FEHBlog

Friday Factoids

On the day I return to Texas, the DC air quality improved from unhealthy to unhealthy for sensitive groups, all due to wildfire smoke. The air quality in Dripping Springs, TX, where the FEHBlog lives, is good.

Also from Washington, DC, the Supreme Court closed its October 2022 term today.

Politico tells us

  • “It’s CDC Director Rochelle Walensky’s last day at the agency, but she’s still thinking a lot about the agency’s work ahead.
  • “She’s been working to smooth potential bumps in a transition, in contact with her successor, Mandy Cohen — an Obama administration alum and formerly North Carolina’s top public health official.
  • “And she looks to stay in the game, telling Pulse she’s “eagerly wanting to champion health and public health from a new perch,” though she’s been vague about what that might be.”

The Department of Health and Human Services announced

  • “actions to lower health care costs and implement President Biden’s lower cost prescription drug law – the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) – which is already saving covered seniors and people with disabilities hundreds of dollars annually.
  • “HHS released revised drug price negotiation guidance from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). The guidance is a critical step in implementing the IRA, which finally took on Big Pharma and will allow Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices on behalf of people with Medicare. * * * “
  • “HHS today also announced that President Biden’s cap on insulin costs at $35 per month will go into effect for people who get their insulin through Medicare Part B and Medicare Advantage with use of a traditional pump starting tomorrow, July 1, 2023. Millions of people with Medicare Part D are already benefiting from the Inflation Reduction Act’s $35 monthly cap on insulin costs, and if these rules for Part B and Part D had been in effect in 2020, 1.5 million beneficiaries would have saved an average of $500 per year.
  • “More information on the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program is available at https://www.cms.gov/inflation-reduction-act-and-medicare/medicare-drug-price-negotiation
  • “To read more on how the $35 insulin cap is already benefiting seniors and other Medicare enrollees across the country, visit: https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/insulin-affordability-ira-data-point.”

From the public health front, MedPage Today informs us

  • “Drug overdose deaths with xylazine involvement have multiplied, with age-adjusted death rates 35 times higher in 2021 than in 2018, the CDC reported.
  • “The age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths involving the animal sedative, also known as “tranq,” rose from 0.03 per 100,000 people to 1.06 per 100,000, Merianne Rose Spencer, PhD, MPH, a researcher at the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics in Hyattsville, Maryland, and co-authors reported in Vital Statistics Rapid Release. * * *
  • “While never approved for human use, xylazine has increasingly been found adulterating other drugs, particularly fentanyl. It slows breathing and heart rate, lowers blood pressure to unsafe levels, complicates efforts to reverse opioid overdoses with naloxone (Narcan), and can lead to serious flesh wounds.”

From the medical research front, the National Institutes of Health announced

  • “Insights into healing and aging were discovered by National Institutes of Health researchers and their collaborators, who studied how a tiny sea creature regenerates an entire new body from only its mouth. The researchers sequenced RNA from Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus, a small, tube-shaped animal that lives on the shells of hermit crabs. Just as the Hydractinia were beginning to regenerate new bodies, the researchers detected a molecular signature associated with the biological process of aging, also known as senescence. According to the study published in Cell ReportsHydractinia demonstrates that the fundamental biological processes of healing and aging are intertwined, providing new perspective on how aging evolved.
  • “Studies like this that explore the biology of unusual organisms reveal both how universal many biological processes are and how much we have yet to understand about their functions, relationships and evolution,” said Charles Rotimi, Ph.D., director of the Intramural Research Program at the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of NIH. “Such findings have great potential for providing novel insights into human biology.”

From the healthcare spending front, Mercer Consulting explains what’s happening with the boatload of claims data that health plans began posting to their websites last year.

  • “It’s been almost a year since group health plan sponsors and issuers, in order to comply with the Transparency in Coverage final rule, posted machine-readable files (MRFs) that contain in-network negotiated charges for every medical service with every provider in their networks. This data had previously been considered by insurers as proprietary and confidential, but the government saw the need to put more data about the cost of healthcare into the hands of consumers. There have been eye-opening reports in the past revealing wide discrepancies in the price of medical services from one healthcare facility to the next; the hope was that making price data freely available would make these kinds of studies much easier to do. Given that the data has been available to the public since July 2022, why haven’t we seen more stories on the cost of healthcare in the United States? What happened to all that medical price data?
  • “Well, it’s certainly out there. By some estimates, over 700 terabytes of MRF data have been published since last summer. * * *
  • “While we’re excited about the possibilities for this price data, we’ll need to be patient as the market moves to put more of it to use. Importantly, this data also underpins the final leg of the transparency regulations, which requires real-time benefit cost estimators be made available to the public for 500 shoppable services this year and for everything else by 2024. So if you haven’t already, make sure your data partners are ready for this next step of compliance.
  • “While we are still a long way from achieving price transparency in health care, this data is a crucial starting point.”

From the Rx coverage front, BioPharma Dive discusses Biomarin Phamaceutical’s plans to market its FDA-approved hemophilia gene therapy in the U.S.

  • “BioMarin’s chief commercial officer, Jeff Ajer, told investors during a conference call Thursday afternoon that the first priority of the launch will be getting the country’s largest hemophilia treatment centers to use Roctavian. The FDA approved the therapy for certain people living with severe hemophilia A, a group that totals around 2,500 in the U.S. by BioMarin’s estimates.
  • “Like other approved gene therapies, Roctavian is expensive. BioMarin set its list price at $2.9 million, which Ajer said translates to net revenue of approximately $1.9 million. The company expects to record between $50 million and $150 million in Roctavian revenue this year. BioMarin is also tying the drug’s price to patient outcomes, promising a warranty that will reimburse insurers up to 100% if patients don’t respond, and a pro-rated rebate for the first four years if the response wanes.  
  • “But unlike most available gene therapies, Roctavian treats a disease with a variety of available options. BioMarin argues that its therapy would likely save the healthcare system money over time. Many hemophilia A patients are currently treated multiple times a week with “replacement Factor,” medicines that supply them with the key blood-clotting protein they’re missing. These treatments are costly too, at about $800,000 per year for the typical patient, according to BioMarin.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington DC, where the air quality index was code red today —

  • The Supreme Court is down to its final four pending decisions from the October 2022 term. The final decision day is tomorrow morning
  • The EEOC Chair made the following noteworthy comment on today’s Supreme Court decision on affirmation action in college admissions:
    • “Today’s Supreme Court decision effectively turns away from decades of precedent and will undoubtedly hamper the efforts of some colleges and universities to ensure diverse student bodies. That’s a problem for our economy because businesses often rely on colleges and universities to provide a diverse pipeline of talent for recruitment and hiring.  Diversity helps companies attract top talent, sparks innovation, improves employee satisfaction, and enables companies to better serve their customers”.
    • “However, the decision in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard College and Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina does not address employer efforts to foster diverse and inclusive workforces or to engage the talents of all qualified workers, regardless of their background. It remains lawful for employers to implement diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility programs that seek to ensure workers of all backgrounds are afforded equal opportunity in the workplace.”
  • Govexec tells us
    • “The Supreme Court on Thursday ruled against the U.S. Postal Service in its attempts to require any employee to work on Sundays, even when it conflicted with their religious observances. 
    • “In a unanimous decision [interpreting Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964], the top court reversed decades of precedent in determining that employers like USPS have to demonstrate more than a de minimis burden to avoid their otherwise mandated obligations to provide reasonable religious accommodations. The justices sent the case back to a lower court to determine whether, given the specifics of the case, the Postal Service could come up with other means to keep a letter carrier on the payroll without requiring him to work on Sundays.”

From the public health front —

  • The American Hospital Association informs us
    • “As proposed by its Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [(CDC)] today recommended a single dose of the GSK or Pfizer Respiratory Syncytial Virus vaccine for people aged 60 and older who decide with their health care provider that the vaccine would benefit them. The Food and Drug Administration last month approved the vaccines for use in individuals 60 and older. The first U.S.-licensed vaccines to protect against RSV, they are expected to be available this fall.”
  • The CDC announced
    • “CDC Director Rochelle P. Walensky, M.D., M.P.H. adopted the 2023-2024 Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices’ (ACIP) recommendations on annual influenza (flu) vaccination for everyone 6 months and older in the United States on June 27, 2023.  There were small changes to the annual recommendations around flu vaccination, including an acknowledgement of the updated flu vaccine composition for the 2023-2024 flu season and a change in the recommendations for vaccination of people with egg allergies. Dr. Walensky’s adoption of the ACIP recommendations makes them official CDC policy. * * *
    • The recommended timing of flu vaccination has not changed. September and October are the best times for most people to get vaccinated.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced
    • “[Its] Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (OASH) is releasing a draft framework to support and accelerate smoking cessation, building on supports that are already in place for people who want to quit. This framework will be a roadmap to enhance collaboration and coordination across HHS—and with federal and nonfederal stakeholders—to drive further progress toward smoking cessation and to deliver equitable outcomes for all persons in America. HHS is seeking public input on the framework before it is finalized.
    • “The public comment period will be open for 30 days starting June 30, 2023, through July 30 at 11:59 PM ET. HHS is committed to transparency and providing opportunities for public participation during the development of the Framework.
    • “Anyone can comment. Each responding entity (person or organization) is requested to submit only one response via email to HHSSmokingCessationFramework2023@hhs.gov as a Word document, Portable Document Format (PDF), or in the body of an email. Please include “Request for Information: Draft HHS 2023 Framework to Support and Accelerate Smoking Cessation” in the subject line of the email message.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management offers employers strategies for reducing record-level employee stress.
  • Roll Call reports
    • “Only one-third of individuals diagnosed with hepatitis C have been cured in the decade since cures for the disease became available, according to a study published Thursday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “Hepatitis C is a viral inflammation of the liver that can be asymptomatic yet spread through blood or other bodily fluids. Without treatment, hepatitis C is a chronic condition that can lead to liver cancer, liver failure or other comorbidities. 
    • “The Food and Drug Administration approved the first highly effective direct-acting antiviral drugs to cure hepatitis C in 2013. Treatment occurs over the course of 8 to 12 weeks and has a 95 percent success rate.
    • “But almost 15,000 Americans still die from hepatitis C annually. * * *
    • “Francis Collins, the former longtime NIH director who leads the White House National Hepatitis C Elimination Program, said the data “highlights an urgency for a bold response to hepatitis C.”

