers to cut prices, the companies can choose to just pull a drug off the market, without guaranteeing that other manufacturers will continue to make the compound.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “Humana reported $741 million in net income in the first quarter of 2024. 
    • “The company published its first quarter earnings report April 24, beating investor expectations. In Q1 2023, Humana posted $1.2 billion in net income.
    • “Total revenue in the first quarter was $29.6 billion, up 10.7% year over year. 
    • “Humana’s medical loss ratio was 88.9% in the first quarter, which the company projects will rise to about 90% for the full year.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “Cleveland Clinic’s eHospital program has expanded and now monitors 248 patient beds in ICUs and other units across the organization’s network.
    • “The eHospital program launched in 2014 as a pilot in one intensive care unit. The program is centered around a component known as the “bunker,” an operations center on Cleveland Clinic’s main campus. The operations center is staffed from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. daily by a team consisting of two critical care nurses and a physician. Their primary responsibility is to monitor patients across various ICU units within the Cleveland Clinic network.”
  • and identifies the 25 most expensive hospital drugs.
    • “Keytruda (pembrolizumab) was nonfederal hospitals’ costliest drug expense in 2023, according to research published April 24 in the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy
    • “In 2021 and 2022, COVID-19 drug Veklury (remdesivir) was the No. 1 pharmaceutical expense for the nation’s hospitals. Most medicines on the list saw modest changes from the prior year except for TNKase (tenecteplase), a cardiovascular therapy that cost hospitals 87.9% more in 2023.” 

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “Enrollees in the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) program just began seeing better coverage of in-vitro fertilization (IVF) for the first time this year. But some members of Congress are looking to take things a step further.
    • “More than 175 House and Senate Democrats are urging the Office of Personnel Management to require every FEHB carrier to expand their offerings and cover costs for both infertility treatments and medications, starting in plan year 2025.
    • “That requirement “would reflect the reality that IVF is one of the most effective treatments for families struggling with infertility, and growing in popularity, with its usage nearly doubling from 2012 to 2021,” the lawmakers, led by Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) and Sen Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), wrote in a letter to OPM Tuesday.”
  • The Congressional letter does not reflect the fact that at least one option of many large FEHB plans do cover IVF treatments and likely more plans will offer that coverage for 2025 due to competition because growing families are good FEHB customers.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services released the 2024 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention (National Strategy) and accompanying Federal Action Plan. * * * To learn more about the 2024 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention and Federal Action Plan, visit www.hhs.gov/nssp.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “a new initiative aimed to help reimagine the home environment as an integral part of the health care system. The Home as a Health Care Hub is intended to enable solutions that seamlessly integrate medical devices and health care, prevention and wellness into people’s lives and may: 
      • “Help medical device developers consider novel design approaches. 
      • “Aid providers to consider opportunities to extend care options and educate patients.
      • “Generate discussions on value-based care paradigms.
      • “Open opportunities to bring clinical trials and other evidence generation processes to underrepresented communities.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission April 23 voted 3-2 to issue a final rule that would ban as an unfair method of competition contractual terms that prohibit workers from pursuing certain employment after their contract with an employer ends. The final rule does not apply to existing agreements with executives earning more than $151,164 annually who are in policymaking positions. In addition, although the Commission recognized that it does not have jurisdiction over not-for-profit entities, it reserved the right to evaluate an entity’s non-profit status and noted that some “entities that claim tax-exempt nonprofit status may in fact fall under the Commission’s jurisdiction.” Specifically, it stated that “some portion of the 58% of hospitals that claim tax-exempt status as nonprofits and the 19% of hospitals that are identified as State or local government hospitals in the data cited by AHA likely fall under the Commission’s jurisdiction and the final rule’s purview.”
    • “The rule takes effect 120 days after publication in the Federal Register and includes model language that employers can use to communicate to workers.  The United States Chamber of Commerce has already indicated that it will file suit to challenge the final rule.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds
  • HR Dive notes,
    • “The U.S. Department of Labor said Tuesday it will publish a final rule raising the Fair Labor Standards Act’s minimum annual salary threshold for overtime pay eligibility in a two-step process. Starting July 1, the threshold will increase from $35,568 to $43,888 per year. It will then increase to $58,656 on Jan. 1, 2025.
