Tuesday Report

Tuesday Report

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.
  • This afternoon, the House of Representatives passed by voice vote the Esophageal Cancer Awareness Act, HR 3490.
    • “This bill requires the Government Accountability Office to report to Congress on (1) the impact of esophageal cancer-related health care spending under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) for federal employees and retirees diagnosed with esophageal cancer, and (2) how often FEHBP participants with a high risk of esophageal cancer undergo screenings according to established guidelines.” 
    • The bill honors the late Rep. Gerald Connelly (D VA) who died from the disease. The bill now heads to Senate.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “President Trump on Tuesday ratcheted up pressure on Senate Republicans to quickly embrace and pass legislation carrying his domestic agenda, intensifying a battle inside the G.O.P. about what should be in the measure and how much it should cost.”
  • Govexec adds,
    • “The Trump administration plans to send its first spending cuts request to Congress on Tuesday, asking lawmakers to swiftly eliminate $9.4 billion in funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and various foreign aid programs.
    • “The request for what are called rescissions allows the White House budget office to legally freeze spending on those accounts for 45 days while the Republican-controlled Congress debates whether to approve the recommendation in full or in part, or to ignore it.
    • “The proposal calls on lawmakers to eliminate $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides funding for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service. That means NPR and PBS would lose their already approved federal allocations, if the request is approved by Congress.”
  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plans to undertake several new health tech initiatives, senior leaders announced today at a closed meeting with stakeholders. 
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services held a meeting today to discuss health tech policy and its recent request for information on health tech initiatives. CMS seems to be moving ahead with some of the initiatives it asked stakeholders to provide feedback on in its RFI — among them a national provider directory and modern identity verification for Medicare beneficiaries.
    • “This comes as the HHS’ health IT office announced a new leader this morning, Thomas Keane, M.D. Keane spoke at the meeting of stakeholders today at the Hubert H. Humphrey building in Washington, D.C.” 
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • Thomas Keane, a software engineer and interventional radiologist, began his role as national coordinator [for health information technology] Monday, the spokesperson said. He previously worked at the ASTP and served as a senior advisor to the deputy secretary of the HHS, according to his biography on the agency’s website. 
  • Healthcare Dive also relates,
    • “The Trump administration rescinded guidance on Tuesday directing hospitals to perform abortions during medical emergencies, even in states with restrictive abortion bans. 
    • “The Biden administration published the guidance in 2022, shortly after Roe v. Wade was overturned, asserting doctors were required to perform emergency care, even if that included abortions, under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act. * * *
    • “The CMS now says that guidance “does not reflect the policy of this Administration.” The new guidance is effective May 29, and furthers an executive order from President Donald Trump seeking to remove regulatory red tape, the CMS said.” * * *
    • “Texas and Idaho, which have some of the nation’s most restrictive abortion bans, have repeatedly argued that there is no conflict between EMTALA and their policies, because both states allow abortion when the mother’s life is at risk.”

From the judicial front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “A federal district court judge on Tuesday denied motions to dismiss complaints in two lawsuits against data analytics firm MultiPlan — now operating as Claritev — and a number of insurers.
    • “Judge Matthew Kennelly of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois denied Claritev’s motion to dismiss complaints in two lawsuits involving federal and state antitrust and consumer protection claims.” * * *
    • “Both lawsuits allege Claritev colluded with insurers to reduce pay for out-of-network providers, violating state and federal antitrust laws under the Sherman Act.
    • “We remain confident in the strength of our legal position and look forward to presenting the facts as the case moves forward,” Claritev said in a statement Tuesday. “These lawsuits will only serve to increase healthcare cost for employers and patients. We will vigorously defend ourselves through the legal process while remaining focused on delivering value to our customers and the broader healthcare ecosystem.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Centene is being sued for wrongful death after one of its members died after failing to get the mental healthcare he needed because of the insurer’s inadequate provider networks, according to the lawsuit filed by the member’s mother.
    • “The suit, filed late May in the Superior Court of Maricopa County in Arizona, accuses Centene’s subsidiary in the state, Health Net, of maintaining “ghost networks” — wherein insurers say providers are in network that aren’t, inflating the care options available under their plans to the detriment of actual access.
    • “As a result, Centene violated state and federal laws requiring network accuracy and adequacy, according to the suit, which also accuses the St. Louis-based payer of negligence and fraud. Centene did not respond to a request for comment.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration did not appeal a recent U.S. District Court decision that set aside the agency’s final rule aimed at increasing its authority over laboratory developed tests, according to two lab industry groups.
    • “The 60-day window for the FDA to appeal the ruling by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas expired over the weekend. The Association for Molecular Pathology supported the FDA’s move not to appeal.
    • “This decision should finally conclude the FDA’s unwarranted and overreaching attempts to assert regulatory authority over LDTs,” AMP President Jane Gibson said in an emailed statement.”

News from the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s conference

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A group of 97 patients had longstanding multiple myeloma, a common blood cancer that doctors consider incurable, and faced a certain, and extremely painful, death within about a year.
    • “They had gone through a series of treatments, each of which controlled their disease for a while. But then it came back, as it always does. They reached the stage where they had no more options and were facing hospice.
    • “They all got immunotherapy, in a study that was a last-ditch effort.
    • “A third responded so well that they got what seems to be an astonishing reprieve. The immunotherapy developed by Legend Biotech, a company founded in China, seems to have made their cancer disappear. And after five years, it still has not returned in those patients — a result never before seen in this disease.
    • “These results, in patients whose situation had seemed hopeless, has led some battle-worn American oncologists to dare to say the words “potential cure.”
    • “The new study, reported Tuesday at the annual conference of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and published in The Journal of Clinical Oncology, was funded by Johnson & Johnson, which has an exclusive licensing agreement with Legend Biotech.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Though they are both multiple myeloma drugs with the same mechanism of action, Sanofi’s Sarclisa has had difficulty competing with Johnson & Johnson’s powerhouse Darzalex, largely because it reached the market five years later.
    • “But one advancement that could help Sanofi close some of the gap is its on-body delivery system for its CD38 antibody.
    • “Tuesday, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Chicago, Sanofi presented data from two trials that showed Sarclisa administered subcutaneously (SC) from an investigational on-body injector (OBI) reduced treatment time and produced similar efficacy and safety compared to intravenous (IV) infusion.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental, non-hormonal drug from Bayer can reduce the hot flashes and other menopausal side effects many women taking a common breast cancer therapy experience, according to results from a late-stage clinical trial run by the pharmaceutical company.
    • “The study, known as Oasis-4, is the fourth successful trial test of Bayer’s drug, called elinzanetant. Detailed data presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting Monday showed treatment reduced vasomotor symptoms in women receiving endocrine therapy to treat or prevent hormone receptor-positive breast cancer.”
  • and
    • “A Johnson & Johnson drug currently used for advanced prostate cancer can help keep the disease from progressing in men who are at earlier stages and have certain genetic mutations, according to newly unveiled data from a Phase 3 clinical trial.
    • “Results from this trial, named Amplitude, were released Tuesday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s meeting in Chicago. They could potentially expand the number of people able to receive J&J’s Akeega, a pill that combines the active ingredients from the medicines Zejula and Zytiga.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Roche said Tecentriq combined with lurbinectedin shows significant survival benefits for patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer.
    • “The Swiss pharmaceutical company said Tuesday that late-stage trials showed the combination led to a 46% reduction in the risk of the disease progressing or death, and 27% reduction in the risk of death.
    • “The combination can be used a as a first-line maintenance treatment for people with the cancer following induction therapy with carboplatin, etoposide and Tecentriq, it said.
    • “The safety profile of the combination was consistent with the known safety profiles of Tecentriq and lurbinectedin, Roche said.”

In other medical research and public health news,

  • Cigna, writing in LinkedIn, explains why early detection is so important to fighting breast cancer.
  • The latest issue of the National Institutes of Health’s Research Matter covers “Customized gene therapy | Parents with substance use disorders | Ultra-processed food consumption.”
  • The New York Times discusses “Anorexia in Middle Age and Beyond. A growing number of older women are seeking treatment for eating disorders. Many have struggled without help for decades.”
  • MedCity News informs us,
    • “The World Health Organization estimates that about 10% of women and girls of reproductive age around the world — roughly 190 million people — suffer from chronic pain as a result of endometriosis. 
    • “Take this estimate with a grain of salt, though — it’s likely too low. The average diagnostic delay for endometriosis patients is eight years, driven in large part by the fact that the standard method used to diagnose the disease is an invasive surgical procedure.”
    • Boston-based biotech startup Heranova Lifesciences is working to address this problem by developing a non-invasive blood-based test. Just this spring, the company announced the LDT validation and U.S. launch of this product, which is called HerResolve. * * *
    • “The gold standard that doctors use to diagnose endometriosis is laparoscopy followed by histological confirmation. With this method, doctors put patients under anesthesia and perform a laparoscopy to look at the tissue and lesions growing outside the uterus — then, the doctor takes a tissue sample to confirm the diagnosis under a microscope.
    • “This method of testing is invasive — and not very quick. Heranova’s test seeks to address these issues by using machine learning to analyze a panel of biomarkers in a patient’s blood sample to determine whether or not they have endometriosis. 
    • “The test’s accuracy is on par with laparoscopy followed by histopathology, said Farideh Bischoff, Heranova’s chief medical officer.”
  • Per Health Day,
    • “Clinicians consider administration of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine as feasible at age 9 to 10 years, and parents appear to be receptive to discussing vaccination at this age, according to a study published online June 2 in Pediatrics.
    • “Caroline K. Tietbohl, Ph.D., from the University of Colorado and Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, and colleagues conducted an explanatory sequential mixed-methods study as part of an ongoing randomized trial that compared initiation at ages 9 to 10 years (intervention) versus 11 to 12 years (control) across 17 practices in Colorado (nine intervention) and 16 practices in California (eight intervention). At one month after study initiation, practice clinicians were surveyed, and semi structured interviews were conducted at three months after study initiation.” * * *
    • “The results of our prospective trial will determine if initiating vaccination earlier increases vaccination completion rates, especially by age 13 years,” the authors write.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • People are more likely to get cancer as they age. Dr. Miriam Merad has an unconventional idea of how that might be reversed: using allergy drugs and other seemingly unlikely medications to damp a condition known as “inflammaging.”
    • The immunologist and oncologist has spent years examining malignant tumors to learn why people over age 50 account for nine in 10 cancer diagnoses in the U.S. She and her research team at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City have homed in on an answer: the aging immune system. Their studies of individual immune cells in human lung tumors, as well as in old mice, have revealed how chronic, or pathogenic, inflammation in older people—dubbed inflammaging—interferes with the immune system and fuels cancer growth.
    • Merad and other researchers are testing whether existing anti-inflammatory medications usually used to fight rheumatoid arthritis or allergy conditions like asthma or eczema can slow cancer in older patients. They are also searching for new drugs. “Aging is something that we think we can transform,” says Merad, director of the Marc and Jennifer Lipschultz Precision Immunology Institute at Mount Sinai.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Becker Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “Following a tumultuous period for UnitedHealth Group, new CEO and board chair Stephen Hemsley addressed investors on June 2, acknowledging the company’s recent shortcomings and detailing his plan to restore the high performance that investors and customers expect moving forward.
    • “Mr. Hemsley expressed a deep commitment to regaining trust through increased transparency, improved pricing strategies, and a renewed focus on internal operations, particularly at Optum Health and UnitedHealthcare. 
    • “We are well aware we have not fulfilled your expectations or our own,” he said. “We apologize for that performance and we are humbly determined to earn back your trust and your confidence.”
    • The article also provides eight notes on Mr. Hemsley’s talk.
  • STAT News adds,
    • UnitedHealth Group’s new CEO told investors that the company is reevaluating how it tallies Medicare Advantage patients’ diagnoses for reimbursement purposes, an issue currently under investigation by the Justice Department. 
    • Stephen Hemsley’s remarks during the company’s annual shareholder meeting on Monday signal a noteworthy shift: UnitedHealth is now publicly acknowledging potential issues with how it assesses the health of its Medicare Advantage members.” * * *
    • “Our management team has been working with urgency through a comprehensive and methodical review of our operations from end to end,” Hemsley said. “Digging into every part of the organization to evaluate how we have been performing and to improve that performance.”
  • Fierce Pharma notes,
    • “Medicare Part D beneficiaries can now tap into Amazon Pharmacy’s PillPack for pre-sorted medication packets, the retail giant announced on Tuesday.
    • “PillPack sorts a patient’s medications into personalized, tear-away packets that are labeled by date and time, which can make it easier to follow prescribed regimens. The expansion brings this service to more than 50 million Part D enrollees who take daily medications, Amazon said.
    • “Once eligible customers sign up for packets through PillPack, Amazon Pharmacy will coordinate needed refills to ensure prescriptions arrive on time.
    • “In addition to growing its reach in the Part D market, Amazon announced that it will roll out new services to support caregivers in managing medications for a family member or loved one.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Pyx Health, a digital mental health platform, on Tuesday announced its acquisition of FarmboxRx, a company that provides fresh produce food boxes to Medicare and Medicaid members.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us that “Hospitals [are] push[ing] back on low Leapfrog grades.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “In January, H1 picked up provider data management software company Ribbon Health to broaden its reach into the health plan, provider system and digital health sectors.
    • “Five months later, the healthcare tech company has acquired Veda Data Solutions to build out its provider data and automation solutions for payers.
    • “Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
    • “Founded 10 years ago, Veda fixes bad provider data for healthcare organizations. Inaccurate and out-of-date health plan provider directories continue to be a thorny problem in healthcare and can make it difficult for patients to find a clinician when they need care.”

