FEHBlog

Friday Factoids

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From Washington, DC. Roll Call informs us,

“Top negotiators for President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy resumed talks Friday evening to lift the nation’s borrowing cap, ending a “pause” put in place hours earlier when Republicans expressed frustration with the White House position.

“After a nearly daylong setback, White House Counselor Steve Ricchetti, White House budget director Shalanda Young, Rep. Garret Graves, R-La., and House Financial Services Chairman Patrick T. McHenry, R-N.C., resumed talks at the Capitol shortly after 6 p.m.”

From the public health front —

  • Reuters reports
    • “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging people at high risk of mpox to get two doses of Bavarian Nordic’s (BAVA.CO) Jynneos vaccine, based on new evidence from a U.S. study showing that the regimen is more effective at preventing infection than one shot.
    • “The study, published on Thursday, offered some of the first evidence on the efficacy of the Jynneos vaccine, which was deployed last year during a global outbreak of mpox that affected more than 30,000 people in the United States.”
  • and
    • “A World Health Organization (WHO) advisory group on Thursday recommended that this year’s COVID-19 booster shots be updated to target one of the currently dominant XBB variants.
    • “New formulations should aim to produce antibody responses to the XBB.1.5 or XBB.1.16 variants, the advisory group said, adding that other formulations or platforms that achieve neutralizing antibody responses against XBB lineages could also be considered.
    • “The group suggested no longer including the original COVID-19 strain in future vaccines, based on data that the original virus no longer circulates in human beings and shots targeting the strain produce “undetectable or very low levels of neutralizing antibodies” against currently circulating variants.
    • “COVID-19 vaccine makers like Pfizer/BioNtech (PFE.N), , Moderna Inc (MRNA.O) and Novavax Inc (NVAX.O) are already developing versions of their respective vaccines targeting XBB.1.5 and other currently circulating strains.
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is also set to hold a meeting of outside experts in June to discuss the strain compositions of COVID-19 shots for later this year; vaccine manufacturers will be expected to update their shots once the strains are selected.”
  • CNBC reports
    • “NIH is enrolling patients in an early-stage clinical trial to test a universal flu vaccine based on mRNA technology.
    • “The technology is behind Moderna’s and Pfizer’s widely used Covid vaccines.
    • “Scientists hope the vaccine will protect against a wide variety of flu strains and provide long-term immunity so people do not have to receive a shot every year.” 
  • Health Payer Intelligence reminds us that the Affordable Care Act requires health plans to cover four categories of preventive services without cost-sharing when delivered in-network, not just U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Grades A and B recommendations. In addition,
    • “(1) Payers have to cover routine immunizations per the recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), a federal immunization committee. ACIP recommendations are finalized when adopted by the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). * * *
    • “(2) The ACA rules around covering preventive care services for women are based on USPSTF and ACIP recommendations. But they also consider Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) guidelines, which draw from the Women’s Preventive Services Initiative (WPSI) standards. To comply with the requirements of preventive care services for women, payers must fully cover well-woman visits, breastfeeding support, and screening and counseling related to intimate partner violence and other conditions and circumstances. Contraceptives approved, granted, or cleared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are also covered. * * *
    • “(3) ACA preventive care coverage also encompasses services for children. These requirements are based on HRSA’s Bright Futures Project. They include well-child visits, immunizations, screenings, behavioral and developmental assessments, and more. As of May 2023, the immunization list covered conditions including but not limited to HPV, hepatitis A and B, rubella, influenza, and tetanus.” * * *
  • The Department of Health and Human Services “and the non-profit organization Baby2Baby announced a new pilot program to distribute a one-time only Newborn Supply Kit made up of essential goods and critical maternal health items to new mothers and their infants. * * * HS and Baby2Baby will first distribute 3,000 of the Newborn Supply Kits across Arkansas, Louisiana, and New Mexico – three states experiencing deep levels of family poverty – via hospitals and community-based partner organizations. Any mother giving birth during pilot implementation at one of the partner sites will be eligible to receive a kit. * * * HHS also launched a new website, www.hhs.gov/newbaby, that includes information across all Federal agencies for families on health, feeding, sleeping, child development and programmatic information.”

From the FDA front —

  • Biopharma Dive tells us
    • “A panel of Food and Drug Administration advisers on Thursday backed maternal use of Pfizer’s RSV vaccine for protecting young infants, but recommended its early use be closely monitored to confirm study safety data.
    • “The panel of outside advisers voted 14-0 that Pfizer’s vaccine, called Abrysvo, was effective in protecting infants from infections caused by respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, when given to their mothers during pregnancy.
    • “Despite some concerns around the shot’s potential risk, they agreed in a 10-4 vote that Pfizer’s data showed it to be generally safe. The FDA, which usually follows the advice of its advisers, is expected to decide whether to approve maternal use of the shot by August. Separately, its use in older adults is due for a decision this month.”
  • MedCity News relates
    • “The inflammatory bowel disorder Crohn’s disease can be treated by several different biologic drugs administered as injections or infusions. The FDA just approved the first daily pill for the chronic condition.
    • “Rinvoq, a blockbuster AbbVie drug already approved for multiple autoimmune and inflammatory disorders, is now approved as a treatment for moderately to severely active Crohn’s disease. The decision announced Thursday specifically covers the treatment of adults whose disease has not been adequately managed by tumor necrosis factors inhibitors, a class of biologic drugs currently used to treat the disorder.”
  • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared the Beta Bionics iLet ACE Pump and the iLet Dosing Decision Software for people six years of age and older with type 1 diabetes. These two devices, along with a compatible FDA-cleared integrated continuous glucose monitor (iCGM), will form a new system called the iLet Bionic Pancreas. This new automated insulin dosing (AID) system uses an algorithm to determine and command insulin delivery.”