    • “The changes will expand overtime pay eligibility to millions of U.S. workers, the agency said. DOL’s 2025 threshold represents a jump of about 65% from the Trump administration’s 2019 rule and is slightly higher than the $55,068 mark that DOL proposed in 2023.
    • “The threshold will automatically update every three years using current wage data — which would next occur on July 1, 2027 —  but DOL said in the proposed rule that updates may be temporarily delayed if the department chooses to engage in rulemaking to change its methodology or update mechanism.”
  • Per FedWeek,
    • “The inspector general’s office at OPM has posted a warning against calling a phone number once associated with the agency’s Employee Express FEHB enrollment site (888-353-9450), saying the number “is currently in use by fraudsters/bad actors who have practiced financial exploitation tactics.”
    • “This phone number was provided on U.S. Department of State human resources notices to employees and Foreign Service retirees. It may also be or have been provided on other participating federal agencies’ human resources or information. This customer service phone number is no longer in use by OPM or the federal government,” it says.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports, “Removing ovaries with a hysterectomy might increase risk of heart disease, stroke and dementia.”
    • “A removal of the ovaries before menopause and before age 46 years may cause an acceleration of the aging processes across many organs, for example, the brain, and many tissues of the body, for example, the bones,” says Dr. Walter Rocca, who is a professor of epidemiology and neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and has written studies on the topic. * * *
    • “Rocca was co-author of a 2021 Jama Network Open study that found that women under 46 who removed both of their ovaries with or without a hysterectomy had an increased risk of mild cognitive impairment and performed worse on cognitive tests 30 years later compared with women who didn’t undergo the procedure.
    • Another study Rocca co-wrote found that women who had ovaries removed before age 50 faced higher risks for several conditions years later, including heart disease and osteoporosis.
    • Other studies have linked the procedures to an increased risk of dementia, Parkinson’s disease and accelerated aging.
    • “Sometimes, patients push to have their ovaries out at a younger age to help with symptoms such as pelvic pain or to avoid a subsequent surgery, says Dr. Daniel Breitkopf, chair of OB-GYN at Mayo Clinic and a member of ACOG’s board of directors. He usually advises waiting.
    • “I would rather do an oophorectomy five or 10 years later so then we have five to 10 years of benefit of those ovaries on your health,” he says.” 
  • The Washington Post informs us,
    • “Viral fragments of bird flu have been identified in samples of milk taken from grocery store shelves in the United States, a finding that does not necessarily suggest a threat to human health but indicates the avian flu virus is more widespread among dairy herds than previously thought, according to two public health officials and a public health expert who was briefed on the issue.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that it had been testing milk samples throughout the dairy production process and confirmed the detection of viral particles “in some of the samples,” but it declined to provide details.
    • “The presence of genetic fragments of the virus in milk is not unexpected. Pasteurization typically works to inactivate pathogens, said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health. It generally does not remove genetic material, Nuzzo said, but typically renders pathogens unable to cause harm to people.”
    • “The greater concern, however, “is that it’s showing up in a lot more samples, meaning the infection is more widespread in dairy herds than we thought,” said one public health official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share information not yet made public.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Day One Biopharmaceuticals said Tuesday the Food and Drug Administration gave accelerated approval to its targeted pill for one of the most common forms of childhood brain tumors, pediatric low-grade glioma.
    • “The weekly pill, previously known as tovorafenib, will be marketed as Ojemda. These tumors generally regress when patients become adults, but toxic treatments are often needed to keep them at bay until then. The hope is that Ojemda can spare some children from, for example, radiation, which can devastate tumors but also healthy tissue throughout the brain and bring lifelong consequences.  * * *
    • “Day One plans to release a price Wednesday morning. 
    • “The authorization is particularly notable because industry has historically developed few drugs for children with cancer, instead focusing on adults, where there is a larger market.” 
