Thursday Miscellany

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “Lawmakers released a more than $1.2 trillion, six-bill appropriations package early Thursday morning, less than 48 hours ahead of a Friday night deadline for this second and final wrapup measure for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1. 
    • “Both parties were touting “wins” in the package well before unveiling the massive 1,012-page bill, which had already won President Joe Biden’s blessing and pledge to sign it “immediately.” That, plus the lure of a two-week recess, should help get the package over the finish line, though it seems likely to slip past the 11:59 p.m. Friday cutoff for the current stopgap spending law.
    • “But lawmakers weren’t really sweating the prospect of a weekend funding lapse, given its limited impact on government operations — especially with Friday’s expected House passage likely to be a strong signal of congressional intent to keep the lights on.”
  • The bill includes appropriations for OPM (pages 247 – 250) and its Inspector General (page 250) plus the three now standard appropriations measures:
    • A prohibition against imposing full Cost Accounting Standards coverage on FEHB carriers. Division B, Section 611, page 268.
    • The Hyde amendment limiting FEHB coverage of abortions to cases “where the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term, or the pregnancy is the result of an act of rape or incest.” Division B, Section 613 and 614, pages 268 – 269.
    • A contraceptive prescription drug coverage mandate with conscience protections for FEHB plans and healthcare providers. Division B, Section 726, page 298.
  • The American Hospital Association News discusses HHS appropriations, which also are included in this bill.
    • “The House may vote on the measure Friday, with Senate action expected over the weekend. A short government shutdown may occur over the weekend, depending how long it takes both chambers to pass the measure and for President Biden to sign it into law.” 
  • Govexec points out “the nine biggest agency and program reforms in the final FY24 spending package.”
  • The Wall Street Journal scoops,
    • “Some Medicare members could get help paying for the popular new weight-loss drug Wegovy—as long as they have a history of heart disease and are using it to prevent recurring heart attacks and strokes.
    • “Medicare Part D drug-benefit plans—which are administered by private insurers—may cover anti-obesity medications if the drugs receive approval for an additional use that is considered medically accepted under federal law, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday. * * *
    • “Some Medicare members could get help paying for the popular new weight-loss drug Wegovy—as long as they have a history of heart disease and are using it to prevent recurring heart attacks and strokes.
    • “Medicare Part D drug-benefit plans—which are administered by private insurers—may cover anti-obesity medications if the drugs receive approval for an additional use that is considered medically accepted under federal law, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “Early data regarding the use of GLP-1 medications like Ozempic and Wegovy to treat addiction is “very, very, exciting,” Nora Volkow, the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said Thursday.
    • “But even as she expressed enthusiasm for the new drugs’ potential, Volkow criticized pharmaceutical companies for neglecting a moral imperative to develop new addiction treatments — but acknowledged that the health system more broadly doesn’t incentivize drug companies to treat the U.S. drug crisis with urgency.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force finalized its research plan for re-evaluating its September 2019 recommendations on the topic of medications to reduce the risk of breast cancer.
  • Beckers Health IT interviews Alexandra Mugge, chief health informatics officer at CMS, about the agency’s efforts “to expedite prior authorizations, through digitization and better data exchange, saving the healthcare industry $15 billion over a decade — in the hopes of one day having the decisions made instantaneously, right in the EHR.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Per a press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Duvyzat (givinostat) oral medication for the treatment of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) in patients six years of age and older. Duvyzat is the first nonsteroidal drug approved to treat patients with all genetic variants of DMD. It is a histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor that works by targeting pathogenic processes to reduce inflammation and loss of muscle.
    • “DMD denies the opportunity for a healthy life to the children it affects. The FDA is committed to advancing the development of new therapies for DMD,” said Emily Freilich, M.D., director of the Division of Neurology 1, Office of Neuroscience in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “This approval provides another treatment option to help reduce the burden of this progressive, devastating disease for individuals impacted by DMD regardless of genetic mutation.”
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Abiomed recalled its Impella left sided blood pumps for risk that the devices could perforate the heart during a procedure. The recall began on Dec. 27 with Abiomed updating its instructions for use.
    • The Food and Drug Administration identified the recall as a Class I event, the most serious type of recall, in a Thursday notice. The agency has received 129 reports of serious injuries, including 49 deaths, related to the problem. 
    • Abiomed’s Impella heart pumps, which are used to support the heart during procedures or during cardiogenic shock, were the subject of four Class I recalls last year, including the latest recall. The company also received an FDA warning letter for quality problems with Impella and software used in the device that had not been authorized by the agency.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The CDC shares with us,
    • Data from the National Vital Statistics System
      • Life expectancy for the U.S. population in 2022 was 77.5 years, an increase of 1.1 years from 2021.
      • The age-adjusted death rate decreased by 9.2% from 879.7 deaths per 100,000 standard population in 2021 to 798.8 in 2022.
      • Age-specific death rates increased from 2021 to 2022 for age groups 1–4 and 5–14 years and decreased for all age groups 15 years and older.
      • The 10 leading causes of death in 2022 remained the same as in 2021, although some causes changed ranks. Heart disease and cancer remained the top 2 leading causes in 2022.
      • The infant mortality rate was 560.4 infant deaths per 100,000 live births in 2022, an increase of 3.1% from the rate in 2021 (543.6).
  • STAT News adds,
    • “The U.S. recorded 107,941 drug overdose deaths in 2022, according to a new federal report — a total that marks an all-time record but also shows signs that the country’s overdose rate may finally be leveling off after years of steady increase.
    • “The 2022 total marks only a slight increase from the drug death toll of 106,699 the year before, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The flattening of drug death rates could provide a rare glimmer of hope amid the bleak U.S. drug crisis, which has seen overdose rates rise inexorably for the past two decades and especially during the Covid-19 pandemic.
    • “A large majority of those deaths were driven by the potent synthetic opioid fentanyl. Since emerging in the drug supply in the mid-2010s, fentanyl has increasingly come to dominate the U.S. illicit drug market. Even as fentanyl deaths have skyrocketed, the share of deaths involving other opioids — like heroin, methadone, and prescription painkillers — has decreased.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “After once losing hope because of end-stage kidney disease, a 62-year-old man is now the first living person to receive a genetically edited kidney from a pig, according to doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital who performed the landmark surgery Saturday.
    • “Richard Slayman, whom doctors praised for his courage, is doing well after the four-hour surgery and is expected to be discharged from the Boston hospital soon, officials said.
    • “The advance, which builds on decades of work, gives hope to the hundreds of thousands of Americans who depend on dialysis machines to do the work of their failing kidneys. Each day, 17 Americans die awaiting a kidney transplant, a problem further complicated by unequal access given to Black and other patients. Doctors expressed hope that using pigs to vastly increase the supply of kidneys might correct the inequity.”
  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “A new class of anticoagulant drugs on the horizon is taking fresh aim at one of cardiology’s toughest challenges: how to prevent blood clots that cause heart attacks and strokes, without leaving patients at risk of bleeding.
    • “At least a half-dozen experimental blood thinners are in development that inhibit a protein called factor XI, one of several blood factors that regulate how the body forms clots. * * *
    • “Any factor XI agent that reaches the market would likely represent an important advance over drugs called factor Xa inhibitors, a blockbuster class of medicines dominated by Eliquis and Xarelto. Since they were approved just over a decade ago, these drugs have supplanted warfarin as the standard-of-care anticoagulant to prevent stroke in patients with the heart-rhythm disorder atrial fibrillation as well as other indications.”
  • HealthDay informs us,
    • “About 1 in every 10 U.S. children ages 5 to 17 has been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to the latest government statistics.
    • “The data from the National Health Interview Survey covers the years 2020 through 2022 and came from in-person or phone interviews involving a representative sample of American homes.
    • “It found that 11.3% of school-age children have been diagnosed with ADHD, with boys more likely to have this diagnosis (14.5%) than girls (8%), according to report authors Cynthia Reuben and Nazik Elgaddal, of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
    • “ADHD is diagnosed more often among white children (13.4%) than Black youngsters (10.8%) or Hispanic (8.9%) kids, the survey also showed. 
    • “Family income seemed to matter, too:  As income levels rose, the rate of child ADHD diagnoses declined.”
  • WTW, an actuarial consulting firm, offers insights on hepatitis C, HPV vaccine and value based insurance design.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “The last decade has seen billions of dollars flow into digital health companies that promise to improve outcomes for the 38 million Americans living with type 2 diabetes. Their products aren’t cheap, but in the long term, they pitch to health plans and employers that these digital tools will help cut health care costs by preventing serious complications like amputation and kidney failure.
    • A systematic review by the Peterson Health Technology Institute found, though, that digital tools used to manage diabetes with the help of finger-stick blood glucose readings don’t result in clinically meaningful improvements over standard care. As a result, they don’t reduce health care spending — they drive it up.
    • “Most of the solutions in this category do not deliver clinical benefits that justify their cost,” Caroline Pearson, executive director of the institute, told STAT. Despite finding that some populations may benefit, the report concludes that current evidence doesn’t support broader adoption for most products.”
  • Plan Sponsor notes,
    • “In the face of rising health care expenditures and out-of-pocket spending, average health savings account balances have also steadily increased since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new data from the Employee Benefit Research Institute.
    • “The average HSA balance rose to $4,418 at the end of 2022 from $2,711 at the start of the year, the most recent data available in EBRI’s database, given that participants can still contribute to 2023 HSAs until taxes are due in April.
    • “Jake Spiegel, a research associate at EBRI, says he sees this trend continuing in 2023 and into the start of 2024 as well.
    • “EBRI’s analysis revealed two predominant factors associated with higher average account balances. The first was that age is strongly associated with higher HSA balances: the older the accountholder, the higher the average balance.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “Change Healthcare said it has reinstated Amazon cloud services for two of its platforms a month into a cyberattack against the company.
    • “The UnitedHealth Group and Optum subsidiary said March 20 it restored Amazon Web Services from backups for Assurance, a claims and remittance management program, and claims clearinghouse Relay Exchange. Change said it rebuilt authentication services for the solutions on a new network with the help of cybersecurity firms Palo Alto Networks and Mandiant, a Google subsidiary. The company said it is also testing the security of the external-facing parts of those applications.”
  • Per the Society for Human Resource Management,
    • “Employees are experiencing more mental health struggles and overall negative feelings about their work, underscoring an “urgent need” for employers to take more aggressive measures to help with their benefits offerings.
    • “Employees are now more likely to experience negative feelings at work, including stress (12 percent more likely) and burnout (17 percent more likely) than they were pre-pandemic (2019), according to new data from MetLife. Employees are also 51 percent more likely to feel depressed at work than they were pre-pandemic as they face what the insurer calls a “complex macro environment and permacrisis state”—a state which has included the pandemic, persistent high inflation, international turmoil and war, and more.
    • “Those are among the findings in MetLife’s 22nd annual U.S. Employee Benefit Trends Study, released March 18—data indicating that employers may have to revisit benefits offerings to not only support employees, but retain them.”
  • HR Dive explains “How menopausal and other reproductive health benefits can help retain women” and “Data shows that fertility treatments are extremely valuable to workers who need them. Here’s why one people officer is working on integrating them.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Just as Pfizer spooked Wall Street after its record pandemic revenue came parabolically back to earth, BioNTech, the company’s Covid-19 vaccine partner, is now dealing with investor malaise of its own.
    • “Shares in the German firm fell about 5% yesterday, hitting a 52-week low, after the company reported disappointing financials. BioNTech’s cut of Covid vaccine revenue fell by about more than three-quarters last year, missing analyst estimates and leading the company to lower its projections for 2024.
    • “Now BioNTech, much like Pfizer, is making the case that its future in oncology will compensate for the rapid erosion in demand for Covid vaccines. The company has more than 20 cancer medicines in its pipeline, including late-stage treatments for tumors of the breast and lung that could hit the market in the next two years.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Walgreens-backed VillageMD sold 11 locations in Rhode Island to Boston-based medical group management firm Arches Medical Partners for an undisclosed sumArches said Wednesday.
    • “The practices, which include about 75,000 patients, joined Arches on March 2, according to VillageMD’s website. 
    • “The deal follows VillageMD clinic closures. The primary care chain recently exited Florida — once one of chain’s largest markets — and plans to withdraw from its home state in Illinois next month.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and his top lieutenants on Wednesday morning moved to quell reservations among their conference about the emerging $1.2 trillion-plus final spending package headed for a vote likely on Friday, while their Democratic counterparts did likewise in a separate meeting.
    • “Appropriators were scrambling under a tight timeline to finish drafting the measure, which is taking longer than expected due to a last-minute decision to write a full-year Homeland Security bill. But Johnson told reporters after a GOP conference meeting that text is expected as soon as Wednesday afternoon.
    • “Other sources expected the bill drop to slip to Thursday, with the standard “reading out” of the DHS title, to catch any errors before posting, not even expected to begin until later Wednesday. But no matter: Lawmakers said they expect the chamber to vote as soon as Friday, regardless of a 72-hour review rule. * * *
    • “Final passage wouldn’t come until this weekend at the earliest, and senators are working to accommodate Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who has never missed a vote but will be attending her mother’s funeral on Saturday. That could push votes off until Sunday or Monday, though few are worried at this point about the effects of such a brief funding lapse. 
    • “I don’t think we’ll do a [continuing resolution],” Johnson said.”
  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News informs us,
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Committee March 20 unanimously passed AHA-supported legislation to reauthorize through 2029 the Dr. Lorna Breen Health Care Provider Protection Act (H.R. 7153), which provides grants to help health care organizations offer behavioral health services for front-line health care workers. The bill also would reauthorize a national campaign that provides hospital leaders with evidence-based solutions to support worker well-being. Without congressional action, the law will expire at the end of this year.”
  • and