From the health plan design front

  • Fierce Healthcare discusses
    • “Following the COVID-19 pandemic, the rising tide of mental health concerns—particularly among children and adolescents—has been a major focus in the industry.
    • “But it’s not a new problem. Behavioral health needs have been on the rise for some time, and that’s why in 2018 the team at Elevance Health’s Carelon established the Suicide Prevention Program, which deploys data and predictive models to identify people at risk sooner and avoid potential self-harm or suicide events. 
    • “Suicide is the second-leading cause of death for young people, and rates have increased by 56% in the last 20 years. Through the prevention program, Carelon saw a reduction of more than 20% in suicidal events among adolescents and young adults with commercial coverage.
    • I”n addition, this corresponded to a 30% decrease in per member per month behavioral health spending.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management identifies four ways to boost employee satisfaction with high deductible plans connected with health savings accounts.

From the generative AI front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “Johnson City, Tenn.-based Ballad Health is using artificial intelligence to identify potential medication errors and improve pharmacy workflows, the health system said June 29. 
    • “Ballad is using a medication safety monitoring platform from MedAware for this effort. The platform monitors drug prescriptions in real-time and compares this information against patient data from the health system’s EHR to flag potentially dangerous or fatal drug interactions. 
    • “The Ballad Health Innovation Center and Ballad Ventures, the system’s venture capital subsidiary, is funding the project with MedAware.

From the healthcare spending front —

  • Healthcare Dive relates
    • “Healthcare costs are expected to rise 7% next year as inflation drives providers to seek rate increases from insurers and pharmaceutical costs rise, according to PwC’s annual report.
    • “The consultancy, which surveyed actuaries at insurers that offer group and individual plans, said the increase outstrips its predictions for 2022 and 2023, which were 5.5% and 6% respectively.
    • “Some trends are pushing costs down, like the availability of more biosimilar drugs and a shift toward cheaper outpatient care. A number of other factors are expected to be cost neutral but key to watch, including health plans’ investment in value-based care, COVID-19 impacts, behavioral healthcare utilization, health equity initiatives, price transparency rules and Medicaid redeterminations, PwC said.
  • and
    • “Primary care physicians saw their compensation rise faster than other medical and surgical specialties in 2022, as significant E/M coding changes enacted by the CMS kicked into gear and volume stabilized coming out of the pandemic.
    • “Medical groups and healthcare organizations reported a 6.1% increase in primary care compensation in 2022 compared to 2021 in the AMGA’s most recent compensation survey published on Wednesday. That’s compared to 1.5% and 1.6% increases for medical and surgical specialties, respectively.
    • “Medical groups’ revenue increased faster than compensation gains for physicians, a trend the AMGA said could be due to groups using more revenue to address higher expenses as supply and labor costs soared.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence points out
    • “Individuals with depression, anxiety, or both who are enrolled in large employer-sponsored health plans have higher out-of-pocket spending than individuals without such diagnoses, according to an issue brief from the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker.
    • “These findings of higher health spending among privately insured individuals receiving treatment for depression and/or anxiety come at a time of rising health costs. Health insurance is already expensive for enrollees with private insurance, and treatment for mental health conditions can further escalate these costs,” the brief noted.
    • “The researchers used large employer health plan claims from the 2021 MerativeMarketScan Commercial Database. Nine percent of adult, large employer-sponsored health plan enrollees had a depression or anxiety diagnosis or both.
    • “Members with a generalized anxiety disorder (anxiety) diagnosis, a depression diagnosis, or both spent, on average, $1,501 per year in out-of-pocket costs. This was nearly double the $863 in average annual out-of-pocket healthcare spending that individuals without one of these diagnoses spent.
    • “Moreover, total annual spending, including out-of-pocket healthcare costs, was 1.9 times higher for individuals with one of these diagnoses than those without one. Utilization was also twice as high for those diagnosed, who typically visited a provider’s office 7.4 times per year, while those without a diagnosis visited 3.2 times per year on average.

From the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) front —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “The promise of gene therapy has arrived for thousands of Americans with the most common and severe form of hemophilia.
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first gene therapy for hemophilia A on Thursday, giving patients a long-awaited option for avoiding the burden of regular infusions and injections.
    • “That’s a complete game-changer for quality of life,” said Mike Reutershan, a 38-year-old medicinal chemist with hemophilia who lives in suburban Boston. “You don’t have to carry a bag of medicine around with you.” 
    • “The FDA approved the new gene therapy, called Roctavian and made by BioMarin Pharmaceutical, for adults with a severe form of the disease. Roctavian is infused just once.  
    • “Priced at $2.9 million, the drug now ranks among the most expensive in the world. But the price is in line with the cost of other new gene therapies, a groundbreaking type of treatment that replaces a missing or faulty gene.”
  • Cardiovascular Business informs us
    • “Just eight days after approving the first anti-inflammatory drug for cardiovascular disease, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has made another historic approval focused on cardiovascular health. 
    • “The agency announced Wednesday, June 29, that it has approved donislecel, a new pancreatic islet cellular therapy made from the pancreatic cells of deceased donors, for the treatment of type 1 diabetes among adult patients with severe hypoglycemia. Donislecel is marketed and sold by Chicago-based CellTrans under the brand name Lantidra
    • “This represents the first time the FDA has approved a cellular therapy for type 1 diabetes.”
  • Biopharma Dive calls attention to ten clinical trials to watch in the second half of this year.  

 

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • Federal News Network tells us
    • “Almost 33,000 federal civilian employees are a step closer to a bigger pay raise in 2024 after the Office of Personnel Management published a proposal to establish four new locality pay areas for the General Schedule.
    • “OPM’s proposed rule, added to the Federal Register Wednesday, comes after the President’s Pay Agent in December approved recommendations from the Federal Salary Council to establish the four new locality pay areas.
    • “The four new proposed locality pay areas are:
      • Fresno-Madera-Hanford, California
      • Reno-Fernley, Nevada
      • Rochester-Batavia-Seneca Falls, New York
      • Spokane-Spokane Valley-Coeur d’Alene, Washington-Idaho.”
  • The Congressional Budget Office released its 2023 Long-Term Budget Outlook. In short,
    • “The U.S. faces a challenging fiscal outlook in the coming years, according to CBO’s projections. Measured as a percentage of GDP, large and sustained deficits lead to high and rising federal debt that exceeds any previously recorded level.”
  • Roll Call adds
    • “This month’s law suspending the debt ceiling and capping appropriations has lowered projected spending, deficits and debt over the long haul, the Congressional Budget Office said in its latest long-term budget outlook.
    • Compared to the agency’s report issued last year, overall spending and deficits are higher over the next several years in the updated forecast released Wednesday. But in part because of the spending caps in the debt limit law, estimated spending in the latter part of the 30-year projection period will be lower than the agency estimated last summer.”
  • The Justice Department announced,
    • “The Justice Department, together with federal and state law enforcement partners, announced today a strategically coordinated, two-week nationwide law enforcement action that resulted in criminal charges against 78 defendants for their alleged participation in health care fraud and opioid abuse schemes that included over $2.5 billion in alleged fraud.
    • “The defendants allegedly defrauded programs entrusted for the care of the elderly and disabled, and, in some cases, used the proceeds of the schemes to purchase luxury items, including exotic automobiles, jewelry, and yachts. In connection with the enforcement action, the Department seized or restrained millions of dollars in cash, automobiles, and real estate.  * * *
    • “Health care fraud is a complex and ever-evolving threat that negatively impacts the American people,” said Assistant Director Luis Quesada of the FBI’s Criminal Investigative Division. “Today’s nationwide coordinated law enforcement action is a testament to the tenacity of the FBI and our partners, as well as our combined efforts to pursue anyone who conspires to exploit our health care system for financial gain.”

