Thursday Report

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The FEHBlog watched today’s confirmation hearing for the President’s nominee for OPM Director, Scott Kupor. Clearly, Mr. Kupor is on a glide path to Senate confirmation. The next step toward that goal will occur at a business meeting of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee on Wednesday April 9 at 10 am.
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Senate April 3 by a vote of 53-45 confirmed Mehmet Oz as the new administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he would reinstate some programs and federal workers cut earlier this week as part of his sweeping reorganization of the department.
    • “Some programs that were cut, they’re being reinstated,” Kennedy said Thursday. “Personnel that should not have been cut were cut. We’re reinstating them.”
  • Per Senate news releases,
  • and
    • “Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) led a markup on six bipartisan Grassley-backed bills to boost competition in the pharmaceutical industry and improve access to more affordable prescription drugs. All six bills advanced in committee by voice vote.” Five of the six bills target pharma, while the sixth bill requests an FTC study of consolidation in the PBM industry.
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “AdvaMed, one of the medical device industry’s largest trade groups, reiterated its opposition to broad-based tariffs Wednesday, saying the actions would hurt innovation, cost jobs and increase healthcare costs, after the Trump administration announced new duties on most U.S. trading partners.
    • “The medtech industry should be exempted from these tariffs,” CEO Scott Whitaker said in a statement.” * * *
    • “Meanwhile, providers have been bracing for the impact of tariffs after the American Hospital Association, alongside the Healthcare Distribution Alliance, also failed to secure carve-outs for critical medical supplies, despite months of lobbying.”
  • Stars and Stripes informs us,
    • “The Department of Defense has scheduled “listening sessions” at three U.S. military bases in Japan next week to collect feedback on a pilot program designed to connect DOD civilians with Japanese health care providers.  Anyone who has used the program — the Health Insurance Enhancement for DOD Civilian Employees in Japan — is encouraged to participate at sessions at Misawa Air Base, Camp Foster and Yokosuka Naval Base, according to a March 28 email distributed by the Defense Health Agency’s National Capital Region.”
  • The Government Accountability Office released a report about DOD’s Actions to Address Challenges with Accessing Health Care in Japan and Guam.
    • The Department of Defense relies on its civilian employees and contractors in Japan and Guam to provide services such as engineering, food service, and teaching. They may receive health care at military facilities but only on a space-available basis—after active-duty service members and their families.
    • Accessing health care through local providers can be difficult. For example, in Japan, they face language barriers and must pay for care up front. DOD started a program intended to help them find providers and pay bills. In Guam, DOD has a working group to address issues that may arise from planned growth of the civilian population on Guam.