    • “Congress should address any statutory constraints that prevent the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and Department of Health and Human Services from adequately helping hospitals and other health care providers impacted by the Change Healthcare cyberattack, AHA said a letter submitted to the House Ways and Means Committee for a hearing March 20 with HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra on fiscal year 2025 funding for HHS.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The top senator with direct oversight of the U.S. Postal Service is calling on its leadership to pause its overhaul of the agency’s mailing network due to potential impacts they are having on delivery, rejecting USPS assertions that is has provided transparency. 
    • “USPS should not continue its nationwide operational reforms until it can prove the changes will not negatively impact mail service, Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., who chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said in a letter to Postmaster General Louis DeJoy. Agency leadership said in response to the letter it has offered volumes of documents and many staff-level briefings to Congress, though Peters said USPS ignored many of his requests for additional information on its efforts and left Congress uncertain about the fallout that could befall postal customers.”
  • On March 18, 2024, the Office of Management and Budget’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs received for final regulatory review an OPM proposed rule with additional requirements and clarifications for the Postal Service Health Benefits Program (RIN 3206-AO59).
  • The AHA News tells us,
    • “U.S. health care organizations should immediately transition away from using certain unauthorized plastic syringes made in China by Jiangsu Caina Medical Co. and Jiangsu Shenli Medical Production Co., and should only use other plastic syringes made in China until they can transition to alternatives, the Food and Drug Administration announced March 19, citing potential quality and performance issues. The recommendations do not apply to glass syringes, pre-filled syringes, or syringes used for oral or topical purposes, FDA said. The agency advises health care providers to confirm the manufacturing location by reviewing the labeling, outer packaging, or contacting the supplier or group purchasing organization.”
  • The Assistant Secretary of Labor for Employee Benefit Security, Lisa M. Gomez, posted on her blog about “Health and Money Smarts for Women.”
  • Fierce Healthcare lets us know,
    • “The Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA, is turning 50 this year and lawmakers are curious to hear about how the law could be updated to increase coverage affordability and care access.
    • “Payers and providers, it turns out, have very different ideas on where Congress should focus its efforts.
    • “In response to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce’s January request for information, lobbying groups representing both sides of the industry weighed in on the act that outlines federal guidelines for employee benefit plans, including employer-sponsored group health plans.”
    • The article delves into these comments.
  • Newfront offers insights about 2024 RxDC reporting considerations. The reports are due June 1, 2025.
  • The Congressional Budget Office released a presentation about “The Federal Perspective on Coverage of medications to treat obesity. Assuming Congress allows Medicare to cover anti-obesity medications (AOM),
  • “The future price trajectory of AOMs is highly uncertain.
    • “CBO expects semaglutide to be selected for price negotiation by the Secretary of Health and Human Services within the next few years, which would lower its price (and potentially the prices of other drugs in the AOM class).
    • “CBO expects generic competition for semaglutide and tirzepatide to start in earnest in the second decade of a policy allowing Medicare Part D to cover AOMs.
    • “New AOMs are expected to become available. The new drugs might be more effective, have fewer side effects, or be taken less frequently or more easily than current medications. Those improvements could translate to higher prices, on average, even if prices decline for drugs that exist today.”
  • See also the Beckers Hospital Review article below on the next generation of AMOs.
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “The Medicare Advisory Payment Commission, which advises Congress on Medicare policy, is recommending boosting hospital payment rates by 1.5% in 2025 and base physician payment rates by 1.3% above current law, according to its annual report released Friday. 
    • “MedPAC suggested tying the rate of physician payment increasesmoving forward to the Medicare Economic Index, an annual measure of practice cost inflation. MedPAC suggested payments increase “by the amount specified in current law plus 50% of the projected increase in the MEI.”
    • “Provider groups, including the Medical Group Management Association and American Medical Association, have said the proposed payment increases are inadequate.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “More than two-thirds of young children in Chicago could be exposed to lead-contaminated water, according to an estimate by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Stanford University School of Medicine.
    • “The research, published Monday in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, estimated that 68 percent of children under the age of 6 in Chicago are exposed to lead-contaminated drinking water. Of that group, 19 percent primarily use unfiltered tap water, which was associated with a greater increase in blood lead levels.
    • “The extent of lead contamination of tap water in Chicago is disheartening — it’s not something we should be seeing in 2024,” lead author Benjamin Huynh, assistant professor of environmental health and engineering at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said in a news release.”
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • “Debi Lucas had a tremor in her arm. Her feet froze when she tried to walk and she fell into her coffee table, busting her lip. 
    • “She went to a neurologist who thought she had Parkinson’s disease. Doctors normally diagnose the neurodegenerative condition by symptoms. Lucas, 59, had them. 
    • “But the neurologist, Dr. Jason Crowell, couldn’t be sure. The symptoms might be related to a traumatic brain injury Lucas suffered in a car accident decades earlier, he thought. Or they might be from her medications. 
    • “To find an answer, Crowell turned to a new test: a skin biopsy that can detect an abnormal protein people with Parkinson’s have inside their nerves. He took samples of skin near her ankle, knee and shoulder and sent them to a lab. 
    • “The results confirmed that Lucas has Parkinson’s. The diagnosis was scary, but Lucas finally knew what was causing her symptoms. “I was glad to have a name on it,” she said. 
    • “The test sped her diagnosis, said Crowell, a movement-disorders neurologist at the Norton Neuroscience Institute in Louisville, Ky. “It just gives me more confidence,” he said. 
    • “The skin test is an important part of progress researchers are making against Parkinson’s, the second-most common age-related neurodegenerative condition, which is on the rise and a major driver of disability, dementia and death. The test Lucas received, made by CND Life Sciences, a medical technology company in Scottsdale, Ariz., is one of a few in use or development to allow doctors to diagnose Parkinson’s based on biology rather than symptoms that can take years to appear“.
  • Medscape explains “why a new lung cancer treatment is so promising.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “The FDA has approved aprocitentan (Tryvio), making it the first endothelin receptor antagonist for the treatment of high blood pressure (BP), Idorsia Pharmaceuticals announced on Wednesday.
    • “The once-daily oral medication is indicated in combination with other antihypertensive drugs to lower BP in adult patients who do not have their BP controlled with other therapies.
    • “It is believed that some people may respond better to the drug’s novel mechanism, as aprocitentan is a dual endothelin receptor antagonist that works differently than conventional diuretics, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system antagonists, calcium channel blockers, and beta-blockers used to lower BP.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review considers the three generations of weight loss drugs.
    • “Anita Courcoulas, MD, defines GLP-1s as “generation one;” dual GLP-1 and GIPs as the second; and a triple threat of GLP-1, GIP and GCGRs as the third generation of weight loss drugs. 
    • “Dr. Courcoulas is chief of Pittsburgh-based UPMC’s minimally invasive bariatric and general surgery program. She told Becker’s the next class of anti-obesity medications are finally reaching weight loss outcomes seen from gastric sleeve and bypass procedures, the two most common surgeries for trimming pounds. * * *
    • “Dr. Courcoulas said the biggest unknown is long-term durability of these medications, a concern other bariatric experts have raised. 
    • “She expects GLP-GIP-GCGR medications to gain approval and enter the U.S. market next year. 
    • “I think it’s very exciting to realize there are medications that are under investigation now that could come to market that could have even better weight loss results than the two drug [classes] we’re seeing now,” Dr. Courcoulas said.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, can damage the heart even without directly infecting the heart tissue, a National Institutes of Health-supported study has found. The research, published in the journal Circulation, specifically looked at damage to the hearts of people with SARS-CoV2-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), a serious lung condition that can be fatal. But researchers said the findings could have relevance to organs beyond the heart and also to viruses other than SARS-CoV-2.
    • “Scientists have long known that COVID-19 increases the risk of heart attack, stroke, and Long COVID, and prior imaging research has shown that over 50% of people who get COVID-19 experience some inflammation or damage to the heart. What scientists did not know is whether the damage occurs because the virus infects the heart tissue itself, or because of systemic inflammation triggered by the body’s well-known immune response to the virus.
    • “This was a critical question and finding the answer opens up a whole new understanding of the link between this serious lung injury and the kind of inflammation that can lead to cardiovascular complications,” said Michelle Olive, Ph.D., associate director of the Basic and Early Translational Research Program at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of NIH. “The research also suggests that suppressing the inflammation through treatments might help minimize these complications.”
  • and
    • “An investigational gene therapy for a rare neurodegenerative disease that begins in early childhood, known as giant axonal neuropathy (GAN), was well tolerated and showed signs of therapeutic benefit in a clinical trial led by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Currently, there is no treatment for GAN and the disease is usually fatal by 30 years of age. Fourteen children with GAN, ages 6 to 14 years, were treated with gene transfer therapy at the NIH Clinical Center and then followed for about six years to assess safety. Results of the early-stage clinical trial appear in the New England Journal of Medicine
    • “The gene therapy uses a modified virus to deliver functional copies of the defective GAN gene to nerve cells in the body. It is the first time a gene therapy has been administered directly into the spinal fluid, allowing it to target the motor and sensory neurons affected in GAN. At some dose levels, the treatment appeared to slow the rate of motor function decline. The findings also suggest regeneration of sensory nerves may be possible in some patients. The trial results are an early indication that the therapy may have favorable safety and tolerability and could help people with the rapidly progressive disease.
    • “One striking finding in the study was that the sensory nerves, which are affected earliest in GAN, started ‘waking up’ again in some of the patients,” said Carsten G. Bonnemann, M.D., senior author and chief of the Neuromuscular and Neurogenetic Disorders of Childhood Section at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), part of NIH. “I think it marks the first time it has been shown that a sensory nerve affected in a genetic degenerative disease can actually be rescued with a gene therapy such as this.”
  • Lifesciences Intelligence reports,
    • “Recently, JAMA Network Open published a study analyzing the association between a healthy diet, sleep duration, and type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk. The study data revealed that habitual short sleep duration was linked to an increased probability of T2D by as much as 41%.
    • “Using data on 247,867 individuals from the UK biobank, researchers divided patients into groups based on their sleeping habits. The stratified groups included normal (7–8 hours per night), mildly short (6 hours per night), moderately short (5 hours per night), and extremely short (3–4 hours per night).
    • “Across all study participants, only 3.2% were diagnosed with T2D; however, the adjusted hazard ratios revealed that the prevalence of T2D was higher among shorter sleep groups. More specifically, the increased probability of T2D was identified in those who slept 5 hours or less per night. Those in the moderate short sleep group were 16% more likely to have a T2D diagnosis. Additionally, those in the extremely short sleep group had a 41% greater likelihood of being diagnosed with T2D.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • BioPharma Dive relates,
    • “Orchard Therapeutics said Wednesday it will offer a new gene therapy to children with a rare, devastating disease at a record-setting wholesale price of $4.25 million. 
    • “The therapy, Lenmeldy, won Food and Drug Administration approval on Monday to treat patients with early-onset metachromatic leukodystrophy, or MLD. The disease, which most often attacks infants between six months and two years of age, robs patients of the ability to walk, talk and function in the world, killing most of its earliest victims within five years of onset.
    • “Lenmeldy’s price tag will leapfrog those of the two most expensive gene therapies available in the U.S. Sarepta Therapeutics sells its Elevidys treatment for Duchenne muscular dystrophy for $3.2 million, while CSL and UniQure’s hemophilia treatment Hemgenix costs $3.5 million.”
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “Despite being a growing percentage of the physician workforce, women physicians continued to be paid less than their male colleagues, a strong body of evidence shows.
    • “While the gender pay gap decreased by 2% from 2021 to 2022 — from 28% to 26% — the gap was still significant, according to online networking service Doximity’s 2023 physician compensation reportopens in a new tab or window.
    • “Women doctors in 2022 earned nearly $110,000 less per year than men physicians, on average, after adjusting for specialty, location, and years of experience. Data from individual states have backed up this figure, too. For instance, in 2022, the Maryland State Medical Society conducted a survey and found that women doctors in Maryland are paid about $100,000 less annually than men.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review lists ten common issues in pharmacies.
  • United Healthcare updated its Change Healthcare cyberattack response website today.
  • HR Daily Advisor explains how companies are exploring the limitations of employee assistance plans amid the country’s mental health crisis.
  • Forbes reports,
    • “Medical diagnosis and procedure codes are so numerous and varied that Debbie Beall, manager of coding at Houston Methodist in Texas, needs a 49-person team to translate the medical notes written by the system’s 1,600 clinicians into the codes needed to bill insurers.
    • “There is a medical code for every imaginable scenario – from “burn due to water-skis on fire” to “spacecraft collision injuring occupant” — and their specificity determines how much the insurance companies pay. Each team member processes anywhere from 70 to 250 claims per day, depending on the complexity, she said. That’s why Beall is so excited about the possibility of using artificial intelligence to speed up the job.
    • “There’s no way I’m ever going to replace coders completely with an AI system,” Beall told Forbes. But for run-of-the-mill procedures performed multiple times a day in a hospital, like X-rays and EKGs? “Yes, an AI engine can do that.”
    • “Beall was one of the first dozen or so people to test a prototype of an AI-powered medical coding tool from electronic health records giant Epic Systems, which had $4.6 billion in revenue in 2022. Based on GPT-4, the large language model that powers the viral chatbot ChatGPT, Epic’s coding assistant prototype ingests and summarizes clinician notes and then tees up the “most likely” diagnosis codes and procedures codes, along with suggestions of “other potential codes,” according to mock ups viewed by Forbes that did not include real patient information. * * *
    • “While Epic has so far focused on using generative AI in back office functions, it has also been working on a patient-facing application that wouldn’t require human review. Krause told Forbes a tool that would help explain the patient’s bill, including their deductible and outstanding balance, could be rolled out by November. “We feel like that’s a fairly benign place to start. It’s not about healthcare at that point, but it’s really about their billing,” he said. “That’s not going to harm a patient in any way.”