From the public health front —

  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “UnitedHealthcare executives recently warned of rising healthcare utilization rates as they saw a higher-than-expected number of hip replacements, knee surgeries and other elective procedures. Analysts from UBS Group AG are suggesting that pickleball could be one factor driving the higher rate of injuries, Bloomberg reported June 26. “UnitedHealthcare executives recently warned of rising healthcare utilization rates as they saw a higher-than-expected number of hip replacements, knee surgeries and other elective procedures. Analysts from UBS Group AG are suggesting that pickleball could be one factor driving the higher rate of injuries, Bloomberg reported June 26. 
    • “The firm estimates that there could be between $250 million and $500 million in medical costs attributable to pickleball injuries this year, according to the report. Analysts said that the number of pickleball players is expected to grow by 150 percent this year  to 22.3 million. They estimate about a third of the core players who play at least eight times per year are older adults.   
    • “The analysts looked at two studies regarding pickleball injuries and concluded that players go to the emergency department at a rate of about 0.27 percent, with the majority of injuries occurring among those 60 and older, according to the report. The most common injuries are strains, sprains, and fractures. The wrist and lower legs are the most likely areas to be injured. “

From the Rx coverage front —

  • The Wall Street Journal features an article titled “Ozempic Can Make You Thin, Not Necessarily Healthy; Diet and exercise still matter when you take drugs for weight loss, and not only for the reasons you expect.”
    • “For those taking these drugs, exercise is still vital to keep your heart healthy and muscles strong. Exercise lowers your risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, Type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease, according to scientific studies. And strength-training is especially important when you lose a lot of weight quickly.
    • “People taking these drugs to lose weight also need the right foods to provide nutrients, fuel their body and keep them healthy. This approach isn’t just about eating better. It’s about eating a specific diet tailored to these drugs. If you don’t, that could lead to health problems down the road or exacerbate side effects.” 
  • STAT News reports offers a new perspective on the country’s shortage of cancer drugs, which is a big bowl of wrong.
    • “A young girl, maybe 5 or 6 years old, had come into Yoram Unguru’s clinic with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, the most common of all childhood cancers. One of the drugs needed for treatment was methotrexate. The only problem was that the drug was in short supply.
    • “Oftentimes we can cure kids of their disease, but we can’t do that without the drugs,” said Unguru, a pediatric hematologist oncologist at Children’s Hospital at Sinai in Baltimore and the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. “It’s just so, so maddening.” * * *
    • “Methotrexate isn’t the only essential chemotherapy clinicians are having a hard time getting their hands on right now. Two other key chemotherapies, cisplatin and carboplatin, which are also generic injectable drugs, have been in shortage for the last few months. But Unguru didn’t see this particular patient recently or even in the last year. He saw her over a decade ago, when the country was facing a different methotrexate shortage back in 2012.
    • “For me, it was my first real world encounter with shortages. That was back when more of this was darker, and I had more of it on my head,” he said, gesturing to his graying beard. * * *
    • “Since then, he’s dealt with countless drug shortages in not only essential cancer medicines but many crucial generic drugs including injectables and antibiotics — nearly all of which have been around and off patent for decades. At any given time, there are dozens or hundreds of generic drugs on the Food and Drug Administration’s shortage list.
    • “These shortages are really omnipresent. In the modern era, it’s not even the new normal. It’s the normal. From 2011, they have really never gone away,” Unguru said. “It’s like Groundhog Day.”
    • “The underlying problem for this hasn’t really changed either — which is that the economics of the generic drug market drive hospitals and producers to emphasize low prices and profits rather than the reliability of the drug supply. The worst part, Unguru said, is that “these shortages are preventable. They’re absolutely preventable.”
  • Reuters relates,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved Pfizer Inc’s (PFE.N) drug to treat hair loss caused by an autoimmune disease, the company said on Friday [June 23].
    • “The drug, branded as Litfulo, has been approved for people aged 12 years and older suffering from severe alopecia areata (AA), a condition where the immune system attacks hair follicles and causes hair to fall out, often in clumps.
    • “The FDA’s decision makes Litfulo the first to be allowed for the treatment of the condition in adolescents.”
  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “Pharmacy benefit managers and their role in the drug supply chain have been under the microscope, and a new playbook aims to arm employers with strategies to strengthen their negotiating power.
    • “The guide, released by the National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions, identifies several key strategic recommendations that employers can adopt when looking to better navigate their relationship with PBMs.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Healthcare Dive reports
    • “In May, the median year-to-date operating margin index for hospitals hit 0.3%, marking the third consecutive month of positive performance, according to a new hospital report from Kaufman Hall.
    • “Hospitals’ financial stabilization is attributable in part to patients’ increased utilization of outpatient hospital services and decreased labor costs, the consultancy found.
    • “To keep the positive momentum, hospitals should pay attention to the trend toward outpatient services, Erik Swanson, Kaufman Hall SVP of data and analytics, said in a statement, calling the shift “particularly important.”
  • Benefits Pro notes
    • “Increased investment in urgent care centers is needed as health care delivery models change and patients with non-life-threatening conditions opt for ease of access, according to a recent analysis by Colliers.
    • “The analysis notes several data points to back up its message. The Urgent Care Association found that since 2019 patient volume has spiked by 60%, while Data Bridge Market Research has predicted a compound annual growth rate of 5.35% between 2022 and 2029.”
  • STAT News explains why “After a late start, Eli Lilly has the momentum in battle for $30 billion weight loss market.”
    • “It was Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic and Wegovy that set off a new era in obesity medicine, delivering unprecedented levels of weight loss and working its way into popular culture, inescapable ads, and hundreds of thousands of medicine cabinets.
    • “But Eli Lilly has been following close behind with new treatments, and after dropping result after result from successful trials at the American Diabetes Association conference here this past weekend, the Indianapolis-based drugmaker looks to be gaining an edge over its Danish competitor in the race to supply obesity drugs.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • The U.S. Supreme Court released three more opinions this morning. The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “The Supreme Court rejected a bid by Norfolk Southern to limit its state-court liability in states where it does relatively little business, ruling Tuesday that states can require companies to submit to their courts’ jurisdiction as a condition of doing business within their borders.
    • “While the case involved a long-pending workplace lawsuit filed by a retired railway employee from Virginia, Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for a 5-4 majority of the justices, linked the issue to a Norfolk Southern train’s Feb. 3 derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.”
  • The Supreme Court has pending seven more decisions from its October 2022 term. The next decision day will be Thursday morning.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission has proposed changes to the premerger notification form in addition to premerger notification rules implementing the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, which requires organizations to report large transactions to the FTC and Justice Department for antitrust review.
    • “The HSR Act and its implementing rules related to mergers and acquisitions involve completing HSR Forms and waiting a specified period of time before completing the transaction.
    • “The proposed HSR changes would help the agencies to more effectively screen transactions for potential competition issues within the waiting period, which is generally 30 days. The FTC said that this competition review is important to identify deals that require in-depth investigations to determine whether they would violate antitrust laws and, if so, to seek to block the proposed transaction.”
  • HHS Inspector General announced posting
    • “its final rule implementing information blocking penalties. The final rule establishes the statutory penalties created by the 21st Century Cures Act. If OIG determines that an individual or entity has committed information blocking, they may be subject up to a $1 million penalty per violation.
    • “The final rule does not impose new information blocking requirements. OIG incorporated regulations published by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) as the basis for enforcing information blocking penalties. For more information on ONC’s information blocking regulations see: Information Blocking.
    • “To report complaints about information blocking, please visit the ONC Information Blocking Portal or the OIG Hotline.”
  • HR Dive points out the steps that covered employers to take to comply with the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, which took effect today.

From the public health front —

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “For the first time in two decades, malaria infections have been confirmed in people who did not travel outside the United States, leading federal health authorities to warn about the potential for transmission of the mosquito-born disease within the nation’s borders.
    • “Four people in Sarasota County, Fla., and one in Cameron County, Tex., were confirmed as having been infected between late May and late June through local transmission. All have gotten treatment and are recovering as health officials watch for additional cases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
    • “Although the potentially fatal disease was once endemic, it was declared eliminated in the United States in 1951. About 2,000 people are diagnosed with malaria in the nation each year, but those cases have involved trips abroad. For a handful who came down with the disease in recent months, that was not the case.
    • “The risk of getting malaria in the United States “remains extremely low,” the CDC said. Still, experts said Americans should be aware of the possibility and take steps to prevent mosquito bites.”
  • The CDC discusses a recent study examining the health impact of widening the age range eligible for cost-free in-network diabetes type 2 testing.
  • The Health and Human Services Department “releasedreport showcasing evidence-based interventions to support physical activity among adults ages 65 years and older. By the year 2030, 1 in every 5 Americans will be age 65 or over. More than 85 percent of older adults currently have at least 1 chronic health condition. The growing population of older adults can gain substantial health benefits and prevent or manage chronic disease by engaging in physical activity.”

From the Rx coverage front —

  • Health Affairs lets us know that
    • “Using Medicare claims, we documented US prescribing patterns for originator biologic trastuzumab (Herceptin), a targeted cancer therapy, and five biosimilar entrants since 2019. The first biosimilar captured a dominant share, but over time, average sales prices of all products declined, and later entrants became dominant in some states. Despite strong brand loyalty to the first biosimilar, competitive pressure increased with subsequent entrants.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review relates
    • “With about a dozen cancer drugs on back order and no clear end to the shortages, the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the Society of Gynecologic Oncology recently advised clinicians to ration chemotherapy supplies. 
    • “The updated guidelines recommend curbing or halting pharmaceutical treatment for patients with “recurrent, agent-resistant cancers” — which means saving therapies for patients with a better chance of surviving. 
    • “The national cancer care group also recommended extending the time between treatments when appropriate; lessening waste by “optimizing vial size, dose rounding and using multi-use vials”; and providing support services to patients and clinicians experiencing “shortage-related distress.”
    • “Two cancer drugs in shortage that treat multiple cancers and cost about $20 per vial, cisplatin and carboplatin, have been in shortage for months. One of the main suppliers for the drugs ended operations in late 2022 after FDA investigators found numerous quality infractions and ruined reporting documents. In another inspection, the agency found more quality issues, which could further delay expected recovery. 
    • “The FDA allowed a China-based drug company to produce and import cisplatin, and the agency is working to boost carboplatin supplies.”