From the Rx coverage front

  • Healio tells us,
    • “Of adolescents with obesity receiving semaglutide in the STEP TEENS trial, 44.9% improved to overweight or normal weight.
    • “The odds of improving body mass index category with semaglutide were 23 times higher than placebo.”
  • STAT News adds.
    • Novo Nordisk is pausing ads for its obesity drug Wegovy as it struggles to keep up with surging demand, the latest hurdle in its rollout of the weight loss drug.
    • “To avoid stimulating further demand for this medicine, we’re pausing some key Wegovy promotional efforts,” the Danish drugmaker said in an emailed statement. “We are pausing all local television advertising and postponing planned national television advertising for Wegovy. We are also assessing our promotional efforts to healthcare professionals and adjusting accordingly.” The news was earlier reported by Endpoints.
  • Medscape informs us,
    • “Drug shortages in the United States hit a 10-year high in the first quarter of 2023, according to data from the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP). Among the top five drug classes affected by shortages are chemotherapy drugs used in the treatment of cancer, many of which do not have alternatives.
    • “The shortage of certain cancer drugs has become a serious and life-threatening issue for cancer patients across the country,” said Karen E. Knudsen, MBA, PhD, chief executive officer of the American Cancer Society (ACS) and its advocacy affiliate, the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN), in a statement. “I have heard from patients and practitioners who are directly experiencing the impact of these shortages.”
    • “As of earlier this month, there were 15 oncology drugs on the official US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) drug shortage list. The other top drug classes on shortage include drugs used for central nervous system (CNS) disorders,  antimicrobials, fluids and electrolytes, and hormones.” * * *
    • “Drug shortages in the United States have been a chronic problem for more than two decades, waxing and waning in intensity. In March, a hearing on drug shortages held by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs noted that since 2001, the number of new drug shortages has ranged between 58 (in 2004) and 267 (in 2011). The trend toward new drug shortages declined from 2018 through 2021, but then rose to 160 in 2022.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • MedCity News points out,
    • “If you enter a drugstore in any major American city, there’s a good chance you might see a retail health clinic. In the past decade or so, healthcare stakeholders have gone back and forth as to whether these clinics will have a significant impact on healthcare delivery in the U.S. But a new report reveals that retail clinics are solidifying their position as a major force in the U.S. healthcare system.
    • “Retail clinic claims volumes have shot up by 200% in the past five years, according to the report, which was released Thursday by analytics company Definitive Healthcare
    • Claims growth for these clinics, which are usually located in stores like WalmartCVS and Walgreens, have greatly outpaced growth in claims for urgent care centers, emergency departments and physician practices. Urgent care center claims grew by 70% in the past five years. Meanwhile, emergency room usage dropped by 1%, and primary care office claims declined by 13%.
    • As of this year, there are more than 1,800 active retail clinics across 44 states. Most of these are in major metropolitan areas, with just 2% of clinics located in rural areas. The report argued that this paucity stems from the same factors that have produced care deserts in rural America — mainly low population density and difficulty attracting workers.
    • The report also revealed that about half of all retail clinics are concentrated in the following seven highly populated states: California, Georgia, Illinois, Florida, Ohio, Tennessee and Texas.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC, Roll Call reports

“Lawmakers from both parties suggested negotiators were making progress Thursday toward a bipartisan deal that would raise the $31.4 trillion debt limit, though days of talks still lie ahead.

“Scrambling to avert a debt limit breach that Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said could hit as early as June 1, negotiators are attempting to reach a framework for a deal by Sunday, when President Joe Biden returns from a trip to the G-7 summit in Japan.

“Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who is negotiating with Biden through proxies, said he is hopeful that a deal could come as soon as this weekend. In a sign of progress, the two parties have begun to exchange offers, said House Rules Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla.

“We’ve made good progress this week, but the work continues,” said Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer. “ No one will get everything they want.”

“If a deal is reached by Monday, the House would vote next week, with 72 hours notice after the text is posted. While the Senate is scheduled to be in recess next week, Schumer said his chamber would be prepared to reconvene with 24 hours’ notice to schedule a vote.”

Per STAT News

“Pharmacy benefit managers would be subject to new transparency rules under a bill that cleared a key House subcommittee, Modern Healthcare says. The Transparent PRICE Act of 2023, which received a unanimous vote in the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee, would require pharmacy benefit managers to annually provide employers with detailed data on drug spending, including acquisition costs, out-of-pocket spending, formulary-placement rationale, and aggregate rebate information. The bill also would order the Government Accountability Office to report on group health plan pharmacy networks, including those owned by health insurers.”

Fierce Healthcare discusses other healthcare actions taken by this subcommittee yesterday.

BioPharma Dive tells us

“The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday ruled against Amgen in its decade-long battle with Sanofi and Regeneron, affirming a lower court’s decision that Amgen’s rivals did not infringe on patents the biotechnology company held on a cholesterol-lowering medicine.

“In a unanimous decision authored by Justice Neil Gorsuch, the court said two Amgen patents on its PCSK9 inhibitor Repatha fell short of a legal standard known as enablement, which requires the claimed invention be described well enough to allow a skilled person in the field to use it. * * *

“The court’s ruling could open the door for challenges to older classes of antibody therapies, [University of Illinois law professor Jacob]Sherkow said. “This decision is probably going to give challengers solace. They’re going to have good options when working with the enablement requirements to challenge competitors’ patents out there.”

From the public health front —

  • The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation released its 2023 U.S. county health rankings while the UnitedHealthFoundation issued its 2023 Seniors Report from its America’s Health Rankings Services.
  • MedPage Today informs us
    • “The CDC encouraged populations at risk of contracting mpox, formerly known as monkeypox, to get fully vaccinated against the disease as part of preparations for summer during a briefing Thursday morning.
    • “Demetre Daskalakis, MD, the White House National Mpox Response Deputy Coordinator, noted that with summer gatherings on the horizon, mpox vaccination should be considered, as should overall sexual health and wellness.
    • “Getting ‘summer ready’ means mpox vaccination, but that’s not all it means — it also means to be up to date on all of your sexual health, and that includes HIV and STIs [sexually transmitted infections] like syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia,” he said.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services posted a fact sheet with “Resources on Ways Communities Can Stay Protected from Mpox in Advance of Summer Months.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out the important medical tests that Americans should consider undergoing over the decades of life.
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force notified the public about a draft research plan concerning “Weight Loss to Prevent Obesity-Related Morbidity and Mortality in Adults: Interventions” that is open for comment until June 14, 2023.

From the Food and Drug Administration front, the Wall Street Journal reports

“The Food and Drug Administration for the first time cleared a test to gauge a mother’s risk of severe preeclampsia, a leading cause of pregnancy-related illness and death in the U.S.  

Thermo Fisher Scientific said Thursday that the blood test it already sells in Europe could be available in the U.S. soon. Its introduction could transform prenatal care in the U.S., doctors and maternal-health advocates said.”

Bravo.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Beckers Hospital Review notes five new details about Kaiser Permanente’s Risant Health deal.
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses provider objections to what appears to the FEHBlog to be a reasonable new prior authorization program that UnitedHealthcare is introducing. No good deed goes unpunished.

From the miscellany department —

  • STAT News relates that
    • “A multibillion-dollar science agency tasked with slashing through research bureaucracy will start its work with a plan to help people regenerate bone.
    • “The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, launched a little more than a year ago, announced Thursday that its first official program would target bone and joint damage from osteoarthritis, a condition affecting more than 32 million Americans.”
  • Govexec discusses FEHB coverage of Covid tests and vaccines following the end of the PHE.
  • The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission weighs in on the Title VII compliance implications of employer use of artificial intelligence to make employment decisions.