From the judicial front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Federal Trade Commission Chair Andrew Ferguson said he will get involved in the agency’s [internal] legal action against the leading pharmacy benefit managers.
    • “In a post shared Thursday on the social media platform X, Ferguson said he no longer is recusing himself from the matter.” * * *
    • “Ferguson, a critic of PBMs, recused himself due to his prior role in advising Virginia’s attorney general on the decision to file an amicus brief in a class-action lawsuit against PBMs, he wrote Thursday in a statement shared on the social media platform. He said his stance had changed to “ensure that the case can continue.”
    • “He said he consulted with the agency’s ethics attorneys when making the decision to involve himself.
    • “The FTC did not immediately respond to questions about next steps. In the Tuesday order pausing the case, FTC General Counsel Lucas Croslow said the pause would remain in effect for at least 105 days, and an evidentiary hearing date would be scheduled 225 days after the stay is lifted.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “The Department of Justice is urging the courts to reject a legal expert’s report that puts its longstanding challenge to UnitedHealthcare’s Medicare Advantage billing practices in jeopardy.
    • “In a memorandum issued this week, DOJ argues that the court-appointed special master’s report, which was released in March, erred in determining that the agency had not presented enough evidence to support the main claims in the case. 
    • “In addition, DOJ alleges that the special master is also pushing to make California’s Central District Court “the first and only court in the nation to read a new requirement into the reverse False Claims Act.” In the report, it interprets a key phrase in the FCA as requiring “proof of an affirmative act of deception,” which DOJ says is “inconsistent with the text, structure and purpose of the FCA.” * * *
    • “In a statement, UnitedHealth emphasized that its “business practices have always been transparent, lawful and approved by our regulator, CMS.”
    • “After more than a decade of DOJ’s wasteful and expensive challenge to our Medicare Advantage business, the Special Master concluded there was no evidence to support the DOJ’s claims we were overpaid or that we did anything wrong,” the company said.
    • “A judge will now be tasked with ruling on whether the case will move forward.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Cardiovascular Business offers key takeaways from the 2025 conference of the American Association of Cardiologists.
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • “An artificial intelligence (AI)-driven screening tool, developed by a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded research team, successfully identified hospitalized adults at risk for opioid use disorder and recommended referral to inpatient addiction specialists. The AI-based method was just as effective as a health provider-only approach in initiating addiction specialist consultations and recommending monitoring of opioid withdrawal. Compared to patients who received provider-initiated consultations, patients with AI screening had 47% lower odds of being readmitted to the hospital within 30 days after their initial discharge. This reduction in readmissions translated to a total of nearly $109,000 in estimated healthcare savings during the study period.
    • “The study, published in Nature Medicine, reports the results of a completed clinical trial, demonstrating AI’s potential to affect patient outcomes in real-world healthcare settings. The study suggests investment in AI may be a promising strategy specifically for healthcare systems seeking to increase access to addiction treatment while improving efficiencies and saving costs.
    • “Addiction care remains heavily underprioritized and can be easily overlooked, especially in overwhelmed hospital settings where it can be challenging to incorporate resource-intensive procedures such as screening,” said Nora D. Volkow, M.D., director of NIH’s National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). “AI has the potential to strengthen implementation of addiction treatment while optimizing hospital workflow and reducing healthcare costs.”
  • Per Cardiovascular Business,
    • “New research shows early-pregnancy blood pressure trajectories are strongly associated with new-onset hypertension years after pregnancy. This may help better stratify risk for targeted surveillance and early interventions, and improve the prediction of cardiovascular disease risk in women later in life. The study was published in the American Heart Association Journal Hypertension this week.[1]