From the studies front —

  • The National Institutes of Health announced
    • “In people with Alzheimer’s disease, the underlying changes in the brain associated with dementia typically begin many years—or even decades—before a diagnosis. While pinpointing the exact causes of Alzheimer’s remains a major research challenge, they likely involve a combination of genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors. Now an NIH-funded study elucidates the role of another likely culprit that you may not have considered: the human gut microbiome, the trillions of diverse bacteria and other microbes that live primarily in our intestines.
    • “Earlier studies had showed that the gut microbiomes of people with symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease differ from those of healthy people with normal cognition [2]. What this new work advances is that these differences arise early on in people who will develop Alzheimer’s, even before any obvious symptoms appear.
    • “The science still has a ways to go before we’ll know if specific dietary changes can alter the gut microbiome and modify its influence on the brain in the right ways. But what’s exciting about this finding is it raises the possibility that doctors one day could test a patient’s stool sample to determine if what’s present from their gut microbiome correlates with greater early risk for Alzheimer’s dementia. Such a test would help doctors detect Alzheimer’s earlier and intervene sooner to slow or ideally even halt its advance.”
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us
    • “Medicare Advantage (MA) beneficiaries given home-delivered meals in the four weeks after being discharged from a hospital were not only less likely to be readmitted within 30 days, they were also less likely to die, according to a study in JAMA Health Forum.
    • “The 2018 Chronic Care Act gave MA plans greater leverage to address the social determinants of healthcare. In addition to giving insurers an impetus for launching dietary programs, the act also covers transportation for beneficiaries and other at-home services.
    • “The study states that “nearly three-quarters of MA plans offered meals as a supplemental benefit in 2022, mostly driven by expectations of downstream cost savings based on findings from earlier observational studies of community-based nutrition programs, and desires to maintain market parity in an increasingly competitive MA space.
    • “Beginning in January 2021, Kaiser Permanente Southern California (KPSC) began offering home-delivered meals to eligible MA enrollees. The comparative cohort study in JAMA Health Forum examines data from 4,032 KPSC MA enrollees who’d been hospitalized for heart failure and 7,944 who’d been hospitalized for other reasons after they’d been discharged from Jan. 1, 2021, to Jan. 31, 2022. The data come from 15 hospitals in the KPSC network.”

In U.S. healthcare business news —

  • Healthcare Dive reports
    • “Walgreens missed Wall Street earnings expectations in its third fiscal quarter and cut its 2023 outlook, citing macro factors including a weak respiratory season and falling demand for COVID-19 tests and vaccines.
    • “The pharmacy chain did beat the Street’s revenue expectations with a topline of $35.4 billion, up 9% year over year, thanks in part to its expanding U.S. Healthcare segment, which includes value-based medical group VillageMD.”

Monday Roundup

From Washington DC —

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash
  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “The House and Senate armed services committees each finished their work on their versions of next year’s defense authorization bill within a day of one another, with both key committees approving overall funding levels that closely match the Biden administration’s 2024 funding request of $842 billion in discretionary DoD spending.
    • “The Senate Armed Service Committee’s bill, approved behind closed doors on Friday, would authorize $844 billion next year, while the House version, debated in a public session a day earlier, would match the administration’s request.
    • “Another area of commonality: both committees endorsed the administration’s proposed pay increase for military service members, making it highly likely that they’ll receive a 2024 increase of 5.2%, the largest military pay raise since 2002.
    • “For now, the measures do not include language that would grant the administration’s request for the same pay raise for federal civilian workers. A provision to achieve that could still be added when the bills reach the House and Senate floors; however, a large faction of House Republicans is pushing an alternative plan that would make all civil servants’ pay increases “merit-based.”
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued,
    • “a proposed rule that proposes to update payment rates and policies and includes requests for information under the end-stage renal disease (ESRD) Prospective Payment System (PPS) for renal dialysis services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries on or after January 1, 2024. This rule also proposes an update to the Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) dialysis payment rate for renal dialysis services furnished by ESRD facilities for calendar year (CY) 2024. In addition, the rule proposes to update requirements for the ESRD Quality Incentive Program (QIP).
    • “For CY 2024, CMS is proposing to increase the ESRD PPS base rate to $269.99, increasing total payments to ESRD facilities by approximately 1.6 percent. The CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule also includes several proposals and requests for information related to ESRD PPS payment policies.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration awarded $50 million to launch the Persistent Poverty Initiative, an initiative to alleviate the cumulative effects of persistent poverty on cancer outcomes by building research capacity, fostering cancer prevention research, and promoting the implementation of community-based programs. The Persistent Poverty Initiative is the first major program to address the structural and institutional factors of persistent poverty in the context of cancer. It is coordinated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). These awards create five new Centers for Cancer Control Research in Persistent Poverty Areas that will advance key priorities of the Administration’s Cancer Moonshot — to reduce inequities in the structural drivers of cancer and prevent more cancers before they start by reducing tobacco use and making sure everyone has access to healthy food.”
  • FedScoop informs us,
    • “Most federal government employees will receive between four and eight additional hours of leave time in 2023, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management said.
    • “The 2023 leave year ending Jan. 13, 2024, will have 27 pay periods, OPM said in a memo sent on Monday to human resource directors of U.S. government agencies. That means most federal employees will receive an additional pay period’s worth of leave in 2023, which could be four, six, or eight hours depending on their accrual rate, according to the memo.
    • “The change doesn’t apply to agencies whose first pay period was Jan. 8, 2023, as they will have 26 pay periods, the memo said. 
    • “While most federal workers will get more leave time, the maximum carryover amount for annual leave – 240 hours for most employees and 360 hours for overseas employees – won’t change, OPM said. It encouraged agencies to remind affected workers to use any time over that limit before the end of the leave year so they don’t lose it.”

From the public health front —

  • CBS News tells us,
    • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now separately tracking several new COVID-19 variants, the agency announced Friday, adding more Omicron descendants to an increasingly complex list of new strains that are competing nationwide. 
    • Among the new variants now being tracked by the CDC is EU.1.1, a strain first designated by scientists earlier this year over its rapid ascent in some European countries
    • The variant is a more distant descendant of the XBB.1.5 variant that had surged earlier this year, with a handful of more mutations to its spike protein that may be driving its spread. 
    • The CDC estimates that EU.1.1 is now 1.7% of U.S. cases nationwide but may have already reached as much as 8.7% of cases in the region spanning Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming.
    • It is too early to know whether EU.1.1 will lead to new or different symptoms in the U.S.
  • FEHBlog note — Reassuringly, the variants remain descendants of the late, great Omicron.
  • Helio informs us,
    • “Prenatal lifestyle interventions delivered by an allied health professional, with individual delivery formats and a moderate number of sessions, decreased gestational weight gain., according to data published in JAMA Network Open.
    • “In addition, researchers observed associations with reduced gestational weight gain among physical activity and mixed behavioral interventions. 
    • “These findings suggest that future pragmatic research should focus on testing and evaluating components to inform implementation in varied antenatal care settings, including those with limited resources, to optimize population benefits for pregnant individuals and the next generation,” the researchers wrote.”

From the obesity drug front —

  • STAT News reports,
    • “Almost half of Americans would be willing to spend up to $100 a month for new weight loss medicines such as Wegovy, and one-third say they would indefinitely pay whatever they can afford to get the drugs, according to a new survey by STAT and The Harris Poll.
    • “Although 47% say they would only spend the money up to a point — such as losing a certain amount of weight, or up until a special event — demand is so great that nearly one-quarter said they would pay up to $250 each month. And another 17% percent are willing to shell out as much as $500 each month. The survey, which polled 2,046 U.S. adults, was conducted earlier this month.”
  • and
    • An experimental pill from Eli Lilly led to 14.7% weight loss on the highest dose in a 36-week trial, heating up the growing competition among drugmakers to develop an effective oral obesity therapy.
    • The mid-stage results for orforglipron match the estimates of 14-15% weight loss that Lilly gave in an investor call late last year. The full results, published Friday in the New England Journal of Medicine, were presented here to a packed conference room at the American Diabetes Association conference.
    • Nonetheless, an overwhelming majority — 84% — believe insurance companies should cover the injectable medicines, which carry list prices ranging from $900 to $1,300 a month.
  • Meanwhile, Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “Pfizer is scrapping of one of two experimental weight-loss pills it’s been developing after spotting signs of potential safety concerns in clinical testing.  
    • “The company on Monday said the decision to stop testing of the pill, lotiglipron, was made after receiving the results from drug-drug interaction studies and observing liver enzyme elevations in early- and mid-stage tests. Patients with liver enzyme spikes, which can be signs of organ damage, didn’t have side effects or require treatment, Pfizer said.  
    • “Pfizer will now focus on its other, similar weight-loss prospect, danuglipron, which so far hasn’t had such concerns. Danuglipron is currently in Phase 2 testing in Type 2 diabetes and obesity, and could move into late-stage development by the end of the year.”  