Midweek update

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From Washington DC, Roll Call informs us,

“Negotiators tapped by President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy to hash out a debt limit compromise were racing against the clock Wednesday to get some principles down on paper that could be written into legislative text in time for votes as early as next week.

“Both the president and his chief GOP counterpart on Capitol Hill said they thought a deal was possible. Biden is scheduled to return Sunday from his trip to Japan for the G-7 summit, telling reporters at the White House on Wednesday he’d be back for “final negotiations” and that he’d hold a press conference upon his return.

“I’m confident that we will get the agreement on the budget, that America will not default,” Biden said. “Every leader in the room understands the consequences if we fail to pay our bills.”

The FEHBlog offers less encouraging news from the public health front —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “For decades, advances in healthcare and safety steadily drove down death rates among American children. In an alarming reversal, rates have now risen to the highest level in nearly 15 years, particularly driven by homicidesdrug overdoses, car accidents and suicides.
    • “The uptick among younger Americans accelerated in 2020. Though Covid-19 itself wasn’t a major cause of death for young people, researchers say social disruption caused by the pandemic exacerbated public-health problems, including worsening anxiety and depression. Greater access to firearms, dangerous driving and more lethal narcotics also helped push up death rates.
    • “Between 2019 and 2020, the overall mortality rate for ages 1 to 19 rose by 10.7%, and increased by an additional 8.3% the following year, according to an analysis of federal death statistics led by Steven Woolf, director emeritus of the Center on Society and Health at Virginia Commonwealth University, published in JAMA in March. That’s the highest increase for two consecutive years in the half-century that the government has publicly tracked such figures, according to Woolf’s analysis. * * *
    • “Many public-health experts say they don’t think the end of the pandemic will reverse the rise in death rates among young people. Rivara predicts these problems will continue due to persistent issues around mental health and the accessibility of guns.
    • “[Dr. Elizabeth] Wolf said demand for child and adolescent psychiatric services still outstrips supply in her Richmond, Va., office. Patients are on months long waiting lists to see a psychiatrist that accepts insurance.”  
  • Digging deeper, the Journal informs us,
    • “Overdose deaths in the U.S. edged higher in 2022, a federal estimate showed, marking only the second time drugs killed more than 100,000 people in a year. 
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday released a provisional count of overdose deaths last year that indicated the toll of the fentanyl crisis leveling off after two years of surges during the Covid-19 pandemic. The CDC counted 109,680 overdose deaths in 2022 compared with 109,179 deaths from a similar 2021 projection. For overdose deaths to hover at such a high level demonstrates how fentanyl’s ubiquity and potency continue to threaten the lives of illicit drug users. 
    • “I’m glad to see us not get worse, but it’s hard to celebrate,” said Dr. Chad Brummett, an anesthesiologist and co-director of the Opioid Research Institute at the University of Michigan.”
  • STAT News adds
    • “More than a quarter of American adults are depressed, a 10% surge from nearly a decade ago, according to the latest Gallup survey.
    • “The data come as the Biden administration tries to overhaul mental health care costs and boost the number of health care workers licensed to practice behavioral health care. Congress in this year’s budget also allotted hundreds of millions of dollars to mental health care grants and programs, many of them trained on children or substance misuse.”
  • On a related note
    • McKinsey Consulting explores how virtual hospitals could offer respites to overwhelmed health systems.
    • Health Affairs Forefront discusses approaches to integrating behavioral health with primary care.
    • Employee Benefits News identifies three coverage categories that can reduce healthcare disparities and lower costs — 1) Colon cancer screening (Hey OPM, the article suggests giving a free day off to employees who undergo screening colonoscopies); 2) Basic dental care, and 3) fertility coverage.

From the Rx coverage front, the New York Times reports,

“Thousands of patients are facing delays in getting treatments for cancer and other life-threatening diseases, with drug shortages in the United States approaching record levels.

“Hospitals are scouring shelves for supplies of a drug that reverses lead poisoning and for a sterile fluid needed to stop the heart for bypass surgery. Some antibiotics are still scarce following the winter flu season when doctors and patients frantically chased medicines for ailments like strep throat. Even children’s Tylenol was hard to find.

“Hundreds of drugs are on the list of medications in short supply in the United States, as officials grapple with an opaque and sometimes interrupted supply chain, quality and financial issues that are leading to manufacturing shutdowns.

“The shortages are so acute that they are commanding the attention of the White House and Congress, which are examining the underlying causes of the faltering generic drug market, which accounts for about 90 percent of domestic prescriptions.”

No bueno.

From the human resources front, HR Dive relates,

  • “Employers cannot automatically revoke reasonable accommodations related to COVID-19, despite the dissolution of the “public health emergency” status for the pandemic, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission cautioned employers Monday. “Employers may evaluate accommodations granted during the public health emergency, and, in consultation with the employee, assess whether there continues to be a need for reasonable accommodation based on individualized circumstances,” the agency said. 
  • “The warning came as EEOC announced updates to its technical guidance, “What You Should Know About COVID-19 and the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act, and Other EEO Laws,” including additional accommodation examples and tips for preventing COVID-related harassment.
  • “The EEOC highlighted that accommodations include low-cost or free measures, such as uninterrupted work time, a quiet workspace or noise-canceling headphones to facilitate that.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

Roll Call tells us,

“President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Tuesday tapped proxies to negotiate directly over how to increase the debt limit with time running short before the government runs too low on funds.”

and

“Lawmakers are beginning to think about changing their plans and staying in Washington in the coming weeks as a standoff over increasing the debt limit bears down. Members of both parties’ leadership said on Tuesday that plans for the Senate to recess next week and the House to leave town the following week could shift.”

BenefitsLink pointed out that the Internal Revenue Service released a revenue procedure identifying inflation-adjusted high deductible health plan and health savings account amounts for use in 2024 just in time for FEHB high deductible health plan benefit proposals due May 31.

STAT News reports

“In an unexpected move, the Federal Trade Commission on Tuesday filed a lawsuit to block Amgen from acquiring Horizon Therapeutics, claiming the $27.8 billion deal would make it possible for Amgen to develop monopolies through a tactic that manipulates health coverage and drives up consumer costs.

“At issue is a practice known as bundling. Simply put, a drug company combines two or more medicines in a package deal for health plans and pharmacy benefit managers, which determine lists of medicines that are covered by insurance. The practice has previously sparked concerns that a drug company will unfairly offer higher rebates for bundles in order to win favorable placement.”