   

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Maddy Weiss on Unsplash

Happy First Day of Spring!

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Lawmakers who are finishing writing six annual spending bills have resolved a last-minute roadblock over border funding, setting the stage for Congress to review and approve the legislation on a tight timeline that could take them to the brink of a partial government shutdown this weekend. 
    • “Congressional negotiators late Monday reached a deal on the provisions within the Department of Homeland Security’s funding bill. That bill got caught in an 11th-hour tangle with the White House over border spending, which has become a top issue in many swing states during the 2024 presidential-election year.
    • “In a statement Tuesday morning, Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) said an agreement has been reached on the Homeland Security funds, and House and Senate committees have begun drafting bill text to be “prepared for release and consideration by the full House and Senate as soon as possible.”
    • “President Biden said Tuesday that a path on the remaining funding legislation had been finalized and he would sign the measure immediately when it gets to his desk.”
  • Per a House Budget Committee press release,
    • “Today, the House of Representatives advanced House Budget Committee legislation, H.R. 766, the Dr. Michael C. Burgess Preventative Health Savings Act (PHSA), to the Senate by a voice vote. 
    • “The historic accomplishment marks the first time in history that a bipartisan bill with sole Budget Committee jurisdiction has been brought to the Floor under a suspension of the House rules. * * *
    • One of the major barriers to deploying modernized and innovative policies that would unequivocally curb the cost of health care is the antiquated process used for calculating congressional cost estimates on proposed health care legislation.
    • Congressional scorekeepers have traditionally focused solely only on the short-term valuation of a policy rather than capturing the long-term economic impact.
    • But today, with passage of H.R. 766, that changes. This bill seeks to improve the methodology of Congress’ broken budgetary process by providing policymakers with a more accurate cost estimate of the long-term cost savings from preventive health care policies.”
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), announced a new voluntary model that empowers primary care providers in eligible Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) to treat people with Medicare using innovative, team-based, person-centered proactive care. A key part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to further promote competition in health care, the ACO Primary Care Flex Model (ACO PC Flex Model) will provide a one-time advanced shared savings payment and monthly prospective primary care payments (PPCPs) to ACOs. The advanced shared savings payments provide ACOs with needed resources and flexibility to cover costs associated with forming an ACO (where relevant) and administrative costs for required model activities. PPCPs will be distributed by ACOs to primary care practices, giving them improved resources and flexibility to provide care that best suits individuals’ needs.” * * *
    • “The ACO PC Flex Model is a five-year voluntary model that will begin on January 1, 2025. CMS is planning to select approximately 130 ACOs to participate in the model. Organizations interested in participating must first apply — either as new ACOs or renewing ACOs — to the Shared Savings Program. Shared Savings Program Applications are open May 20, 2024 – June 17, 2024. The ACO PC Flex Model Request for Applications (RFA) is planned to be released in the second quarter of 2024.
    • “For Frequently Asked Questions about the Primary Care Flex Model, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/priorities/innovation/innovation-models/aco-primary-care-flex-model/faqs.
    • “For a fact sheet on the model, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/aco-pc-flex-fs.pdf – PDF.”
  • Yesterday, HHS’s Office for Civil Rights offered guidance to HIPAA covered entities and business associates about their use of online tracking technologies.
    • “Compliance with the Security Rule helps lower the risk of unauthorized access to ePHI collected through a regulated entity’s website or mobile app that could lead to harm to individuals. Therefore, OCR is prioritizing compliance with the HIPAA Security Rule in investigations into the use of online tracking technologies. OCR’s principal interest in this area is ensuring that regulated entities have identified, assessed, and mitigated the risks to ePHI when using online tracking technologies and have implemented the Security Rule requirements to ensure the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of ePHI. OCR investigations are fact-specific and may involve the review of technical information regarding a regulated entity’s use of any tracking technologies. OCR considers all of the available evidence in determining compliance and remedies for potential noncompliance.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued the following final recommendation today:
    • “For children and adolescents younger than 18 years without signs and symptoms of or known exposure to maltreatment: The evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of primary care interventions to prevent child maltreatment. [Grade I]”
  • Beckers Payer Issues discusses what fifteen insurers and trade associations explored with Biden Administration officials yesterday about the Change Healthcare situation.
    • During the meeting, stakeholders discussed how progress has been made in reestablishing claims processing systems, though small, rural and safety-net providers specifically are still reporting issues with cash flow.
    • Many healthcare organizations will require third-party certification of Change’s cybersecurity before reconnecting to its systems, in which UnitedHealth was urged to provide a timeframe around. Payers were also asked to analyze their internal data to determine which providers need more support and to engage with them directly.
    • According to Reuters, payers said they would accelerate payments to Medicare and Medicaid providers, along with providing loans to Medicaid providers.”
  • Here is a link to the HHS readout from this meeting.
  • The U.S. Postal Service reminded its retirees with Part A only about the opportunity to enroll for Medicare Part B with no late enrollment penalty during a special enrollment period beginning April 1, 2024. The Postal Service is picking up the late enrollment penalty cost. This is a good deal.
    • “The one-time PSHB SEP is from April 1, 2024, to Sept. 30, 2024. Individuals eligible for the PSHB SEP will receive notification by U.S. Mail™ in March 2024.
    • “All required information must be returned in the envelope provided and postmarked by Sept. 30, 2024.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “On Monday, the FDA launched a new portal for patients, consumers and health care professionals to report potential drug shortage issues directly into CDER’s NextGen system without creating a NextGen account. 
    • “Since 2017, NextGen has been a way for regulated industry to communicate with the FDA, including submitting information on shortages, discontinuations, and anticipated supply disruptions. Non-industry stakeholders without a NextGen account previously reported information about potential shortages to the FDA’s Drug Shortages Staff by email. The new public portal allows anyone to submit shortage information through an online form directly into NextGen.  
    • “Expanding access to NextGen’s shortage reporting beyond regulated industry will allow for greater consistency and ease of reporting by outside stakeholders, and greater efficiency in tracking and responding to these reports.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “Investigation of an early signal for stroke associated with COVID-19 bivalent vaccines turned into suspicion of high-dose or adjuvanted flu shots instead, based on a large U.S. population-based study.
    • “When researchers inspected a large Medicare database, they found no evidence of a significantly elevated risk for stroke at 1-21 days or 22-42 days after vaccination with either of the mRNA COVID vaccines distributed for the 2022-2023 respiratory season when compared with the 43-90 day control window, reported researchers led by Yun Lu, PhD, a statistician of the FDA in Silver Spring, Maryland.
    • “There was a significant excess of nonhemorrhagic stroke for people with concomitant administration of Pfizer-BioNTech’s bivalent vaccine plus a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine during the 22-42 days risk window (risk difference of 3.13 out of 100,000 doses); and a significant excess of transient ischemic attack for people with concomitant administration of Moderna’s bivalent COVID vaccine plus a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine during the 1-21 days risk window (risk difference of 3.33 out of 100,000 doses).
    • “But the researchers found that people with administration of a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine alone (without concomitant COVID vaccination) had an elevated risk for the combined outcome of nonhemorrhagic stroke or transient ischemic attack in both the 1-21 days risk window (risk difference of 1.65 per 100,000 doses) and 22-42 days risk window (risk difference of 1.60 per 100,000 doses).
    • “This finding suggests that the observed association between vaccination and stroke in the concomitant subgroup was likely driven by a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccination,” the investigators reported in JAMA.”
  • Medscape lets us know,
    • “The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cleared the twiist automated insulin delivery (AID) system (Sequel Med Tech, LLC; Manchester, NH) for people aged 6 years or older with type 1 diabetes
    • “The system comprises a novel insulin pump developed by Sequel’s research and development partner DEKA and uses the FDA-cleared Tidepool Loop algorithmthat was originally developed through patient-led, open-source initiatives.
    • “The twiist AID system has the capacity to work interchangeably with different integrated continuous glucose monitors (iCGMs), and Sequel will announce their initial iCGM partner closer to market launch, Sequel CEO and co-founder Alan Lotvin, MD, told Medscape Medical News
    • “It is the first AID system that directly measures volume and flow of insulin delivery, which enables it to rapidly detect obstructions or occlusions, usually within about 20 minutes, Lotvin explained. “