In other Rx and medical device news

  • Biopharma Dive identifies five Food and Drug Administration (FDA) decisions to watch for in this third quarter of 2023.
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out
    • The FDA has given a fast-track designation to a drug designed to prevent infection from both influenza A and B strains created by San Diego-based Cidara Therapeutics, according to a June 22 news release.
    • The novel drug, CD388, is being developed alongside Janssen Pharmaceuticals primarily for flu prevention in adults who are high risk as well as for individuals for whom flu vaccines “are either ineffective or contraindicated,” the release states. 
    • The FDA’s decision could prove to be timely as early data from the flu season that is currently underway in the Southern Hemisphere is showing that both influenza A and B are both circulating.
  • MedTech Dive notes
    • “Dexcom next year will introduce a continuous glucose monitor aimed at the 25 million non-insulin-using Americans with Type 2 diabetes.
    • “The CGM, which is based on the Dexcom G7, will last for 15 days, include a cash-pay option and come with software designed for the needs of people who are yet to require insulin.
    • “Dexcom’s analysis shows those patients want help understanding the effect of lifestyle on blood glucose and staying off insulin, leading the company to develop a revised set of features for the new device.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • UnitedHealth Group will acquire Amedisys for $101 a share, or nearly $3.29 billion, upending a prior deal for the home-health provider to combine with Option Care Health
    • “Amedisys said Monday that it has agreed to a takeover by UnitedHealth’s Optum health-services arm in which each Amedisys share will be converted into the right to $101 in cash. 
    • “Amedisys will become a wholly owned subsidiary of UnitedHealth when the transaction is completed. UnitedHealth’s UnitedHealthcare is the biggest U.S. health insurer. Its Optum business includes a sprawling network of physician groups, surgery centers and other assets.” * * *
    • “The companies didn’t provide an expected closing date on the acquisition, which still needs to be approved by regulators and Amedisys shareholders. 
    • “The combination is likely to draw close antitrust scrutiny from the Federal Trade Commission. Optum will be seeking to take over the No. 2 competitor in the home-health business after recently absorbing the No. 3 company, according to analysts. * * *
    • “When it announced its offer for Amedisys, UnitedHealth said it was confident it could secure approval for the combination, partly because of how fragmented the home-health business is.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence points out
    • “What will happen to the volume and value of mergers and acquisitions in 2023? This is a question at the forefront of payers’ minds as the healthcare industry emerges from the uncertainties of the coronavirus pandemic.
    • “The twelve months ending on May 15, 2023, witnessed strong merger and acquisition volume despite various challenges, according to a report from PwC. At the end of the report’s timeframe, the volume of deals was nearly twice as high as the period of 2018 to 2020.
    • “Still, health services deals dipped slightly, dropping by four percent from 2022. Volume dropped from 1,738 in 2022 to 1,661 as of May 15, 2023.
    • “Deal values declined significantly by 15 percent. In 2022, deal value amounted to $100 billion. In the study’s timeframe, deal value totaled $85 billion. Megadeal values, specifically, have been more than halved in the last two years since 2021, a trend which might continue due to rate hikes.”

Weekend update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

The FEHBlog is back in DC this week.

And speaking of Washington, DC —

  • The U.S. Supreme Court has ten decisions to issue from its October 2022 term. Last week, the Supreme Court issued seven decisions. Its next decision day is Tuesday, June 27.
  • Last Friday, the President issued an Executive Order on Strengthening Access to Affordable, High Quality Contraception and Family Planning Services.
    • “Sec. 2.  Improving Access and Affordability Under the Affordable Care Act.  (a)  The Secretaries of the Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services (Secretaries) shall consider issuing guidance, consistent with applicable law, to further improve Americans’ ability to access contraception, without out-of-pocket expenses, under the Affordable Care Act.  In doing so, the Secretaries shall consider actions that would, to the greatest extent permitted by law:
    •           “(i)   ensure coverage of comprehensive contraceptive care, including all contraceptives approved, granted, or cleared by the Food and Drug Administration, without cost sharing for enrollees, participants, and beneficiaries; and
    •           “(ii)  streamline the process for patients and healthcare providers to request coverage, without cost sharing, of medically necessary contraception.
    •      “(b)  The Secretaries shall consider additional actions, as appropriate and consistent with applicable law, to promote increased access to affordable over-the-counter contraception, including emergency contraception.”
  • From the public health / medical research front –
  • Bloomberg Prognosis offers guidance on Covid boosters.
    • In April, a CDC advisory committee on immunization practices showed just how rapidly we can lose the protections vaccines offer, Wallace points out. A review of data from 20 states revealed the bivalent booster’s effectiveness in those 65 and older fell to 65% in the first two months. That dropped to 45% in four months and plummeted to 22% in six months.
    • Those numbers are part of the reason higher-risk people are offered second doses of the bivalent shot.
    • “If people are in these groups, I would not hesitate to take advantage of this additional protection, as well as considering taking other prevention strategies, like masking in indoor public spaces,” says Wallace.
    • If you’re unsure, a healthcare provider can explain which dosing strategy is right for you. 
  • Medscape informs us
    • Can common anti-depressants prevent COVID-19 infection? That’s the suggestion of research in BMC Medicine, based on infection trends among more than 5,600 mental health care patients in the United Kingdom from April to December 2020.
    • The report says that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) were particularly effective in blocking COVID-19 transmission.
    • “Mental health patients with a recent (previous 90 days) prescription for an SSRI had an almost 40% reduction in the likelihood of a positive COVID-19 test,” wrote the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota.
    • Research showed that 27.7% of COVID-19-negative patients had taken at least one antidepressant medication within the last 90 days before they were admitted to a mental health care facility, compared to just over 16% of COVID-19 positive patients.  * * *
    • “The results of this study hint at the potential clinical benefit” of SSRIs on COVID-19 infection, said the lead author, Oleg Glebov of King’s College London, in a press release.
  • The Raleigh News Observer reports
    • “Until recently, if a heart stopped beating, it couldn’t be donated. Donor hearts typically come from patients determined to be brain dead, from which doctors can extract the beating organ and transplant it into its new owner. But a new study from Duke researchers found that using a heart that has been “reanimated” by a machine works just as well as traditional transplants. This method could expand the pool of heart donors by 30%, said Dr. Adam DeVore, a Duke researcher and author on the paper. DeVore said this method allows doctors to salvage hearts from a group of patients who previously had been unable to donate.
    • “Duke’s own heart transplant clinic has greatly benefited by drawing from this new pool of donors. DeVore said the program has doubled in size in the last year, which he credits in part to the new method.”
  • Emergency room physician Edwin Leap writes in his blog that heart attacks are on the rise in younger people.
    • “While I certainly try not to inflame anyone’s fears, I write this to say that people should be attentive to their symptoms. Even a person who is relatively young should be cautious if they have chest pain, difficulty breathing, profound weakness or dizziness/passing out. Of course, associated symptoms can include nausea, unexpected sweating (or diaphoresis), numbness or tingling in arms or face, or pain into jaw, neck or back. Of course, symptoms in women can be more subtle can can simply involve profound fatigue.
    • “What may be equally important is the idea that we should be take good care of ourselves. In the face of an increased level of risk for heart disease, it’s a good time to lose weight, exercise, stop smoking and eat a healthy diet. I would also suggest that everyone take their existing prescriptions, try hard to control their blood glucose in diabetes, manage their blood pressure and all the rest. We can’t control all of our health risks, but the ones which we can, we certainly should.
    • “Furthermore, even young people should find a primary care physician if possible, and establish a relationship with that physician. The screening exams that they perform, the regular exams, the attention to your health that they provide can truly be lifesaving.”
  • In the FEHBlog’s view, health plans should help all of their members connect with a primary care physician. Leverage that network.

From the Rx coverage front —

  • The Wall Street Journal confirms‘ that Novo Nordisk is preparing to request Food and Drug Administration approval for a Wegovy weight loss pill.
    • “Later this year, Novo Nordisk plans to ask U.S. and European drug regulators to approve the tablet.  Novo already sells a tablet form of semaglutide, Rybelsus, to treat Type 2 diabetes, though some people use it off-label for weight loss.
    • “Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic and Wegovy therapies and Lilly’s Mounjaro have emerged as viral sensations—touted by celebrities and discussed on Facebook and TikTok—because of their potential to help people lose significant weight.
    • “These types of drugs, first approved to treat diabetes, work by mimicking gut hormones that play a role in regulating blood sugar and, it has turned out, appetite. A key gut hormone is called glucagon-like peptide-1, or GLP-1. * * *
    • “BMO Capital Markets analyst Evan David Seigerman estimated that pill forms of weight-loss drugs could make up about 15% of the total market, which he predicts will reach $100 billion in annual sales worldwide in coming years.”

From the wellness front —

  • Fortune Well interviews longevity expert Dr. Peter Attia.
    • While Dr. Peter Attia, author of New York Times bestseller Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity, said there’s no “silver bullet” to increase one’s health span and life span, there are still a variety of longevity-linked habits that may work for you to stave off age-related disease and early mortality. 
    • “People have so much more agency over this than they will ever believe if they don’t take the step to educate themselves on it,” Attia tells Oprah Winfrey this week for a series called The Life You Want on Oprah Daily. “A lot of people think, ‘Well, this is my lot in life’…It’s not the case at all.”
    • Exercisenutritionsleep, and managing emotional health by engaging with others and trying new hobbies are all associated with a longer, healthier life. 
    • For Attia, moving without distraction and staying outside is his secret sauce. 
  • and
    • offers guidance on the best timing for dinner from a health standpoint.
  • The Wall Street Journal discusses the health importance of controlling salt intake.