    • “Blood pressure patterns observed in the first half of pregnancy, even among women without hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP), can identify women at greater risk of developing hypertension up to 14 years after giving birth. The new findings are from a large observational study supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Among groups of women who did not develop HDP, those with higher-risk blood pressure patterns, including elevated-stable patterns during early pregnancy, were still 11 times more likely to develop hypertension years later than those women with less risky blood pressure patterns.”  
  • Per HCP Live,
    • “Bariatric surgery improves survival and is cost-effective for patients with obesity and cirrhosis, compared to lifestyle modifications alone.
    • “Sleeve gastrectomy and Roux-en-Y gastric bypass show increased expected survival and quality of life benefits, despite higher initial costs.
    • “The study emphasizes the need for greater awareness and uptake of bariatric surgery, given its long-term health improvements and potential reductions in obesity-related comorbidities.”
  • Fierce Pharma tells us,
    • “The interim results of a phase 3 trial of Merck’s pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) treatment Winrevair were so conclusive that the company not only halted the study for efficacy but did the same two months later in another trial of the first-in-class activin signaling inhibitor.
    • “Merck has revealed data from the study, providing further evidence of the value of Winrevair, which has been approved in more than 40 countries, including in the U.S. a year ago. 
    • “The Zenith trial included 172 patients at the highest risk of mortality—those in the World Health Organization Functional Class (FC) III or IV—and achieved its primary endpoint of time to clinical worsening to first morbidity or mortality event.”
  • Medscape reports,
    • “A low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level below 70 mg/dL was associated with a 26% reduced risk of all-cause dementia and a 28% lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease-related dementia (ADRD), with statin use further decreasing that risk, a new study suggests.
    • “While earlier research had suggested lower LDL levels may offer a protective advantage against dementia, these findings provide a specific target number, which investigators said could prove helpful in clinical practice. 
    • “These findings emphasize the importance of targeted LDL-C management as part of dementia prevention strategies, with potential integration into clinical guidelines,” lead investigator Yerim Kim, MD, PhD, Department of Neurology, Kangdong Sacred Heart Hospital, Hallym University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea, and colleagues wrote.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare takes a five year look back at the COVID 19 pandemic and how it impacted healthcare.
  • Beckers Payer Issues offer thoughts about “From volume to value: The shift in healthcare that’s helping put patients first.”
  • Plan Adviser lets us know,
    • “Research and investment provider Devenir LLC reported that health savings account balances rose 19% in 2024 from 2023 levels, reaching almost $147 billion. The number of accounts grew 5% last year, according to the firm’s year-end survey.
    • “The sustained growth in both assets and participation demonstrates a growing awareness among consumers and employers of HSAs’ long-term value in managing healthcare costs,” said Jon Robb, a Devenir senior vice president of research and technology, in a statement.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review
    • “California has the highest hourly mean wage for registered nurses in the U.S., and Oregon has the highest hourly mean wage for RNs after adjusted for cost of living, according to data published April 2 by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
    • “[In the article you will find] the mean hourly and annual wages for nurses in 49 states and Washington, D.C., adjusted for cost of living. Becker’s calculated these figures using May 2024 salary data from BLS and 2024 cost of living index data from the World Population Review.” 
  • and
    • “Heritage Valley Kennedy Hospital in Kennedy Township, Pa., will close on June 30 due to declining patient volume and reduced insurance reimbursements, according to an April 2 news release shared with Becker’s.
    • “Following the closure, emergency care, outpatient surgery, and diagnostic services will shift to Heritage Valley’s Sewickley and Beaver locations, according to the report. Some services, including a walk-in clinic, X-rays and physical rehabilitation, will remain available at the adjacent medical office building.
    • “Heritage Valley said it is in talks with Encompass Rehabilitation about its leased 12-bed unit at Kennedy Hospital and is exploring partnerships to sustain behavioral health services in the area.”