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Elevance Health has inked a deal to acquire Kroger Specialty Pharmacy.
    • “The grocery chain announced Monday that an agreement is in place, saying it’s expected to close in the back half of 2024 pending regulatory approvals. Elevance intends to add Kroger Specialty Pharmacy to its CarelonRx business, which houses its pharmacy benefit management services.
    • “Financial terms of the sale were not disclosed.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “AstraZeneca is the latest large pharmaceutical company to make a sizable bet on radiopharmaceutical drugs for cancer, agreeing on Tuesday to acquire longtime biotechnology partner Fusion Pharmaceuticals in a deal worth up to $2.4 billion.
    • “AstraZeneca will acquire all of Fusion’s shares for $21 apiece, or about $2 billion. The British drugmaker could add another $3 per share via a financial instrument known as a “contingent value right” if Fusion meets an unspecified regulatory milestone. Should Fusion hit that mark, the buyout would be worth $2.4 billion.” 
  • Beckers Health IT offers six takeaways from last month’s HIMSS conference.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

Beware the Ides of March. Wm. Shakespeare

From Washington, DC,

  • STAT News reports
    • “A panel of expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration on Friday voted in favor of expanding the use of CAR-T therapy in blood cancer, despite concerns about the powerful treatment’s side effects.
    • “The group voted 11-0 that the benefits of Carvykti, a CAR-T medicine from Johnson & Johnson and Legend Biotech, outweighed its risk for patients with multiple myeloma whose disease has persisted despite initial treatment. The same panel voted 8-3 in favor of Abecma, from Bristol Myers Squibb and 2seventy Bio, for multiple myeloma patients who’ve received at least two lines of therapy. Currently both medicines are approved only for patients who have been treated for myeloma with four or more medications.”
    • “In clinical trials, each drug proved to significantly delay disease progression compared to standard therapy. But zooming in on the data, the FDA observed an alarming imbalance of deaths in the early months of both studies, finding that more patients in the CAR-T group died of myeloma or side effects than those receiving the standard of care.
    • “That’s a legitimate concern, panelists said, but one that is outweighed by the potential for a single dose of CAR-T to help patients live without the need for regular, taxing cancer treatment.”
  • MedTech Dive notes,
    • “Intuitive Surgical said Thursday it received 510(k) clearance from the Food and Drug Administration for a fifth-generation robotic surgery system intended to help the company keep its dominant market share in the face of looming competition.
    • “The da Vinci 5 system incorporates features that surgeons have long sought, such as feedback that simulates the feel of the patient’s body tissue, a smaller physical footprint in the operating room, and better console ergonomics.
    • “The improvements “can help drive incremental demand for the system and raise the bar for competition in the future,” William Blair analyst Brandon Vazquez said Friday in a note to clients.”
  • One Digital offers its thoughts about “How will the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 Impact Employer-Sponsored Group Health Plans in 2025?”
    • It’s not good news, and the FEHBlog doesn’t understand why CMS is making life so difficult for plan sponsors, e.g.,
      • “[T]he Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released Draft CY 2025 Part D Redesign Program Instructions on January 31, 2024. These instructions, which are still in draft form, noted that one of the methods previously used by a majority of plan sponsors to determine the creditable nature of their plans, the creditable coverage simplified determination methodology, would no longer be a “valid method to determine whether an entity’s prescription drug coverage is creditable or not.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control informs us,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare is elevated across many areas of the country. This week, 16 jurisdictions experienced high or very high activity compared to 22 jurisdictions previous week.
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID-19, influenza, and RSV are decreasing.
    • “Influenza test positivity increased slightly nationally. COVID-19 and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week.
    • “Nationally, COVID-19 wastewater viral activity levels, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, has decreased to low.
    • Reported on Friday, March 15th, 2024.
  • STAT News gives us good news,
    • “A series of new studies are raising hopes that CAR-T, a process in which treatments are made by genetically editing a patient’s own white blood cells, can eventually be used to treat an incurable and deadly type of brain cancer, called glioblastoma multiforme, or GBM.
    • “In the most dramatic result, from a three-person study conducted by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, a 72-year-old man saw his tumor shrink 18.5% in just two days and then decrease further over the next two months until it was 60% smaller than when treatment began. That’s notable because glioblastoma is a cancer where drugs can normally only prevent a tumor from growing. Researchers say the results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday, do not mean the treatment is ready to be used widely but give reason to think they are on the right track.”
  • Healio calls our attention to a study on the benefits of bariatric surgery.
    • Bariatric surgery was associated with reductions in body weight, blood pressure, total cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose and HbA1c.
    • Adults who underwent surgery reduced their 10-year Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease ASCVD risk by 34.4%.
  • The National Institutes of Health’s Director, in her blog, discusses a study suggesting that during sleep, a neural process helps clear the brain of damaging waste.
    • “We’ve long known that sleep is a restorative process necessary for good health. Research has also shown that the accumulation of waste products in the brain is a leading cause of numerous neurological disorders, including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. What hasn’t been clear is how the healthy brain “self-cleans,” or flushes out that detrimental waste.
    • “But a new study by a research team supported in part by NIH suggests that a neural process that happens while we sleep helps cleanse the brain, leading us to wake up feeling rested and restored. Better understanding this process could one day lead to methods that help people function well on less sleep. It could also help researchers find potential ways to delay or prevent neurological diseases related to accumulated waste products in the brain.
    • “The findings, reported in Nature, show that, during sleep, neural networks in the brain act like an array of miniature pumps, producing large and rhythmic waves through synchronous bursts of activity that propel fluids through brain tissue. Much like the process of washing dishes, where you use a rhythmic motion of varying speeds and intensity to clear off debris, this process that takes place during sleep clears accumulated metabolic waste products out.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • MedTech Dive lets us know,
    • “Most U.S. hospital executives expect low- to mid-single-digit increases in procedure volumes this year, according to a survey conducted by BTIG analysts.
    • “The forecast, which reflects the resolution of staff shortages at most surveyed sites and a small overall rise in capital equipment budgets, could benefit Boston Scientific, Medtronic and Stryker, the analysts wrote Wednesday in a note to investors.
    • “Robotic surgery jumped up the list of spending priorities, climbing from sixth to third place year over year. The change is a “good sign” for Intuitive Surgical, the analysts said, although the forecast of a continued slump in bariatric procedures has negative implications for the company.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Medicare households are spending far more on healthcare than other households, according to a new KFF analysis.
    • “Researchers analyzed data from the 2022 Consumer Expenditure Survey, tracking spending trends between 2013 and 2022. At the end of that window, health-related expenses in Medicare households averaged $7,000, or 13.6% of total household spending.
    • “By comparison, non-Medicare households spent on average 6.5% of their total on health-related expenditures, or $4,900.
    • “Healthcare expenses included insurance premiums, medical services, prescription drugs and medical supplies like crutches, hearing aids and eyeglasses.”
  • From Healthcare IT News, a Gartner expert points to AI and hospital-at-home as the biggest emerging technologies at HIMSS24. Veronica Walk, senior director analyst, healthcare and life sciences, at the consulting giant offers an end-of-the-week look at the emerging technologies at the conference that provider organization C-suite executives must grasp. Check it out.
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses why payers and providers continue to tussle over Change Healthcare cyberattack response. Hint: The reason is money.

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network builds on OPM’s March 12 press release about the Postal Service Health Benefits Program launch in January 2025.
  • STAT News calls attention to healthcare points that you might have missed in the President’s FY 2025 budget. For example,
    • “The budget proposes for the first time a change to the law that would let pharmacists fill prescriptions for brand-name biologics with biosimilars without doctor permission. The measure is part of the administration’s plan to lower drug costs. * * *
    • “Besides budget boosts for behavioral health services, research, and the 988 crisis hotline, the administration is asking Congress for legislative changes to make mental health care more accessible. Those include eliminating Medicare’s 190-day lifetime limit on psychiatric services in hospitals, which it estimates would cost the program $2.9 billion over 10 years. * * *
    • “Medicare would also have to cover three behavioral health visits without cost-sharing, a move that could cost $1.5 billion over a decade. Biden wants to extend this requirement to private insurers as well, at an estimated cost of $428 million over that time.”
  • HealthDay informs us,
    • The White House on Wednesday launched a nationwide call for more training and better access to the lifesaving opioid overdose drug naloxone.
    • Called the Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose, the initiative urges organizations and businesses to commit to train employees on how to use opioid overdose medications, to keep naloxone in emergency kits and to distribute the drug to employees and customers so they might save a life at home, work or in their communities.
    • “Today, we’re calling on organizations and businesses — big and small, public and private — across the country to help ensure all communities are ready to use this lifesaving tool to reduce opioid deaths,” the White House said in a fact sheet announcing the new initiative. “As the drug supply has gotten more dangerous and lethal, we’re asking allies to join us because we all must do our part to keep communities safe.”
  • The CDC is offering free webinars on the RxDC process on March 27 and April 3.