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy front —

  • Nextgov reports,
    • “Cybersecurity experts are warning that a potential cyber leadership vacuum in the federal government may prevent agencies from recovering and responding to a sprawling ransomware attack that has already exposed millions of Americans’ personal data.
    • “A senior official with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency confirmed on a call with reporters last week that several federal civilian agencies were among the victims in a widespread cyberattack that exploited a vulnerability discovered in the popular MOVEit file-transfer product developed by Progress Software. The attack is believed to have been carried out by CL0p, a Russian-linked ransomware gang otherwise known as TA505. Since the news of the global attack was first reported, a variety of federal and state agencies, banks and private sector organizations also confirmed they were victims and that data may have been stolen from millions of customers.
    • “The Office of the National Cyber Director was established under the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2021 in large part to provide coordination and guidance across the federal government on cybersecurity matters, including incident response and crisis management. Chris Inglis, the first-ever Senate-confirmed national cyber director, stepped down in February after helping to develop the new national cyber strategy released earlier this year. President Joe Biden has not yet nominated a replacement to fill the post.” 
  • Cybersecurity Dive adds,
    • “The U.S. State Department is offering a $10 million bounty related to information on the Clop ransomware gang, which is attributed to broad exploits of the MOVEit transfer vulnerabilities with victims that include federal agencies.  
    • “The Department of Energy confirmed data was impacted by an attack, and reports from CNN indicate a possible attack is being investigated against the Office of Personnel Management. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is also dealing with a third-party vendor data breach.” 
  • Cyberscoop tells us,
    • “The Department of Justice established a cyber-focused section within its National Security Division to combat the full range of digital crimes, a top department official said Tuesday.
    • “The National Security Cyber Section — NatSec Cyber, for short — has been approved by Congress and will elevate cyberthreats to “equal footing” with other major national security issues, including counterterrorism and counterintelligence, Assistant Attorney General for National Security Matt Olsen said in remarks at the Hoover Institution in Washington. 
    • “The new section enables the agency to “increase the scale and speed of disruption campaigns and prosecutions of nation-state cyberthreats as well as state-sponsored cybercriminals, associated money launderers, and other cyber-enabled threats to national security,” Olsen said. 
    • “The NatSec Cyber Center arrives at a time of growing concern about nation-state cyberattacks especially originating from Russia and China. Last week, Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, warned Americans to be prepared for a major Chinese cyberattack. “This, I think, is the real threat that we need to be prepared for, and to focus on, and to build resilience against,” she said at an event in Washington.”
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency shares a “Readout from CISA’s 2023 Second Quarter Cybersecurity Advisory Committee Meeting.”
  • The National Institutes of Standards and Technology announced on June 22, 2023,
    • “U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo announced that the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is launching a new public working group on artificial intelligence (AI) that will build on the success of the NIST AI Risk Management Framework to address this rapidly advancing technology. The Public Working Group on Generative AI will help address the opportunities and challenges associated with AI that can generate content, such as code, text, images, videos and music. The public working group will also help NIST develop key guidance to help organizations address the special risks associated with generative AI technologies. The announcement comes on the heels of a meeting President Biden convened earlier this week with leading AI experts and researchers in San Francisco, as part of the Biden-Harris administration’s commitment to seizing the opportunities and managing the risks posed by AI. * * *
    • “[Also on June 22], the National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee delivered its first report to the president and identified areas of focus for the committee for the next two years. The full report, including all of its recommendations, is available on the AI.gov website.
    • “Questions about the public working group or NIST’s other work relating to generative AI may be sent to: generativeAI@nist.gov

From the cybersecurity vulnerabilities and breaches front —

  • Cybersecurity Dive offers details on the MoveIT file transfer program vulnerability and resulting breaches.
    • “Big names disclose MOVEit-related breaches, including PwC, EY and Genworth Financial
    • “More than 100 organizations have been hit as part of the MOVEit attack campaign, including PBI Research Services, which exposed millions of customer data files to theft.”
  • Cyberscoop informs us,
    • “Apple issued a security update on Wednesday for all its operating systems to patch dangerous vulnerabilities that could allow attackers to take over someone’s entire device. 
    • “The vulnerabilities in question first revealed on June 1, appeared to have led the main Russian intelligence agency to make unusually public claims that Apple intentionally left the flaws in its iOS so the National Security Agency and other U.S. entities could compromise “thousands” of iPhones in Russia. Apple has denied those claims.
    • “The charges from the Federal Security Service, or FSB, came the same day that researchers with cybersecurity firm Kaspersky published a report detailing what they said was an “ongoing” zero-click iMessage exploit campaign dubbed “Operation Triangulation” targeting iOS that allowed attackers to run code on phones with root privileges, among other capabilities. Kaspersky published an additional analysis Wednesday, saying that after roughly six months of collecting and analyzing the data, “we have finished analyzing the spyware implant and are ready to share the details.”
  • HHS’s healthcare sector cybersecurity coordination center (HC3) issued an analyst note on “SEO poisoning.”
    • Search engine optimization (SEO) poisoning, considered a type of malvertising (malicious advertising), is a technique used by threat actors to increase the prominence of their malicious websites, making them look more authentic to consumers. SEO poisoning tricks the human mind, which naturally assumes the top hits are the most credible, and is very effective when people fail to look closely at their search results. This can lead to credential theft, malware infections, and financial losses. As more organizations utilize search engines and healthcare continues to digitally transform, SEO poisoning is becoming a larger security threat. HC3 has observed this attack method being used recently and frequently against the U.S. Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) sector.
  • Security Week relates,
    • “The National Security Agency (NSA) has published technical mitigation guidance to help organizations harden systems against BlackLotus UEFI bootkit infections.
    • “The NSA’s recommendations provide a blueprint for defenders to protect systems from BlackLotus, a stealthy malware that emerged on underground forums in late 2022 with capabilities that include user access control (UAC) and secure boot bypass, unsigned driver loading, and prolonged persistence.”
  • This week, CISA added six and then five more known exploited vulnerabilities to its catalog.

From the ransomware front, here is the link to Bleeping Computer’s The Week in Ransomware.

From the cybersecurity defenses front —

  • Health IT Security points out,
    • Cyber resilience is crucial to business continuity amid a cyber incident, as it ensures that systems can recover quickly. As such, it is no surprise that cyber resilience would be top-of-mind for organizations undergoing a digital transformation.  
    • “In Accenture’s new “State of Cybersecurity Resilience 2023” report, researchers exemplified the benefits of cyber resilience by identifying a group of companies that it calls “cyber transformers.”
    • “Cyber transformers, according to Accenture, “strike a balance between excelling at cyber resilience and aligning with the business strategy to achieve better business outcomes.”
  • NIST announced
    • “NIST’s IoT cybersecurity guidance has long recognized the importance of secure software development (SSDF) practices, highlighted by the NIST IR 8259 series—such as the recommendation for documentation in Action 3.d of NIST IR 8259B, that manufacturers have considered and documented their “secure software development and supply chain practices used.” The NIST SSDF (NIST SP 800-218)describes software development practices that can aid manufacturers in developing IoT products by providing guidance for the secure development of software and firmware. These development practices can also provide assurance to customers regarding how those products were developed and how the manufacturer will support them. When used together, NIST’s SSDF and IoT cybersecurity guidance help manufacturers design and deliver more secure IoT products to customer.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • The American Hospital Association reports,
    • “Medicare will cover new Alzheimer’s drugs that receive traditional approval from the Food and Drug Administration when a beneficiary is diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment or Alzheimer’s disease dementia and has a physician participating in a registry with an appropriate clinical team and follow-up care, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced June 22. CMS called the approach consistent with its 2022 national coverage determination for the first monoclonal antibodies targeting amyloid to treat Alzheimer’s. “
  • For those interested, Fierce Healthcare offers a more detailed explanation of this development.
  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans tells us,
    • “The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has released Notice 2023-37 on the high deductible health plan (HDHP) preventive care safe harbor specific to 1) COVID-19 testing and 2) recommendations with an “A” or “B” rating by the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF). 
    • COVID-19 testing and screening
      • “IRS has determined that, with the end of the COVID-19 National Emergency and the Public Health Emergency, the relief described in Notice 2020-15 is no longer needed. Accordingly, Notice 2020-15 applies only with respect to plan years ending on or before December 31, 2024. For subsequent plan years, an HDHP is not permitted to provide health benefits associated with testing for and treatment of COVID-19 without a deductible or with a deductible below the minimum deductible (for self-only or family coverage) for an HDHP, except as otherwise provided in this notice. 
      • “IRS Notice 2023-37 states that the preventive care safe harbor, as described in Notice 2004-23, does not include COVID-19 testing effective June 23, 2023, although HDHPs may continue to provide benefits related to testing for COVID-19 before satisfaction of the applicable minimum deductible for plan years ending on or before December 31, 2024.”
    • Recommendations with an “A” or “B” rating by the USPSTF
      • “Consistent with the position taken in Question and Answer 7 of DOL FAQs Part 59, IRS Notice 2023-37 provides that items and services recommended with an “A” or “B” rating by the USPSTF on or after March 23, 2010, are treated as preventive care for purposes of the HDHP safe harbor, regardless of whether these items and services must be covered, without cost sharing, referencing pending litigation (Braidwood v. Becerra).”
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) agreed unanimously on Thursday to include the 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV20; Prevnar) as an option for U.S. children.”
  • The U.S. Census Bureau announced,
    • “The nation’s median age increased by 0.2 years to 38.9 years between 2021 and 2022, according to Vintage 2022 Population Estimates released today by the U.S. Census Bureau. Median age is the age at which half of the population is older and half of the population is younger.
    • “A third (17) of the states in the country had a median age above 40.0 in 2022, led by Maine with the highest at 44.8, and New Hampshire at 43.3. Utah (31.9), the District of Columbia (34.8), and Texas (35.5) had the lowest median ages in the nation. Hawaii had the largest increase in median age among states, up 0.4 years to 40.7.
    • “No states experienced a decrease in median age. Four states — Alabama (39.4), Maine (44.8), Tennessee (39.1), West Virginia (42.8), and the District of Columbia (34.8) — had no change in their median age from 2021 to 2022.”
  • From the public health front —
  • MedPage Today relates,
    • “While in-hospital delivery-related maternal mortality has decreased, severe maternal morbidity increased, according to a retrospective cross-sectional study.
    • “Among over 11 million hospital discharges from 2008 to 2021, regression-adjusted maternal mortality per 100,000 discharges decreased from 10.6 deaths in 2008 to 4.6 deaths in 2021, reported Dorothy Fink, MD, of the Department of Health and Human Services in Rockville, Maryland, and colleagues.
    • “Each subsequent year after 2008 had an 11% decrease in odds of death compared with the previous year (adjusted OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.87-0.92), they noted in JAMA Open Network.
    • “This large national study found a decreasing trend of in-hospital delivery-related maternal mortality during 2008 to 2021, regardless of racial or ethnic group, age, or mode of delivery, likely demonstrating the impact of national and local strategies focused on improving the maternal quality of care provided by hospitals during delivery-related hospitalizations,” Fink and team wrote.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • Color Health wants to take away any reason you might have for skipping screenings for cancer. 
    • The Silicon Valley company, which pivoted from cancer genomics to Covid-19 testing on a large and hugely profitable scale, has a new program that incorporates both its roots in cancer testing and its logistical experience from the pandemic. Called, simply, the Cancer Prevention and Screening Program, and built in partnership with the American Cancer Society, the program aims to make it easy to get the appropriate screenings, whether at a clinic or at home.” * * *
    • “Research has shown that outreach and navigation can improve participation, screening, follow-up,” said Samir Gupta, a cancer researcher and gastroenterologist at the University of California, San Diego, who does not work with Color. “But we haven’t been able to come up with sustainable models for how that work gets paid for. This is interesting because it’s a market solution for the lack of resources that exist helping people complete screening and follow-up.” * * *
    • “Color does already work with a wide range of customers, including large employers, workers’ unions, and government entities. Many of those existing customers will receive the cancer screening and prevention service from Color, which will officially launch in October.”