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The White House is not requesting an increase in pay for federal employees in fiscal 2026. President Donald Trump released more details of his budget request for next year late Friday afternoon. The appendix section of the budget proposals also includes provisions to continue the pay freeze for certain non-career Senior Executive Service members and political appointees. In all, the new budget document details more specific discretionary spending requests for each agency. Unlike the “skinny” budget released in early May, the administration did include funding requests for the Office of Personnel Management, the Education Department and independent agencies like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “The White House released a more detailed budget proposal on Friday that yields more information on how the Trump administration is aiming to reshape the HHS next year, including drastic cuts to the National Institutes of Health.
    • The updated proposal doubles down on plans to slash the NIH’s budget nearly in half, consolidate the HHS’ 28 operating divisions into 15, eliminate dozens of federal healthcare and social welfare programs and terminate more than 5,000 contracts.
    • “The Trump administration argues the changes are necessary to streamline HHS functions and eliminate priorities around diversity, equity and inclusion panned by conservatives.
    • ‘The administration can’t fully implement the budget without the support of Congress. Lawmakers usually make changes to the executive branch’s spending wish list in appropriations legislation.
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “HHS has proposed oversight of the 340B drug pricing program to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services as part of a broader reorganization. 
    • “The move, initially referenced in a preliminary memo from White House officials in April, would place the 340B program under CMS’s Program Management authority, allowing the agency to use its in-house drug pricing expertise and streamline oversight, according to HHS’s Budget in Brief. 
    • “Funding for 340B oversight would be maintained at $12 million to “provide oversight and auditing of covered entities and drug manufacturers, support operational improvements, and increase operational efficiencies,” the document said. 
    • “The 340B drug pricing program requires drug manufacturers to offer discounts on outpatient prescription drugs to eligible safety-net hospitals. CMS Program Management is a key part of the federal health infrastructure, overseeing the administration of Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program and the Federal Exchange.” 
  • Per Federal News Network,
    • “The Trump administration is proposing changes that would make it easier to fire federal employees accused of misconduct in a matter of days, because they no longer meet “suitability and fitness” standards required to join the federal workforce.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management, in a proposed rule it will publish Tuesday in the Federal Register, plans to expand suitability adjudications normally reserved for federal job applicants to include current employees.
    • “The proposed rule, once finalized, would allow the Trump administration to fast-track the firing of federal employees, on the grounds that they no longer meet suitability standards for federal employment.
    • “OPM’s proposed rule states agencies must remove federal employees within five workdays, if it decides they no longer meet the suitability standard.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Cardiovascular Business reports,
    • “BiVacor has received the FDA’s breakthrough device designation for its titanium Total Artificial Heart (TAH), which serves as a bridge to transplant for patients with end-stage heart failure.
    • BiVacor’s TAH is based on rotary blood pump technology and approximately the size of an adult’s fist. It has no valves or flexing ventricle chambers, and its only moving part is a magnetically suspended double-sided centrifugal pump impeller.
    • “The FDA’s decision signals just how much potential the agency sees in this technology. The breakthrough devices program is designed to help medical devices make it through the approval process faster than they would otherwise. Its representatives work directly with the manufacturer, for example, and submissions are prioritized.
    • “This is more than a regulatory milestone,” Daniel Timms, PhD, founder and chief technology officer of BiVacor, said in a statement. “It’s a validation of a concept we’ve spent decades proving that a fully implantable, TAH isn’t just possible, it’s necessary. Patients with biventricular failure have been overlooked for too long. The early results from our clinical trial show that we can give them a second chance, without the compromises of older technologies. The breakthrough device designation puts us on a faster track to deliver exactly that.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “The FDA granted de novo authorization to the first artificial intelligence (AI) program to support breast cancer risk prediction from screening mammograms.
    • “The program, called Clairity Breast, analyzes mammograms for subtle features that correlate with future breast cancer risk, according to a news release from Clairity. The analysis results in a 5-year risk score validated from analysis of more than 77,000 mammograms from multiple hospital-based and free-standing mammography facilities.
    • “The system can be applied immediately to clinical practice, Larry Norton, MD, a breast cancer specialist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, told MedPage Today.
    • “We’re very excited about it,” said Norton, who also is founding scientific director of the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, which supported development of Clairity Breast. “We were confident that it’s going to turn out to be something that’s going to help people, something that we think really has great science behind it.”

From the judicial front,

  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “The US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit granted a Texas doctor group’s request Friday to rehear its challenge to a Biden administration rule governing the arbitration process for surprise medical bill disputes.
    • “The No Surprises Act protects patients from most unexpected out-of-network bills by requiring insurers and medical providers to undergo an arbitration process for payment disputes. But the process is the subject of countless legal battles, and the Texas Medical Association has successfully challenged multiple provisions of the implementation regulations.
    • “A three-judge panel previously upheld several portions of the rule (RIN: 1210-AC17) in a mixed decision regarding the qualifying payment amount—a key factor arbitrators use to settle disagreements. The Texas Medical Association had asked the full panel to reconsider the decision upholding the exclusion of bonuses as well as the inclusion of “ghost rates,” or contracted rates for services that a doctor hasn’t actually provided.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CBS News reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its warning about the risk of contracting measles while traveling, after the agency tallied dozens of cases so far this year in travelers who were infectious while flying on airplanes within the U.S.
    • “Travelers can catch measles in many travel settings including travel hubs like airports and train stations, on public transportation like airplanes and trains, at tourist attractions, and at large, crowded events,” the agency now says, in an update published Wednesday.”
  • Per HCPLive,
    • “Cardiac deaths have risen since 2020, with more occurring at home, indicating a potential gap in care for heart disease patients during the pandemic.
    • “Hospital data showed a 20–34% reduction in acute myocardial infarction hospitalizations, while at-home cardiac deaths increased, suggesting changes in care-seeking behavior.”
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “Measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination rates in children declined in some counties across the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers found.
    • “Across 2,066 counties in 33 states with both pre- and post-pandemic vaccination data, the county-level mean MMR vaccination rate decreased from 93.92% to 91.26%, according to Lauren Gardner, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and colleagues.
    • “A decline in coverage was reported in 78% of counties during this time, and only four states — California, Connecticut, Maine, and New York — had an increase in median county-level vaccination rates, they reported in a JAMA research letter.”
  • The American Medical Association tells us what doctors wish their patients knew about e-cigarettes.
  • Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, discusses “What to know about nerve pain and tingling hands and feet. Tingling or painful sensations in your hands and/or feet are the main symptoms of neuropathy.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Novartis said Pluvicto demonstrated positive results in patients with PSMA-positive metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
    • “The Swiss pharmaceutical company on Monday said Pluvicto showed statistically significant and clinically meaningful benefits—including combined with hormone therapy versus hormone therapy alone—with positive trend in overall survival.
    • “The results are from a prespecified interim analysis of a Phase 3 trial, it said.
    • “Pluvicto is already approved for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and now shows potential in patients in an earlier disease setting, it said.
    • “The company will present results at an upcoming medical meeting and based on FDA feedback, will submit for regulatory review in the second half of the year, it said.
    • “Pluvicto is a radioactive medication used to treat some types of prostate cancer.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental medicine from Vera Therapeutics succeeded in a late-stage trial in a rare kidney disease, positioning the company to discuss an approval application with U.S. regulators in the near future. 
    • “According to Vera, the drug, called atacicept, met its main goal in a Phase 3 trial in IgA nephropathy, a chronic condition that can lead to kidney failure. After 36 weeks of treatment, atacicept was associated with a 42% reduction versus a placebo — and a 46% decline from the study’s start — in the amount of protein in participants’ urine, an important marker of kidney health. 
    • “Without providing specifics, Vera said atacicept’s other efficacy results were “consistent with or better than” what was observed in mid-stage testing and had a safety profile “comparable to placebo.” The company will share the data with the Food and Drug Administration in the coming weeks and intends to file an accelerated approval request in the fourth quarter.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Amgen has detailed a positive phase 3 readout for its T-cell engager Imdelltra in previously treated small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
    • “The DLL3xCD3 bispecific has shown that it can help patients live longer, has a more tolerable safety profile and improves certain cancer-related symptoms compared with chemotherapy in second-line SCLC, according to results from the phase 3 DeLLphi-304 trial. The data will be presented June 2 at the 2025 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting and simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “The drug significantly reduced the risk of death by 40% versus chemo in SCLC patients who had tried one line of platinum-based chemotherapy. Patients in the Imdelltra arm lived a median 13.6 months, compared with 8.3 months for chemo.
    • “All patient subgroups appeared to have benefited, regardless of their prior PD-1/L1 exposure, presence of brain metastases or liver metastases, and the type of prior chemotherapy. Among those who had tried a PD-1/L1 inhibitor, Imdelltra’s death risk reduction was 39%. In PD-1/L1-naïve patients, the number was 35%.
    • “These data underscore Imdelltra’s potential to transform patient outcomes and the small cell lung cancer treatment paradigm,” Amgen’s R&D chief, Jay Bradner, M.D., said in a statement.
    • “Findings from the DeLLphi-304 trial could help convert Imdelltra’s accelerated approval earned last year into a full approval.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “UnitedHealth Group shareholders signed off on the planned compensation package for newly-reinstated CEO Stephen Hemsley.
    • “Hemsley, who returned to the CEO role last month, will earn a $1 million base salary each year. He will also receive a one-time $60 million equity award in nonqualified stock options.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “BioNTech & Bristol Myers will jointly develop BioNTech’s BNT327 cancer-drug candidate.
    • “Bristol Myers will make a $1.5B upfront payment to BioNTech, with $2B in payments through 2028.
    • “BNT327 is being evaluated in Phase 3 trials as a first-line treatment in lung cancer.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “In late April, when Sanofi revealed that it was selling a controlling stake in its consumer health business Opella for 10 billion euros ($11.4 billion), chief financial officer Francois Roger said that the French drugmaker would “explore external growth opportunities for bolt-on acquisitions.”
    • “Just five weeks later, Sanofi has made a deal few would describe as “bolt-on,” as it has bought out Massachusetts-based Blueprint Medicines for up to $9.5 billion.
    • “With the deal, Sanofi gains Blueprint’s portfolio of rare immunological disease treatments, including systemic mastocytosis (SM) pill Ayvakit, which generated sales of $479 million last year and has peak sales potential of $2 billion, the 14-year-old company projected last year.
    • “Blueprint also brings a next-generation SM candidate in elenestinib, a KIT D816V inhibitor which is the subject of a phase 2/3 study, and an early-stage KIT inhibitor BLU-808. KIT plays a central role in mast cell activation, Sanofi said, which is implicated in a broad range of inflammatory diseases.”
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • Atai Life Sciences, among the most prominent biotechs focused on psychedelic medicines, said Monday it will merge with private psychedelic startup Beckley Psytech, pending results of a trial for a drug based on the practice of “smoking toad.”
    • “The new company will be known as Atai Beckley, with Beckley Psytech shareholders receiving 31% of shares in the entity.  The deal, which values Beckley at $370 million, comes as the Trump administration has expressed support for the field.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “St. Louis-based Ascension is reportedly in talks to acquire ambulatory surgery center company AmSurg for about $3.9 billion, according to Bloomberg.
    • “AmSurg split from Envision Healthcare when the company emerged from bankruptcy in 2023. It is now backed by Pacific Investment Management Co., King Street Capital Management and Partners Group.
    • “A potential acquisition would significantly expand Ascension’s footprint in the ASC space, aligning with the broader trend toward lower-cost, outpatient care settings. AmSurg has a network of more than 250 surgery centers across 34 states and supports nearly 2,000 physicians, according to its website.”
  • and
    • “Blythe, Calif.-based Palo Verde Hospital is at risk of shutting down due to financial challenges over resignations and months of litigation, The Desert Sun reported May 30. Becker’s reached out to the hospital, which remains open as of June 2. 
    • “Congressman Raul Ruiz, MD, raised concern for the 51-bed hospital in a May 28 letter, obtained by the Sun, to California Gov. Gavin Newsom, asking the state for $4 million in emergency funding, otherwise the hospital could shutter “as soon as tomorrow.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review also collected eight GLP-1 updates for your information.
  • Per Healthcare IT News,
    • “The Clinic by Cleveland Clinic, an initiative with telemedicine technology and services company Amwell, has been getting life-changing results from leading-edge virtual care. 
    • “The Clinic has been providing virtual second opinions by the many top specialists at the renowned healthcare organization. The platform connects patients to more than 3,500 specialists across Cleveland Clinic without the need for the patients to travel to a major medical center.
    • “Misdiagnoses contribute to more than 800,000 deaths or disabilities each year in the U.S., Johns Hopkins has found, costing the healthcare system hundreds of billions, beyond the human cost. 
    • “Data from the Clinic by Cleveland Clinic shows that in 67% of cases patients receive a new diagnosis or treatment recommendation after seeking a second opinion.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Electronic health records giant Epic announced Monday that more than 1,000 hospital customers and 22,000 clinics using its EHR are now live on a government-backed data exchange, as the company doubles down on a commitment it made last year.
    • “Epic said in an announcement that it marks a significant milestone in “making health information seamlessly and securely available wherever care happens.”
    • “In March, Epic reported that more than 2,000 hospital customers and more than 50,000 Epic clinics were either live or preparing to go live on the federal Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) framework for nationwide health data exchange, according to Becker’s Health IT.
    • “The company’s goal is to have all its customers live on TEFCA by the end of the year, Epic said in August. The health IT company now commands 42.3% of the hospital EHR market, up from 39.1% a year prior, so shifting all its hospital customers to TEFCA would represent a significant share of U.S. hospitals.”
  • and
    • “Digital health company Scripta Insights is joining forces with RxSaveCard with the goal of making it easier for employers to manage drug costs and meet their fiduciary duties.
    • “RxSaveCard offers a proprietary cost management and payment solution for pharmacy benefits, and those tools will be integrated into Scripta’s AI-powered Rx Navigation platform.
    • “For members, the integration is designed so they can better find savings for a variety of drugs, including high-cost specialty products.
    • “The platform is designed to identify lower-cost options both in the member’s prescription drug coverage or through cash-pay, according to an announcement from the companies.”

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Modern Healthcare relates,
    • “A coalition of healthcare trade associations and companies representing 550 providers and accountable care organizations is pleading with Congress to restore incentive bonuses for Medicare alternative payment models.
    • “The American Medical Association, Boston-based Mass General Brigham and others wrote congressional leaders Thursday expressing concern that failure to renew bonus payments will worsen providers’ financial instability, particularly in underserved regions.
    • “While we have seen steady growth for advanced [alternative payment models] in recent years, 2025 is a pivotal year for Medicare’s value transformation,” the letter says. “The expiration of Medicare’s advanced [alternative payment model] incentive payments and sharp increase in qualifying thresholds is creating significant challenges for physician practices and hospitals as they plan for the years ahead.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. The Department of Health and Human Services has canceled a contract with Moderna to develop messenger RNA vaccines against influenza strains seen as potential pandemic risks, leaving the future of the underlying research uncertain.
    • “Moderna revealed in a statement Wednesday that the HHS had terminated the contract, which could have handed the company more than $700 million in total funding. Moderna also reported that an experimental H5 avian influenza vaccine it’s developed showed promising results in an early-stage clinical trial. But without the government’s help, it will now be forced to “explore alternatives for late-stage development and manufacturing.”
    • “While the termination of funding from HHS adds uncertainty, we are pleased by the robust immune response and safety profile observed in this interim analysis,” said CEO Stéphane Bancel, in a statement. “These clinical data in pandemic influenza underscore the critical role mRNA technology has played as a countermeasure to emerging health threats.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “Federal job applicants will soon be quizzed on their favorite Trump administration policy as part of the hiring process, according to the Office of Personnel Management’s new “merit hiring plan.”
    • “How would you help advance the president’s executive orders and policy priorities in this role?” asks one of four essay questions that job seekers must answer if they are seeking any federal position GS-5 or above. “Identify one or two relevant executive orders or policy initiatives that are significant to you, and explain how you would help implement them if hired.”
    • “The federal government’s dedicated HR agency published the plan via a joint memo from Vince Haley, director of President Trump’s Domestic Policy Council and acting OPM Director Charles Ezell. The document is a hodgepodge of bipartisan reforms developed under both Trump and former President Biden to accelerate and improve the hiring process, alongside plans to eradicate longstanding efforts to make the federal workforce more reflective of the American populace.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, discusses what the latest FERS changes found in the budget reconciliation bill mean for federal and postal employee retirement benefits.
  • The Congressional Budget Office announced its 2025 panel of health advisors.
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “The White House will fix errors in a much-anticipated federal government report spearheaded by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., which decried America’s food supply, pesticides and prescription drugs.
    • “Kennedy’s wide-ranging “Make America Healthy Again” report, released last week, cited hundreds of studies, but a closer look by the news organization NOTUS found that some of those studies did not actually exist.
    • “Asked about the report’s problems, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the report will be updated.
    • “I understand there was some formatting issues with the MAHA report that are being addressed, and the report will be updated,” Leavitt told reporters during her briefing. “But it does not negate the substance of the report, which, as you know, is one of the most transformative health reports that has ever been released by the federal government.”
  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefits Plans discusses what the President’s April 15 executive order on PBM transparency means for employers and other purchasers of PBM services.
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Six years after being spun out from Novartis and becoming a public company, eye care specialist Alcon has gained its first FDA approval for a prescription drug, scoring a nod for dry eye disease (DED) treatment Tryptyr (acoltremon ophthalmic solution).
    • “Tryptyr, which is administered as a single drop twice daily, is a first-in-class TRPM8 receptor agonist intended to activate tear production. 
    • “Tryptyr is the first eye drop that stimulates corneal nerves to directly address tear deficiency, a known cause of (DED),” Marjan Farid, M.D., professor of ophthalmology at the University of California, Irvine, said in a release.
    • “There are roughly 38 million in the U.S. who have DED. Fewer than 10% of those who have been diagnosed are being treated with a prescription product, according to Alcon.”