From the Change Healthcare situation front,

  • United Healthcare updated its Change Healthcare situation response website this afternoon.
  • The HHS Office for Civil Rights, which enforces the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rule, issued a Dear Colleague letter about the Change Healthcare situation and announced opening an investigation of UHC about cyberattack and its fallout.
  • The Congressional Research Service posted an insight report titled “The Change Healthcare Cyberattack and Response Considerations for Policymakers.’
  • The American Medical Association explained how providers can navigate the Change Healthcare situation.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Early detection of colon cancer can prevent a majority of deaths from this disease, possibly as much as 73 percent of them. But just 50 to 75 percent of middle-aged and older adults who should be screened regularly are being tested.
    • “One reason, doctors say, is that the screening methods put many people off.
    • “There are two options for people of average risk: a colonoscopy every 10 years or a fecal test every one to three years, depending on the type of test.
    • “Or, as Dr. Folasade P. May, a gastroenterologist at UCLA Health puts it, “either you take this horrible laxative and then a doctor puts an instrument up your behind, or you have to manipulate your own poop.”
    • “But something much simpler is on the horizon: a blood test. Gastroenterologists say such tests could become part of the routine blood work that doctors order when, for example, a person comes in for an annual physical exam. * * *
    • “A study published on Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine found that a blood test searching for such [colon cancer] DNA called Shield and made by the company Guardant Health detected 87 percent of cancers that were at an early and curable stage. The false positive rate was 10 percent.
    • “But there is a caveat to the blood test: While it detects cancers, it misses most large polyps, finding just 13 percent of them. In contrast, the fecal test detects 43 percent and a colonoscopy finds 94 percent, Dr. Carethers said.
    • “While polyps are usually harmless, a few can turn into cancers, so doctors want to find all of them and remove them to prevent cancers from forming.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services posted a fact sheet on in vitro fertilization across our country.
  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “Merck on Wednesday announced plans to start clinical trials testing a newer version of its vaccine for human papillomavirus, or HPV, as well as a different regimen of the shot it currently sells.
    • “The trials are bids to improve upon vaccines Merck currently markets as Gardasil and Gardasil 9. One will test a shot meant to provide protection against more strains of HPV. The other will evaluate a single-dose regimen of Gardasil 9. Both studies should begin in the fourth quarter of this year. 
    • “Gardasil is approved for use against genital warts and to prevent several cancers caused by stains of HPV. The vaccine is one of Merck’s top-selling products and still growing. It generated $8.9 billion in sales in 2023, up 29% from the previous year.” 
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “For four decades, researchers and companies searched for ways to replace the broken blood-clotting genes that cause hemophilia, a multibillion dollar effort designed to turn a chronic, sometimes debilitating disease into a curable one. 
    • “But the first two gene therapies have so far been met with crickets. Only a handful of patients with hemophilia B, the rarer form of the disease, appear to have been treated worldwide since Hemgenix was approved in November 2022. After Roctavian was approved for hemophilia A last June, only three patients were treated through the rest of the year.
    • “The issue doesn’t appear to be access. Hemgenix and Roctavian, marketed by the Australian biotech CSL Behring and the San Francisco biotech BioMarin, are Malibu-mini-mansion expensive: $3.5 million and $2.9 million, respectively. But current hemophilia treatments can run over $1 million per year. So most insurers have been happy to pay the lump sum.
    • “​​You can’t blame the payers this time,” said Michael Sherman, former chief medical officer of the nonprofit insurer Harvard Pilgrim.” 
  • The National Cancer Institute posted research highlights.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have discovered that symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are tied to atypical interactions between the brain’s frontal cortex and information processing centers deep in the brain. The researchers examined more than 10,000 functional brain images of youth with ADHD and published their results in the American Journal of Psychiatry. The study was led by researchers at NIH’s National Institute of Mental Health and National Human Genome Research Institute. * * *
    • “The findings from this study help further our understanding of the brain processes contributing to ADHD symptoms—information that can help inform clinically relevant research and advancements.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review published a “Final Evidence Report on Treatments for Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria. — Independent appraisal committee voted that current evidence is not adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for iptacopan over C5 inhibitor; committee voted that the evidence is adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for add-on danicopan compared to C5 inhibitor alone.”
  • Medscape relates,
    • “Chronic smoking remains a major cause of premature mortality on a global scale. Despite intensified efforts to combat this scourge, a quarter of deaths among middle-aged adults in Europe and North America are attributed to it. However, over the past decades, antismoking campaigns have borne fruit, and many smokers have quit before the age of 40 years, enabling some case-control studies.
    • “Among those abstainers who made the right choice, the excess mortality attributable to smoking over a lifetime would be reduced by 90% compared with controls who continued smoking. The estimated benefit is clear, but the analysis lacks nuance. Is smoking cessation beneficial even at older ages? If so, is the effect measurable in terms of magnitude and speed of the effect? An article published online on February 8, 2024, in The New England Journal of Medicine Evidenceprovided some answers to these questions.”

From the HIMSS conference front,

  • Healthcare IT News reports “Samsung focuses on intuitive mobile tech and wearables at HIMSS24. These technologies can help cure healthcare worker burnout, patient confusion and inefficient communications between care teams, says a top exec and nurse.”
  • Forbes explains why AI is taking center stage at the conference.
    • “At the HIMSS conference in Orlando, healthcare leaders, including CIOs, CMIOs, CNIOs, and other C-suite members, were focused on AI as the central theme. They explored how healthcare organizations can better utilize their clinical data. They identified security, AI platforms, and workforce optimization as the three main areas for healthcare AI development.”
  • In related news, Health IT Analytics lets us know,
    • “Researchers from Mount Sinai have been awarded a four-year, $3 million grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop artificial intelligence (AI)-driven prediction models to flag risk of cardiovascular disease events in patients with obstructive sleep apnea.
    • “The American Heart Association (AHA) indicates that obstructive sleep apnea increases patients’ risk of cardiovascular disease, including coronary artery disease, hypertension and stroke. The use of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines is often prescribed to treat sleep apnea, but evidence to suggest the benefits of CPAP use in relation to cardiovascular event rates is limited.
    • “To bridge this gap, the research team will build machine learning (ML) tools to identify obstructive sleep apnea patients at high risk for atherosclerosis progression and cardiovascular events like stroke and heart attack.”

In other U.S. healthcare business news,

  • The Wall Stree Journal reports,
    • “People seeking a popular new weight-loss drug will have a new home-delivery option from a familiar name: Amazon.com.
    • Amazon Pharmacy, which has sold prescription medicines online since 2020, will now handle some of the home delivery of anti-obesity therapy Zepbound and other Eli Lilly drugs that are ordered through the drugmaker’s new direct-to-consumer service, the companies said Wednesday.
    • “The service, called LillyDirect, connects patients with telehealth services specializing in obesity that can write prescriptions for Zepbound or another weight-loss drug. The service also arranges for a prescription to be processed and mailed directly to customers.” 
  • The Society for Human Resource Management notes,
    • “According to the latest Employer Costs for Employee Compensation report, released March 13 by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), employers spent 3.8 percent more on wages and benefits in December 2023 compared to September 2023.
    • “Total employer compensation costs for private-industry workers averaged $43.11 per hour worked in December 2023. Wages and salaries averaged $30.33 per hour worked and accounted for 70.4 percent of employer costs, while benefit costs averaged $12.77 per hour worked and accounted for the remaining 29.6 percent, according to the BLS report.
    • :That’s a significant jump from the total employer compensation costs for those same workers last fall, and one indicating that despite slowing compensation growth over the past year, bigger hikes are not yet over.”

Weekend Update

Photo by Tomasz Filipek on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Reuters adds, “U.S. President Joe Biden will put forth his proposed U.S. spending plan [tomorrow] March 11, according to the White House Office of Management and Budget.”
  • Today, the Department of Health and Human Services posted a letter to healthcare leaders about the Change Healthcare cyberattack.
    • We urge insurance companies and other payers to:
      • Make interim payments to impacted providers. Larger payers in particular have the balance sheet stability to advance payments. Payers have the opportunity to stop-gap the cash flow concerns by stepping in with bridge payments [FEHBlog note — assuming that the payer doesn’t rely on Change Healthcare for backend claims processing.}
      • In particular, for Medicaid plans, consider making interim payments to impacted providers.
      • Ease the administrative burden on providers by simplifying electronic data interchange requirements and timelines and by accepting paper claims. 
      • Pause prior authorizations and other utilization management requirements; use all available leeway on deadlines.
  • The Washington Post further reports,
    • “Federal health officials on Saturday said they would offer emergency funding to physicians, physical therapists and other professionals that provide outpatient health care, following a cyberattack that crippled the nation’s largest processor of medical claims and left many organizations in financial distress.
    • “The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services also announced that it would make advance payments available to suppliers that bill through Medicare Part B, which serves a wide array of health-care organizations. Officials had previously announced a similar program to make emergency payments available for hospitals that had been ensnared by the Feb. 21 hack of Change Healthcare, a unit of UnitedHealth Group, and have struggled to get paid for more than two weeks. The emergency funds represent upfront payments made to health-care providers and suppliers based on their expected future claims. * * *
    • “It’s going to help significantly,” added Farzad Mostashari, the CEO of Aledade, the nation’s largest network of independent physician practices. Mostashari had previously warned that as many as 25 percent of physician practices were in financial distress.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • According to the Centers for Disease Control,
    • “Activity Levels Update:
      • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare is elevated across many areas of the country. This week, 20 jurisdictions experienced high or very high activity compared to 26 jurisdictions previous week.
      • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID-19, influenza, and RSV are decreasing.
      • “Influenza test positivity remained stable nationally. COVID-19 and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week.
      • “Nationally, COVID-19 wastewater viral activity levels, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, has decreased to moderate.
    • Reported on Friday, March 8th, 2024.
  • Fortune Well offers advices on pregnancy in advance maternal age (at age 35 or older).
  • The Washington Post tells us,
    • “Tai chi, a gentle Chinese martial art involving slow movements, outperformed moderate aerobic exercise in lowering blood pressure in a recent clinical trial.
    • “An analysis, published in JAMA Network Open, tracked 342 18- to 65-year-olds with prehypertension, or blood pressure that is slightly higher than normal, between late July 2019 and mid-January 2022. * * *
    • “These findings support the important public health value of Tai Chi to promote the prevention of cardiovascular disease in populations with prehypertension,” the researchers conclude. Other research continues to explore the potential benefits of tai chi. The exercises are associated with better balance, fall reduction, and benefits for patients with conditions such as arthritis and fibromyalgia.”
  • Bloomberg discusses measles prevention practices for adults born after 1957.
    • “[Katrine Wallace, an epidemiologist at University of Illinois Chicago] says, adults are sufficiently protected from the measles if one of these four things applies to you:
      • “You had measles at some point in your life.
      • “You were born before 1957.
      • “You’ve had two doses of a measles-containing vaccine if you spend time in a high-risk setting for transmission, like schools or hospitals. 
      • Y”ou’ve had one dose of a vaccine if you don’t spend time in high-risk settings. 
      • “Kids and teens need one or two doses for protection depending on their age.” 
    • If you aren’t sure whether you’ve been vaccinated or had the measles, you can get what’s called an MMR titer test, which is available commercially at various labs for about $129, Wallace advises.
  • The Wall Street Journal delves into the development of individual body organ tests.
    • “Measuring organ age is the latest frontier in the world of biological age, the idea that your body’s physical age can be different from its chronological one. For example, a 50-year-old man hypothetically might have physical health that more closely resembles that of a 53-year-old, with, say, a 51-year-old heart and a 54-year-old brain.
    • “Knowing the age of your organs might one day help you prevent and treat disease. In theory, if you knew that your heart was aging too fast, you could take steps to ward off heart disease.
    • “Heart aging predicts future heart disease, and brain aging predicts future dementia,” says Hamilton Oh, one of the paper’s lead authors and a graduate student at Stanford.
    • “Walking into your doctor’s office and getting a simple test to determine your organ age is likely still a ways off, but the concept is gaining interest among researchers, doctors and people focused on their own longevity and health. Scientists caution that more research is needed before such a technology might be ready for mainstream use. Some also say that parts of the recent study made too many assumptions.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Dispatch informs us,
    • “A 2021 study published by the RAND Corporation found that, even after rebates and other discounts, U.S. prescription drug prices were, on average, nearly twice as high as those in countries including Canada, France, Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom. A 2024 study, also conducted by the RAND Corporation for the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, similarly found that 2022 drug prices in the U.S. were nearly three times higher than those in the 33 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries used in the comparison.
    • “However, the study also found that, on average, unbranded generic drugs were about a third cheaper in the U.S. than in other comparison countries, meaning Americans are actually paying less for these drugs than they would elsewhere. “This finding suggests that robust price competition in U.S. unbranded generic markets continues to drive savings for consumers and health care payers relative to spending on these drugs in other countries,” the study said. Even though generic drugs make up 90 percent of U.S. prescription volume, the substantially higher cost for brand-name drugs still results in a higher average cost for all drugs in the U.S. than elsewhere, according to the report.”
  • HR Dive lets us know,
    • “Judge J. Campbell Barker of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas vacated the National Labor Relations Board’s joint employer rule late Friday. The rule was set to go into effect Monday.
    • “The new rule would be “contrary to law” and “arbitrary and capricious,” Barker ruled. The court had been considering a legal challenge brought in November by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, along with other business groups. 
    • “Federal agencies and employers now await a possible court decision on the U.S. Department of Labor’s independent contractor rule, also set to go in effect Monday.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington DC