From the Rx coverage front

  • STAT News points out.
    • An experimental pill from Eli Lilly led to 14.7% weight loss on the highest dose in a 36-week trial, heating up the growing competition among drugmakers to develop an effective oral obesity therapy.
    • The mid-stage results for orforglipron match the estimates of 14-15% weight loss that Lilly gave in an investor call late last year. The full results, published Friday in the New England Journal of Medicine, were presented here to a packed conference room at the American Diabetes Association conference.
    • By the end of the trial, the authors said, participants’ weight loss had not plateaued, suggesting the potential for even greater weight loss over a longer treatment period.
    • Orforglipron, taken daily, is a GLP-1 drug, a type of medication that mimics the effects of the glucagon-like peptide 1 hormone that helps people feel full after eating. This class of drugs has exploded in popularity, with the injectable GLP-1s Wegovy and Mounjaro showing up to 15% and 21% weight loss in trials, respectively. If pills can ultimately prove to work as well, they could be more accessible and more attractive to many patients for their convenience.
  • Fierce Healthcare notes,
    • “Optum Rx will add two more Humira biosimilars to its formulary later this summer.
    • “The pharmacy benefit manager—one of the three largest in the market—will place Boehringer Ingelheim’s Cyltezo and Sandoz’s Hyrimoz on its formulary at parity with Humira starting July 1. Optum added Amgen’s Amjevita to its formulary at parity with Humira earlier this year.
    • “Humira, manufactured by AbbVie, is an injectable treatment for a range of conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis and others. It’s a high source of cost, and PBMs have had high hopes that biosimilars coming to market could be critical in addressing those expenses.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Deal volumes for health services are holding steady in 2023, even as the sector faces headwinds like high-interest rates, increased regulatory scrutiny and other macroeconomic concerns, according to a report by consulting firm PwC
    • “The analysis found deal volumes declined 4% in the 12 months ending May 15, 2023, compared with 2022, and deal value declined 15%. 
    • “However, the firm is “optimistic” about healthcare merger and acquisition activity for the rest of 2023, arguing corporate and private equity players have plenty of cash to spend and health services companies face a climate that demands adaptation and change.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds.
    • “Ochsner Health and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center are partnering to build an integrated cancer care program in southeastern Louisiana, the organizations announced Thursday.
    • “Called the Ochsner MD Anderson Cancer Center, their collaboration is the first to bring MD Anderson’s best practices and clinical leadership to the state’s cancer patients. It is the seventh such arrangement MD Anderson has with major health systems.”
  • MedCity News tells us.
    • “There are a lot of administrative hurdles behavioral health providers have to go through to join an insurer’s network. That’s why the industry needs something similar to the “Common App” for applying to be in-network with insurers, said Cara McNulty, president of behavioral health and mental wellbeing at CVS Health. The Common App allows students to apply to multiple colleges through one application.” 

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • The Senate Finance Committee informs us
    • “U.S. Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Finance Committee member Michael Bennet (D-Colorado), along with Finance Committee members Tim Scott (R-South Carolina) and Ben Cardin (D-Maryland), are reintroducing legislation that would provide Medicare coverage for screening tests to save lives and costs to the health care system. 
    • “The Medicare Multi-Cancer Early Detection (MCED) Screening Coverage Act would ensure Medicare patients have coverage for innovative tests that can detect multiple types of cancer before symptoms develop.  Bipartisan companion legislation (H.R. 2407) was also introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives.”  
  • Here’s a link to the National Cancer Institute’s FAQs on multi-cancer detection tests.
  • The American Hospital Association reports
    • “A bipartisan group of 233 representatives and 61 senators yesterday called on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Service to enhance its proposal to streamline prior authorization processes in Medicare Advantage, Medicaid and the federally-facilitated Marketplace to require real-time electronic decision-making for routinely approved services, responses for emergency procedures within 24 hours and additional transparency. They said adding these provisions would better align the rule with the Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act, House-passed legislation supported by the AHA to streamline prior authorization in the MA program, and urged CMS to quickly finalize the rule with these updates.
    • “AHA also has urged CMS to quickly finalize the proposed rule, adequately enforce and monitor the requirements and test and vet any electronic standards before mandating their adoption.”
  • Govexec.com tells us
    • “President Biden’s plan to provide civilian federal employees with an average 5.2% pay raise in 2024 appears safe for now, as a key House panel advanced spending legislation that does not address federal employee compensation.
    • “But Democrats and federal employee groups blasted the GOP-led appropriations package, which cuts spending on financial agencies and government administration by 58% compared with fiscal 2023 levels and includes policy riders restricting telework at federal agencies and targeting transgender federal workers and their family members.
    • “The House Appropriations Committee’s Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee on Thursday advanced its annual appropriations bill—one of 12 such pieces of legislation covering different areas of government—to the full committee.”
  • The EEOC reminds us
    • “The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA) is a new law that requires covered employers to provide “reasonable accommodations” to a worker’s known limitations related to pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions unless the accommodation will cause the employer an “undue hardship.”
    • “The PWFA applies only to accommodations. Existing laws that the EEOC enforces make it illegal to fire or otherwise discriminate against workers on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions.
    • “The PWFA does not replace federal, state, or local laws that are more protective of workers affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions. More than 30 states and cities have laws that provide accommodations for pregnant workers.”
  • The new law takes effect on Tuesday, June 27, 2023.
  • STAT News explains why five cases have been filed in federal district courts challenging the constitutionality of the Inflation Reduction Act’s authorization for CMS to negotiate Medicare drug prices.
    • “The pharmaceutical industry has been filing a lawsuit here, there, and pretty much everywhere.
    • “Drugmakers lost a two-decade long lobbying fight in Congress last summer when Democrats gave Medicare more power to choose what it pays for prescription drugs. Now, they’re taking their battle to the courts.
    • “Merck filed suit in the District of Columbia. Bristol Myers Squibb filed in New Jersey. The Chamber of Commerce filed in Ohio. PhRMA filed in Texas. And there’s no reason to believe the barrage of lawsuits will stop anytime soon.
    • “They’re dividing and conquering to advance different legal arguments. The Merck and Bristol Myers Squibb lawsuits were strikingly similar. They relied on the same legal reasoning, and were filed by the same firm and a few of the same attorneys, even. The PhRMA and Chamber of Commerce suits advanced different arguments that were also similar to each other.
    • “The scattershot approach, according to legal experts, increases the industry’s chance of producing conflicting decisions that the Supreme Court would have to resolve.”