Happy National Employee Benefits Day!

“National Employee Benefits Day is celebrated each year in April. The day recognizes trustees, administrators, benefits practitioners and professional advisors for their dedication to providing quality benefits and the important role they play in their colleagues’ well-being.”

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “Senate Republicans rallied behind a fiscal framework that allows more than $5 trillion in tax cuts over a decade, taking a crucial step toward turning President Trump’s agenda—tax cuts, border security and national defense—into law. 
    • “But the GOP budget resolution released Wednesday won’t be the final word along the complicated path to a major tax and spending bill. The plan employs a controversial accounting maneuver, postpones decisions about spending cuts and conflicts with a competing House plan. 
    • “The Senate is likely to vote on its budget later this week, but key House members are already objecting, warning that the Senate’s approach doesn’t guarantee the deep spending cuts they see as necessary.”
  • Modern Healthcare adds,
    • “The Senate Budget Committee unveiled a budget resolution Wednesday that could pave the way to less draconian cuts in health programs than House lawmakers previously proposed.
    • “The Senate proposal includes the House’s earlier recommendations that could lead to billions in health program cuts — but it also includes instructions for the Senate to go a different route while renewing tax cuts passed during President Donald Trump’s first term. The upper chamber’s resolution would delay sorting out differences with the House.
    • “The Senate’s budget resolution and negotiations with the lower chamber could provide for greater flexibility around healthcare cuts, which moderate Republicans in the House said they would not support if they were too steep. It also means the healthcare sector will have to wait to see what healthcare cuts — or spending — could be on tap until the Senate has done its work.”
  • Per a news release, “Today, Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions Subcommittee of the House Education and Labor Committee held a hearing titled “A Healthy Workforce: Expanding Access and Affordability in Employer-Sponsored Health Care.”
  • Modern Healthcare points out,
    • “The Health and Human Services Department is restructuring agencies that enforce regulation, handle claims disputes, and investigate potential civil rights violations as part of a department-wide reorganization.
    • “A new assistant secretary for enforcement will oversee three parts of HHS — the Departmental Appeals Board, the Office of Medicare Hearings and Appeals and the Office of Civil Rights — as part of a sweeping overhaul announced last week. The new role raises questions about how HHS plans to handle billions of dollars in claims disputes and appeals resolutions, as well as how the offices will operate within the new structure. Healthcare attorneys are also watching for how HHS handles the operational elements of the reorganization, including staffing decisions and the chain of command at the affected offices.”
  • Fierce Healthcare lets us know,
    • “President Donald Trump made good on his threat of announcing new and steeper tariffs during a Wednesday afternoon White House event, setting the stage for higher prices and supply chain uncertainty for numerous industries including healthcare.
    • “The tariffs, set to go into effect at midnight, are the largest trade policy shift for the U.S. in decades and an end to the so-called free-trade era. They include a minimum 10% tariff that affects “all countries,” according to the White House. 
    • “Additionally, a slew of higher, individualized reciprocal tariffs will go into effect for dozens of countries with which the U.S. has a large trade deficit, the White House said. These are broadly designed to be around half of those imposed by most trade partners, including longtime allies.
    • “A 39% European Union tariff rate, for instance, will be matched by a 20% rate, the president explained. A 67% tariff imposed by China will see a reciprocal 34% tariff from the U.S.
    • “Pharmaceuticals are among a select list of goods that will not be subject to the higher reciprocal tariffs, according to a fact sheet released shortly after the signing ceremony and affirmed in the signed executive order
    • “The president also signed an order to close the “de minimis loophole,” a trade policy signed into law by Congress that allows shipments valued at less than $800 to be duty-free, for Chinese imports.”
  • Healthcare Dive points out,
    • “Enrollment in the Affordable Care Act marketplaces reached a new high in 2025, boosted by growth in states won by President Donald Trump in last year’s election, according to a research brief by KFF. 
    • “Sign-ups in the insurance marketplaces have more than doubled over the past five years, increasing from 11.4 million in 2020 to 24.3 million in 2025, the health policy research firm said Wednesday. 
    • “Much of the growth is linked to more generous federal financial assistance for the health plans first made available in 2021, according to KFF. But those enhanced premium subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year absent congressional action.”
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • “Federal drug regulators have missed the deadline for making a key decision regarding a Covid-19 vaccine from Novavax, days after the Food and Drug Administration’s vaccine chief was pushed out.
    • “The agency was set to give full approval to Novavax’s shot, but senior leaders at the agency are now sitting on the decision and have said the Novavax application needed more data and was unlikely to be approved soon, people familiar with the matter said. 
    • ‘The FDA has allowed emergency use of Novavax’s Covid-19 vaccine. It set an April 1 deadline for a decision on whether to grant a normal, full approval, the people said.
    • “The decision would have cleared the vaccine’s continuing use though the pandemic emergency has passed. The FDA gave full approval to Covid-19 shots from Pfizer and its partner BioNTech and from Moderna in 2021 and 2022, respectively.
    • “Novavax said it is “continuing to communicate with the FDA and dialogue to ensure they have all the information required to complete our” application. 
    • “A Health and Human Services Department spokesman declined to comment. The FDA didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.”