  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “The CMS rolled out several flexibilities on Tuesday that aim to help providers’ mounting financial challenges in the wake of the cyberattack against Change Healthcare.
    • “The agency instructed Medicare administrative contractors, who process claims for the government, to expedite provider requests to switch to new clearinghouses to get around the Change outage. CMS is also encouraging Medicare Advantage plans, Part D sponsors, and Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program managed care plans to relax prior authorization requirements or offer advance funding. 
    • “The agency said providers can submit requests for accelerated payment to their Medicare administrative contractors for individual consideration.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “Availity, another clearinghouse, is used by Humana and Elevance Health. Humana CEO Bruce Broussard said a lot of business is shifting from Change to Availity.
    • “Elevance Executive Vice President and CFO Mark Kaye noted they’ve noticed providers have been able to adapt in the days after the cyberattack.
    • “Today, we’re about down to a 10% reduction relative to normal daily volumes,” said Kaye. “Some providers are now submitting claims directly to Availity, while others have switched their clearinghouse.”
  • Axios tells us that in the wake of the CDC’s recent decision to treat Covid like other respiratory illnesses,
    • “The HHS’s free COVID test program was suspended because of the lowering case rates after the winter respiratory season, though the agency may resume it in the future as needed.
    • “Orders for free tests placed on or before Friday will be delivered, per HHS.” 
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “The Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) jointly launched a cross-government public inquiry into private-equity and other corporations’ increasing control over health care.
    • “Private equity firms and other corporate owners are increasingly involved in health care system transactions and, at times, those transactions may lead to a maximizing of profits at the expense of quality care. The cross-government inquiry seeks to understand how certain health care market transactions may increase consolidation and generate profits for firms while threatening patients’ health, workers’ safety, quality of care and affordable health care for patients and taxpayers.
    • “The agencies issued a Request for Information – PDF (RFI) requesting public comment on deals conducted by health systems, private payers, private equity funds and other alternative asset managers that involve health care providers, facilities or ancillary products or services. The RFI also requests information on transactions that would not be reported to the Justice Department or FTC for antitrust review under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared for marketing the first over-the-counter (OTC) continuous glucose monitor (CGM). The Dexcom Stelo Glucose Biosensor System is an integrated CGM (iCGM) intended for anyone 18 years and older who does not use insulin, such as individuals with diabetes treating their condition with oral medications, or those without diabetes who want to better understand how diet and exercise may impact blood sugar levels. Importantly, this system is not for individuals with problematic hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) as the system is not designed to alert the user to this potentially dangerous condition. “
  • The Congressional Research Service issued an In Focus report about the Federal Employee Paid Parental Leave Benefit.
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management announced,
    • Today, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) welcomed its new class of next generation Artemis astronauts in a ceremony at the agency’s Johnson Space Center on Tuesday. The ten astronaut graduates are now eligible for flight assignments. The agencies also announced the opening for the next round of NASA astronaut applications.  

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The mortality rate for U.S. women with breast cancer fell an estimated 58 percent from 1975 to 2019, according to research published in JAMA that credits the decline to advances in screening and treatments.
    • “Nearly half (47 percent) of the reduction was attributed to earlier and more effective treatment of those with Stage 1, 2 or 3 breast cancer. (With staging, generally the lower the number, the less the cancer has spread.)
    • “In addition, about 25 percent of the drop was attributed to improved mammography screening and about 29 percent to better treatment of metastatic breast cancer, meaning cancer that has spread.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster weight-loss drug cuts the risk of kidney disease-related events in diabetic patients by 24%, according to a new clinical trial conducted by the Danish pharmaceutical company.
    • “Headline results from a five-year study of Semaglutide, which is marketed as Ozempic to treat diabetes, show that diabetic patients with chronic kidney disease saw a statistically significant and superior reduction in kidney disease progression, major adverse cardiovascular events and death, it added.
    • “The announcement follows October’s decision to stop the trial, known as FLOW, early thanks to successful results.
    • “Last year, a separate trial of Novo Nordisk’s obesity drug Wegovy showed that it cuts the risk of heart attacks and strokes.”
  • The National Institutes of Health adds,
    • “A weekly injection of semaglutide was safe and reduced the amount of fat in the liver by 31% in people with HIV and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), according to a presentation today at the 2024 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Denver. This is the first clinical trial of semaglutide for MASLD in people with HIV. The research was sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, and conducted in the United States and Brazil by ACTG, a global clinical trials network focused on HIV and other infectious diseases. ACTG is funded by NIAID and collaborating NIH institutes. McGovern Medical School at UTHealth Houston also contributed funding for this study.
    • “Previously known as nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, MASLD is characterized by the accumulation of excess fat in the liver that is not caused by alcohol consumption or viral hepatitis. Over time, fat deposits may cause inflammation and cellular damage, and can result in cardiovascular and liver disease. MASLD also is associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, and other metabolic disorders. It is the most common cause of chronic liver disease in the United States, and a leading reason for liver transplantation. An estimated 30-40% of people with HIV experience MASLD, slightly higher than the average among people without HIV.Semaglutide is an antidiabetic medication approved for use for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and an anti-obesity medication used for long-term weight management.”
  • Medscape relates,
    • “A new and deceptively simple advance in chronic stroke treatment could be a vibrating glove.
    • “Researchers at Stanford University and Georgia Tech have developed a wearable device that straps around the wrist and hand, delivering subtle vibrations (akin to a vibrating cellphone) that may relieve spasticity as well as or better than the standard Botox injections.
    • “The vibro-tactile stimulation can be used at home, and we’re hoping it can be relatively low cost,” said senior study author Allison Okamura, PhD, a mechanical engineer at Stanford University, Stanford, California.
    • “For now, the device is available only to clinical trial patients. But the researchers hope to get the glove into — or rather onto — more patients’ hands within a few years. A recent grant from the National Science Foundation’s Convergence Accelerator program could help pave the way to a commercial product. The team also hopes to expand access in the meantime through larger clinical trials with patients in additional locations.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Determining whether someone has Alzheimer’s disease usually requires an extended diagnostic process. A doctor takes a patient’s medical history, discusses symptoms, administers verbal and visual cognitive tests.
    • “The patient may undergo a PET scan, an M.R.I. or a spinal tap — tests that detect the presence of two proteins in the brain, amyloid plaques and tau tangles, both associated with Alzheimer’s.
    • “All of that could change dramatically if new criteria proposed by an Alzheimer’s Association working group are widely adopted.
    • “Its final recommendations, expected later this year, will accelerate a shift that is already underway: from defining the disease by symptoms and behavior to defining it purely biologically — with biomarkers, substances in the body that indicate disease.
    • “The draft guidelines, Revised Criteria for Diagnosis and Staging of Alzheimer’s Disease, call for a simpler approach. That could mean a blood test to indicate the presence of amyloid. Such tests are already available in some clinics and doctors’ offices.”
    • “Someone who has biomarker evidence of amyloid in the brain has the disease, whether they’re symptomatic or not,” said Dr. Clifford R. Jack Jr., the chair of the working group and an Alzheimer’s researcher at the Mayo Clinic.
    • “The pathology exists for years before symptom onset,” he added. “That’s the science. It’s irrefutable.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Becker’s Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “Danville, Pa.-based Geisinger appointed Terry Gilliland, MD, as the next president and CEO of Geisinger Health.
    • “Dr. Gilliland will succeed Jaewon Ryu, MD, JD, after he transitions to CEO of Risant Health, a nonprofit organization created by Kaiser Foundation Hospitals. Oakland, Calf.-based Kaiser Permanente agreed to acquire Geisinger last year as the first health system to join Risant, and the deal is waiting on regulatory approval.
    • “Geisinger’s board conducted an extensive search for Dr. Ryu’s successor.
    • “The role of leading Geisinger is unique,” said Heather Acker, chair of the Geisinger board of directors, in a news release. “It requires passion for our mission–to make better health easier for our patients and members across Pennsylvania; a drive to innovate care delivery; and a commitment to educating future caregivers. We are confident that Dr. Gilliland is the right person to lead Geisinger on our path forward.”
  • According to Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Insurance network coverage dramatically impacts whether a person remains in treatment for opioid use disorder, according to results shared by treatment provider Ophelia.
    • “A new study finds that nearly three-quarters (72.3%) of patients receiving opioid treatment through network insurance stayed in treatment for at least six months. Patients received telehealth treatment from Ophelia.”
  • Bloomberg reports,
    • “The US Department of Labor’s new worker classification rule is facing at least four lawsuits alleging the regulation is illegal, with less than a week before the new policy is set to go into effect.
    • “Freelance writers, a trucking company, and groups representing construction, financial services, and tech companies have filed four separate legal challenges in federal district court in Texas, Georgia, Tennessee, and Louisiana contending the new standard, which will make it harder for businesses to use independent contractors, violates the Administrative Procedure Act and departs from the text of the Fair Labor Standards Act. 
    • “The growing pile of lawsuits threatens to disrupt the Biden administration’s implementation of the new rule due to take effect March 11. The DOL says the regulatory update will better protect workers from misclassification, but the business community warns it could have major consequences for industries that rely on independent contractors to operate their services—like Uber Technologies Inc. and Lyft Inc., as well as the trucking, construction, and other sectors. 
    • “And the multi-district nature of the litigation also could lead to splits among the district and appellate courts, inviting potential US Supreme Court review.” 

Thursday Miscellany

As you may be able to tell, it’s a late FEHBlog post because the FEHBlog was returning home to Dripping Springs, TX, last night from our Nation’s capital.

In case, here are some highlights from Washington DC.