From the public health front —

  • Healthcare Dive points out
    • “From 2019 to 2021, preventable deaths in Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas and New Mexico climbed by more than 35%, and the rates in Arizona increased by 45%, according to nonprofit Commonwealth Fund’s 2023 Scorecard on State Health System Performance released Thursday. The report attributes the increase in deaths mostly to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • “The mortality rate for women in their reproductive years (age 15 to 44) rose nearly 40% due to maternal deaths, COVID-19, and substance misuse.
    • “Massachusetts, Hawaii, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont had the best overall health system performances while states in the Southeast and South Central regions ranked the lowest. Those included Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma, West Virginia and Mississippi.”
  • Here’s a link to the scorecard.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced
    • “A large nationally representative study shows in-hospital delivery-related maternal mortality rates improved 57% between 2008 and 2021, despite identified increases in severe maternal morbidity (SMM). This observational study of over 11 million hospital discharges, conducted by the HHS Office on Women’s Health (OWH) and published in JAMA Open Network, intends to more clearly define trends and risk factors leading to maternal mortality and morbidity in the United States and to improve overall national prevention and treatment efforts.
    • “This decline in deaths during delivery hospitalization likely demonstrates the impact of national and local strategies to improve the quality of care by hospitals during delivery-related hospitalizations. This includes HHS quality improvement activities such as state Perinatal Quality Collaboratives and the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health, and ties into the Administration’s commitment to addressing the maternal health crisis, with the United States facing some of the highest maternal death rates among developed nations.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “Severe fungal disease used to be a freak occurrence. Now it is a threat to millions of vulnerable Americans, and treatments have been losing efficacy as fungal pathogens develop resistance to standard drugs. 
    • “Medical experts say one reason for the surge is that more people have compromised immune systems, including cancer patients and those taking medicines after organ transplants. Compounding the problem, research shows, is that rising temperatures appear to have expanded the geographical range of some deadly fungal pathogens and possibly made them better adapted to human hosts.
    • “It’s going to get worse,” said Dr. Tom Chiller, head of the fungal-disease branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “The failure of some doctors to recognize quickly enough what is happening to stricken patients is causing deaths and complications they could have prevented.
    • “Fungi aren’t being given enough thought,” said Dr. Peter Pappas, an infectious-disease specialist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “When symptoms can’t be explained, fungi should be one of the first things you think about.”

From the Rx coverage front —

  • STAT News reports
    • The Food and Drug Administration granted conditional approval Thursday to the first gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Regulators restricted the treatment to younger patients, with additional data required to broaden its use.
    • The gene therapy, called Elevydis, is made by Sarepta Therapeutics. The company will charge $3.2 million for the treatment, making it the U.S.’s second most expensive drug, behind a recently approved gene therapy for hemophilia. CEO Doug Ingram said on a conference call the price was below what a recently published company-funded analysis found would be cost-effective.
  • Here’s a link to the FDA announcement, which includes more details.

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • STAT News reports
    • “Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley wants to see his party’s leadership turn up the pressure on pharmacy benefit managers.
    • “They talk in such generalities on this subject that it’s difficult for me to tell where they’re coming from,” he said at a STAT event Wednesday, speaking about top GOP senators’ approach to reforming the drug pricing middlemen who negotiate between pharmaceutical companies and insurers. “We’re hearing… ‘We don’t want to do something splitting the caucus.’ But we’ve got a major problem here with PBMs deciding rebates, deciding the price of drugs, probably being an instrument to drive up the price of drugs, and nobody knows what they’re doing.”
    • “Grassley has reason to push urgency. The Senate leaves this weekend for a July recess, and when they return next month, lawmakers have just over two weeks of working days in the Capitol before a monthlong AugusSt break. Multiple drug pricing priorities hang in limbo.”
  • The Federal Times adds
    • “The House’s fiscal 2024 funding plan for federal civilian agencies would force agencies to roll back telework, keep abortion out of employee health insurance plans and make pay contingent on compliance with Congressional demands.
    • “The Financial Services and General Government Appropriations bill, which will be considered in a hearing Thursday, sets funding for more than two dozen independent agencies, including the Internal Revenue Service and White House offices, for the government fiscal year that starts Oct. 1, according to an executive summary released Wednesday.”
  • STAT News informs us
    • “A panel of experts that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccinations opted Wednesday not to recommend that all seniors get a vaccine to protect against RSV.
    • “Instead, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices said that anyone 60 and older should be able to get one of the new vaccines — being brought to market by GSK and Pfizer — if they and their physicians think it would be worthwhile.”

From the public health front —

  • The National Cancer Institute advises
    • “A new study has found an effective way to help women in rural towns get screened for cancer. But the study didn’t zero in on just one kind of cancer screening. Instead, the researchers tried simultaneously boosting all of the cancer screenings women need—breast, cervical, and colorectal. And a randomized clinical trial of the approach showed that it worked.
    • “In the trial, providing rural women with an interactive video of tailored messages about cancer screening plus a phone call with a patient navigator was the most effective way of getting them up to date on all three cancer screeningsExit Disclaimer
    • “Results of the study, which included nearly 1,000 women living in rural parts of Indiana and Ohio, were published April 28 in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The basic message is: Health care providers can, and probably should, address all screenings needed at the same time,” said study co-leader Victoria Champion, Ph.D., R.N., of Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center.”
  • and
    • “New cases of colorectal cancer in people under the age of 50 have been rising at an alarming rate over the past several decades. But younger adults aren’t routinely screened for colorectal cancer because the disease is still relatively rare in younger adults. 
    • “Now, a study has identified four warning signs that, according to the investigators, could help encourage younger adults to seek medical care so they can potentially catch the disease at an earlier and more treatable stage. 
    • “To conduct the study, the research team analyzed insurance claims data on more than 5,000 people diagnosed before age 50, called early-onset colorectal cancer, and more than 22,000 people without cancer (controls).
    • “The analysis showed that, in the period of 3 months to 2 years before people with colorectal cancer were diagnosed, four signs were more commonly reported in people who developed colorectal cancer than in matched controls:
      • abdominal pain
      • rectal bleeding
      • diarrhea
      • iron deficiency anemia
    • “Having just one of these signs during this period was associated with nearly twice the likelihood of being diagnosed with early-onset colorectal cancer as having none of the signs.
    • “Having three or more of these signs was associated with six times the likelihood of being diagnosed with the disease. The findings were published May 4 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.”
  • STAT News reports “Xylazine or ‘tranq’ is making opioid overdoses harder to reverse.”
    • “Six years ago, when you would hit somebody with naloxone, they would be very responsive,” said Sarah Laurel, the executive director of Savage Sisters, a Philadelphia nonprofit that provides resources and care to people who use drugs. But more recently, she said, “I started noticing that my friends, when we would hit them with Narcan, they weren’t responsive. Their color was not returning, and they weren’t beginning to breathe on their own.”
    • “When responding to an overdose in the xylazine era, Laurel said, the new priority is simple: oxygen. Emergency responders and harm-reduction workers are increasingly using whatever tools and techniques they have available to make sure oxygen is reaching overdose victims’ brains, including mouth-to-mouth breathing and oxygen masks.
    • “Amid the fast-changing landscape, doctors, first responders, public health officials, and nonprofits have scrambled to formalize their new overdose-response protocols. At the same time, they have worked to draw up new instructions for bystanders who encounter an overdose in progress. They are, in essence: Administer naloxone, call 911, and then immediately start “rescue breathing” to ensure the overdose victim doesn’t die or experience hypoxic brain injury before emergency responders arrive.
    • “Recent guidance from the Philadelphia Department of Public Health encourages overdose responders to provide supplemental oxygen and employ “airway management” techniques — essentially, manipulating the head, neck, and body to ensure breathing isn’t blocked.”
  • HHS announced
    • The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), issued a new advisory today: Identification and Management of Mental Health Symptoms and Conditions Associated with Long COVID.
    • “Long COVID has a range of burdensome physical symptoms, and can take a toll on a person’s mental health. It can be very challenging for a person, whether they are impacted themselves, or they are a caregiver for someone who is affected,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “This advisory helps to raise awareness, especially among primary care practitioners and clinicians who are often the ones treating patients with Long COVID.”
  • and
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration today announced a public-private partnership between the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Upstream to expand access to contraception, an essential component of reproductive health care, and address the growing disparities in women’s health in the U.S.”

From the plan design front —

  • Health Payer Intelligence points out
    • “Payers should consider program design intensity when implementing value-based purchasing contracts, as higher-intensity programs can lead to better care quality and greater spending reductions, a systematic review published in Health Affairs found.
    • “Value-based purchasing programs can incorporate both financial and non-financial features. Financial aspects include bonuses, penalties, and financial risk-sharing arrangements.
    • “Non-financial aspects aim to help providers respond to the spending and quality incentives in a VBP program. These include analyzed data, reports, or lists; technical assistance through leadership or change management training, infrastructure payments to add more staff; raw claims data; risk-management support; and care management support.
    • “Different combinations of financial and non-financial supports can lead to varying levels of program intensity.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • Food and insurance companies are exploring ways to link health coverage to diets, increasingly positioning food as a preventive measure to protect human health and treat disease.
    • Insurance companies and startups are developing meals tailored to help treat existing medical conditions, industry executives said, while promoting nutritious diets as a way to help ward off diet-related disease and health problems.
    • “We know that for adults, around 45% of those who die from heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, stroke, that poor nutrition is a major contributing factor,” said Gail Boudreaux, chief executive of insurance provider Elevance Health speaking at The Wall Street Journal Global Food Forum. “Healthy food is a real opportunity.”