From the judicial front,

  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “Portions of a Tennessee law aimed at increasing pharmacy access are preempted by the federal employee benefits statute and can’t be enforced against certain self-funded employer health plans, a federal judge ruled.
    • “The law’s “any-willing-provider” requirement—which limits a plan’s ability to exclude pharmacies from its network—has an “impermissible connection” with benefit plans governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, Judge Charles E. Atchley Jr. said Monday for the US District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee. That’s because it dictates the scope of provider networks eliminates plans’ “discretion to shape benefits as they see fit,” he said.
    • “ERISA also preempts the Tennessee law’s prohibition on using financial incentives to promote or discourage use of a particular pharmacy, Atchley said, explaining that the law prevents ERISA-governed plans from “designing and providing benefits in a way that the plan determines best serves participants.”
    • “The decision is a victory for commercial bakery McKee Foods Corp., which initially filed suit to counter a campaign by defendant Thrifty Med Plus Pharmacy to be reinstated in the pharmacy network for McKee’s employee health plan.” * * *
    • “The case is McKee Foods Corp. v. BFP Inc., E.D. Tenn., No. 1:21-cv-00279, 3/31/25.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission’s [internal] lawsuit against three large pharmacy-benefit managers over insulin prices is on hold after President Trump fired two of the agency’s commissioners. 
    • “The FTC this week halted a lawsuit against the country’s largest drug middlemen, which negotiate drug prices for employers and insurers. The FTC said it needs to pause the litigation because its two remaining commissioners, both Republicans, are recused from the case, leaving none to oversee it.
    • “The antitrust enforcer in September 2024 sued Cigna’s Express Scripts, UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Rx and CVS Health’s CVS Caremark, accusing the firms of inflating the price of insulin. The lawsuit said firms profited by pocketing the discounts they had negotiated for the higher-priced insulin products they steered their customers to buy.
    • The FTC said in a court filing that the companies had agreed to put the case on hold for at least 105 days.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The AHA News informs us,
    • “A National Institutes of Health study published today found that blood pressure patterns observed during the first half of pregnancy can determine a woman’s risk of developing hypertension up to 14 years after giving birth. The study found that women showing certain blood pressure patterns during the first 20 weeks of pregnancy were more likely to develop hypertension years later. Researchers identified six risk groups of blood pressure trajectory that ranged from ultra-low to elevated-stable patterns. Women with elevated-stable patterns were at the highest risk.” 
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Lung cancer screening more than tripled after the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force expanded screening eligibility in 2021, according to a March 20 research letter published in JAMA Oncology.” * * *
    • “Read the full analysis here.” 
  • Nevertheless, MedPage Today cautions,
    • “Among eligible populations, screening for breast and colorectal cancers was nearly four times more common than for lung cancer.
    • “Among those who never had lung cancer screening, roughly 60% had undergone screening for breast and colorectal cancers.
    • “The findings suggest individuals eligible for low-dose CT screening may be receptive to efforts aimed at increasing uptake.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Two recent studies have added to the growing body of research suggesting consuming more dairy reduces a person’s risk of getting colorectal cancer.
    • “A prospective cohort study in Nature Communications published in January looked at the incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) in more than 540,000 UK women over 16 years and found a 14% reduced risk for the cancer for every 200 g of dairy milk consumed per day. It also found an 8% reduced risk per 50 g of yogurt per day.
    • “The other study, from GutMicrobes, also published in January, looked specifically at yogurt intake with a focus on Bifidobacterium, a bacteria commonly found in yogurt. The researchers found that people who had at least two servings per week of yogurt had a 20% lower risk for Bifidobacterium-positive tumors than those who had less than one serving per month of yogurt, “suggesting the antitumor effect of yogurt intake on the specific tumor subgroup.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Jobs in the health insurance industry fell last year, something that hasn’t happened since 2009 and bucked an uptick in overall employment.
    • “It is a turning point for the industry, after years of profit growth and strategic expansions into pharmacy and provider businesses that increased headcount. Some of the largest publicly traded insurers reported steep workforce declines, according to a Modern Healthcare analysis of regulatory filings.
    • “Elevance Health, Humana, UnitedHealth Group and Centene cut their workforces, with the biggest reductions coming from the latter two companies. CVS Health and Molina Healthcare kept their workforce steady. Cigna grew its headcount nearly 1.4%.
    • “Across the seven companies, employment dipped 4.6% in 2024. Moreover, when not accounting for UnitedHealth Group, which reported a major reduction overseas, staffing among the other six still slipped 1.4%. National employment across all industries grew 1.2% last year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
    • “It was such a growth story for many years, and that’s tapered a little bit,” said Judy Busby, senior vice president and managing director of insurance staffing company The Jacobson Group.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Nonradiologists interpreted 43.6% of office-based imaging studies in 2022, according to a study published April 2 in the American Journal of Roentgenology
    • “Researchers from the Harvey L. Neiman Health Policy Institute analyzed more than 1.6 million Medicare physician office-based imaging claims ordered by nonradiologists. They found that just 36.4% of the studies were interpreted by a radiologist.” * * *
    • “For imaging type, nonradiologists interpreted 52% of ultrasound images, 5.3% of CT scans and 6.1% of MRIs. Smaller practices — those with one to nine providers — had a higher rate of self-interpretation than practices with 500 or more physicians.”Our results raise potential implications for quality of patient care,” Vijay Rao, MD, senior vice president of enterprise radiology at Philadelphia-based Jefferson Health and one of the study’s authors, said in a news release. “The large differences between radiologists and nonradiologists in interpretation training could lead to differences in diagnostic accuracy.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Artis BioSolutions emerged from stealth Wednesday, announcing that it has acquired Landmark Bio, an alliance of academic institutions, hospitals and biotech companies founded in 2021 to help turn research ideas into broadly available genetic medicines.
    • “Landmark will continue to operate as a distinct entity, based in Watertown, Massachusetts. The acquisition by Artis BioSolutions will allow Landmark to scale up operations and “bring breakthrough therapies to more patients” Landmark CEO Ran Zheng said in a statement.
    • Artis BioSolutions, backed by the venture capital firm Oak HC/FT, is now well positioned as a contract development and manufacturing organization for advanced therapies, the company said Wednesday. Artis BioSolutions said it can help customers speed up timelines, lower manufacturing costs and improve both product quality and supply chain management.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Hims & Hers’s addition of obesity drug Zepbound won’t do much to bolster its weight-loss business, analysts say.
    • “Hims & Hers has been selling a compound GLP-1 for around $165 a month but will now offer the brand-name Zepbound for around $1,900 a month. Investors worry patients won’t make that price leap and that Hims, which has built its business on affordable healthcare, will struggle to meet its revenue goal.
    • “It’s probably unlikely that a compounded GLP-1 customer at Hims that’s paying $165 per month is going to transition to paying $1,900 per month for the fully branded,” Needham analyst Ryan MacDonald said. “There’s a question about how achievable the weight-loss revenue guidance is for 2025.”