From the judicial front,

  • Chain Drug Review reports,
    • “Express Scripts, a Cigna-owned pharmacy benefit manager, and CVS Health have filed separate lawsuits against the state of Arkansas, seeking to halt the implementation of a new law that would bar PBMs from owning, managing, or controlling pharmacies within the state. 
    • “In a statement, CVS Health said the “unconstitutional law puts local politics ahead of patients, restricting their access to life-saving medications and undermining fair competition.“
    • “The lawsuits, filed Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, argue that the law, scheduled to take effect in 2026, is unconstitutional under multiple provisions, according to Modern Healthcare. Both companies claim the legislation would lead to significant disruptions in pharmacy access, workforce displacement, and increased medication costs.”
    • FEHBlog note — Good luck, CVS and ESI.
  • The Groom Law Group, which represents ERIC in its federal court lawsuit challenging the problematic to say the least 2024 mental health parity amendments, brings us up to date on the litigation, which so far has been successful.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Adults diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder experience a range of benefits, including improved self-understanding, reduced self-blame and enhanced communication with others.
    • “The diagnosis can lead to positive changes in relationships, as individuals can now better explain their needs and behaviors to loved ones.
    • “Adults with autism may make adjustments to their routines and social interactions to accommodate their sensory sensitivities and communication challenges.”
  • Cardiovascular Business points out,
    • “Smoking marijuana and eating THC-based gummies have a negative impact on a person’s vascular health, according to new research published in JAMA Cardiology. In fact, the impact appears to be comparable to the damage seen in some tobacco users.
    • “There is a popular belief that marijuana smoke is harmless,” wrote first author Leila Mohammadi, MD, PhD, a vascular specialist with the University of California San Francisco, and colleagues. “However, marijuana smoke contains many of the thousands of chemicals contained in tobacco smoke, along with fine particles that contribute to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. As cannabis legalization increases, it is crucial to understand the public health and clinical implications of marijuana use.” * * *
    • “Click here to review the full analysis.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Use of the investigational non-opioid analgesic resiniferatoxin appeared to improve pain control in patients with advanced cancer who had intractable pain, though all patients experienced adverse events (AEs), according to an interim analysis of a first-in-human phase I trial.
    • “Among 19 patients with refractory cancer pain localized to the abdomen and/or lower extremities, a total of 213 treatment-emergent AEs were reported with a single intrathecal injection of resiniferatoxin, including 37 serious AEs in 14 patients, and at least one AE in all patients, reported Andrew J. Mannes, MD, of the NIH, and colleagues.” * * *
    • “In an accompanying editorial, Krishna B. Shah, MD, and Bilal Dar, MD, both of the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, noted that the improvements in efficacy “exceeded thresholds typically considered clinically meaningful,” and that the drug has the potential to provide “durable, opioid-sparing analgesia while preserving functional and cognitive abilities.”
    • “These interim results “represent an important step toward expanding the therapeutic interventional opioid-sparing options for patients with refractory cancer pain,” they wrote.”
  • Medscape notes,
    • “Extreme fatigue, bone loss, and abdominal pain are real-world adverse events noted with the use of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s) that may not have been apparent from the clinical trials.
    • “In a wide-ranging “meet the professor” lecture at the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology (AACE) Annual Meeting 2025, obesity expert W. Timothy Garvey, MD, the Charles E. Butterworth, Jr. professor and university professor at the University of Alabama (UAB) and director of the UAB Diabetes Research Center at Birmingham, Alabama, said these phenomena all point to the importance of close clinical management of people taking GLP-1s and to the dangers of online prescribing of these medications.
    • “You can’t engage in complications-centric obesity care unless you evaluate the patient for complications, which doesn’t happen with online availability of prescriptions,” said Garvey.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Intellia Therapeutics shares dropped 25% early Thursday after the gene-editing company disclosed that one patient in an ongoing Phase 3 trial had signs of liver stress.
    • “Lab tests showed the patient had grade 4 liver transaminase elevations that “appear to be resolving” without hospitalization or medical treatment and have since fallen to less dangerous levels, Intellia said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Wednesday. “We continue to monitor these events as the Magnitude study progresses,” the company said.
    • “The Magnitude trial is testing Intellia’s experimental therapy in a type of deadly heart condition known as transthyretin amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy, or ATTR-CM. Intellia has already recruited 365 patients and plans to enroll a total of 765 by early 2027. Though the study is blinded, it’s likely that the patient with the potentially serious liver signals received treatment with Intellia’s therapy, analysts said.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “Healthcare C-suite leaders are trying to keep pace with rapid changes in U.S. economic and regulatory policies in the first four months of the second Trump administration.
    • “Among 700 business executives across six industries, nearly half (48%) of business executives rank economic policy among the top three factors driving strategic change over the next one to two years, according to a new PwC May pulse survey
    • “For healthcare executives, persistent policy and market volatility is a bigger concern, with six out of 10 (61%) rethinking short-term business strategies due to economic policies.
    • “Leaders at healthcare organizations also cited a number of other factors affecting short-term strategic changes — AI and data regulations (56%), U.S. trade policy (44%) and U.S. federal government spending and budget policy (37%). Healthcare C-suite leaders seem less concerned about corporate tax policy, cited by 34% as a factor driving short-term strategic changes, as well as the U.S. antitrust and competition environment (24%), climate policy (22%) and U.S. immigration policy (22%).
    • “About half (48%) of the business executives surveyed expect the current uncertainty to last less than a year, but many anticipate it could extend through the next presidential election.” 
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Private practice is slowly fading as a way to do business, going the way of landline phones, bank deposit slips and fax machines.
    • “An analysis by the American Medical Association found the percentage of physicians in a practice wholly owned by physicians last year to be at the lowest level since the survey began in 2012. The AMA examined data from its biennial Physician Practice Benchmark Survey, most recently conducted in 2024.
    • “The percentage of physicians working in private practice has dropped below 45%.
    • “Of the remaining physicians surveyed, the highest percentage are employed by hospitals.
    • “Along with that shift, only 35% of physicians described their employment status as owners in 2024.”
  • The Wall Street Journal explains how Novo Nordisk lost its mojo in the GLP-1 drugs market.
    • “Novo Nordisk, once Europe’s most valuable company, is losing its grip on the anti-obesity market due to production issues and slow marketing.
    • “Eli Lilly’s weight-loss drug Zepbound has surpassed Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy in weekly U.S. prescriptions, and Lilly has a more promising pipeline.
    • “Novo Nordisk’s CEO was ousted, shares have tumbled, and the company faces challenges in R&D and direct-to-consumer marketing.”
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) news release,
    • ICER publishes Evidence Report on Treatment for Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis
    • There are significant uncertainties regarding long term efficacy of tolebrutinib;
    • ICER estimates that treatment would achieve common thresholds of cost-effectiveness if priced between $3,250 and $5,900 per year.
  • Health Affairs concludes in a recent article,
    • “Because many value-based care programs in the US are fragmented, heterogeneous and complex, none are driving large-scale, systemic change. Clinical care redesign driven by value-based healthcare programs has been halting and has achieved far less than promised.
    • “A rising mood of despair over the ability to achieve a sustainable, high-value healthcare system is causing some to support interventions such as price controls and heavier regulation to drive down spending. However, a key missing ingredient in value-based reforms has been sufficiently nuanced information about the clinical context in which patients are treated. A primary challenge in finally achieving high value healthcare in the US is discovering how to harness the comprehensive and nuanced data generated in the provision of care, which is available in each patient’s EHR, to support systemic care redesign to achieve better outcomes at lower cost. Adding that key ingredient could be transformative.
    • “The system currently used to extract data from EHRs in the US, ICD-10-CM, does not adequately capture clinical detail and nuance. Gaps, limitations, and errors in describing healthcare today lead directly to our inability to accurately measure both the outcomes resulting from the care provided and the cost of that care. The WHO created and released ICD-11 to address these issues, and with an appropriate comprehensive extension such as ICD-11-CCL the ability to measure and attain value in healthcare would be achievable. However, even if the US loses access to ICD-11, there is another viable option. SNOMED CT is a comprehensive clinical terminology, optimized for the capture of clinical nuance, that uses architecture designed for computerized data analytics. It is already used to capture and store clinical content in EHRs and could be leveraged through the creation of a comprehensive code set to also extract and transmit data with all clinical nuance preserved. Such a system would overcome most, if not all, of the current limitations in ICD-10-CM and could empower existing value-based programs to improve the cost-effectiveness of healthcare.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Retail giant Walmart is rolling out a new platform for insurers and benefit managers that’s designed to make it easier to encourage healthy eating.
    • “The tool, called Everyday Health Signals, is powered by artificial intelligence, analyzing a consumers’ retail history on Walmart.com to surface personalized feedback such as shopping lists and nutrition analyses. Given that the retailer sees 145 million customers each week in stores and online, it has a bevy of data to pull from, according to an announcement.
    • “Eligible customers can opt in to allowing Everyday Health Signals to dig into their shopping history, Walmart said.
    • “The program is initially launching in partnership with NationsBenefits, connecting its members to data they can use to meet key health goals. Walmart intends to expand to other insurers and benefits organizations in the future.”
  • and
    • “Humana is the latest major insurer to partner with digital sleep clinic Dreem Health to improve members’ sleep care.
    • “California-based Dreem Health was acquired by sleep diagnostics company Sunrise in December. The company already has partnerships with the country’s largest payers including Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, HealthNet, UnitedHealthcare and Medicare.
    • “Sunrise was built on the back of research conducted by Jean-Benoit Martinot, M.D., the father of Sunrise CEO and founder Laurent Martinot. The company developed a small device that patients are able to use to diagnose sleep disorders from anywhere—without the inconvenience of spending the night hooked up to wires in a lab—while still providing a near-similar level of information.
    • “Our dream today is to become the largest sleep clinic in the country,” said Laurent Martinot in an interview with Fierce Healthcare. “We already have the largest virtual care sleep clinic. We would like to become the No. 1 one place you go if you feel you are not sleeping well and you need some care.”
    • “The Sunrise device is a diagnostic tool that is able to measure jaw movements, muscle contractions and snoring noises (through a built-in mic) from the comfort of a patient’s own bed. It’s disposable and is able to record data for up to three nights. A report is generated after just one night of sleep, allowing a care team to engage and start next steps immediately.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Highmark Health is off to a challenging start to the year as its insurance business dinged the company’s bottom line during the first quarter.
    • “On Thursday, the privately held for-profit Blue Cross and Blue Shield licensee reported net income of $13 million, a steep decline from $194 million the prior year, as revenue rose 11% to $8 billion
    • “As we’ve seen with the nationals on the health plan side, elevated trends are here to stay,” said Carl Daley, chief financial officer and treasurer of Highmark Health.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Cancer drugmaker iTeos Therapeutics said Wednesday it plans to wind down operations and seek to sell the company’s assets and intellectual property rights.
    • “ITeos has for years struggled to develop a cancer treatment that sufficiently impressed investors and its pharmaceutical partners. Two weeks ago, it said it was shelving its most advanced drug prospect, a TIGIT-targeting treatment developed with GSK.
    • “The immuno-oncology developer is the latest biotechnology company considering merger prospects or liquidatation of its assets this year. Others such as Cargo Therapeutics and Third Harmonic Bio have made their own plans to dissolve.”

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC

  • Federal News Network interviews Bloomberg Government deputy news director Loren Duggan about what’s next for the Big Beautiful Bill Act.
  • Per a Senate press release,
    • Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) joined Sens. John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) to introduce the Don’t Sell My DNA Act to safeguard consumers’ sensitive genetic data during corporate bankruptcy proceedings.
    • The Don’t Sell My DNA Act strengthens consumer privacy protections by:
      • Modernizing the Bankruptcy Code to include genetic information in the definition of “personally identifiable information”;
      • Requiring written notice and affirmative consumer consent prior to the use, sale or lease of genetic information during bankruptcy proceedings; and
      • Requiring the trustee or debtor in possession of genetic information to permanently delete any data not subject to a sale or lease.
    • “Consumers should feel confident that any personal information shared with a public company isn’t up for grabs when that company files for bankruptcy,” Grassley said. “This bill would fill gaps in current law to help safeguard consumers’ genetic information and ensure Americans’ DNA isn’t treated like any other financial asset.”
  • The American Hospital Association lets us know,
    • Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. May 27 announced in a post on X that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would no longer recommend the COVID-19 vaccine for healthy children and pregnant women. 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Center announced Monday it is extending three tracks within the Kidney Care Choices (KCC) Model through 2027.
    • “Starting in performance year 2026, the model’s financial methodology and participation options will be modified to “improve model sustainability,” the agency said. However, one KCC Model track will be shuttered a year early at the end of December.
    • “The KCC Model has 93 participants, and implementation first began in January 2022. The most recent participants were announced Jan. 15.”
  • The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced last week
    • The EEOC collects workforce data from employers with more than 100 employees (lower thresholds apply to federal contractors). Employers meeting the reporting thresholds have a legal obligation to provide the data; it is not voluntary.  * * *
    • The 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection opened on Tuesday, May 20, 2025. The deadline to file the 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 report is Tuesday, June 24, 2025.
    • “As part of EEOC Acting Chair Lucas’ efforts to identify continued cost savings for the American public, there will be a shorter collection period during which filers may submit their 2024 reports. The collection period will not extend beyond the Tuesday, June 24, 2025 “Published Due Date” deadline. Additionally, beginning with the 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection, all communications sent to filers will be electronic.” * * *
    • “Filers should visit the dedicated EEO-1 Component 1 website at www.eeocdata.org/eeo1
      to access the EEO-1 Component 1 Online Filing System (OFS), to find supplementary resource materials such as the 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 Instruction Booklet and 2024 EEO-1 Component 1 Data File Upload Specifications, and to get the latest updates. Filers needing additional assistance can access the Filer Support Team Message Center upon logging into the OFS.”

In Food and Drug Administration News,

  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of certain lots of BD esophagogastric balloon tamponade tubes due to the potential for serious injury or death. BD said it became aware of some users encountering challenges removing the plastic plugs from the rubber lumen to inflate the balloons. BD and their subsidiary C.R. Bard Urology and Critical Care sent all affected customers a letter with updated use instructions. There have been two serious injuries, and one death associated with the issue.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • Despite facing ongoing legal pressure from its rival United Therapeutics, Liquidia has successfully landed a pair of long-awaited FDA approvals for its dry powder formulation of treprostinil.
    • The FDA has cleared treprostinil—also known by the trade name Yutrepia—to improve exercise ability in adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and pulmonary hypertension associated with interstitial lung disease (PH-ILD).
  • and
    • The FDA has also approved Sanofi’s meningococcal vaccine MenQuadfi for use in infants as young as 6 weeks, multiple news outlets reported Tuesday. The shot was already cleared to protect against four prolific strains of meningococcal bacteria in individuals as young as 2 years and older.
    • The FDA based its decision on data from three phase 3 trials that found MenQuadfi worked as well as GSK’s rival meningococcal vaccine Menveo when given with other routine vaccines in children between the ages of 6 weeks to 19 months, Reuters pointed out. Sanofi’s trials enrolled more than 6,000 participants.
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “A patient who received an experimental gene therapy developed by Rocket Pharmaceuticals has died following treatment, the company disclosed Tuesday.
    • “According to Rocket, the patient experienced what’s known as capillary leak syndrome, where plasma and proteins seep from blood vessels into surrounding tissue, and later died from an acute systemic infection.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration ordered the study’s halt Friday, while Rocket works with clinical trial monitors and other experts to investigate the cause. The company said it is focusing on a “novel immune suppression agent” it recently added to a pre-treatment preparatory regimen.”