  • The GAO released a troubling report on our country’s fiscal health this week. Here’s a link to a Wall Street Journal Opinion Watch podcast about the report. The podcast is about 20 minutes long, and it may make your hair stand on edge.
  • Mercer Consulting discusses changes to the RxDC reports due annually on June 1.
    • “CMS released instructions for the third prescription drug data collection (RxDC) reports due June 1, 2024 – and they may cause plan sponsors to reconsider whether they need to make “plan level” submissions, instead of relying on their vendors to make “aggregate” submissions on their behalf. The good news is that the instructions largely mirror prior versions, so plan sponsors should be able to build off prior RxDC reporting efforts. However, for the first time, CMS plans to enforce the “aggregation restriction”—a provision in the 2021 regulations that CMS suspended for the first two reporting cycles. As explained [in the article], the reinstated aggregation restriction may cause headaches for some plan sponsors, who find that they can no longer rely on their PBM’s aggregate submission of pharmacy data but must instead submit plan level data. Other plan sponsors may welcome the opportunity to do a plan level submission so they can obtain otherwise unavailable prescription drug data.”
  • Per Govexec,
    • “With federal budget talks still unresolved less than a month away from Congress’ latest deadline, the Office of Personnel Management said Friday that the decade-long pay freeze for senior political appointees like Vice President Kamala Harris and others will remain in effect.
    • “In a Feb. 9 post, OPM Director Kiran Ahuja said that under January’s continuing resolution that extended federal funding to agencies until March 1 and 8, certain senior political appointees will continue to see their payable pay rates remain at current levels at least through the latter budget deadline, when Congress will have to decide whether it will continue to fund the federal government. 
    • “Future Congressional action will determine whether the pay freeze continues beyond March 8, 2024,” Ahuja said. “Until such time, the OPM guidance issued on Dec. 21, 2023, regarding the pay freeze for certain senior political officials continues to be generally applicable in applying the pay freeze in 2024.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “There isn’t a silver bullet to maintaining mental acuity or warding off dementia [as we age], scientists of aging say. But a combination of genetics, healthy lifestyle habits and factors such as cleaner air and good education have been linked to prolonged mental agility.  * * *
    • “Genetics is thought to play a role in brain maintenance, as does diet, exercise and a person’s risk of vascular disease. More education, mental stimulation and social connectivity have been associated with improved cognitive reserve.
    • “Better brain maintenance and cognitive reserve might help keep symptoms of dementia at bay. Almost 50% of people 40 and older think they will likely develop dementia, according to a 2021 AARP survey. The actual number of U.S. adults 65 and older with dementia is closer to 10%, a 2022 study found. * * *
    • “Sleeping too little—or too much—can also lead to cognitive problems. Activities including yoga and tai chi, the Chinese martial art, could help improve cognitive function, research suggests. 
    • “Hearing loss is a risk factor for dementia, too. Lost hearing might cause the brain to atrophy more quickly and can make people more isolated, said Dr. Dung Trinh, chief medical officer of the Healthy Brain Clinic. Hearing aids can help preserve mental fitness.”
  • AHA News adds,
    • “About half of U.S. health care workers have witnessed racial discrimination against patients and say discrimination against patients is a crisis or major problem, according to a survey released Feb. 15 by the Commonwealth Fund and African American Research Collaborative. Younger workers and workers of color were more likely than their older or white counterparts to say they witnessed discrimination, as were workers at facilities with more patients of color. About six in 10 Black health care workers and four in 10 Latino, Asian American and Pacific Islander workers say they have been discriminated against because of their race or ethnicity. 
    • “While most health care workers see positive efforts from employers to address discrimination, a majority of Black, Latino, and AAPI workers worry about retaliation if they raise discrimination concerns. When asked about potential solutions, more than two-thirds of health care workers thought the following could help: providing an easy way to anonymously report situations involving racism or discrimination; creating opportunities to listen to patients and health care professionals of color; examining treatment of non-English-speaking patients; and training health care staff to spot discrimination.” 
  • Employee Benefit News offers three suggestions on how employers can help employees hold cancer at bay with preventive screenings.
    • “A new report from healthcare platform Color Health shows that although 80% of employers are concerned by rising cancer costs and 96% of benefits leaders agree early detection is the best solution, the majority of focus is devoted to post-diagnosis treatment, rather than evidence-based screenings. 
    • “According to the report, three out of four employers say they are placing more emphasis on screening, early detection and risk prevention efforts, but they are going to have to go beyond their current benefits setup: Only a quarter believe their current health plans meet the screening needs of their workforce, and three-quarters say employees are not being adequately screened by their primary care provider. Leaders report that 40% of employees are not compliant with screenings in general, and for the most deadly forms of cancer — lung and bronchus — the American Lung Association reports that only 6% of people eligible get screened. 
    • “The assumption [has been that] if we cover mammograms and colonoscopies and lung CTs, then people will actually get them, and that’s turned out to be false,” says Othman Laraki, Color Health’s CEO. “The big driver for that is that for non-acute care services, availability is not the same thing as access.” 