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “The Trump administration began broad staff cuts at the Health and Human Services Department, locking some workers out of federal buildings and reassigning others to new agencies including the Indian Health Service.
    • “Emails notifying employees of cuts and reassignments flooded inboxes on Monday night and Tuesday morning. The move is part of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s strategy to shrink and reshape the nation’s health agencies.
    • “The cuts extend far and wide, from the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 
    • “On the social-media platform X, Kennedy said what the government had been doing wasn’t working: “We must shift course. HHS needs to be recalibrated to emphasize prevention, not just sick care. These changes will not affect Medicare, Medicaid, or other essential health services.” 
    • “An HHS spokesman said the cuts wouldn’t affect drug or food reviewers or inspectors. “This critical work continues,” he said.”
  • Per a Senate committee press release,
    • “Today, U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), ranking member of the HELP Committee, sent a letter to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., inviting him to participate in a[n April 10, 2025,] HELP Committee hearing on the reorganization of HHS.”
  • Federal News Network adds,
    • “The departments of Agriculture, Defense, Energy, Transportation and Housing and Urban Development, as well as the Small Business Administration and the General Services Administration, have all restarted their deferred resignation programs, Federal News Network has confirmed.
    • “The “fork in the road” relaunch at those seven agencies comes at the same time many agencies are beginning to take on plans for conducting reductions in force (RIFs).”
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses what’s going on with Dr. Mezmet Oz’s efforts to be confirmed as CMS Director.
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., sent letters to HHS officials last week demanding the CMS and the Health Resources and Services Administration look into the growing problem of “line skipping” in organ donation, after media reports suggested patients were being passed over in the organ donation process in favor of less sick recipients.
    • “Reports from The New York Times, cited by the senators, found line skipping occurred in nearly 20% of transplants from deceased donors last year. For comparison, patients received out of order organ donations in about 2% of such donations in 2016, the letter said.
    • “The senators have charged the CMS and HRSA, which oversee organ procurement organizations, with explaining their process for monitoring organ distribution, and asked officials to provide transparency into any complaints the agencies might have received about line skipping since 2019.”
  • Per a Justice Department news release,
    • Today, Attorney General Pamela Bondi released the following statement:
      • “Luigi Mangione’s murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America. After careful consideration, I have directed federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty in this case as we carry out President Trump’s agenda to stop violent crime and Make America Safe Again.”
      • “As alleged, Luigi Mangione stalked and murdered UnitedHealthcare executive Brian Thompson on Dec. 4, 2024. The murder was an act of political violence. Mangione’s actions involved substantial planning and premeditation and because the murder took place in public with bystanders nearby, may have posed grave risk of death to additional persons.   
      • “Following federal murder charges handed down on Dec. 19, 2024, Attorney General Bondi has now directed Acting U.S. Attorney Matthew Podolsky to seek the death penalty in this case.
      • “This is in line with Attorney General Bondi’s Day One Memo as Attorney General entitled Reviving The Federal Death Penalty And Lifting The Moratorium On Federal Executions.”