From the judicial front,

  • The American Medical Association informs us,
    • “In a win for the nation’s youth—and all Americans’ health—the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled (PDF) that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) did not act in an arbitrary and capricious manner when it told applicants that they could not put certain flavored e-cigarette liquids on the shelf.
    • “The unanimous decision overturned a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling. Had that appellate-court ruling been allowed to stand, companies could have marketed products that clearly were designed to appeal to children, with names such as “Jimmy the Juice Man Peachy Strawberry,” “Suicide Bunny Mother’s Milk and Cookies,” “Pink Lemonade,” “Iced Pineapple Express” and “Killer Kustard Blueberry.”
    • “Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., who wrote the opinion for the court, said the FDA did not act arbitrarily and capriciously when it denied the companies’ applications for premarket approval of the tobacco products. The companies challenged the agency’s decision arguing that, among other things, that the FDA didn’t give them fair notice about the evidentiary and comparative requirements used during the application stage and that the agency had changed its position on scientific evidence. 
    • “The high court remanded the case to the 5th Circuit to review other legal arguments, so this is not the end of the litigation, but it is a favorable step forward. The 5th Circuit’s decision was an outlier among the federal circuits that have considered similar cases.”
  • Per Govexec,
    • “At least one agency’s staff impacted by the mass dismissals of probationary workers can pursue their reinstatements as a class, the panel that hears federal employees’ challenges to firings has for the first time ruled, creating a new path for sweeping reversals of those terminations. 
    • “Hundreds of recently hired and subsequently fired employees at the Homeland Security Department will be part of a class action alleging their dismissals were unlawful after a Merit Systems Protection Board administrative judge granted the request. The DHS ruling was the first to come down after a consortium of lawyers filed similar challenges on behalf of fired probationary employees at 20 federal agencies
    • “I find that a class appeal is the fairest and most efficient way to adjudicate the appeal and that the putative class counsel and named appellants will adequately represent the interests of the parties,” said Sara Snyder, the chief administrative judge for MSPB’s western regional office.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CBS News reports,
    • Cases of the new COVID-19 variant NB.1.8.1, linked to a large surge in China, have been detected in multiple locations across the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The earliest cases in the U.S. date back to late March and early April, and were detected through a screening program at airports for arriving international travelers.
    • “CDC is aware of reported cases of COVID-19 NB.1.8.1 in China and is in regular contact with international partners,” a CDC spokesperson said in a statement last week.
    • The spokesperson said that, so far, too few U.S. sequences have been reported of NB.1.8.1 to be included in the agency’s variant estimates dashboard.
    • But hospitalizations abroad have raised questions about the new variant, its symptoms and more.
    • Answers to those questions may be found in the CBS News article.
  • ABC News adds,
    • “More than five years after the first cases of COVID-19 were detected in the United States, hundreds of people are still dying every week.
    • “Last month, an average of about 350 people died each week from COVID, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).” * * *
    • “The experts said there are a few reasons why people might still be dying from the virus, including low vaccination uptake, waning immunity and not enough people accessing treatments.” * * *
    • CDC data shows that those aged 75 and older currently have the highest rate of COVID-19 deaths at 4.66 per 100,000.”
  • The American Medical Association let us know what doctors wish their patients knew about lung cancer screening.
  • The Washington Post relates,
    • “Engagement with digital technology was associated with a 58 percent reduced risk of cognitive impairment in people middle-aged and older, according to a study in the journal Nature Human Behavior.
    • “Researchers conducted a systematic review of 57 studies to see whether exposure to technology has helped or harmed cognition among the first generation of adults with prolonged exposure to digital devices such as smartphones, tablets and computers. The studies involved more than 411,000 adults with an average age of 69.
    • “The analysis revealed that technology could play a role in preserving brain function, not worsening it, said co-authors Jared Benge, a clinical neuropsychologist at the University of Texas at Austin’s Dell Medical School, and Michael Scullin, an associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infection is associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but treating the viral infection may offer protection, a new study found.
    • “In a matched case-control study of nearly 700,000 older adults, HSV-1 was more common in those with AD, and antiviral therapy for HSV-1 was associated with a lower risk of developing AD.
    • “However, the authors and outside experts cautioned that no firm conclusions can be drawn from this observational study and called for more research.
    • “The study was published online on May 20 in BMJ Open. It was funded by Gilead Sciences, which is actively involved in the research and development of treatments for HSV.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • Good posture improves circulation, respiration, digestion and bladder function. It also enhances cognitive ability and mood.
    • To improve posture, become aware of your body position, stand against a wall to align yourself, and perform dynamic stretching exercises.
    • Upright posture is associated with confidence, self-esteem, and reduced anxiety. Physical therapists can help develop personalized plans to improve posture.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fair Health released today a claims-based analysis of GLP-1 drugs and obesity. Beckers Hospital Review summarizes this analysis here.
  • The Wall Street Journal considers the price outlook for GLP-1 drugs used to treat obesity.
  • Fierce Pharma tells us,
    • “After a fourth quarter in which revenue boomed throughout the biopharma industry, there were reversals for several drugmakers in the first three months of 2025. 
    • “The companies that took the biggest hits were in the United States, where there is already considerable angst in the industry over the tariff threats and drug price-slashing aspirations of President Donald Trump, along with the unsettling prospects of having a pharma adversary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., heading up the Department of Health and Human Services.
    • “Among the top 25 revenue companies in the industry in Q1, there were seven that saw year-over-year sales declines, all from the U.S. Viatris took the biggest hit at 11%, followed by Pfizer (-8%), Organon (-7%), Bristol Myers Squibb (-6%), Regeneron (-4%), Merck (-2%) and Gilead (-0.3%).”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Eli Lilly is wagering up to $1 billion on a private biotechnology company developing new, non-opioid pain drugs that have already caught the attention of other large pharmaceutical firms.
    • “Per an announcement Tuesday, Lilly plans to acquire SiteOne Therapeutics in an all-cash deal. The companies aren’t disclosing how much money is being exchanged upfront or when they expect the transaction to close. But, if SiteOne’s research programs hit certain regulatory and commercial goals, the amount paid to its shareholders could reach that 10-figure mark.”
  • and
    • “Biogen is partnering with RNA drug developer City Therapeutics to develop a better way of reaching an unspecified target that “mediates key central nervous system diseases.” Biogen will pay City, a startup that launched publicly late last year, $16 million in upfront fees and invest another $30 million in convertible notes that could later become a minority stake. “With this effort, we are further expanding the modalities in our R&D toolbox to potentially reach our targets of interest more precisely by adding an RNAi-based approach,” Biogen research head Jane Grogan said in a statement.”
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review news release,
    • ICER today released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of apitegromab(Scholar Rock Holdings), nusinersen (Spinraza®, Biogen), onasemnogene abeparvovec-xioi (Zolgensma®, Novartis), and risdiplam (Evrysdi®, Genentech) for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).
    • “This preliminary draft marks the midpoint of ICER’s eight-month process of assessing this treatment, and the findings within this document should not be interpreted to be ICER’s final conclusions.”
  • Beckers Health IT discusses why Texas Health is taking a loss on its hospital at home program and summarizes Medscape’s list of telehealth friendly states which Utah leads.
  • Beckers Clinical Leadership identifies the 24 U.S. hospitals that have received the American Nurses Credentialling Center’s Magnet with Distinction award. “The Magnet with Distinction program was created as a special designation to celebrate hospitals and healthcare organizations that exceed scoring thresholds required to earn Magnet recognition.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “AI-powered ambient-listening technology is expanding in healthcare, documenting doctor-patient encounters.
    • “AI scribes save doctors time on documentation, reducing burnout and improving focus on patients, according to pilot programs.
    • “Concerns exist around patient privacy, data security and costs, but patient feedback has been largely positive.”
  • Fierce Healthcare offers insights into how Anthem Blue Cross is growing its behavioral health network in California.
    • “The insurer’s network is built on partnerships with multiple organizations, with recent additions including Headway, Rula and Octave. Through its relationship with these firms, the insurer is seeking to make it simpler for members to find providers that meet their unique needs.
    • “Through Headway, the insurer connects employers and plan members with personalized services. Rula, meanwhile, makes it easier for members to schedule an appointment with one of the more than 10,000 providers in its network.
    • “Octave, similarly, is built to make it simple for members to find a provider across multiple specialties, backgrounds and evidence-based approaches, according to the announcement.”
  • NIST explains for those interested how an MRI machine works.

Friday Report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management is taking a second bite at the apple to modernize its human resources platform.
    • “OPM released a new request for proposals on Thursday through the General Services Administration schedules program for a secure, cloud-based software-as-a-service (SaaS) human capital management (HCM) platform.
    • “The objective of this acquisition is to deploy an integrated, enterprise-wide core HR platform—powered by a secure, FedRAMP-authorized SaaS solution—that consolidates key human capital functions, including personnel management, time and attendance, leave, benefits administration, learning and performance management and workforce analytics,” the RFP states. “The platform must enable seamless interoperability with critical external systems (e.g., USA Staffing, GSA Payroll, eOPF, eHRI, LMS, and benefits systems) and eliminate the data and process gaps currently affecting onboarding, pay accuracy, personnel action sequencing, leave eligibility and audit reporting.”
    • “The solicitation says the platform will be used for OPM’s workforce of 2,000 to 3,000 people.”
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) revealed several updates to the ACO REACH program in 2026, though the model’s long-term future remains unclear.
    • “The CMS said it is making changes to the model based on preliminary data on 2023 performance (PDF), which found that standard accountable care organizations saved $197.5 million in aggregate that year. New entrant ACOs, meanwhile, generated $36.8 million in aggregate savings, reducing gross spending at higher rates that standard organizations.
    • “In addition, high-needs ACOs reduced spending by $2.3 million in the aggregate, according to the preliminary report. The CMS is set to release full data on ACO REACH later this year.
    • “The proposed changes come in a confusing environment for ACOs, which have pushed the agency to outline plans for the ACO REACH program, currently set to expire in 2026.”
  • The American Hospital Association News let us know,
    • “AHA May 23 submitted recommendations to the Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission in response to the agencies’ requests for information on unnecessary or burdensome anticompetitive regulations. “[T]he U.S. health care system imposes a bewildering array of regulations on hospitals and health systems, adding significant administrative costs, disincentivizing pro-competitive arrangements, and promoting vertical consolidation of large commercial insurers to the detriment of patients and providers across the country,” AHA Deputy General Counsel Julie Rapoport Schenker wrote in the letters to the agencies. The AHA’s recommendations included addressing regulations that foster anticompetitive conduct by insurers and limit the ability of hospitals and health systems to thrive in a competitive free market, among others.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP points out,
    • “Excess deaths in the United States kept rising even after the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, with more than 1.5 million in 2022 and 2023 that would have been prevented had US death rates matched those of peer countries, estimates a Boston University (BU)-led study today in JAMA Health Forum.
    • “The data show a continuation of a decades-old trend toward increasing US excess deaths, mainly among working-age adults, largely driven by drug overdoses, gun violence, auto accidents, and preventable cardiometabolic causes, the researchers say.
    • “The US has been in a protracted health crisis for decades, with health outcomes far worse than other high-income countries,” says lead and corresponding author Jacob Bor, ScD, said in a BU news release. “This longer-run tragedy continued to unfold in the shadows of the COVID-19 pandemic.”
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “Seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and RSV activity is low.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity has declined to low levels nationally. Wastewater levels are at low levels, emergency department visits are at very low levels, and laboratory percent positivity is stable.
      • “Additional information about current COVID-19 activity can be found at: CDC COVID Data Tracker: Home.
    • “Influenza
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity has declined to low levels in most areas of the country.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Cancer screening poses a quandary for women with dense breast tissue. They’re at elevated risk for breast cancer, but mammograms often miss tumors buried in dense breasts — and insurers often resist paying for additional scans that may help find the masses.
    • “Now a large study comparing various types of scans has found that mammography enhanced with iodine-based dye can detect three times as many invasive cancers in dense breast tissue as ultrasound.
    • “And so-called contrast-enhanced mammography can find tumors that are much smaller than those found by regular mammography. M.R.I.s are better at detecting more tumors than standard mammograms, the study found but are considerably more expensive.
    • “The scans were given to women with dense breast tissue who had already undergone mammograms that hadn’t turned up any abnormalities.”
    • “Contrast-enhanced mammography needs to become standard of care for women with dense breasts,” if they are at high risk of developing breast cancer, said Dr. Fiona J. Gilbert, a professor of radiology at the University of Cambridge’s School of Clinical Medicine. She is lead author of the study, which was published Wednesday in The Lancet.”
  • NCQA offers via LinkedIn a White Paper, Webinar and a New HEDIS Measure for Asthma Awareness Month, which is May.
    • “The HEDIS MY 2026 measure set will include a new measure focused on asthma, Follow-Up After Acute Care Visits for Asthma (AAF-E). Patients with uncontrolled asthma are more likely to seek care for acute exacerbations, rather than focusing on preventive care. The new measure focuses on the patient-clinician relationship as encouraging treatment adherence and efficacy. Guiding patients toward non-acute care—and clinicians with whom they have a trusted relationship—may help improve asthma outcomes.”
  • The Wall Street Journal delves into “new tests [that] promise to reveal the secrets in your blood. A wave of diagnostic tests—some here, some coming—can identify cancer and Alzheimer’s at earlier stages and predict flare-ups of other conditions.”
  • Per HCPLive,
    • “Semaglutide demonstrated notable protective effects on osteoporosis and gout in people with obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) in a new cohort study.
    • “The impact of newer anti-obesity medications on skeletal health remains incompletely understood, particularly in populations with varying metabolic profiles,” lead investigator Jo-Ching Chen, Chung Shan Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, and colleagues wrote.
    • “Chen and colleagues conducted a 5-year cohort study examining skeletal health outcomes in people with obesity and T2D receiving semaglutide vs conventional glucose-lowering medications (sitagliptin, empagliflozin, glipizide), and obese individuals without T2D receiving semaglutide vs traditional anti-obesity medications (Contrave, phentermine, Qsymia).”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “After meeting the mark alongside Keytruda in PD-L1-positive breast cancer earlier this year, Gilead Sciences’ antibody-drug conjugate Trodelvy has impressed in a solo showing in a similar indication.
    • “In the late-stage Ascent-03 trial, Trodelvy bested standard-of-care chemotherapy at extending the time before disease worsening or death in certain patients with previously untreated metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC).
    • “The study specifically assessed the TROP2-targeted ADC in patients who aren’t candidates for PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitors, either because their tumors don’t express the PD-L1 protein or because the patients are ineligible.
    • “The “highly statistically significant and clinically meaningful” improvement on the progression-free survival metric allowed the study to meet its primary endpoint, Gilead said. The company will discuss the Ascent-03 results with regulators and plans to present detailed results from the trial at an upcoming medical meeting.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports
    • “The nation’s leading nonprofit healthcare providers struggled financially during the quarter ended March 31.
    • “Most of the major systems, including Kaiser Permanente, Mass General Brigham, Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic, Ascension and Providence, recorded operating margins that were flat or lower than this time last year, despite growing patient volumes.
    • “The results come as analysts have been sounding the alarm with escalating urgency about how headwinds, including market volatility and policy changes in Washington, could harm provider finances.” 
  • Beckers Health IT explains “two ways Amazon is changing healthcare, per CEO Andy Jassy.”
  • Per Health Leaders,
    • “A recent Experian Health survey shows steady improvement in access to care but suggests a disconnect between patients and providers on digital tools.
    • “Providers continue to face challenges with capacity constraints and staffing shortages.
    • “Patients call for better pricing estimates and self-scheduling tools.”
  • Healthcare Innovation lets us know,
    • Aligning itself with new strategies coming out of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, the Health Care Payment Learning & Action Network (HCPLAN) announced it will launch four new initiatives focused on healthcare choice and competition, patient empowerment, preventative care, and technology-enabled healthcare, while discontinuing its alternative payment model measurement effort, which had been funded by CMMI.
    • The HCPLAN is a group of public and private healthcare leaders that was formed to provide thought leadership, strategic direction, and ongoing support to accelerate the adoption of alternative payment models (APMs) and accountable care.
    • Since its launch in 2015, the HCPLAN APM Measurement Effort has monitored the shift of U.S. healthcare from fee-for-service to APMs. The 2024 APM Measurement Effort results demonstrated the continued growth in APM adoption and initiatives to enhance patient access, affordability, and quality of care. As part of its efforts to advance the availability and reduce the cost of key data needed to improve care, the HCPLAN will explore alternative pathways for the continuation of this effort.
  • MedTech Dive explores “Why Medtronic plans to spin out its diabetes business. While some analysts questioned why Medtronic would leave a fast-growing market, others backed the company’s plan to focus on segments with higher margins.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Pharmacy benefit manager WellDyne is partnering with Waltz Health to bring greater transparency to its specialty pharmacy clients.
    • “WellDyne is teaming up with Waltz as well as Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs as part of its broader member routing strategy, which surfaces real-time alerts and smart prompts that can help its members find the most affordable medication option for them.
    • “The PBM’s tech stack also uses automated algorithms to adjudicate claims in the background and let members know when they may be able to achieve savings. The technology optimizes claims across different touch points including retail, home delivery, discount cards and other avenues.
    • “Rich Wipperfurth, chief commercial officer for WellDyne, said traditional models are also built on simplicity but in a way that steers the member toward preferred distribution channels, pharmacies and other sources.
    • “WellDyne wants to inject more choice back into the equation, Wipperfurth said.”