From the medical and drug research fronts —

  • The National Institute of Health informs us,
    • “A study from the National Institutes of Health shows that new cases of chronic pain occur more often among U.S. adults than new cases of several other common conditions, including diabetes, depression, and high blood pressure. Among people who have chronic pain, almost two-thirds still suffer from it a year later. These findings come from a new analysis of National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) data by investigators from the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) at the NIH, Seattle Children’s Research Institute, and University of Washington, Seattle, and are published in JAMA Network Open.”
  • The New York Times reports
    • “The man should have gotten Alzheimer’s disease in his early 40s — he had a gene mutation that guaranteed it, or so it seemed. Scans of his brain even revealed severe atrophying and the hallmarks of the disease: rough, hard, amyloid plaques and spaghetti-like tangles of tau proteins. But the fatal brain disease did not appear until the man was 67.
    • “Now an intense research effort has discovered why. The man was protected because another mutation in a different gene blocked the disease from entering his entorhinal cortex. That tiny area of the brain is a hub for neurons involved in memory, recognition of objects, navigation and time perception. And it is there that scientists believe that Alzheimer’s disease begins.
    • “A paper on the finding was published Monday in the journal Nature Medicine.
    • More than six million people in the United States have Alzheimer’s, a disease that has been notoriously difficult to treat. Yet here was a man with a mutation that causes the most severe and rapidly progressing form of Alzheimer’s. And his disease was delayed for two decades. If a drug could do what the mutation did, resulting in most people getting Alzheimer’s very late in life, the outcome could be transformative.”

From the SDOH front,

  • the National Institutes of Health shared
    • “New research shows that the economic burden of health disparities in the United States remains unacceptably high. The study, funded by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD), part of the National Institutes of Health,  revealed that in 2018, racial and ethnic health disparities cost the U.S. economy $451 billion, a 41% increase from the previous estimate of $320 billion in 2014. The study also finds that the total burden of education-related health disparities for persons with less than a college degree in 2018 reached $978 billion, about two times greater than the annual growth rate of the U.S. economy in 2018.”

From the AI department,

  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us
    • Payers are putting artificial intelligence to work. 
    • Google recently launched a new AI-powered cloud program for prior authorization and claims processing. Elevance Health is piloting AI-powered concierge care for members. 
    • Becker’s asked 18 payer executives how AI will transform the insurance industry. [The interview squibs are available in the article.]

From the patient front, here is a link to HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research March 2023 Chartbook on Patient Safety.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington DC —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Time isn’t on Washington’s side.
    • “With the U.S. facing a potentially economy-shaking default as soon as next month, logistical hurdles, disagreements on the scope of any talks, a tight legislative calendar and a late start are complicating negotiations over raising the debt ceiling.
    • “President Biden said Monday that the next meeting with congressional leaders will come Tuesday, while responding “no” when asked if there were updates regarding the talks with Republicans. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) said that the two sides remain “far apart” and that he would like a deal to be done by this weekend.” * * *
    • “A second meeting with the president and congressional leaders that was originally set to take place on Friday was postponed until early this week. The House and Senate are scheduled to be in session simultaneously for just one more week this month, and Mr. Biden is set to travel overseas for a Group of Seven meeting. Moreover, Republican leaders have so far rejected any short-term debt deal to buy more time.”
  • According to the White House’s briefing room,
    • “President Biden announced his intent to nominate Dr. Monica Bertagnolli as Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the world’s preeminent biomedical research organization. Dr. Bertagnolli is a world-renowned surgical oncologist, cancer researcher, educator, and physician-leader who has the vision and leadership needed to deliver on NIH’s mission to seek fundamental knowledge and promote human health.”  

From the litigation front, the American Hospital Association informs us

“The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit today temporarily restored an Affordable Care Act requirement that most health plans cover certain preventive services without cost sharing. The 5th Circuit ordered that this requirement remain in effect for everyone (except the few health plans challenging the requirement) until it issues a final decision in the case, which is expected later this year. A federal judge in Texas recently vacated the requirement nationwide, prompting the Department of Health and Human Services and plaintiff to appeal the decision and seek this temporary stay.”

From the public health front —

  • HealthDay tells us,
    • “Older Americans are dying of falls at more than double the rate of 20 years ago — with women, men and all racial groups showing increases, according to a new study.
    • “In 2020, the study found, just over 36,500 Americans age 65 and up died of a fall-related injury. That was up from roughly 10,100 deaths in 1999.
    • “Adjusted for age, those numbers translated into a more than twofold increase in the rate of fall-related deaths among older Americans: from 29 per 100,000 in 1999, to 69 per 100,000 in 2020.” * * *
    • The National Council on Aging has a tool for older adults to check their risk of falls.

From the Rx coverage front —

  • MPR relates
    • “The Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Pulmonary-Allergy Drug Advisory Committee voted 16:6 in favor for adults, and 17:5 in favor for children (<18 years of age and ≥30kg), that available data support a favorable benefit-risk assessment for neffy® in the treatment of severe allergic reaction (Type 1), including anaphylaxis, for adults and children who weigh more than 30kg. * * *
    • “While not bound to the committee’s recommendations, the FDA does take them into consideration when making final decisions on approval. If approved, neffy would be the first needle-free epinephrine product to treat severe allergic reaction. A decision is expected by mid-2023.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) announced today that it will assess the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of sotatercept (Merck & Co) for pulmonary arterial hypertension.
  • The Wall Street Journal delves into “How to Get Your Health Insurance to Cover Ozempic and Other Drugs Used for Weight Loss; Tips for checking whether your health plan will pay for a prescription and then getting authorization.”
  • Per Hub International,
    • “CMS recently released its updated Medicare Part D guidelines that can be used by group health plan sponsors to determine whether their plans’ prescription drug coverage is creditable for 2024 and to update the information needed for required Part D disclosures to eligible individuals and to CMS.
    • “To help determine whether prescription drug coverage is creditable, CMS has released the following 2024 parameters for the standard Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit:
      • Deductible: $545 (up from $505 in 2023);
      • Initial coverage limit: $5,030 (up from $4,660);
      • Out-of-pocket threshold: $8,000 (up from $7,400);
      • Total covered Part D spending at the out-of-pocket expense threshold for beneficiaries who are not eligible for the coverage gap discount program: $11,477.39 (up from $10,516.25 in 2023); and
      • Estimated total covered Part D spending at the out-of-pocket expense threshold for beneficiaries who are eligible for the coverage gap discount program: $12,447.11 (up from $11,206.28).”