Friday Factoids

From Washington, DC

  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management released its call letter for benefit and rate proposals for 2025 FEHB and Postal Service Health Benefit (PSHB) plans. Not surprisingly, the 2025 call letter focuses on the launch of the PSHB Program on January 1, 2025. The next step will be for OPM to issue its technical guidance. The benefit and rate proposals are due on May 31, 2024.
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “A bipartisan group of senators announced Friday that it is working on new legislation for “long-term reforms” to physician payments under Medicare and other program changes.
    • “In a joint release, U.S. Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nevada; Marsha Blackburn, R-Tennessee; John Barrasso, R-Wyoming; Debbie Stabenow, D-Michigan; Mark Warner, D-Virginia; and Minority Whip John Thune, R-South Dakota said they have formed a “Medicare payment reform working group.”
    • “The lawmakers plan to proposes changes to the physician fee schedule and “make necessary updates” to 2015’s Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), they said, and “in the coming weeks” will be seeking feedback from stakeholders.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “On Thursday, February 8, 2024, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra addressed the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. for its historic Headliners Luncheon.
    • “During his address, he urged the nation to shift from an “illness-care system” to a “wellness-care system.” He also highlighted the Biden-Harris Administration’s work to increase access to quality, affordable health care, lower health care costs, including the cost of prescription drugs, and protect access to reproductive health care.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control tells us,
    • What CDC knows
      • BA.2.87.1, a new variant of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, was identified in South Africa by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases. CDC is closely tracking this variant because of the large number of mutations when compared to previous variants. At this time, BA.2.87.1 has not been identified in clinical specimens outside South Africa. Because this is a newly emerging variant, there is not as much additional data about its potential impact. So far, the public health risk for this new variant appears low.
    • What CDC is doing
      • CDC continues to track the appearance and spread of new variants around the world through genomic surveillance. CDC is working closely with partners in South Africa to gather the latest information on BA.2.87.1. CDC and its partners are continually assessing potential impacts to vaccines, tests, and treatments.
    • Keep reading: CDC Tracks New SARS-CoV-2 Variant, BA.2.87.1
  • Here is a link to the CDC’s Covid Data Tracker.
  • ABC News adds,
    • “The flu virus is hanging on in the U.S., intensifying in some areas of the country after weeks of an apparent national decline. 
    • “Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data released Friday showed a continued national drop in flu hospitalizations, but other indicators were up — including the number of states with high or very high levels for respiratory illnesses.
    • ““Nationally, we can say we’ve peaked, but on a regional level it varies,” said the CDC’s Alicia Budd. “A couple of regions haven’t peaked yet.”
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “The CDC has published its first comprehensive laboratory recommendations for syphilis testing.
    • “Published in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Reportopens in a new tab or window, the new recommendations include approaches for laboratory-based tests, point-of-care tests, sample processing, and how laboratories should report test results to clinicians and health departments.
    • “The recommendations are primarily for clinical laboratory or disease control personnel, but also for clinicians to understand how to collect and process specimens, interpret test results, and counsel and treat patients, according to CDC researchers led by John Papp, PhD, of the agency’s National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention in Atlanta.”
  • Mercer Consulting suggests that rising cancer rates call for a comprehensive strategy.
    • “A comprehensive cancer strategy includes both support for employees as they cope with the physical and emotional stresses of a cancer diagnosis, and effective care management to help ensure the patient receives quality care quickly in the most appropriate setting — which can lead to better outcomes and better use of healthcare dollars. Just over a third of large employers (34%) provide a specialized cancer care management program. These programs assist with care coordination, support compliance with treatment regimens, find applicable clinical trials, and connect families to local community resources and to other solutions the employer offers.  
    • “Centers of Excellence or site-of-care navigation programs, offered by 24% of large employers, help ensure that members are treated by quality providers with relevant experience and expertise. Hotlines, caregiver and family advocacy services, and financial planning services can help employees and their families deal with the day-to-day challenges of the cancer journey.”
  • Milliman Consulting offers some use cases for AI in healthcare and their implications for health insurers.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • Takeda Pharmaceutical plans to quickly begin late-stage testing of an experimental drug for narcolepsy, which, if successful, could help the company enter what Wall Street analysts see as a multibillion-dollar market.
    • There are two kinds of narcolepsy, with a key difference being that “Type 1” can involve a sudden loss of muscle control. Takeda has been testing its drug, known as TAK-861, as a potential treatment for both, and on Friday disclosed high-level results from a pair of studies that each focused on one type.
    • “Takeda said the Type 1 trial, which evaluated 112 patients, found those given its drug as opposed to a placebo experienced statistically significant and “clinically meaningful” improvements in wakefulness at the eight-week mark. The company now intends to begin Phase 3 trials in the first half of its fiscal year, which begins April 1.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Primary care providers Indianapolis-based Marathon Health and Denver-based Everside Health completed their merger on Thursday, and will operate as Marathon Health.
    • “The Marathon executive team — CEO Jeff Wells and executive chairman Ben Evans — will stay intact post-merger, while Everside Health CEO Chris Miller will depart the company, according to a company spokesperson. Marathon declined to disclose financial details of the deal.
    • “The new Marathon Health will have a physical presence in 41 states at 680 health centers and provide virtual healthcare in all 50 states.” 
  • and
    • “One Medical is closing several offices and moving its chief financial officer to a role focused on growth as Amazon attempts to reallocate internal resources to cut costs.
    • “One Medical plans to close offices in New York City, Minneapolis and St. Petersburg, Florida, by the end of February, according to an internal email obtained by Business Insider. The company will also downsize its San Francisco office space to one floor.
    • “An Amazon spokesperson confirmed the changes to Healthcare Dive and said the company is reducing its investment in corporate office space given many One Medical corporate employees work remotely.”
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • “Fresenius Medical Care has received 510(k) clearance for its high-volume hemodiafiltration dialysis therapy system, the company said Thursday.
    • “The device, the 5008X Hemodialysis System, uses both diffusion and convection to remove waste products from the blood of kidney disease patients. Using diffusion, the standard mechanism for hemodialysis, and convection is intended to improve the removal of larger waste products.
    • “Fresenius plans to start a broad market launch next year and push to establish hemodiafiltration, which is already widely used in Europe, as the new standard of care in the U.S.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence points out “KLAS Report Reveals Top-Performing Vendors for Payer Services. The top-performing vendors varied across payer services, with Zelis ranking high for payment accuracy and integrity and ZeOmega succeeding in care management.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Think Advisor lets us know,
    • “The U.S. House of Representatives voted 211-208 on Wednesday to pass H.R. 485, the Protecting Health Care for All Patients Act of 2023.
    • “The bill would prohibit federal health programs — including Medicare, Medicaid and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program — from using a “quality-adjusted life year” measure or similar measures when allocating resources.
    • “All Republicans who voted supported the bill, and all Democrats who voted opposed it.
    • “The bill was introduced by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Ore.”
  • Roll Call reports,
    • “House Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, a 10-term Republican from Washington state who has been a strong advocate for people with disabilities, announced Thursday she would not seek reelection this year.
    • “It’s been the honor and privilege of my life to represent the people of Eastern Washington in Congress. They inspire me every day,’’ Rodgers said in a statement. “After much prayer and reflection, I’ve decided the time has come to serve them in new ways. I will not be running for re-election to the People’s House.”
    • “The announcement comes as Rodgers is leading negotiations with the Senate on a wide-ranging health care package that touches all parts of the industry. The legislation would implement more transparency in data and pricing for prescription drugs and other medical services.”
  • BioPharma Dive informs us,
    • “The CEOs of three major drugmakers defended the prices they charge U.S. patients in a Senate [Health Education Labor and Pensions] committee hearing Thursday, claiming Americans gain access to cutting-edge medicines months or years earlier than people in countries that pay a fraction of the U.S. costs. * * *
    • “Sen. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., asked the CEOs to pledge to not block entry of generics or biosimilars to the respective drugs in the spotlight when their primary patents expire, which Merck and Bristol Myers agreed to. That question in the case of Bristol Myers Squibb was focused Opdivo, its cancer immunotherapy rival to Keytruda.
    • “For Merck, Davis committed to open competition with any forthcoming biosimilars of intravenous Keytruda. But he didn’t mention the company is trying to develop and launch a subcutaneous, or under-the-skin, version that would likely extend its market advantage beyond the anticipated 2028 expiration of its main patent. Bristol Myers is also working on subcutaneous Opdivo.
    • “Questioned by Luján on settlements that have pushed the launch of biosimilar Stelara to 2025, J&J’s Duato said the price of the drug will be lower when that happens and added that prices net of rebates have dropped ahead of biosimilar competition.”
  • Bloomberg reports,
    • “The pharmaceutical industry, Trump and Obama administration officials, and others are urging the Biden administration to reconsider a controversial plan for seizing patents on a drug when its cost gets too high, claiming the approach misinterprets decades-old law and threatens the delicate pipeline that produces innovative, life-saving drugs.
    • “Over 500 comments were filed by the Feb. 6 deadline for groups and individuals to weigh in on the Biden administration’s framework for the federal government to use its march-in rights. The proposal lays out the Biden administration’s stance in a longstanding debate over whether price is a justifiable reason for the government to “march in” and take over a patent on technology developed with the help of taxpayer dollars and then license it to an outside manufacturer.
    • “The Biden plan is already drawing blowback from a broad swath of players in the innovation space. A collection of former US Patent and Trademark Office directors and other government officials under the George W. Bush, Obama, and Trump administrations wrote to warn that the proposed framework, if adopted, would prove destabilizing.”
  • Per an HHS press release
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Intergovernmental and External Affairs (IEA) will be hosting a stakeholder webinar TOMORROW, February 9, 2024, from 2 – 3 PM ET to provide an update on patient privacy.  
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, through its Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), finalized modifications to the Confidentiality of Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Patient Records regulations at 42 CFR part 2 (“Part 2”), which protect the privacy of patients’ SUD treatment records. Specifically, today’s final rule increases coordination among providers treating patients for SUDs, strengthens confidentiality protections through civil enforcement, and enhances integration of behavioral health information with other medical records to improve patient health outcomes.
    • “Today’s rule was informed by the bipartisan Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) that, among other things, required HHS to bring the Part 2 program into closer alignment with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) Privacy, Breach Notification, and Enforcement Rules.
    • “The final rule includes the following modifications to Part 2:
      • “Permits use and disclosure of Part 2 records based on a single patient consent given once for all future uses and disclosures for treatment, payment, and health care operations.
      • “Permits redisclosure of Part 2 records by HIPAA covered entities and business associates in accordance with the HIPAA Privacy Rule, with certain exceptions.
      • “Provides new rights for patients under Part 2 to obtain an accounting of disclosures and to request restrictions on certain disclosures, as also granted by the HIPAA Privacy Rule.
      • “Expands prohibitions on the use and disclosure of Part 2 records in civil, criminal, administrative, and legislative proceedings.
      • “Provides HHS enforcement authority, including the potential imposition of civil money penalties for violations of Part 2.
      • “Outlines new breach notification requirements applying to Part 2 records.”
    • “A fact sheet on the final rule may be found at: https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/regulatory-initiatives/fact-sheet-42-cfr-part-2-final-rule/index.html
    • Register in advance for this webinar: REGISTER HERE  
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The U.S. Postal Service was $2 billion in the red in the first three months of fiscal 2024—typically its busiest and most profitable period of the year—doubling its loss from the same period in the previous year. 
    • “The accelerated losses during the holiday season continue a longstanding trend of poor financial performance for the mailing agency, but mark a troubling sign as its leadership team undertakes significant operational transformations with a promise to right the ship.
    • “In a positive development, however, USPS turned a net profit of $472 million when accounting only for the part of the ledger postal management deems within its control. That figure, which does not include fluctuations in workers’ compensation and amortized payments toward employee retirement accounts, grew from $187 million in the first quarter of the prior year.” 
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management announced,
    • “[t]he Finalists for this year’s Presidential Management Fellows (PMF) Program, the federal government’s premier leadership development program. In total, 825 Finalists were selected from more than 7,000 applicants from around the world. 
    • “Presidential Management Fellows are the next generation of federal government leaders,” said Kiran Ahuja, Director of OPM. “The PMF Program gives Fellows the leadership skills and exposure they need to make a difference in government and an impact within their community. Congratulations to all the 2024 PMF finalists. We cannot wait to see what you will accomplish in public service.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Medscape points out,
    • “Brain fog is one of the most common, persistent complaints in patients with long COVID. It affects as many as 46% of patients who also deal with other cognitive concerns like memory loss and difficulty concentrating. 
    • “Now, researchers believe they know why. A new study has found that these symptoms may be the result of a viral-borne brain injury that may cause cognitive and mental health issues that persist for years.
    • “Researchers found that 351 patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19 had evidence of a long-term brain injury a year after contracting the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The findings were based on a series of cognitive tests, self-reported symptoms, brain scans, and biomarkers.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “People receiving a double dose of naloxone are no more likely to survive an opioid overdose than people receiving a standard, 4-milligram nasal spray, according to a new study.
    • “The new paper, published Thursday in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, showed no significant difference in survival rates between people who were revived using 4- and 8-milligram sprays of naloxone, commonly known by the brand name Narcan. People receiving the smaller dose also did not require a higher total number of sprays, despite having received just half the initial amount. The researchers found only one major contrast between those receiving different dose sizes: Those who received a double dose were over 2.5 times more likely to experience severe withdrawal symptoms, like vomiting.
    • “The study comes as pharmaceutical companies continue to market expensive high-dose formulations of naloxone, arguing that amid record drug death levels resulting from potent synthetic opioids like fentanyl, it’s essential to deliver as much of the overdose-reversal medication as possible. Public health experts and harm-reduction groups have pushed back, however, charging that the companies have used Americans’ fear of fentanyl as an excuse to sell needlessly expensive naloxone products to cash-strapped public health agencies.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review reports,
    • “Patients who take Ozempic, Mounjaro and Wegovy are less likely to be diagnosed with anxiety or depression compared to those who don’t receive the popular diabetes and weight loss drugs, according to a new study
    • “A review of more than 4 million patient records conducted by Epic Research found that diabetic patients are less likely to have anxiety if they are taking any glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist. 
    • “The researchers analyzed five different GLP-1s: tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound), semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus), dulaglutide (Trulicity), liraglutide (Saxenda, Victoza) and exenatide (Byetta, Bydureon). 
    • “The patients taking GLP-1s for weight loss were compared with those receiving another kind of weight loss drug, and diabetic patients were compared with people not taking a GLP-1.”
  • The American Hospital Association News notes how you can “[l’earn how hospitals and health systems are improving maternal and child health outcomes in this synopsis of the latest resources from AHA’s Better Health for Mothers and Babies initiative. READ MORE.”
  • The NIH Director discusses in her blog “What’s Behind that Morning Migraine? Community-Based Study Points to Differences in Perceived Sleep Quality, Energy on the Previous Day.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • AstraZeneca sees its revenue and core earnings per share growing by double-digit percentages in 2024, the pharmaceuticals major said as it reported fourth-quarter core earnings per share below expectations on higher costs, sending the stock lower.
  • CNBC discusses how “Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly are tackling weight loss drug supply woes.”
    • “Last week, the Danish drugmaker [Novo Nordisk] said it had more than doubled its supply of lower-dose versions of its weight loss injection Wegovy in January compared to previous months. Supply shortages forced Novo Nordisk to restrict the availability of those lower doses in the U.S. since May. 
    • “But why are those lower doses important? It’s because people are supposed to start Wegovy at a low dose and gradually increase the size over time to mitigate side effects such as nausea. So, more of those low “starter” doses means more new patients can begin treatment with Wegovy. 
    • “The company plans to “gradually” increase the overall supply of Wegovy throughout the rest of the year, executives added on the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call Wednesday.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “UnitedHealth’s chief operating officer Dirk McMahon is retiring after more than two decades at the company.
    • McMahon plans to retire on April 1, the payer said in a Wednesday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday.
    • “UnitedHealth has yet to name a replacement for McMahon.”
  • and
    • “Walgreens has named a new head of its healthcare unit as the pharmacy chain works to improve its halting finances and shift to delivering more healthcare services.
    • “John Driscoll, the current executive vice president and president of the U.S. Healthcare segment, will be replaced by Mary Langowski, who previously held the chief executive role at chronic condition management company Solera Health. Driscoll will serve in a senior advisory role, Walgreens announced Thursday.”
  • and
    • “Molina Healthcare lost half a million Medicaid members due to redeterminations by the end of 2023, executives said Thursday.
    • “States resumed checking beneficiaries’ eligibility for the safety-net program in April following a pause during the COVID-19 public health emergency. Some 16 million Americans have been disenrolled from Medicaid to date because of the redeterminations. The process is disproportionately impacting insurers with a heavy Medicaid presence like Molina, which brings in 80% of its revenue from the program.
    • “Molina still expects to retain 40% of its Medicaid membership once redeterminations are complete. However, on Thursday the insurer raised its estimate of members gained during COVID from 800,000 to 1 million because of new business adds. That implies a net member loss of 600,000 once redeterminations are complete.” 
  • and
    • “Tenet Healthcare beat Wall Street expectations for revenue in the fourth quarter of 2023 on continued cost control measures and sustained demand for services, particularly in its ambulatory care unit, executives said during an earnings call on Thursday.
    • “CEO Saum Sutaria told investors that Tenet was entering a “new era” in which a higher proportion of its performance was generated by its ambulatory surgical business. Same-facility revenue for ambulatory services grew 9.2% during 2023, above Tenet’s long-term goal of 4% to 6% top line growth.
    • “The Dallas-based for-profit will continue a careful watch on its debt levels, executives said. The company has recently taken steps to reduce its leverage, last week finalizing the sale of three hospitals to Novant Health and announcing the sale of four additional hospitals to UCI Health.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues discusses why it appears that insurers are split in two camps over rising Medicare Advantage costs.