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” squeezed through the House after a late scramble to get rival factions on board. Next it goes to the Senate, where GOP lawmakers are already making demands and party leaders will once again need to bridge sharp disagreements.
    • The more than 1,000-page bill passed the House early Thursday morning after Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) found a recipe that satisfied just enough lawmakers, who approved the measure by just one vote after an all-night session. Now Senate Republican leader John Thune (R., S.D.) needs to line up enough support within his own narrow majority—without making changes that fracture the fragile House agreement and derail the party’s hopes to finish the bill by its July 4 target.
  • Federal News Network explains,
    • “Four of the six provisions on federal benefits cuts that originated from Republicans on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee remain in the House-passed version of the bill, which now heads to the Senate for consideration. But notably, the proposed change to a “high-5” annuity calculation is no longer on the table. The provision was struck from the reconciliation legislation prior to the House’s passage of the bill.
    • “Oversight committee Democrats, as well as Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio), led efforts to remove the “high-5” proposal from the reconciliation bill. Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) proposed an amendment to strike the “high-5” provision, which was ultimately adopted.
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, answers frequently asked questions about federal retirement.
  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News tells us,
    • “Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary testified May 22 before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies on the discretionary budget proposal for fiscal year 2026. The proposal includes $93.8 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the FDA. The allocation is a 26.2% reduction from the FY 2025 enacted level.”  
  • The House of Representatives and the Senate left Washington DC today for a weeklong District/State work break following Memorial Day next Monday. The Senate Majority Leader announced his plans to file additional cloture motions for Presidential nominees when the Senate returns to Capitol Hill on June 2. That list does not include the President nominee for OPM Director Scott Kupor.
  • The AHA News informs us,
    • “The White House May 22 released its Make America Healthy Again report that focuses on childhood chronic disease. The report highlights findings from the MAHA Commission related to poor diet, exposure to environmental chemicals, lack of physical activity, stress and overmedicalization. The report lists a series of recommendations and next steps for research, including studies on nutrition, lifestyle interventions and precision toxicology. In parallel, the commission will develop a strategy to be released in August.”
  • The Washington Post assesses the report here.
  • The AHA News adds,
    • “The Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and the Treasury May 22 released several new guidance documents and requests for information on price transparency, following the February executive orderon the same subject. As part of this package, CMS released new guidance on calculating the estimated allowed amount values in the hospital machine-readable files. Whenever possible, hospitals should use the average dollar amount received over the last 12-month period (or less, if the payment methodology was only used for part of the year), which should be derived from the electronic remittance data. If there is no historic data, hospitals should use the expected payment amount, encoded as a dollar figure. This replaces previous guidance which allowed hospitals to use a code of nine number nines to signify that there was not sufficient historic data for that item or service over the last year. CMS also released an RFI on hospital price transparency accuracy and completeness. Comments are due July 21. The AHA plans to submit comments.  
    • “The departments also released a FAQ document, announcing that a new standard format for the insurer machine-readable files will be released Oct. 1, 2025. The new format aims to reduce the file size of the insurer files by decreasing duplicative data. In addition, the departments issued an RFI on improving prescription drug price transparency as part of the Transparency in Coverage, or insurer transparency rule.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Advisers to the Food and Drug Administration have recommended COVID-19 vaccine makers continue to target their shots to the so-called JN.1 coronavirus strain for the upcoming fall and winter seasons, maintaining guidance they gave last year.
    • The advisory committee convened Thursday for the first time under the Trump administration, meeting two days after FDA leadership unveiled new guidelines for COVID vaccine approvals. All nine members of the panel voted in favor of targeting shots to the JN.1 family of variants.
    • The FDA doesn’t have to follow the panel’s advice but usually does.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “In another sign of growing scrutiny over Covid-19 vaccines, the Food and Drug Administration has asked the two makers of mRNA vaccines to widen the age range of boys and young men that their labels say are at risk for a rare side effect causing heart inflammation.
    • “The letters, first reported by CBS News, asked Moderna and partners Pfizer and BioNTech to make updates to safety information based on new studies of myocarditis or pericarditis or both after vaccination. Both reactions are rare and known to occur most often in young men within a week after the second shot in the two-dose Covid-19 vaccine regimen, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Most cases were mild, causing no more than brief chest pain.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Stryker has received 510(k) clearance for a minimally invasive back pain treatment, positioning it to challenge Boston Scientific for the market. 
    • “The Food and Drug Administration clearance, which Stryker disclosed Monday, covers the use of the OptaBlate basivertebral nerve ablation system to provide relief for low back pain.
    • “Stryker is entering a growing market. Boston Scientific’s rival device, which it acquired for $850 million upfront in 2023, “grew strong double digits” in the first quarter, CEO Mike Mahoney told investors in an April earnings call.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “While GSK’s Nucala may not have earned the distinction of becoming the first FDA approved biologic for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the British drugmaker is confident its IL-5 antibody still has a major role to play in tackling the traditionally tough-to-treat respiratory condition.
    • “Now, following an unexpected delay earlier this month, the company has a fresh FDA green light to put its thesis to the test.
    • “The FDA on Thursday approved Nucala as an add-on maintenance treatment for adults with inadequately controlled COPD and an eosinophilic phenotype.” 
  • and
    • “In a somber end to an FDA advisory committee’s two-day scouring of multiple drugmakers’ oncology data, Pfizer’s pitch to expand Talzenna into a broader prostate cancer population has failed to impress.
    • “Late Wednesday, eight outside experts on the FDA’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee delivered a unanimous 8-to-0 ‘No’ vote on the question of whether Pfizer’s PARP inhibitor Talzenna has a favorable benefit-risk profile in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients without homologous recombination repair (HRR) gene mutations.
    • “Patients without HRR mutations make up the majority of the mCRPC patient population at about 70%, according to briefing docs released ahead of the meeting.”

From the judicial front,

  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “A bankruptcy judge on Wednesday approved Rite Aid’s pharmacy asset sales to a variety of buyers, including some of the bankrupt drugstore chain’s rivals.
    • “Financial details were not disclosed, and sale documents redacted purchase prices for Rite Aid’s assets, which went to retail pharmacy chains like CVS and Walgreens, along with grocers Albertsons, Kroger and Giant Eagle and other buyers.” * * *
    • “The liquidation is a growth opportunity for CVS, already the nation’s largest drugstore chain with more than 9,000 pharmacies. The Woonsocket, Rhode Island-based company purchased prescription files from 625 Rite Aid stores in 15 states and fully acquired 64 brick-and-mortar Rite Aid locations in Idaho, Oregon and Washington.”
  • The Associated Press reports,
    • “The Supreme Court’s conservative majority on Thursday declined to reinstate independent agency board members fired by President Donald Trump, endorsing a robust view of presidential power.” * * *
    • “The court’s action essentially extended an order Chief Justice John Roberts issued in April that had the effect of removing two board members who Trump fired from agencies that deal with labor issues, including one with a key role for federal workers as Trump aims to drastically downsize the workforce.
    • “Neither agency has enough appointed members to take final actions on issues before them, as Trump has not sought to appoint replacements.”
    • “The decision Thursday keeps on hold an appellate ruling that had temporarily reinstated Gwynne Wilcox to the National Labor Relations Board and Cathy Harris to the Merit Systems Protection Board.”
  • Bloomberg Law points out,
    • “A federal district court judge in California said she will likely extend a freeze on President Donald Trump’s plan to lay off thousands of federal workers, dealing another blow to his unprecedented overhaul of the federal workforce. 
    • “Judge Susan Illston of the US District Court for the Northern District of California at a Thursday hearing said she is inclined to grant a preliminary injunction halting the layoffs while the case proceeds, temporarily protecting the jobs of thousands of federal workers.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • NBC News reports,
    • New data from Truveta, a health care and analytics company, shows that the percentage of 6-month-old babies in Texas getting their measles vaccination in April increased by more than 30 times the prior year’s average.
    • “That means parents aren’t just getting the vaccine early, they’re getting it as early as they can,” Nina Masters, a senior scientist at Truveta and part of the research team, said in an interview with NBC News.
    • “Typically, the MMR is given in two doses, around a child’s first birthday, and again around the time a child enters kindergarten, at age 4 or 5. One dose is 93% effective at preventing measles, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A second dose increases protection to 97%.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Roche, hoping to carve out a standard-of-care spot for its PI3K inhibitor Itovebi, now has another leg to stand on with new evidence that shows the drug can extend the lives of certain patients with breast cancer.
    • “Adding Itovebi to Ibrance and Faslodex slashed the risk of death by 33% in patients with PIK3CA-mutated, HR-positive, HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer that has grown during or after hormone therapy treatment. The data, to be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s (ASCO’s) annual meeting, come from Roche’s pivotal phase 3 INAVO120 trial. 
    • “In the 325-patient study, Roche’s Itovebi triplet combination kept patients alive for a median of 34 months compared to 27 months for those who took a placebo along with Ibrance and Faslodex.”
  • and
    • “Roche’s plan to bolster Tecentriq’s position in small cell lung cancer with Jazz Pharmaceuticals’ Zepzelca has paid off. But the pair’s success leaves room for improvement for future contenders.
    • “Adding Zepzelca on top of Tecentriq as maintenance treatment of first-line extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC) significantly reduced patients’ risk of death by 27% compared with Tecentriq alone, according to data from the phase 3 IMforte trial.
    • “Patients who received the combo lived a median 13.2 months, versus 10.6 for those who got Tecentriq alone. The results will be presented at the 2025 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Merus said Thursday that a combination of its experimental drug petosemtamab with the checkpoint inhibitor Keytruda has kept 79% of patients with newly diagnosed metastatic head and cancer alive for at least one year, according to a new analysis of a mid-stage clinical trial. 
    • “The survival data are only a snapshot. Merus, a Dutch biotech, will need to complete a larger, randomized study to prove more definitively that its drug can extend the lives of patients with head and neck cancer beyond the ability of current treatments. But for now, the preliminary survival results are encouraging and matched the expectations of investors.
    • “Merus released the new petosemtamab data ahead of a presentation next week at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive, “AI tool could help doctors ID breast cancers vulnerable to Enhertu. Tumors with low- and ultra-low levels of a protein called HER2 are treatable with Enhertu, but harder to identify. New research shows AI can improve diagnosis.”
  • Per a National Institutes of Health news release,
    • “National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists have developed a new surgical technique for implanting multiple tissue grafts in the eye’s retina. The findings in animals may help advance treatment options for dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), which is a leading cause of vision loss among older Americans. A report about the technique published today in JCI Insight.
    • “In diseases such as AMD, the light-sensitive retina tissue at the back of the eye degenerates. Scientists are testing therapies for restoring damaged retinas with grafts of tissue grown in the lab from patient-derived stem cells. Until now, surgeons have only been able to place one graft in the retina, limiting the area that can be treated in patients, and as well as the ability to conduct side-by-side comparisons in animal models. Such comparisons are crucial for confirming that the tissue grafts are integrating with the retina and the underlying blood supply from a network of tiny blood vessels known as the choriocapillaris.
    • “For the technique, investigators designed a new surgical clamp that maintains eye pressure during the insertion of two tissue patches in immediate succession while minimizing damage to the surrounding tissue.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Health insurance companies initially declined to pay more than one dollar for every $10 providers submitted in claims last year, an increase from 2023.
    • “Payers in 2024 initially denied 11.8% of dollars associated with hospital-based claims, according to a report from consultant Kodiak Solutions. That compares with 11.53% of dollars denied in 2023.
    • “The company examined data from its revenue cycle analytics platform used by more than 2,100 hospitals and 300,000 physicians. It categorized any initial bill that commercial, Medicaid and Medicare insurers initially rejected, or requested more information for, as a denial.
    • “Insurers often overturned their initial denials and ended up paying nearly 97% of dollars requested, according to the report.”
  • Reuters informs us,
    • “Median annual list price for new drugs over $370,000 in 2024
    • “72% of new drugs in 2024 for orphan diseases
    • “Drugmakers emphasize value, offer savings programs amid rising list prices.”
  • The International Foundation for Employee Benefit Plans shares its survey of GLP-1 drug coverage and expenses among employer sponsored plans.
  • Fierce Pharma notes,
    • “It’s plainly apparent that Novo Nordisk has had May 22 circled its calendar since February, when the FDA began the countdown for compounders to stop selling their versions of semaglutide.
    • “Now that the day has come, the Danish drugmaker is capitalizing on the chance to steer more patients toward its branded offerings.
    • “Self-paying patients new to Wegovy can access a one-month supply of the obesity blockbuster for $199 through June 30, Novo announced on Thursday. After that, the drug will go for its standing price of $499 a month for cash-paying customers, which was discounted in March from a previous price tag of $650 per month.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Shares of Hinge Health jumped 22% above the initial public offering price in the company’s New York Stock Exchange debut on Thursday, bringing its market capitalization to more than $3 billion.
    • “The physical therapy company’s stock opened at $39.25 on Thursday and closed at $37.56, up 17% from its $32 per share IPO price. Hinge Health’s IPO has been closely watched given the recent stagnation in the exit markets and signals a potential upswing in the public investor market.”
  • Becker Hospital Review announced,
    • “Northern Light Inland Hospital and its associated clinical services in Waterville, Maine, will officially close May 27, marking the end of operations for the facility that has been gradually winding down since the closure was announced earlier this year.
    • “The hospital’s emergency department will stop accepting new patients at 12 p.m. on May 27. All remaining clinical services will cease at 5 p.m. the same day, the health system said in a May 22 news release.”