From the artificial intelligence front —

  • This week’s episode of the Econtalk podcast features an artificial intelligence discussion between host Russ Roberts and his guest Tyler Cowen. Russ Roberts suggests using ChatGPT to formulate questions for your doctor or your parents’ or your kids’ doctors.
  • Bloomberg examines the use of AI by drug manufacturers.
  • Medcity News looks into the use of AI by pharmacists and PBMs.

From the miscellany department —

  • Fierce Healthcare points out, “Million-dollar claims per million covered employees rose 15% in the past year and 45% from 2019 to 2022, according to a report by Sun Life, a life and disability insurance company.”
  • EHR Intelligence reports,
    • “The Health IT End-Users Alliance has released a consensus statement regarding collecting and using social determinants of health (SDOH) data to support health equity.
    • “The Alliance brings together health information professionals, physicians, hospitals, and other front-line healthcare providers to advance end-user perspectives in health IT policy and standards development.
    • “The statement calls for additional efforts to standardize and increase the uniform collection and reporting of SDOH. The group also calls for more training on collecting this data, better use of appropriate tools and processes to manage and share SDOH, and ongoing research to support these efforts.”
  • Employee Benefit News notes, “Thirteen FSA and HSA-eligible expenses that may surprise you.”

Weekend update

Photo by Michele Orallo on Unsplash

Happy Mothers’ Day! Here’s a reminder that on June 27, 2023, two new federal employment laws will take effect — the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act and the PUMP Act (fairness for nursing mothers).  

OPM shares excerpts from OPM Director Kiran Ahuja’s commencement address to the graduating class of the University of Georgia’s School of Public and International Affairs.

The House of Representatives and the Senate will be in session this week for Committee business and floor voting.

The Wall Street Journal reports

  • The Biden administration and congressional Republicans are making progress in their negotiations over federal spending and raising the debt limit, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said, adding that she believes the talks could result in an agreement.
  • “I’m hopeful. I think the negotiations are very active. I’m told they have found some areas of agreement,” Ms. Yellen said in an interview Saturday at the end of a gathering of finance ministers from the Group of Seven advanced democracies in Japan.
  • Republicans and Democrats are racing to find a compromise for raising the nation’s roughly $31.4 trillion debt limit. Republicans say lifting the debt ceiling should be paired with cuts to federal spending, while Democrats say raising the cap shouldn’t be contingent on broader budget negotiations.

Axios tells us that “The Biden administration is pouring billions of dollars into the development of future coronavirus vaccines, trying to develop a sequel to Operation Warp Speed even as the public health emergency ends.”

Also, from the research front, Biopharma Dive informs us

  • Sanofi and AstraZeneca released new study results on Friday [May 11] that showed their antibody drug for respiratory syncytial virus reduced hospitalizations for infection-related respiratory disease by 83% in infants.
  • The drug, sold as Beyfortus, won approval in Europe in November as a preventive treatment for babies in their first RSV season and is due a decision by U.S. regulators in the third quarter. The results released Friday add to earlier data that showed the drug to be 75% effective in reducing RSV-related hospitalizations over a placebo.
  • RSV is a leading cause of hospitalization in infants, often overlapping with seasonal patterns for influenza and now COVID-19, too. It is estimated that more than 25,000 children under 5 years old die from RSV infections globally each year, with millions hospitalized.

and MedTech Dive points out,

  • Guardant Health on Tuesday presented the results of a pivotal study of Shield, its blood-based test for colorectal cancer, demonstrating an overall sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 90%.
  • Looking at the results by stage, the test only detected 55% of stage I cancers. Its detection of later-stage cancers was 100%.
  • The test should meet the criteria to gain FDA approval and Medicare reimbursement, but its early-stage performance will likely make Shield less competitive against Exact Sciences’ stool-based test, Cologuard, to start, analysts with Craig Hallum wrote in a research note on Wednesday. 

From the SDOH front, Healthcare Finance relates,

  • CVS Health said this week it’s adding mental health screenings to Project Health, the company’s free, community-based health screening program. 
  • It will kick-start its mental health screenings in Greensboro, North Carolina and Petersburg, Virginia. Over the course of the year it will also add nearly 100 organizations to host its mobile units in under-resourced communities.
  • CVS Health plans to host nearly 2,000 Project Health screening events across the U.S. in 2023. The company hosts these events at CVS Pharmacy locations and community organizations, offering free biometric screenings, including blood pressure, cholesterol, glucose level and body mass index, to detect early risks of chronic conditions such as diabetes, hypertension and heart disease.
  • The screenings will now also offer PHQ-2 assessments – screenings to help identify people who require additional evaluation for depression. Following these screenings, participants have the opportunity to meet with a nurse practitioner who can provide referrals for treatment and advice on follow-up care.

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy front —

  • On May 10, 2023, the National Institute of Standards and Technology posted “revised draft guidelines, Protecting Controlled Unclassified Information in Nonfederal Systems and Organizations (NIST Special Publication [SP] 800-171 Revision 3).”
    • “Notable updates in the draft include: 
      • “Changes to reflect the state-of-practice cybersecurity controls;
      • “Revised criteria used by NIST to develop security requirements;
      • “Increased specificity and alignment of the security requirements in SP 800-171 Rev. 3 with SP 800-53 Rev. 5, to aid in implementation and assessment; and
      • “Additional resources to help implementers understand and analyze the proposed updates.”
    • “NIST is requesting public comments on the draft guidelines by July 14, 2023.”
    • “NIST anticipates releasing at least one more draft version of SP 800-171 Rev. 3 before publishing the final in early 2024. Following the publication of the final version, the authors plan to revise the set of supporting NIST publications on protecting controlled unclassified information, including SPs 800-171A (security requirement assessment), SP 800-172 (enhanced security requirements) and SP 800-172A (enhanced security requirement assessment).” 
    • “NIST is planning a webinar for June 6, 2023, to introduce the changes made to SP 800-171. Registration information will be posted next week on the Protecting CUI project site.” 
  • Cybersecurity Dive reports, “White House considers ban on ransom payments, with caveats. Experts suggest the effort, a reversal from the administration’s previous stance, is fraught with complications that could cause unintended consequences.”
    • Cybersecurity Dive adds,
      • “As the White House floats the possibility of a ban on ransom payments, the number of organizations hit by ransomware that ultimately pay a ransom remains high. 
      • “Nearly half, 46%, of organizations hit by ransomware during the past year paid a ransom to recover data, according to research Sophos released Wednesday [May 10].”
      • “The survey also found that cybersecurity insurance plays a direct role in the likelihood of an organization making a ransom payment. Nearly 3 in 5 organizations with a standalone cyber insurance policy paid the ransom, compared to the 15% of uninsured organizations that paid the ransom.”
    • Cybersecurity Dive points out,
      • “The number of ransomware claims filed by U.S. clients of insurance broker Marsh spiked 77% in the first quarter of the year compared with the prior three-month period, the company told CFO Dive.
      • “Marsh saw 55 ransomware claims from U.S. clients in the first quarter of the year versus 31 claims in the fourth quarter. The figures, which are expected to be published in an upcoming report, follow a downward trend in 2022 that had been credited with helping to moderate skyrocketing premiums in the cyber insurance market.
      • “I do think that we can still continue to see a deceleration of rate increases for those companies that have an optimal cyber risk maturity profile and have not suffered significant events that have caused the carriers to make claim payments,” Meredith Schnur, Marsh’s U.S. and Canada cyber brokerage leader, said in an interview.”
  • Cybersecurity Dive reports,
    • “Acting National Cyber Director Kemba Walden said the national cybersecurity strategy has been well received, however, acknowledged there were areas of disagreement. 
    • “Walden speaking Tuesday [May 9, 2023] at a forum hosted by The Software Alliance, also known as BSA, said there are two major areas of common ground that form the basis of the policy. Individual technology users, small businesses, local governments and small infrastructure providers like schools and hospitals are currently bearing the brunt of the cybersecurity risk — and that needs to change. 
    • “Cybersecurity risk is in the wrong place,” Walden said. “I think that’s an area of common ground.”
    • “Secondly, the U.S. is currently engaged in a game of Whac-A-Mole with malicious actors and the country needs to work together to make sure systems can be properly defended.
    • “Walden said her main concern regarding the national cyber strategy is to make sure the U.S. can build a more resilient digital ecosystem.”