From the patient safety front,

  • The American Hospital Association News lets us know,
    • “As part of the AHA’s Patient Safety Initiative, a dedicated webpage features case studies showing how hospitals and health systems across the nation are implementing effective and innovative programs to create a culture of safety, improve staff well-being and connect with their communities. READ NOW.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Cardiovascular Business reports, “Embracing a healthy plant-based diet can help patients with obesity, diabetes and heart disease live longer, according to new research presented during ACC.25, the annual conference of the American College of Cardiology (ACC).”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “A diet involving fasting on three nonconsecutive days per week yielded a 6.37 lbs greater weight loss after a year than a daily caloric deficit.
    • “Both groups aimed for a total weekly energy deficit of 34%.
    • “Weight-loss differences were likely due to greater adherence to the intermittent fasting diet.”
  • This week’s issue of NIH Research Matters discusses “Diet and healthy aging | Peptide eye drops | Bacteria use antimicrobial agent.”
  • The Washington Post takes “a closer look at vitamin D’s role in gut health. Health-care providers often recommend meeting your vitamin D requirements through food rather than sun exposure.”
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • “A new form of tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy, a form of personalized cancer immunotherapy, dramatically improved the treatment’s effectiveness in patients with metastatic gastrointestinal cancers, according to results of a clinical trial led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The findings, published April 1, 2025 in Nature Medicineoffer hope that this therapy could be used to treat a variety of solid tumors, which has so far eluded researchers developing cell-based therapies.”
  • Health Day informs us,
    • “Surgery might not be needed in breast cancer patients whose tumors are wiped out by chemotherapy and radiation therapy
    • “31 women who had surgery after successful chemo and radiation treatment remained cancer-free five years later
    • “As many as 60% of early-stage breast cancers are completely eliminated by chemo and radiation prior to surgery, researchers noted.”
  • Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, discusses “How to keep your memory sharp as you age. Simple habits can reduce your risk of memory loss and dementia — and slow cognitive decline.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “A new blood-based test reflected Alzheimer’s tau tangle pathology.
    • “The assay measured a new plasma tau species known as endogenously cleaved MTBR-tau243.
    • “The test distinguished various stages of Alzheimer’s and separated it from non-Alzheimer’s tauopathies.” * * *
    • “This blood test clearly identifies Alzheimer’s tau tangles, which is our best biomarker measure of Alzheimer’s symptoms and dementia,” [Dr. Randall] Bateman said in a statement. The test also provides a good indication about whether a patient’s symptoms are due to Alzheimer’s or another disorder, he noted.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Hims & Hers is expanding its weight-loss offering on its telehealth platform with the addition of Eli Lilly’s LLY  Zepbound prescription and generic liraglutide.” * * *
    • “The telehealth-consultation platform on Tuesday said its aim is to bring customers more treatment options that best suit their needs.
    • “We’ve now expanded that choice even further by adding access to generic liraglutide and branded tirzepatide through our platform,” the company said.
    • “Hims & Hers’ platform already offers weight-loss brands including Novo Nordisk’s NOVO.B Ozempic and Wegovy.
    • The company said it plans to continue expanding its weight loss offering to deliver a more personalized experience to its customer base.
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Eli Lilly is broadening its direct-to-consumer approach by partnering with a digital health company, Noom, which is focused on weight management. 
    • “The collaboration connects Noom users with Eli Lilly’s pharmacy provider, GiftHealth, to facilitate access to Zepbound single-dose vials for individuals with a prescription, according to a March 31 Noom news release. 
    • “The integration also allows users to track prescription fill statuses and shipping dates within an app. Eli Lilly’s decision to offer Zepbound in a single-dose vial format for cash-paying patients is part of a broader effort to increase access to the weight loss drug.”
  • and
    • “Durham, N.C.-based Duke University Health System has completed its $284 million acquisition of Lake Norman Regional Medical Center and related businesses in Mooresville, N.C., from subsidiaries of Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems.
    • “Duke finalized the acquisition April 1. The 123-bed acute care hospital will be renamed Duke Health Lake Norman Hospital, according to a Duke Health news release.
    • “This is an exciting day for Duke Health and the Lake Norman team,” DUHS CEO Craig Albanese, MD, said in the release. “We have a bright future ahead and look forward to bringing the excellence and innovation of Duke Health to enhance the care offered at Duke Health Lake Norman Hospital and clinics.” 
  • Modern Healthcare relates,
    • “Novant Health, with MedQuest Associates, has signed an agreement to acquire 18 OrthoCarolina imaging centers in the Carolinas.  
    • “The deal, which closed March 31, involves 13 locations in the Charlotte region in North Carolina, three locations in the Winston-Salem region in North Carolina and two locations in South Carolina. MedQuest, which is owned by Novant, will manage day-to-day operations at the sites, according to a Tuesday news release.
    • “Financial details of the deal were not disclosed. 
    • “Winston-Salem-based Novant operates more than 900 care locations in the Carolinas, including 19 hospitals, about 750 physician clinics and other outpatient facilities. MedQuest operates more than 50 outpatient centers and mobile radiology units.”