Midweek Report

Photo by Joshua Hoehne on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec tells us,
    • Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., died Wednesday morning after a battle with esophageal cancer. He was 75 years old.
    • Connolly is leaving behind a legacy as a legislator who fought for the federal workforce, government contractors and the economic development of his home region of Northern Virginia.
    • In April, Connolly announced he would not seek re-election in 2026 and would step down from his post as the ranking member of the House Oversight Committee. He first announced his diagnosis in November, shortly after easily winning a ninth term to the House.
  • RIP, Congressman.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “House Republicans made a series of last-minute changes to their sprawling tax-and-spending bill, searching for a path that could unite the party’s warring wings headed into a nail-biter floor vote expected early Thursday.
    • “New language to assuage conservatives would accelerate new Medicaid work requirements to December 2026 from 2029 and end certain tax credits for wind energy and solar energy by 2028 instead of a slower phaseout through 2031. The updates would also formally lock in a $40,000 cap on the state and local tax deduction starting this year, up from a $30,000 cap in the prior plan; that change was designed to satisfy Republicans from high-tax states such as New York and New Jersey. 
    • “Lawmakers from states such as Florida and Texas that haven’t expanded Medicaid under Obamacare would get a favorable change to a funding formula, and border states would get $12 billion for security costs incurred during the Biden administration. An indoor-tanning excise tax that was eliminated in the original bill text would be maintained and a nuclear-energy tax break would be expanded. Federal land swaps in Nevada and Utah would be eliminated. Gun-rights supporters won changes to the tax treatment of suppressors. 
    • “The revised legislation advanced in an initial vote in the early hours of Thursday morning, with all Republicans except one in favor, and all Democrats opposed.” * * *
    • “I believe we are going to land this airplane,” Johnson said during a hectic day of legislating that saw the House Rules Committee start a hearing at 1 a.m. and continue past sunset. He is trying to finish the bill in the House before Memorial Day; it would then go to the Senate, and Republicans are aiming to get it to Trump’s desk by July 4.” 
  • Per the New York Times,
    • “The House early Thursday narrowly passed a wide-ranging bill to deliver President Trump’s domestic agenda, after Speaker Mike Johnson put down several mini-rebellions in Republican ranks to muscle the legislation to its first major victory over unified Democratic opposition.
    • “The early morning vote was 215 to 214, mostly along party lines.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “We have a tiny sliver that really matters to employers and working families,” said James Gelfand, president and CEO of The ERISA Industry Committee, a group representing large employers. “But I can say those provisions are monumental to us.”
    • “There’s a laundry list of items Gelfand and others are happy the bill, in its current form, includes.
    • “Employer-offered worksite clinics with free or discounted primary care services would now be available to employees on high-deductible health plans (HDHPs), even if they already have an HSA.” * * *
    • “Other changes allow HSA funds to be spent on gym memberships, increases the HSA contribution limit for some individuals, classifies bronze and catastrophic plans as a HDHP that can pair with an HSA and permits one spouse to contribute to an HSA even if the other spouse has a flexible spending account.” * * *
    • “The bill [further codifies a rule from 2019 creating the [ICHRA] program and lets employees use pretax dollars through a cafeteria plan to pay for on-exchange marketplace premiums, explains the KFF.
  • and
    • “A bipartisan bill aiming to reform prior authorization has been reintroduced in the Senate.
    • “The Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act seeks to streamline the prior auth process in Medicare Advantage (MA), which would ease administrative burdens on providers and reduce delays in accessing care for patients.
    • “The bill is co-sponsored by Sens. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., and Mark Warner, D-Va., and is supported by dozens of senators on both sides of the aisle. A version of the legislation in the House is also backed by a bipartisan group.”
  • Per an CMS news release,
    • “Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced a significant expansion of its auditing efforts for Medicare Advantage (MA) plans. Beginning immediately, CMS will audit all eligible MA contracts for each payment year in all newly initiated audits and invest additional resources to expedite the completion of audits for payment years 2018 through 2024.”
  • The American Hospital Association News informs us,
    • “The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response today released a bulletin on workplace violence in health care that includes recommendations for strengthening security protocols, enhancing emergency preparedness, supporting workforce mental health and promoting information sharing.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • BioPharma Dive points out,
    • “After discussions with the Food and Drug Administration, Moderna on Wednesday said it has voluntarily withdrawn its application for a combination COVID-19 and influenza shot in adults aged 50 years and older.
    • “The biotechnology company said it plans to resubmit its candidate later this year after it gathers data from an ongoing Phase 3 trial of a standalone seasonal influenza vaccine it’s developing. Earlier this month, Moderna had told investors the FDA would require efficacy data from this trial before considering approval of the combo vaccine.
    • “Moderna’s confirmation comes one day after the FDA announced new rules for COVID vaccine approvals, for which it will now require placebo-controlled studies for any clearance in healthy adults under 65 years old.”
  • and
    • “Expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday backed Johnson & Johnson’s Darzalex for people with an asymptomatic form of multiple myeloma that often progresses into more severe blood cancer.
    • “Members of the Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 6-2 that the benefits of Darzalex’s use in high-risk smoldering multiple myeloma outweighed its risks. However, panelists wrestled with some controversial aspects of the Phase 3 trial J&J is using to ask for an expanded approval. Namely, FDA staff had flagged the trial’s inclusion of patients that could be classified as having a lower risk of progression, as well as an unclear survival benefit following disease progression.
    • “The FDA isn’t required to follow the advice of its outside expert panels but usually does.”
  • MedTech Dive adds,
    • “Teal Health published data Monday from a trial of its cervical cancer screening sample self-collection device in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The paper describes a trial of 599 people who both self-collected samples and underwent standard clinician collection. Self-collection correctly identified 95.2% of the positive samples.
    • “Teal won Food and Drug Administration approval for the self-collection device in early May, setting the company up to start shipping the product to customers in June.”
  • The New York Times provides helpful background information about the Alzheimer’s Disease blood test that the FDA approved for marketing last week.
    • “The test, manufactured by Fujirebio Diagnostics, is intended to be used only by specialists in Alzheimer’s, the F.D.A. said. Its mouthful of a name — Lumipulse G pTau217/ß-Amyloid 1-42 Plasma Ratio — describes what the test measures: levels of two proteins, amyloid and tau, that are hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease.
    • “In people who develop Alzheimer’s, amyloid begins to accumulate and form plaques in the brain more than 20 years before any symptoms of cognitive impairment. Tau accumulates later, forming tangles in the brain, and is much more closely correlated with cognitive decline.” * * *
    • “The F.D.A., and Alzheimer’s experts, emphasized that the blood test should be given only to people who are already experiencing cognitive decline and are ages 55 and older. Moreover, it should not be used on its own to diagnose or to rule out Alzheimer’s.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Biden’s cancer diagnosis has sparked a debate over prostate-cancer screening guidelines.
    • “Increased diagnoses of later-stage cancers are suspected to be linked to changing screening guidance.
    • “Some prostate-cancer specialists said that there has also been a shift in how they manage lower-risk prostate cancer.”
  • Per STAT News,
    • “In what researchers hope could be a case of 1 + 1 = 3, new research suggests that combining a model to predict 10-year cardiovascular risk with an imaging test of coronary arteries could be better than either method alone at identifying people in danger of their first heart attack.
    • “The model is PREVENT, which computes a risk score based on measures familiar from the primary care office: blood pressure, cholesterol levels, kidney function, age, and BMI, as well as questions about type 2 diabetes, smoking, and social determinants of health. The imaging test is a CT scan that detects calcium buildup in arteries leading to the heart. High amounts of calcium, alone and inside fatty plaques, can lead to blockages and heart attacks.” * * *
    • “It’s not always clear who should be screened for coronary calcium; thus, we decided to see if the PREVENT score could be used in this novel manner,” Morgan Grams of New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine told STAT. She is an author of the study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Heart Association. “Once we determined that it could, we assessed whether the coronary calcium score could add information to PREVENT in the prediction of incident cardiovascular disease. It did.”
       
  • Per a National Institute of Health news release,
    • Research teams funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have created a versatile set of gene delivery systems that can reach different neural cell types in the human brain and spinal cord with exceptional accuracy. These delivery systems are a significant step toward future precise gene therapy to the brain that could safely control errant brain activity with high precision. In contrast, current therapies for brain disorders mostly treat only symptoms.
    • The new delivery systems carry genetic material into the brain and spinal cord for targeted use by specific cell types. This platform has the potential to transform how scientists can study neural circuits. It provides researchers with gene delivery systems for various species used in research, without the need for genetically modified, or transgenic, animals. Examples include illuminating fine structures of brain cells with fluorescent proteins and activating or silencing circuits that control behavior and cognition.
    • “Imagine this new platform as a delivery truck dropping off specialized genetic packages in specific cell neighborhoods in the brain and spinal cord,” said John Ngai, Director of the NIH’s Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies® Initiative, or The BRAIN Initiative®. “With these delivery systems, we can now access and manipulate specific cells in the brain and spinal cord – access that was not possible before at this scale.”
  • Healio notes,
    • “Increased dietary fiber was associated with reduced likelihood of stroke, especially small-vessel stroke, in addition to reduced all-cause mortality and improved poststroke survival, researchers reported.
    • “Data on the link between daily dietary fiber intake and odds of stroke and adverse stroke outcomes were published in Stroke.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Sanofi will acquire Vigil Neuroscience for $470M, potentially reaching $600M with milestone payments.
    • “The deal centers on neurology, adding VG-3927, an Alzheimer’s treatment, to Sanofi’s pipeline.
    • “Vigil’s VGL101 molecule will return to Amgen before the Sanofi acquisition closes in Q3.”
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Digital physical therapy company Hinge Health priced its IPO at $32 per share on Wednesday, at the top of the company’s expected price range.
    • “The company said it raised $437 million by selling 13,666,000 million shares of its Class A common stock, according to a press release issued Wednesday. Hinge Health said it sold 8.5 million shares and 5.1 million shares are being sold by existing shareholders.
    • “Hinge Health will begin trading tomorrow morning on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol “HNGE.” The offering is expected to close May 23.”
  • Fierce Pharma relates,
    • “Cigna’s Evernorth is rolling out a new pharmacy benefit management program that caps members’ monthly cost for key GLP-1 drugs.
    • “Evernorth said in an announcement that through its Express Scripts arm it negotiated directly with the manufacturers for Wegovy and Zepbound—Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, respectively—to cap patients’ monthly costs at $200. The company said this could save as much as $3,600 per year compared to savings patients receive through direct-to-consumer discount programs.
    • “Evernorth added that the costs will contribute toward a patient’s deductible as well.
  • CNBC adds, “Evernorth’s new weight loss pricing program will begin in the second half of the year, as employers begin to make decisions about coverage for next year’s plans.”
  • Per STAT News,
    • “Five years after launching, a unique nonprofit drug company has published data showing that consumers and health plans saved considerable money on a generic cancer medicine thanks to its “transparent” pricing model. And it maintains that the findings validate plans to distribute and — eventually — manufacture still more copycat medicines for the U.S. market.
    • “The company — CivicaScript — was created as a vehicle to combat stubbornly high drug prices even after dominant brand-name medicines lost patent protection and generic competitors entered the market. Backed mostly by 18 Blue Cross Blue Shield plans, the nonprofit made its first drug available — a generic version of the Zytiga prostate cancer treatment — in August 2022.
    • “The initial wholesale price was $160, plus an $11 dispensing fee paid to pharmacies, but uptake was slow until it was accepted by pharmacy benefit managers and other health plans. But eventually, the gambit worked: Between September 2023 and December 2023, patients saved 64% and payers saved 92% by purchasing the generic distributed by CivicaScript, according to a new analysis.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues offers the view of eleven payer “leaders to learn what’s overhyped in healthcare.” 