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Neurocrine Biosciences, a drugmaker focused on the brain and nervous system, said Tuesday that one of its experimental medicines succeeded in a clinical trial evaluating it as a treatment for major depression.
    • “The medicine hit the Phase 2 trial’s main goal as well as “key secondary endpoints,” according to Neurocrine, which plans to meet with the Food and Drug Administration to discuss a path to late-stage testing. If positive results continue to pile up, the medicine could become the first of its kind to secure an approval.
    • “Eiry Roberts, Neurocrine’s chief medical officer, called the newly released data “very encouraging” and reflective of the medicine’s potential to alleviate many of the symptoms associated with major depressive disorder.”
  • HealthDay relates,
    • “The dangerous heart rhythm disorder called atrial fibrillation is becoming more common in middle-aged people, a new study warns.
    • “More than a quarter of patients at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) seeking care for A-Fib during the last decade were younger than 65, researchers found.
    • “That’s much higher than the 2% prevalence of A-Fib commonly estimated among non-seniors, researchers said.
    • “Common knowledge among cardiologists is that, in people under 65, A-Fib is extremely uncommon and not detrimental. But there really hasn’t been any data to back that up,” said lead researcher Dr. Aditya Bhonsale, a UPMC cardiac electrophysiologist.
    • “The study also found that younger patients with A-Fib were more likely to die or to be hospitalized for heart failure, stroke or heart attack.”
  • Medscape discusses four recently FDA approved therapies that “are likely to be particularly important for primary care clinicians.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Health Payer Intelligence reports,
    • “Provider markups on specialty drugs increased 2024 commercial health insurance premiums by $13.1 billion, according to research from Oliver Wyman commissioned by AHIP.
    • “Provider-administered drugs can be delivered directly to providers from a specialty pharmacy—known as white bagging—or providers can purchase the drugs from the manufacturer or distributor and store the drug until the patient needs it, also called buy and bill.
    • “In the buy-and-bill method, hospitals and physicians can add a markup to the drug, which patients are responsible for paying. Delivering drugs through white bagging is generally more affordable for patients and payers because pharmacies do not add markup charges.
  • mHealth Intelligence relates, “Though telehealth utilization resulted in improvements in some healthcare utilization and quality measures, it was also linked to a 1.6 percent increase in healthcare spending, according to new research published in Health Affairs.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “In the early days of the pandemic, as social distancing forced patients out of doctors’ offices, health care organizations scrambled to offer care online. In turn, health care accreditation organizations rushed to tweak their standards, filling a void in best practices for virtual visits.
    • “But as telehealth has matured, accreditation bodies — typically nonprofits that offer a seal of approval to organizations that pass their audits — are trying to address the nuance of digital care head-on. Today, the Joint Commission announced a new telehealth accreditation that will launch on July 1. Later that month, the National Committee for Quality Assurance plans to release its own virtual care standards, with applications for a new accreditation opening in November.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) announced,
    • ICER and NEWDIGS at Tufts Medical Center “have collaborated to publish a new white paper today that provides clear policy and market solutions to help manage the challenges of paying for gene therapies. The paper, entitled, “Managing the Challenges of Paying for Gene Therapy: Strategies for Market Action and Policy Reform,” was developed with input from a diverse set of patient advocacy groups, payer organizations, large and small biopharmaceutical manufacturers, providers, and others.”
    • “The specific policy reforms and market-based tools ICER and NEWDIGS identify in the paper are intended to help the US health system address these challenges to achieve more equitable and affordable access for patients to the growing number of gene therapies expected to be approved in the coming years. Options such as value-based pricing, value-based outcomes contracts, warranties, subscription insurance models, installment payment arrangements, and a federal carve-out benefit program are explored. For each option, the white paper analyzes the relative advantages and potential unintended consequences, along with suggestions for implementation, and an exploration of unique opportunities for combination or layered approaches.