From the cyber vulnerabilities front —

  • Health IT Security informs us,
    • “The Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center’s (HC3) latest alert [dated May 10, 2023] details the growing trend of threat actors targeting a known vulnerability in Veeam Backup & Replication (VBR) software. VBR is a popular software product that can be used to back up, replicate, and restore data on virtual machines (VMs).
    • The vulnerability, known as CVE-2023-27532, is a high-severity vulnerability with a CVSS score of 7.5 that exposes encrypted credentials stored in the VBR configuration to unauthenticated users. If successfully exploited, threat actors may be able to gain access to the backup infrastructure hosts and could steal data or deploy ransomware.”
  • Health IT Security further tells us,
    • “The internet has a bot problem, cybersecurity company Imperva suggested in its 2023 Bad Bot Report. Nearly half of all internet traffic came from bots in 2022, while human traffic dipped to its lowest level in eight years.
    • Bots are not inherently bad – they can help automate select tasks, measure customer engagement, or simulate conversations. However, malicious bots can help threat actors launch denial-of-service attacks, distribute malware, or crack passwords. Imperva observed an uptick in bad bot traffic volume for the fourth consecutive year, growing to 30.2 percent in 2022, compared to 27.7 percent in 2021.
    • “Bad bots interact with applications like legitimate users would, making them harder to detect and block. They abuse business logic by exploiting the way a business operates, rather than exploiting technical vulnerabilities,” the report stated. * * *
    • “Imperva suggested that businesses begin mitigating risk by protecting exposed APIs and mobile apps, monitor traffic, and remain aware of data breaches and leaks occurring across the industry.”
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) added one and then seven more known exploited vulnerabilities to its catalog.

From the ransomware front —

  • Cyberscoop calls our attention to “The Ransomware Malicious Quadrant, published Wednesday by ransomware-focused cybersecurity firm Halcyon and first shared with CyberScoop, takes a range of the most consequential and effective ransomware groups over the past year and gathers the most critical datapoints on each, and categorizes them.”
  • Silicon Angle tells us,
    • “A new ransomware group targeting vulnerabilities in virtual private network appliances has been found that has a unique twist: The ransomware encrypts itself to avoid detection by security software.
    • “Discovered by security researchers at Kroll LLC, the ransomware, dubbed “Cactus,” is believed to have first been deployed in March. The ransomware targets known vulnerabilities in Fortinet Inc. VPN appliances to gain access to major organizations before getting to work.”
  • “CISA and FBI have released [on May 11, 2023] a joint Cybersecurity Advisory (CSA), Malicious Actors Exploit CVE-2023-27350 in PaperCut MF and NG. This joint advisory provides details related to an exploitation of PaperCut MF/NG vulnerability (CVE-2023-27350). FBI observed malicious actors exploit CVE-2023-27350 beginning in mid-April 2023 and continuing through the present. In early May 2023, the FBI observed a group self-identifying as the Bl00dy Ransomware Gang attempting to exploit vulnerable PaperCut servers against the Education Facilities Subsector. The advisory further provides detection methods for exploitation and details known indicators of compromise (IOCs) related to the group’s activity. CISA encourages network defenders to review and apply the recommendations in the Detection Methods and Mitigations sections of this CSA.”
  • Here’s the latest’s Bleeping Computer Week in Ransomware report.

From the cyberdefenses front —

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Justice Department announced on Tuesday [May 9] that it disrupted Russian government cyberespionage malware that has infected targets in at least 50 countries. The U.S. government had been investigating it for more than 20 years.
    • “On the same day, a coalition of U.S. and U.S.-allied cyber agencies released technical details on the malware, known as Snake, to help industry and governments to shut it down.”
  • The Washington Post also discusses the growing use of artificial intelligence as a hacking tool, adding,
    • AI will help defenders as well, scanning reams of network traffic logs for anomalies, making routine programming tasks much faster, and seeking out known and unknown vulnerabilities that need to be patched, experts said in interviews.
    • Some companies have added AI tools to their defensive products or released them for others to use freely. Microsoft, which was the first big company to release a chat-based AI for the public, announced Microsoft Security Copilot in March. It said users could ask questions of the service about attacks picked up by Microsoft’s collection of trillions of daily signals as well as outside threat intelligence.
    • [However, b]y multiplying the powers of both sides, AI will give far more juice to the attackers for the foreseeable future, defenders said at the RSA conference.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

Today marks the final issue of the CDC’s weekly interpretative review of its Covid statistics. The final issue advises

“The latest updates to CDC’s COVID Data Tracker reflect these changes. The homepage has a new look, and there are also new landing pages for hospitalizationsemergency department (ED) visits, and death data, as well as visualizations of trends and maps. Several pages have also been retired, but COVID Data Tracker has a page with links to archived data and visualizations.