Wednesday Report

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC,

  • NBC News reports
    • “Two Key House committees advanced their portions of a sweeping package for President Donald Trump’s agenda on party-line votes Wednesday following marathon meetings. 
    • “The tax-writing Ways and Means Committee advanced its bill, which would permanently extend Trump’s 2017 cuts, Wednesday morning after a session that clocked in at more than 17 hours.
    • “Later Wednesday, the Energy and Commerce Committee passed its legislation, which includes steep Medicaid cuts, after meeting for more than 26 hours.”
    • “The House Agriculture Committee was still debating its part of the broader package which includes a $290 billion cut to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), late Wednesday afternoon. The panel began its markup around 7:30 p.m. Tuesday before breaking around midnight and reconvening Wednesday morning. 
    • “The Ways and Means and Energy and Commerce committees did not make substantive changes to the original plans offered by their chairs.” 
  • Following the creation of committee recommendations, the House Budget Committee will take responsibility for the budget reconciliation bill. Per a Budget Committee news release today,
    • “On Friday, May 16th, 2025, at 9:00 AM in 210 Cannon House Office Building, the House Committee on the Budget will hold a markup to provide for reconciliation pursuant to title II of the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2025, H. Con. Res. 14. 
    • “Committee hearings and markups are available LIVE from our website or YouTube.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. May 14 testified on President Trump’s discretionary budget proposal for fiscal year 2026 in hearings before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies and the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. The proposal includes $93.8 billion for HHS, which is a 26.2% reduction from the FY 2025 enacted level.”
  • The Wall Street Journal offers its insights on these hearings here.
  • Federal News Network lets us know that OPM is proceeding with its retirement application processing improvements, notwithstanding the cancellation of the Workday contract.
  • Govexec takes on “Age gap retirement planning for federal employees: Avoiding the ‘Widow’s Penalty,’ Medicare planning and more. How to think about the best ways to utilize your retirement and health care benefits when you may be older, or younger, than your spouse.”
  • Per a CMS news release,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is taking bold steps to modernize the nation’s digital health ecosystem with a focus on empowering Medicare beneficiaries through greater access to innovative health technologies. The agency, in partnership with the Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy/Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ASTP/ONC), is seeking public input on how best to advance a seamless, secure, and patient-centered digital health infrastructure. The goal is to unlock the power of modern technology to help seniors and their families take control of their health and well-being, manage chronic conditions, and access care more efficiently.” * * *
    • “The request for information (RFI) invites input from patients, caregivers, providers, payers, technology developers, and other stakeholders on how CMS and ASTP/ONC can: 
      • “Drive the development and adoption of digital health management and care navigation applications; 
      • “Strengthen interoperability and secure access to health data through open, standards-based technologies; 
      • “Identify barriers preventing the seamless exchange of health information across systems; and
      • Reduce administrative burden while accelerating progress toward value-based, patient-centered care.”
    • “The public comment period will be open through June 16. The RFI is available at https://public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2025-08701.pdf, and the public should submit all comments through the provided weblink.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The number of people who died of drug overdoses in the U.S. dropped dramatically in 2024, a promising sign amid a national fentanyl crisis that has fueled a surge in drug-related deaths in recent years.  
    • “Drug-overdose deaths dropped by 27% to around 80,000 deaths in 2024 from about 110,000 in 2023, according to preliminary data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday. The deaths reported last year fell closer to levels not seen since before the Covid-19 pandemic, which exacerbated the country’s drug-overdose crisis and led to a surge in deaths.
    • “Yearly declines in new overdose deaths are rare and tend to be small, making 2024’s drop unprecedented in its scope. This is also only the fourth year in more than three decades in which the U.S. reported fewer drug fatalities, but also the second in a row after a modest reduction in 2023.” * * *
    • “Despite the drop in drug-overdose related deaths in 2024, the yearly tally is still much higher than those recorded less than a decade ago and before the opioid crisis took off in the 1990s. The U.S. recorded well over 100,000 deaths a year from 2021 to 2023, according to federal data.”
  • Reuters informs us,
    • “The Texas health department reported 717 cases of measles in the state on Tuesday, an increase of eight since its last update on Friday, as the U.S. battles one of the worst outbreaks of the childhood disease in the country.
    • “Cases in Gaines County, the epicenter of the outbreak, rose to 405 from 403 since the last update, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.
    • “Texas had reported seven additional cases in the last update on Friday, which was the lowest increase since the outbreak began in February.
    • “New Mexico’s health department reported 71 cases, unchanged from its last update. Most of the state’s cases are from Lea County, adjacent to Gaines County in Texas.”
  • Per Becker’s Hospital Review,
    • “Seventy-six percent of oncologists reported seeing an increasing number of patients presenting with advanced-stage cancer. Of those, 75% attributed the increase to screening barriers, according to a survey published May 13 by the Harris Poll on behalf of Quest Diagnostics. 
    • “The Harris Poll surveyed 174 medical oncologists and 76 surgical oncologists on their experiences with advanced-stage cancer diagnoses and recurrence between Aug. 6 and Sept. 4.” * * *
    • “Read the full survey results here.” 
  • The National Cancer Institute (NCI) posted its latest edition of Cancer Currents, which is a research blog.
  • Per HCPLive,
    • “Findings from a recent study suggest iron deficiency anemia (IDA)independently and significantly increases the odds of ischemic stroke in young adults.
    • “IDA is the most common form of anemia globally. It results from iron deficiency, when there are insufficient iron stores to support the production of red blood cells. IDA disproportionately affects women due to regular iron losses through menstruation and increased iron demands during pregnancy. Maternal anemia can lead to the child exhibiting intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
    • “Additionally, it is currently estimated that 10-15% of all strokes occur in adults aged 18-50, a group that also exhibits an increased prevalence of IDA. However, little data has been collected regarding the association between IDA and stroke in young adults.
    • “Although multiple studies have explored the association of IDA and thrombotic events in children, our study was the first to explore its role in ischemic stroke in a young adult population, that is, most susceptible to IDA,” wrote Jahnavi Gollamudi, MD, University of Cincinnati, and colleagues.
    • “Investigators classified patients into 2 groups: those with a first-time ischemic stroke diagnosis were defined as Group A, and those without a history of ischemic stroke were defined as Group B.”
  • Per a National Institutes of Health news release,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have identified a series of changes in the architecture and cell composition of connective tissues of the breast, known as stromal tissue, that is associated with an increased risk of developing aggressive breast cancer among women with benign breast disease, and poorer rates of survival among women with invasive breast cancer. This process, which they call stromal disruption, could potentially be used as a biomarker to identify women with benign breast disease who are at high risk of developing aggressive breast cancers, as well as those with breast cancer who may be at increased risk of recurrence or death.
    • “Such insights could help inform the development of cancer prevention and treatment strategies that target the stromal microenvironment. In addition, stromal disruption is inexpensive to assess and could be widely adopted, particularly in low-resource settings where molecular analysis is impractical or very expensive.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “After flexing its antibody-drug conjugate bona fides at last year’s American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) conference, AbbVie is advancing its solid tumor ambitions with a new FDA green light.
    • “The FDA on Wednesday granted an accelerated approval to AbbVie’s c-Met-directed ADC Emrelis, also known as telisotuzumab vedotin, as a new treatment option for adults with locally advanced or metastatic, non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who’ve previously received systemic therapy. The drug is cleared in patients whose tumors exhibit high overexpression of the c-Met protein.
    • “The c-Met protein is overexpressed in around 25% of patients with advanced epidermal growth factor receptor wild-type, non-squamous NSCLC, and roughly half of those patients have high c-Met overexpression, AbbVie explained in a press release.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “A two-drug regimen involving an experimental cancer immunotherapy from iTeos Therapeutics and GSK didn’t significantly delay tumor progression in a Phase 2 trial, leading the companies to end development and terminate the collaboration they formed around the drug four years ago.
    • “When added to GSK’s drug Jemperli, the immunotherapy, known as belrestotug and aimed at a cellular target called TIGIT, didn’t meet preset criteria for progression-free survival compared to Jemperli alone in people with non-small cell lung cancer. The study showed a “trend below the meaningful threshold” for drug responses in study arms including people with head and neck cancer, the companies said Tuesday.
    • “Based on the results, iTeos and GSK are stopping all ongoing trials of belrestotug, including an ongoing Phase 3 study in lung cancer. iTeos is “taking immediate steps to preserve capital” as well as starting a strategic review.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • We start with global news from the Wall Street Journal,
    • GSK will acquire a liver-disease treatment from Boston Pharmaceuticals for up to $2 billion as it seeks to boost its pipeline of new drugs.
    • “The British pharma giant said Wednesday that it will pay the U.S. biotech company $1.2 billion upfront, with a further $800 million in potential success-based milestone payments.
    • “The drug is currently in late-stage trials, with a potential market launch in 2029. It aims to treat a form of liver disease characterized by inflammation and damage caused by a build-up of fat. GSK said the drug is also being explored for use in alcohol-related liver disease, and that mid-stage data has shown potential to reverse liver fibrosis and halt disease progression.
    • “Unlike current daily tablet treatments, efimosfermin is designed to be administered as a monthly shot. GSK plans to develop it both as a monotherapy–which uses one type of treatment–and in combination with its own experimental liver-disease therapies.”
  • and
    • “Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk has signed a collaboration deal with U.S. biotech Septerna that will see the two companies develop pills to treat obesity, type 2 diabetes and other cardiometabolic diseases.
    • “Under the terms of the agreement, Septerna is eligible to receive around $2.2 billion from Novo Nordisk, including over $200 million in upfront and near-term milestone payments.
    • “The U.S. company will also receive research, development and commercial milestone payments, on top of tiered royalties on global net sales of marketed products. Novo Nordisk will cover all research-and-development costs.”
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • “The mood at the annual meeting of the American Society of Cell and Gene Therapy isn’t amazing. The biotech market has been bad for years. The FDA and NIH are shrouded in uncertainty. But many researchers tried to project confidence. Over the last four years, 16 gene and cell therapies have been approved, as one presenter noted Tuesday. Also, there was a purple-clad Mardi Gras-style stilt walker directing attendees into the main hall — so there’s that.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out that “A total of 66 hospitals [named in the article] received both Healthgrades’ Outstanding Patient Experience and Patient Safety Excellence awards.”
  • Per Beckers Payer Issues,
    • “Contract disputes between insurers and health systems are down in 2025 compared to the second half of 2024.
    • “According to data from FTI Consulting, there were 133 total disputes in 2024, compared to 86 in 2023 and 51 in 2022. In the first quarter of 2025, 26 total disputes have been recorded, compared to 50 in Q4 2024 and 37 in Q3 2024. Network breaks between Medicare Advantage plans and health systems tripled from 2022 to 2024.
    • “FTI has tracked media reports regarding negotiations over reimbursement rates between provider organizations and insurance companies during each quarter since early 2022.”
  • HR Dive notes,
    • “While 86% of employers think their benefits are modern, only 59% of workers agree,  according to the results of Prudential’s 2025 Benefits and Beyond study, released Monday. 
    • “Workers say their top challenges are saving for retirement (45%), cost of everyday goods (44%), cost of housing (29%) and making it paycheck to paycheck (26%); and 1 in 10 workers identified being able to survive paycheck to paycheck as their No. 1 worry, the study found. 
    • “The study’s findings are clear: When it comes to workplace benefits, there is a disconnect on what companies offer and what employees actually need — now and in the future,” the press release said.”

Tuesday Report

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Last week, the President issued another Executive Order on deregulation. The EO begins
    • “Deregulation is a critical priority for my Administration.  We will foster prosperity by freeing Americans from the heavy burden of Federal regulations accumulated over decades.”
  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News tells us,
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services May 13 announced a 60-day public comment period opened for stakeholders regarding its request for information to remove outdated or unnecessary regulations. The request stems from an executive order issued in January requiring HHS to implement a “10-to-1” rule, eliminating at least 10 existing regulations for every new regulation introduced. Comments on the RFI can be submitted at regulations.gov/deregulation.”
  • When will OPM make a similar deregulation announcement?
  • The Congressional Research Service released a report on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee’s budget reconciliation measures. The Congressional Budget Office posted its own report on those recommendations.
    • “In CBO’s estimation, the reconciliation recommendations of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform would, on net, decrease deficits by $51.0 billion over the 2025‑2034 period. The estimated budgetary effects of the legislation are shown in Table 1. The costs of the legislation mainly fall within budget functions 550 (health), 600 (income security), 800 (general government), and 950 (undistributed offsetting receipts).”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Doctors that treat Medicare beneficiaries would receive a pay boost under the sweeping tax-and-spending cuts legislation House Republicans unveiled Monday.
    • “Medicare reimbursements to physicians declined 2.9% this year, provoking outcries from medical societies that complain doctor pay has failed to keep up with cost increases. The GOP measure would raise rates next year and remake the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule to link future updates to the Medicare Economic Index, which generally rises faster than overall inflation.
    • “In 2026, the legislation would hike Medicare physician payments by an estimated 2.25%. That projection is based on how the bill would modify the “conversion factor” that determines Medicare fees for physician services. Next year, that formula would be boosted by 75% of growth in the Medicare Economic Index. In later years, it would fall to 10% of medical inflation.
    • “The physician pay increase comes with a downside for some providers, however. While the measure would raise rates, it would curtail financial incentives under alternative payment models.”
  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “House Republicans revived a set of policies that would change how prescription drug middlemen do business, as President Donald Trump again denounced the industry, sending shares of some of the companies down Monday.
    • “The budget proposal from the House Committee on Energy and Commerce includes a set of reforms that Congress considered last year but ultimately didn’t pass. It would remove one method that the companies, which negotiate with drugmakers and pharmacies on behalf of employers, health insurers and government programs, use to boost profits.
    • “The revival of the modest reforms in the House budget plan adds to pressure on the companies, which are already facing intense scrutiny in Washington. Trump complained about the companies known as pharmacy benefit managers during a press conference Monday touting his executive order intended to help lower the prices Americans pay for drugs.”
  • The Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing today on the allegedly adverse impact of prescription benefit manager practices on rural pharmacies.
  • Beckers Hospital Review looks into a Republican budget reconciliation proposal in Congress to “place a 10-year moratorium on state and local governments regulating AI. The provision would prevent any laws targeting AI models, systems or automated decision tools during that time.”
  • The AHA News informs us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services May 13 launched a new strategy focused on three pillars: promoting evidence-based prevention, empowering people to achieve their health goals, and driving choice and competition. To support the new strategic plan, CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, M.D., and Innovation Center Director Abe Sutton hosted a public webinar highlighting the Innovation Center’s commitment to take learnings from historical investments in value-based care to the “Make America Healthy Again” initiative. They also highlighted the need for models to demonstrate cost savings and improved outcomes in accordance with statutory requirements. The agency posted FAQs regarding the new strategic direction on a new homepage.”
  • and
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services May 12 issued a proposed regulation that would change how states may structure provider taxes for purposes of generating revenue for their Medicaid programs. CMS states that these changes are intended to prevent states from adopting provider taxes that are not “generally redistributive” and therefore may be in violation of the statute. While CMS notes that they have particular concerns about certain Medicaid managed care organization taxes, these policies, if adopted, would apply to all provider taxes. The public has 60 days to comment.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review offers eight things to know about this proposed regulation.
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force confirmed today the continuing validity of its Grade A recommendation of “early, universal screening for syphilis infection during pregnancy [for asymptomatic women]; if an individual is not screened early in pregnancy, the USPSTF recommends screening at the first available opportunity.” * * * “To achieve the benefit of screening, it is important that screening occur as early in pregnancy as possible and that everyone with abnormal syphilis test results receive timely, evidence-based evaluation and treatment.”

From the judicial front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “The now 13-year-long legal saga over who invented CRISPR took yet another unexpected turn on Monday, in a ruling that could not only change U.S. ownership of patent rights to the groundbreaking gene-editing technology but more broadly redefine how the law determines when an invention has been made. 
    • “The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit sided with the University of California and the University of Vienna in their bid to revive a fight over foundational CRISPR-Cas9 patents that the schools say should go to their Nobel Prize-winning scientists Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier. In 2022, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office determined that a group of scientists led by Feng Zhang of the Broad Institute of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology had conceived of uses of the technology in humans before Doudna and Charpentier.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • From HHS news releases,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today announced that it is initiating action to remove concentrated ingestible fluoride prescription drug products for children from the market. Unlike toothpaste with fluoride or fluoride rinses, these products are swallowed and ingested by infants and toddlers. They have also never been approved by the FDA. Ingested fluoride has been shown to alter the gut microbiome, which is of magnified concern given the early development of the gut microbiome in childhood. Other studies have suggested an association between fluoride and thyroid disorders, weight gain and possibly decreased IQ.
    • “The best way to prevent cavities in children is by avoiding excessive sugar intake and good dental hygiene, not by altering a child’s microbiome. For the same reason that fluoride may kill bacteria on teeth, it may also kill intestinal bacteria important for a child’s health,” said FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., M.P.H. “I am instructing our Center for Drug Evaluation and Research to evaluate the evidence regarding the risks of systemic fluoride exposure from FDA-regulated pediatric ingestible fluoride prescription drug products to better inform parents and the medical community on this emerging area. When it comes to children, we should err on the side of safety.”
  • and
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today announced the next steps in Operation Stork Speed–a groundbreaking initiative to ensure the safety, reliability, and nutritional adequacy of infant formula for American families. The FDA issued a Request for Information (RFI) to begin the nutrient review process required by law for infant formula. Currently, infant formula must meet minimum and maximum levels of certain nutrients. While the FDA regularly reviews individual nutrient requirements for infant formula, this will be the first comprehensive review since 1998.
    • “Operation Stork Speed brings radical transparency to ingredients in infant formula and puts science front and center,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “Every child has a fundamental right to a healthy start. We’re giving parents the truth and the tools to make that happen. You can’t Make America Healthy Again if we don’t fix what nourishes our youngest and most vulnerable Americans.”
    • “Through the RFI, the FDA is seeking public input to help determine whether existing nutrient requirements should be revised based on the latest scientific data, including international. The agency also welcomes data on potential adjustments to existing minimum or maximum levels, recommendations for additional nutrients to consider, and how such changes may improve health outcomes.
    • “Commenters will have 120 days to submit responses. Further information on how to submit a comment can be found here.”
  • This week’s issue of NIH Research Matters covers the following topics — “Measuring tinnitus | Fat metabolism & pancreatic cancer | Senescent cell subtypes.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “More U.S. high-schoolers used nicotine pouches — smokeless nicotine powder products — last year than the year before, according to new research published in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The researchers, who used data from a nationally representative survey of 10,146 youths in 2023 and 2024, said 5.4 percent of 10th- and 12th-graders reported having used nicotine pouches, up from 3 percent the year before. The 10th- and 12th-graders’ use of pouches in the 12 months and 30 days before the surveys also increased year to year. Males were also more likely to use pouches than females.
    • “Looking at race and ethnicity data, use was highest among White, non-Hispanic 10th- and 12th-grade teens — 9 percent had used a nicotine pouch at some point. Teens in rural areas were also more likely to use the products than urban or suburban youths: In 2024, 11.2 percent of rural youths vs. 5.9 percent of suburban and 3 percent of urban youths said they’d used a pouch.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “Social determinants of health at the community level, such as median income and walkability, have a larger influence on hip replacement outcomes than an individual patient’s race, according to data.
    • “The study was inspired by “persistent disparities observed in total hip arthroplasty outcomes, often attributed to individual factors such as race,” study author Bella Mehta, MD, MBBS, MS, a rheumatologist at Hospital for Special Surgery, told Healio.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Treating early Alzheimer’s disease patients with lecanemab (Leqembi) was feasible and most patients tolerated the drug well, a retrospective study at one specialty memory clinic showed.
    • “Infusion-related reactions occurred in 37% of 234 Alzheimer’s patients treated with lecanemab and typically were mild, according to Suzanne Schindler, MD, PhD, of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and co-authors.
    • “Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA) emerged in 42 of 194 people (22%) who received at least four lecanemab infusions and had at least one MRI, the researchers reported in JAMA Neurology.
    • “Overall, 29 people (15%) had ARIA with brain edema or effusion (ARIA-E) — with or without ARIA with brain hemorrhage or hemosiderin deposition (ARIA-H), including microhemorrhages and superficial siderosis — and 13 people had isolated ARIA-H (6.7%).
    • “Most ARIA cases were asymptomatic (74%) and radiographically mild (62%). Eleven patients (5.7%) developed symptomatic ARIA; two (1.0%) were patients with clinically severe ARIA symptoms. No patients developed a macrohemorrhage or died.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Andrew Witty is stepping down as chief executive officer of UnitedHealth, citing personal reasons, the healthcare giant announced Tuesday.
    • “Witty, who has run UnitedHealth since 2021, is departing following a sharp downturn in the company’s financial performance from higher medical spending and unfavorable policy changes. He will be replaced effective immediately by Stephen Hemsley, the chairman of UnitedHealth’s board and its CEO from 2006 to 2017.
    • “UnitedHealth also suspended its 2025 guidance on Tuesday, pointing to the ongoing increase in medical care activity.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “In a call with analysts Tuesday, the company said it was seeing medical costs continue to accelerate beyond the trends it flagged last month and signs that the issue was spreading beyond enrollees in its Medicare plans. 
    • “To all stakeholders, including employees and shareholders, I’m deeply disappointed in and apologize for the performance setbacks we have encountered from both external and internal challenges,” Hemsley said. “This company has both the opportunities and capabilities to deliver exceptional services and outcomes for customers, consumers and care providers, and to continue to reliably generate the earnings growth that align with our 13% to 16% long term growth range.”
    • “The company said it expects to return to growth in 2026.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues offers us five things to know about Mr. Hemsley.
  • Beckers Payer Issues also discusses recent developments in the GLP-1 drug market.