    • “Gene therapies have the possibility to transform thousands of lives, but only if we ensure sustainable access to them for all patients,” said Sarah K. Emond, MPP, President and CEO of ICER. “It is incumbent upon the entire health care system to focus on innovative payment solutions that can address the challenges of paying for high-cost, one-time treatments. This paper should help stakeholders understand the menu of options available to move beyond responding to the high costs with reduced access, while meaningfully addressing the concerns around clinical uncertainty and budget impact.”
    • “Each condition, therapy and payer is unique, so a single solution cannot satisfy all situations,” said Mark Trusheim, Strategic Director of NEWDIGS. “With a menu of options which can be combined in a single contract or assembled from existing market offerings, each community can construct the most effective approach to ensuring appropriate patient access in their area.”
  • Reuters reports,
    • “Eli Lilly (LLY.N), said on Monday that it will acquire a manufacturing facility from Nexus Pharmaceuticals to produce injectable medicines.
    • “Lilly expects production at the facility based in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin, to begin at the end of 2025.”
    • “Soaring demand for GLP-1 agonists, a class of highly effective diabetes and obesity drugs which suppress appetite and promote a feeling of fullness, has led to constrained supply for drugmakers such as Lilly and Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “A merger between Humana and Cigna could still be in the cards according to one analyst, Bloomberg reported April 22. 
    • “The math now works for a [Cigna and Humana] fusion,” Jeffries analyst David Windley wrote April 22. Since the two companies abandoned a proposed merger in December, Cigna’s stock prices have risen by 37% and Humana is down 31%, according to Bloomberg. 
    • “Cigna could strike a deal to acquire Humana for around $420 per share, Mr. Windley wrote in a note to clients. An acquisition would add to Cigna’s growth if it does not pay more than $470 per share for the company, according to Jeffries.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “About a week ago, cybersecurity experts identified posts from the criminal group RansomHub that suggested the data from the Change Healthcare hack was up for sale.
    • “Those listings have since been pulled, according to a twitter post from Brett Callow, a threat analyst at Emsisoft. It’s unclear at present what led the group to suspend the sale, as they were seeking an additional ransomware payout from Change’s parent company UnitedHealth Group.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • American Hospital News reports
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services April 22 finalized minimum staffing requirements for nursing homes that participate in Medicare and Medicaid. As proposed in September, the final rule will require nursing homes to provide a minimum of 3.48 hours of nursing care per resident day, including 0.55 hours of care from a registered nurse per resident day and at least 2.45 hours of care from a nurse aide per resident day, as well as 24/7 onsite RN services. CMS slightly expanded the opportunity for facilities to seek exemptions from the requirements from its original proposal. AHA had urged CMS not to finalize the proposal but instead develop more patient- and workforce-centered approaches focused on ensuring a continual process of safe staffing in nursing facilities.”
  • KFF adds
    • KFF estimates that 19% of nursing facilities would meet the minimum HPRD staffing standards under full implementation of the final rule with their current staffing levels (Figure 1). Nearly 60% of facilities would meet the interim requirement of an overall requirement of 3.48 HPRD, but fewer facilities would meet the RN and nurse aide provisions that are required when the rule is fully implemented (49% and 30% respectively; data not shown).”
  • HHS’s Office for Civil Rights announced a final amendment to the HIPAA Privacy rule concerning reproductive health. The final rule
    • “Prohibits the use or disclosure of PHI when it is sought to investigate or impose liability on individuals, health care providers, or others who seek, obtain, provide, or facilitate reproductive health care that is lawful under the circumstances in which such health care is provided, or to identify persons for such activities.
    • “Requires a regulated health care provider, health plan, clearinghouse, or their business associates, to obtain a signed attestation that certain requests for PHI potentially related to reproductive health care are not for these prohibited purposes.
    • “Requires regulated health care providers, health plans, and clearinghouses to modify their Notice of Privacy Practices to support reproductive health care privacy.
    • “The Final Rule may be viewed here – PDF.
    • “View The Final Rule Fact Sheet here.”
  • AHA News adds,
    • “The rule will take effect 60 days after publication in the Federal Register and require covered entities to comply within 240 days. As requested by the AHA, OCR plans to issue a model attestation form before the compliance date.”