“These are the most notable changes to COVID Data Tracker:

  • Hospital admission rates and the percentage of COVID-19 deaths among all deaths are now the primary surveillance metrics.
  • COVID-19 hospital admission levels replace COVID-19 Community Levels (CCLs) as the main indicator of county trends. COVID-19 hospital admission levels are comparable with CCLs.
  • Provisional death certificate data from the National Vital Statistics System (NVSS) will become the primary source for mortality surveillance, replacing aggregate death counts.
  • Aggregate case and death count reporting has been discontinued.
  • ED visit data will serve as an early indicator of COVID-19 activity.”

The Wall Street Journal reports on the ongoing struggles of people afflicted with long Covid.

From the public health front –

  • In recognition of Mothers’ Day this weekend, the CDC encourages pregnant women to get a flu shot (not the nasal flu vaccine spray).
  • MedPage Today tells us that “The CDC reported that the nation’s first-ever cases of treatment-resistant ringworm were identified in New York City. (Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services celebrated “the first anniversary of the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline. Since being launched on Mother’s Day 2022 by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the hotline’s professional counselors have provided emotional support, resources, and referrals to almost 12,000 pregnant and postpartum individuals struggling with mental health concerns, and their loved ones.  Additionally, HRSA is introducing an updated, more user-friendly toll-free number for the Hotline: 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262).”

From the Rx coverage front —

  • The Food and Drug Administration announced “approving Veozah (fezolinetant), an oral medication for the treatment of moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms, or hot flashes, caused by menopause. Veozah is the first neurokinin 3 (NK3) receptor antagonist approved by the FDA to treat moderate to severe hot flashes from menopause. It works by binding to and blocking the activities of the NK3 receptor, which plays a role in the brain’s regulation of body temperature.”
  • Mercer Consulting offers advice to employers and health plans on how to help employees and members address drug shortages.
  • Biopharma Dive reports
    • “A group of Food and Drug Administration advisers narrowly supported approving what could be the first gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy in a meeting Friday, clearing the way for the agency to make a closely watched decision later this month.
    • “By an 8-6 vote, the panel recommended that the treatment, developed by biotechnology company Sarepta Therapeutics, be granted an “accelerated” approval. The close vote reflected a daylong back-and-forth over the treatment, and whether the protein it’s designed to produce in the body — called microdystrophin — is reasonably likely to benefit people with Duchenne who can still walk. * * *
    • “The FDA usually follows the advice of its advisory committees, but isn’t required to do so. The agency is set to make its decision by May 29.
    • “While far from unanimous, the panel’s recommendation could make that decision easier, and marks an important moment for a Duchenne patient community that has long advocated for gene therapy.”

From the federal employee benefits front, NARFE informs us that.

  • “Effective May 1, 2023, the US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) extended its contract with John Hancock to provide insurance coverage to all Federal Long Term Care Insurance Program (FLTCIP) enrollees. Although OPM solicited multiple bids, John Hancock remained the sole bidder. The program administrator, Long Term Care Partners LLC, has mailed notice of this action to enrollees.  
  • “Per the extended contract, most enrollees should expect to face a premium increase effective January 1, 2024. In September 2023, each enrollee will be offered personalized options that will include accepting the premium rate increase to maintain current coverage or to reduce coverage to reduce the impact of any increase. OPM indicated that premium increases would be phased in over three years for some options.  
  • No additional information on the premium increases or personalized options is available currently.” 

From the bravery department, Govexec points out that the National Association of Letter Carriers named two dozen letter carriers were named as heroes of the year for taking life-saving actions on the job. Bravo!

From the healthcare spending front, Fierce Healthcare informs us

  • “The anti-dementia medication lecanemab will come with an extraordinarily high price tag if the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) decides to cover it, according to a research letter in JAMA Internal Medicine.
  • “Researchers at RAND estimate that covering the drug and other associated services could add between $2 billion and $5 billion in annual Medicare costs. This could also lead to “substantial out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries lacking supplemental coverage,” the researchers said.
  • :Those out-of-pocket costs could be as much as one-fifth of the annual income for a Medicare beneficiary, according to the study. The medication, developed by Eisai and Biogen, costs $26,500 a year, including treatment add-ons such as imaging.”

Whoa, Nelly. Thank heavens OPM is allowing FEHB carrier to offer Medicare Part D EGWPs next year.

Thursday Miscellany

From Washington DC —

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash
  • The Secretary of Health and Human Services issued a statement on the end of the Covid health emergency which occurred today.
    • Govexec and the Society for Human Resource Management respectively discuss the impact of this event on federal agencies and employers generally.
      • SHRM notes, “President Biden in April ended the pandemic national emergency weeks earlier than expected—but the premature ending won’t shift the deadlines spelled out in the administration’s guidance from March, including the extended deadline for special enrollment in health plans. * * * July 10 will also mark the end of some COBRA-related relief, under which employees were allowed extra time to pay their COBRA premiums or to decide whether they wanted to use the coverage.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “A highly anticipated meeting scheduled for Friday between President Biden and congressional leaders to chart a path forward on lifting the debt ceiling was postponed until next week, officials said.
    • “The delay will give White House and congressional staff more time to make progress in their closed-door spending talks, the officials said, adding that one of the lawmakers was unable to attend the meeting Friday because of a scheduling conflict.
  • STAT News informs us
    • “The Senate health committee on Thursday passed a package of bills aimed at speeding generic drug competition and reining in drug middlemen business practices. But they failed to pass an ambitious reform to the pharmacy benefit manager sector, despite strong bipartisan support for it.
    • “Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is pursuing the drug pricing reforms at the behest of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who wants to hold a floor vote on an even bigger package of health bills later this year. The markup came just a day after the same panel held a major hearing on PBM and drugmakers’ role in high insulin prices.
    • “It’s not clear when the Senate would take up that package, and while the package is bipartisan, it’s not clear whether it has enough support among House Republicans to pass in that chamber. There are a few, tamer PBM bills that the House Energy and Commerce Committee is expected to mark up on May 17, but there is no indication that Senate and House lawmakers are coordinating on PBM legislation.
    • “The committee passed 18 to 3 a bill that would ban PBMs from using so-called spread pricing. It would also require that the middlemen disclose rebates, fees, and other payments they receive and to pass them on to the insurers for whom they negotiate those concessions. * * * The committee included an amendment from Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.), that would let patients appeal insurer decisions to make them try cheaper drugs before getting more expensive drugs.”

From the public health front, Healio tells us that “Overweight and obese BMI during adulthood appeared associated with increased risk for colorectal cancer and non colorectal gastrointestinal cancers, according to study results published in JAMA Network Open.” The FEHBlog does not think that the new generation of obesity-reduction drugs needs publicity, but there you go.