Friday Report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “President Trump today released his discretionary spending budget blueprint for fiscal year 2026. The “skinny budget” request, which includes top line discretionary funding priorities, is not binding but can act as a starting point for Congress and the administration as they begin the appropriations process to fund the government. The administration later this month is expected to issue its full budget request, which will include its proposed changes to mandatory spending and tax policy.”  
  • Bloomberg Law adds,
    • “The president’s [skinny] budget calls for $557 billion in non-defense spending next year, which represents a cut of $163 billion from current levels. National security funding would increase to $1.01 trillion, a 13% increase from the previous year. Any final spending plan for regular agency budgets will need some Democratic support to pass the Senate, one of the few opportunities the minority party has to exert some leverage while Republicans have unified control over the federal government.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “Amid the Trump administration’s sweeping overhaul of the federal workforce, the Office of Personnel Management has shuttered an office that was central to developing leadership skills governmentwide.
    • “The Center for Leadership Development (CLD), an arm within OPM’s Human Resources Solutions (HRS) office, was bulldozed as part of an OPM reduction in force (RIF) in April. Federal News Network confirmed the elimination of the office with OPM, as well as two sources who provided further information on the condition of anonymity for fear of professional retribution.
    • “About 140 employees were working in the CLD office back in January, but those numbers had dwindled to about 80 employees over the last few months, according to an OPM employee familiar with the situation. Many CLD employees opted into the deferred resignation program (DRP) or voluntarily left their jobs. OPM notified the remaining employees on April 18 that their positions were being eliminated as part of the agency’s RIF.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Novo Nordisk NOVO.B said the Food and Drug Administration accepted its submission of a new drug application for a Wegovy pill to treat obesity amid a tense race to get an oral weight-loss medication on the market.
    • “The Bagsvaerd, Denmark, company said Friday that if the application is approved, Wegovy would become the first oral formulation of a GLP-1 drug for chronic weight management.
    • “The FDA’s deadline to decide on the application will be in the fourth quarter, the company said.
    • “The application is based on results from a phase 3 randomized, controlled trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of the drug over 64 weeks, the company said.”
  • Per a National Cancer Institute news release,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the combination of two immunotherapy drugs for the initial treatment of some people with advanced colorectal cancer. The approval is for the use of nivolumab (Opdivo) and ipilimumab (Yervoy) for people whose tumors are classified as MSI-H or dMMR.
    • “About 5% of people with advanced colorectal cancer have MSI-H or dMMR tumors, which means the tumors are unable to properly repair certain types of DNA damage that can occur during cell division. Several colorectal cancer experts said the approval should immediately make the combination the preferred initial, or first-line, treatment for people with advanced MSI-H or dMMR colorectal cancer. 
    • “The approval was based on updated findings from a large clinical trial, called CheckMate-8HW in which all participants had advanced colorectal cancer with MSI-H or dMMR tumors. Patients in the trial who were treated with the combination of nivolumab and ipilimumab lived substantially longer without their cancer getting worse, a measure known as progression-free survival, than patients treated with nivolumab alone.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • GE HealthCare said Friday it received Food and Drug Administration clearance for its artificial intelligence tool that uses deep learning to outline organs at risk in MRI images and help improve radiation therapy planning.
    • MR Contour DL can outline 37 organs and structures in the head-neck and pelvic areas. The process previously had to be done manually.
    • The AI model will be integrated into the company’s Intelligent RT radiation therapy workflow management solution, which provides clinicians with a real-time view of a patient’s radiation therapy treatment journey.
  • Cardiovascular Business relates,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the balloon-expandable Sapien 3 transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) platform from Edwards Lifesciences for treating asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis (AS). 
    • “This is the first time the FDA has approved any TAVR technology in asymptomatic patients. The decision covers the Sapien 3, Sapien 3 Ultra and Sapien 3 Ultra Resilia TAVR valves.
    • “This approval is a powerful opportunity to streamline patient care and improve the efficiency of the healthcare system,” Larry Wood, Edwards’ corporate vice president and group president of TAVR and surgical technologies, said in a statement announcing the news. “We are proud to partner with leading physicians to advance our knowledge of this deadly disease with high quality science and optimize the treatment pathway for patients.”
  • MedTech Dive adds,
    • Intuitive Surgical received Food and Drug Administration clearance for its da Vinci Single Port surgical system for procedures performed through the anus.
    • “The clearance covers the use of the system for transanal local excision/resection, enabling physicians to reach lesions in the upper rectum without cutting the abdomen, according to the Thursday announcement. Conventional transabdominal rectal resection can require multiple incisions and the removal of the rectum. 
    • “Intuitive designed the single port device to navigate narrow body cavities. Physicians can control up to three multi-jointed instruments and a camera through a single entry point.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity continues to decline. COVID-19 and RSV activity are declining nationally to low levels.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity continues to decline nationally. Wastewater levels are at low levels, emergency department visits are at very low levels, and laboratory percent positivity is stable.
      • “Additional information about current COVID-19 activity can be found at: CDC COVID Data Tracker: Home
    • “Influenza
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity continues to decline in most areas of the country.
    • “Vaccination
      • “Vaccination coverage with influenza, COVID-19, and RSV vaccines remained low among U.S. adults and children during the 2024─25 respiratory virus illness season.”
  • Per the AHA News,
    • “The U.S. has had 935 confirmed cases of measles so far this year, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cases have been reported by 29 states, with Texas reporting the most at 683 — a 20% increase from last week. There have been 12 outbreaks, and 93% of confirmed cases (869 of 935) are outbreak-associated. The vaccination status of 96% of all cases is classified as “unvaccinated or unknown.”
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP adds,
    • “The nation is now experiencing 12 [measles] outbreaks, one more than the previous week, and 93% of illnesses reported are connected to outbreaks.
    • “In related developments, CBS News reported yesterday that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would ask the CDC to develop new guidance for treating measles with drugs and vitamins. Today, the CDC posted new resources for public health departments and parents, along with a fact sheet for clinicians that covers two alternative treatments that Kennedy has pushed, including vitamin A, antibiotics, and inhaled steroids.”
  • and
    • “Twelve more US children have died of influenza, surpassing theprevious high for a flu season outside of a pandemic year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in its weekly update today.
    • “The pediatric deaths push the season total to 216, surpassing last season’s total of 207. Ten of the children died of influenza A, and two died from influenza B. Subtyping showed that eight of the influenza A deaths were caused by the H1N1 strain, and four were H3N2.”
  • CNN offers an interview with its wellness editor, who is an emergency medicine doctor, about whooping cough.
  • Per the University of Minnesota CIDRAP,
    • “A study published earlier this week in Nature Communications using claims data from the US Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare System finds protection from the 2024-25 Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine was 68%, 57%, and 56% against COVID-19–associated hospitalizations, emergency department and urgent care (ED/UC) visits, and outpatient visits, respectively.
    • “However, the authors caution that uptake of the vaccine was extremely low—only 3.7% through November 2024—and the study did not assess waning effectiveness.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • The video is just under two and a half minutes long. A slim man with close-cropped hair walks into a room, pulls a long black mamba — whose venom can kill within an hour — from a crate and allows it to bite his left arm. Immediately after, he lets a taipan from Papua New Guinea bite his right arm. “Thanks for watching,” he calmly tells the camera, his left arm bleeding, and then exits.
    • Over nearly 18 years, the man, Tim Friede, 57, injected himself with more than 650 carefully calibrated, escalating doses of venom to build his immunity to 16 deadly snake species. He also allowed the snakes — mostly one at a time, but sometimes two, as in the video — to sink their sharp fangs into him about 200 times.
    • This bit of daredevilry (one name for it) may now help to solve a dire global health problem. More than 600 species of venomous snakes roam the earth, biting as many as 2.7 million people, killing about 120,000 people and maiming 400,000 others — numbers thought to be vast underestimates.
    • In Mr. Friede’s blood, scientists say they have identified antibodies that are capable of neutralizing the venom of multiple snake species, a step toward creating a universal antivenom, they reported on Friday in the journal Cell.
  • The AHA News notes, “Older adults may be in circumstances that exacerbate challenges to accessing behavioral health care and have complex needs that can complicate behavioral health treatment. This new infographic gives statistics about how behavioral health care needs change in an aging population.” 
  • Healio tells us,
    • “Once-weekly semaglutide 2.4 mg significantly reduced steatohepatitis and liver fibrosis symptoms among adults with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis and moderate or advanced liver fibrosis, researchers reported.
    • “In findings from part one of the ESSENCE phase 3 trialpublished in The New England Journal of Medicine,semaglutide 2.4 mg (Wegovy, Novo Nordisk) conferred greater improvements in multiple liver endpoints compared with placebo. In addition to greater improvements in steatohepatitis and liver fibrosis, researchers also observed greater weight loss, reduced insulin resistance and improvement in noninvasive liver markers with the GLP-1 medication.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Cigna is building on client demand for tools to support patients on GLP-1 weight loss drugs, announcing two new programs on Friday meant to improve clinical care around the dispensing of GLP-1s and provide home delivery of the medications.
    • “The programs come as payers that contract with Cigna’s massive pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts for their drug benefits want to offer GLP-1s but are put off by the medications’ steep list prices and unpredictable long-term outcomes, according to Cigna.
    • “The programs were announced in tandem with Cigna’s first quarter results, which came in well above analysts’ expectations. Revenue of $65.5 billion was up more than 14% year over year, while net income of $1.3 billion compares to a loss of $277 million same time last year. Cigna raised its 2025 profit outlook following the results.”
  • and
    • “Amwell narrowed its losses on growing revenue in the first quarter as the telehealth vendor continued to roll out products as part of a contract with the Department of Defense.
    • “The company posted a net loss of $18.4 million, down from $73.4 million in the prior-year period. Amwell reported revenue of $66.8 million, compared with $59.5 million in the first quarter last year. 
    • “The telehealth firm has deployed scheduled virtual visits across the Military Health System, executives said in an earnings call Thursday. However, rollouts for its automated and digital behavioral health programs will take place in the third quarter instead of the second due to leadership changes at the Defense Health Agency, leaders said.”
  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “UnitedHealth Group and Amedisys have found buyers for key divestitures aimed at getting their $3.3 billion merger over the finish line, according to new filings.
    • “In documents submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Amedisys said April 30 the companies entered an agreement to sell off certain Amedisys home health and hospice centers, as well as some of UnitedHealth’s care centers, to BrightSpring Health Services and the Pennant Group.
    • “Completion of these sales is contingent on several factors, according to the filing, including the final closure of the UnitedHealth-Amedisys deal.
    • “Financial terms were not disclosed in Amedisys’ filing, but the Pennant Group noted in a separate SEC document that it would pay about $102.5 million for the assets it’s buying from Amedisys and UnitedHealth.”
  • Per Biopharma Dive,
    • “Amgen on Thursday said its just-launched biosimilar of Johnson & Johnson’s autoimmune drug Stelara recorded $150 million in sales in the first quarter, spotlighting rising revenue from the biotech’s portfolio of copycat biologics.
    • “During the company’s first quarter earnings call, commercial chief Murdo Gordon said Amgen’s biosimilar products recorded $735 million in sales, roughly 9% of the company’s revenues. Those sales climbed 35% compared to the same period last year, showing the business “continues to contribute meaningfully to our long-term growth,” CEO Robert Bradway said.
    • “Still, Amgen’s overall performance is uneven. While some products are thriving, like an Avastin lookalike that booked $179 million in sales, others, such as its Humira biosimilar are struggling. Amgen recently launched a biosimilar version of Regeneron’s eye drug Eylea and could begin marketing a copycat form of AstraZeneca’s rare disease treatment Soliris sometime before the middle of the summer.”
  • and
    • “Madrigal Pharmaceuticals said its pioneering medicine for a common liver disease brought in $137.3 million in the first quarter, surpassing analyst estimates by more than $20 million. 
    • “More than 17,000 patients have now taken the drug, known as Rezdiffra, Madrigal said Thursday. It won Food and Drug Administration approval in March 2024, becoming the first medication cleared to treat metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis, or MASH.
    • “The company said it’s now looking toward a potential mid-year approval that would position Rezdiffra as the first available MASH treatment in Europe. CEO Bill Sibold said he’s looking to build on what he described as an “exceptional launch” in the U.S.”
  • Fierce Pharma adds
    • “AstraZeneca has taken a key step in advancing Breztri Aerosphere toward a potential label expansion and achieving its goal of annual sales of $3 billion to $5 billion for the 3-in-1 inhaler.
    • “Two phase 3 trials evaluating the effectiveness and safety of Breztri in a total of 4,434 patients with uncontrolled asthma have met their primary endpoints. The studies showed that Breztri delivered statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in lung function compared to dual-drug combinations of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) and long-acting beta2-agonist (LABA) maintenance treatments, AZ said.
    • “Data from the KALOS and LOGOS studies will be shared with regulatory authorities and presented at an upcoming medical meeting, the company added.”