  • HHS’s Office of the National Coordinator of Health IT announced that
    • “Common Agreement Version 2.0 (CA v2.0) has been released. The Common Agreement establishes the technical infrastructure model and governing approach for different health information networks and their users to securely share clinical information with each other – all under commonly agreed-to rules-of-the-road. The seven designated Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) under the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement℠ (TEFCA℠) can now adopt and begin implementing the new version. Also published today is the Participant and Subparticipant Terms of Participation, which sets forth the requirements that each Participant and Subparticipant must agree to and comply with to participate in TEFCA.”Common Agreement Version 2.0 (CA v2.0) has been released.
    • “The Common Agreement establishes the technical infrastructure model and governing approach for different health information networks and their users to securely share clinical information with each other – all under commonly agreed-to rules-of-the-road. The seven designated Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) under the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement℠ (TEFCA℠) can now adopt and begin implementing the new version. Also published today is the Participant and Subparticipant Terms of Participation, which sets forth the requirements that each Participant and Subparticipant must agree to and comply with to participate in TEFCA.
    • ?Notably, CA v2.0 includes enhancements and updates to require support for Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources® (FHIR®) Application Programming Interface (API) exchange, which will allow TEFCA Participants and Subparticipants to more easily exchange information directly between themselves and will enable individuals to more easily access their own health care information using apps of their choice via TEFCA. These enhancements and updates mark a huge step forward for TEFCA as it meets the promise of seamless nationwide exchange at scale. Visit HealthIT.gov to view a list of key concepts that have evolved from Common Agreement v1.1 to v2.0.”
  • Federal News Network shared the results of survey of federal employee attitudes toward the push to return to office.
    • “Of the 6,300 survey respondents, about 30% said they work entirely remotely, 6% work entirely in-person and 64% were working on a hybrid schedule — a mix of in-person work and telework.
    • “Over half of employees said senior leadership at their agency had not clearly explained the purpose of returning to the office. More than a third were in strong disagreement.”
  • From MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration approved Lumicell’s breast cancer imaging tool, the company said Thursday.
    • “Lumicell developed the Lumisystem imaging technology to enable surgeons to detect residual cancer in the breast cavity after performing a lumpectomy to remove the tumor.
    • “An FDA advisory committee voted in March that the benefits of Lumisystem outweigh the risks, with one expert predicting the system will have the biggest impact on surgeons who have higher re-excision rates.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times asks and considers,
    • Bird Flu Is Infecting More Mammals. What Does That Mean for Us?
    • H5N1, an avian flu virus, has killed tens of thousands of marine mammals, and infiltrated American livestock for the first time. Scientists are working quickly to assess how it is evolving and how much of a risk it poses to humans. * * *
    • “I never let my kids go to a state fair or animal farm, I’m one of those parents,” Dr. Lakdawala said. “And it’s mostly because I know that the number of interactions that we increase with animals, the more opportunities there are.”
    • “Should H5N1 adapt to people, federal officials will need to work together and with their international counterparts. Nationalism, competition and bureaucracy can all slow down the exchange of information that is crucial in a developing outbreak.
    • “In some ways, the current spread among dairy cows is an opportunity to practice the drill, said Rick Bright, the chief executive of Bright Global Health, a consulting company that focuses on improving responses to public health emergencies. But the U.S. Agriculture Department is requiring only voluntary testing of cows, and is not as timely and transparent with its findings as it should be, he said.
    • “Dr. Rosemary Sifford, the department’s chief veterinarian, said the staff there were working hard to share information as quickly as they can. “This is considered an emerging disease,” she said.
    • “Government leaders are typically cautious, wanting to see more data. But “given the rapid speed at which this can spread and the devastating illness that it can cause if our leaders are hesitant and don’t pull the right triggers at the right time, we will be caught flat-footed once again,” Dr. Bright said.
    • “If we don’t give it the panic but we give it the respect and due diligence,” he added, alluding to the virus, “I believe we can manage it.”