From the Rx coverage and more front, the FDA announced

  • “the supplemental approval of Rexulti (brexpiprazole) oral tablets for the treatment of agitation associated with dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease. This is the first FDA-approved treatment option for this indication.”
    • Medpage Today adds, “Brexpiprazole’s labelopens in a new tab or window will continue to carry a boxed warning about the risk of increased mortality in elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis treated with antipsychotic drugs. The warning further stipulates that the drug is not approved for patients with dementia-related psychosis who are not experiencing agitation associated with Alzheimer’s dementia.”
  • and “finalized recommendations for assessing blood donor eligibility using a set of individual risk-based questions to reduce the risk of transfusion-transmitted HIV. These questions will be the same for every donor, regardless of sexual orientation, sex or gender. Blood establishments may now implement these recommendations by revising their donor history questionnaires and procedures.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out “The Biden administration has been taking action to address the prescription drug supply shortage, which has caused upheaval both for patients and providers, according to a May 10 Bloomberg report.”

From the medical research front —

  • STAT News reports
    • “Home to billions of cells that form trillions of connections, the human brain isn’t just the body’s most important organ; it’s also the hardest to study. But an international team of scientists using cutting-edge stem cell technology has devised a new way to better understand the brain’s cellular cleanup crew — and its connection to neurological disease.
    • “Researchers coaxed stem cells to grow into microglia, immune cells that roam the brain searching for signs of damage and that monitor and maintain neuronal connections. They then added microglia to brain organoids, tiny 3D structures of neurons that mimic some aspects of brain function, and transplanted these microglia-containing “mini-brains” into mice. Doing so caused microglia to look and behave much more like they would in a human brain compared to previous lab experiments conducted in a dish.
    • “The authors also found early hints that they could use these transplanted organoids to study disease, including the role that microglia might play in autism. Microglia in brain organoids derived from people with autism had larger cell bodies than cells from controls and had an overabundance of small cellular extensions associated with an active, inflammatory state researchers believe may contribute to the disorder.”
    • “The findings, published on Thursday in the journal Cell, are the result of a collaboration between scientists from San Diego to Germany to Israel. The study raises the possibility of using transplanted organoids to understand the complex crosstalk between neurons and immune cells across a range of diseases, and to perhaps one day use this system to test potential treatments.”
  • The Washington Post adds
    • “A skin patch being developed by a French pharmaceutical company to treat peanut allergy is showing promise in toddlers, according to a peer-reviewed study published Wednesday.
    • “The “peanut patch” outperformed a placebo in “desensitizing children to peanuts and increasing the peanut dose that triggered allergic symptoms,” said the study, which was funded by the company DBV Technologies and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Michele Orallo on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill —

Roll Call reports

  • “The White House and congressional leaders are discussing the duration of appropriations caps and a debt limit raise as staff talks get underway in advance of the next principals meeting on Friday.
  • “A two-year appropriations deal is under consideration, according to sources familiar with the talks, along the lines of three separate laws since 2015 that were paired with suspensions of the debt limit. 
  • “The White House and top Democrats are pushing for two years of debt limit breathing room, as in the 2019 deal cut with former President Donald Trump. That law contained two years of spending caps, which Speaker Kevin McCarthy pointed out as far back as January.
  • “Such an arrangement would, in theory, remove the threat of fiscal cliffs facing lawmakers and the economy until after the 2024 elections.”

Fierce Healthcare tells us,

  • “The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee convened the heads of three big pharmas—Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks, Novo Nordisk CEO Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen and Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson—as well as the top brass at the three largest PBMs—CVS Health Executive Vice President and President of Pharmacy Services David Joyner, Express Scripts President Adam Kautzner and OptumRx CEO Heather Cianfrocco.
  • “The legislation on the docket for the HELP Committee aims to inject transparency into the pharmaceutical supply chain as well as increase access to generics. PBM reforms on the table include eliminating spread pricing models as well as clawbacks from pharmacies. * * *
  • “The HELP Committee will convene Thursday to mark up four bills that target drug pricing. Sanders said that while these measures are a priority, there’s more work to be done in addressing this issue. He added that issues with affording drugs are a broader part of the ongoing challenges around affordability in healthcare.”

Tomorrow is the last day of the Covid public health emergency, and today the Department of Health and Human Services posted a fact sheet on how the end of the PHE affects telehealth.

From the Rx coverage front, the Wall Street Journal points out

  • “Advisers to the Food and Drug Administration recommended making an oral contraceptive available without a prescription for the first time, potentially widening access to birth control for women across the country. 
  • “The panel of FDA advisers voted 17 to 0 on Wednesday that there was enough evidence for the agency to approve the medication’s sale over-the-counter. The FDA, which is expected to make a final decision this summer, doesn’t have to follow the expert panel’s advice, though it often does.
  • “The FDA approved the pill, called Opill, for prescription use in 1973. HRA Pharma, owned by Perrigo, a Dublin-based generic drugmaker, submitted its application to make Opill available over-the-counter last July. 
  • “The advisory panel said the benefits of making oral contraceptives available over-the-counter outweighed the risks.”

The cost curve is pointing down.

From the medical research front, the National Institutes of Health updates us on multiple mRNA vaccines that show promise for treating HPV-Related cancers.

From the healthcare quality front, NCQA informs us

  • “We launched our Race and Ethnicity Stratification Learning Network.
  • “The network is a free, interactive, online tool that offers data and best practices to help health plans improve how they collect race and ethnicity data on enrollees.
  • Improving data collection of race and ethnicity data is vital to improving health equity.
  • “The data available in this new resource summarize the care of 20 million people enrolled in 14 health plans that reported results on 5 HEDIS measuresstratified by race and ethnicity.
  • “Best practices we identify come from NCQA’s qualitative interviews of key staff at plans in the learning network.
  • “A report groups our findings in three areas.”

Check it out.

From the federal employment front, the Office of Personnel Management announced

  • released proposed regulations that would prohibit the use of previous salary history in setting pay for federal employment offers. Under the new proposed regulations, federal agencies would not be able to consider an applicant’s salary history when setting pay for new federal employees in the General Schedule pay system, Prevailing Rate pay system, Administrative Appeals Judge pay system, and Administrative Law Judge pay system.  
  • “These proposed regulations are a major step forward that will help make the federal government a national leader in pay equity,” said OPM Director Kiran Ahuja. “Relying on a candidate’s previous salary history can exacerbate preexisting inequality and disproportionally impact women and workers of color. With these proposed regulations, the Biden-Harris Administration is setting the standard and demonstrating to the nation that we mean business when it comes to equality, fairness, and attracting the best talent.”