  • MedPage Today discusses the ready availability of human vaccines for the H5H1 avian flu virus should the need arise.
  • Precision Vaccinations reminds us,
    • “In April 2024, the United States observes the 15th Annual Oral Cancer Awareness Month, which emphasizes the significance of preventing human papillomavirus (HPV)- related oral cancers [with HPV vaccines].
  • HealthDay tells us,
    • “The right diet may be the best medicine for easing the painful symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), new research shows. 
    • “In the study, two different eating plans beat standard medications in treating the debilitating symptoms of the gastrointestinal disease. One diet was low in “FODMAPs,” a group of sugars and carbohydrates found in dairy, wheat and certain fruits and vegetables, while the second was a low-carb regimen high in fiber but low in all other carbohydrates.
    • “Published April 19 in the journal Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the findings suggest that patients should first try dietary changes before moving to drugs for relief.”
  • MedScape informs us,
    • “A new three-phase screening protocol that incorporates a PSA test, a four-kallikrein panel, and an MRI scan appears to improve the prostate cancer detection rate among men invited to participate in a single screening compared with those not invited, according to preliminary findings from the Finnish ProScreen randomized clinical trial.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “UnitedHealth’s results beat Wall Street expectations on an adjusted basis, with the company noting that overall care patterns in the first quarter were“consistent with the company’s expectations.” Nothing to worry about here, executives repeatedly told investors, who promptly sent UnitedHealth’s stock soaring and hospital shares tanking. Then on Thursday, Elevance offered more relief, saying that costs were running as expected while raising its full-year earnings guidance.
    • “Various monthly surveys are also showing a moderation in hospital volumes. TD Cowen’s survey, for instance, found that 305 hospitals reported only 1% year-over-year revenue growth in March, which was far weaker than 11% growth in February. Analysts led by TD Cowen’s Gary Taylor suggested that we could be at the start of a reversal of hospitals’ outperformance over managed care companies. 
    • “Investors will find out more this week as providers including Universal Health and HCA Healthcare, two large hospital chains, report earnings. HCA might still deliver solid results, as improvements in labor cost pressures and pricing should still positively influence earnings, notes UBS analyst A.J. Rice. 
    • And in any case, stabilization of healthcare utilization isn’t the same as a sharp drop-off. UnitedHealth and Elevance earnings may have signaled to investors that their views on providers were perhaps a bit too rosy, but they didn’t exactly demonstrate that cost pressures have eased. UnitedHealth noted that while it was no longer seeing the “aggressive acceleration” in medical utilization the industry saw in 2023, it hasn’t yet seen a major “step down.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group provided an update late Monday on its analysis of the data accessed in the cyberattack on Change Healthcare, and said it identified files that contain personal and health information.
    • “The company said that the personal health information (PHI) and personally identifiable information (PII) found in the files “could cover a substantial proportion of people in America.” However, UHG said it has not yet uncovered evidence that full medical histories or doctors’ charts were among what was stolen.
    • “UnitedHealth added that with the complexity of the review, it will likely take months of further analysis to identify and notify impacted customers. In the meantime, it’s offering two years of credit monitoring and identity theft protection to anyone who has been effected by the breach.
    • “In addition, the company has also offered to make notifications and conduct required administrative steps on behalf of providers and customers.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb is turning to a manufacturing startup to help produce cancer cell therapies faster, announcing Monday a partnership with the South San Francisco, California-based Cellares.
    • “The deal, which reserves Cellares’ production capacity for Bristol Myers’ use, is worth up to $380 million in upfront and milestone payments. Cellares will handle technology transfer of certain Bristol Myers cell therapies to its automated manufacturing platform, dubbed the Cell Shuttle.
    • :Bristol Myers currently sells two so-called CAR-T cell therapies, Breyanzi for lymphoma and Abecma for multiple myeloma, and has several others in development. In a statement, Lynelle Hoch, head of the pharmaceutical company’s cell therapy unit, said the Cellares deal would help it meet demand for CAR-T therapies “now and in the future.”