Weekend Update

Texas bluebonnets now blooming in central Texas

From Washington, DC,

  • On April 3, 2025, at 10 am, ET, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee will hold a confirmation hearing for Scott Kupor, the President’s nominee for the position of OPM Director. The FEHBlog looks forward to Mr. Kupor’s confirmation.
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Over three dozen healthcare associations and organizations penned a letter this week calling on House and Senate leaders for action on a bill bolstering foreign-born physician recruitment to underserved regions.
    • “The letters—which include the American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges as signatories—speak to the Conrad 30 Waiver Program and its role in alleviating the nation’s worsening clinical workforce shortage.
    • “It allows foreign students who come to the U.S. for medical training immediately begin practicing in the U.S. by foregoing visa requirements that would force them to return to their home country for at least two years. In exchange, program participants are required to work full-time for at least three years in a medically underserved community.” * * *
    • “A pair of bills introduced in the House and Senate late last month and referred to their respective judiciary committees would reauthorize and “make necessary updates to strengthen the program,” the groups said.”
  • CMS is holding a virtual town hall meeting on April 30, 2025, from 10 am to 3 pm ET “for clinicians and researchers as well as other interested parties, such as patient advocacy organizations, patients, and caregivers, to share input relevant to the clinical considerations related to drugs selected for the second cycle of negotiations [under the Inflation Reduction Act].”

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “President Trump can once again fire a key appointee who hears appeals of firings and suspensions of federal employees, putting the board on which she sits at risk of losing its functionality as the administration is pushing out large swaths of the federal workforce. 
    • “Cathy Harris, a Democrat nominated to the Merit Systems Protection Board by President Biden, was fired by Trump last month but quickly won reinstatement from a district judge. On Friday, a panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a 2-1 decision paused the lower court’s decision and said Trump could fire Harris. 
    • “The decision also applied to Gwynne Wilcox, a member of the National Labor Relations Board who Trump had fired, and a district court also reinstated. 
    • “If Harris is removed, MSPB would be left without a quorum. From 2017 to 2022, the board also lacked a quorum, which created a 3,500-case backlog that was only just recently eliminated. Due to an interim final rule established that same year, MSPB can conduct some actions without a quorum, though it cannot issue final decisions appealed to its central board.
    • “Zac Kurz, an MSPB spokesman, confirmed Friday evening that that the central board no longer has a quorum. While regional administrative judges can still issue initial rulings, the central board can no longer hear appeals of those rulings.”  

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “As many as one in five people — an estimated 64 million in the United States — have elevated levels of a tiny particle in their blood. It can greatly increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes.
    • “But few know about it, and almost no doctors test for it, because there was not much to be done. Diet does not help. Neither does exercise. There have been no drugs.
    • “But in the near future, that may change.
    • “On Sunday [today], cardiologists announced that an experimental drug made by Eli Lilly, lepodisiran, could lower levels of the particle, Lp(a), by 94 percent with a single injection. The effects lasted for six months and there were no significant side effects.
    • “But it is not yet confirmed that reducing Lp(a) levels also reduces the risk of heart attacks and strokes. That awaits large clinical trials that are now underway.
    • “The Lilly research was presented Sunday at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology and simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine. At least four other companies are also testing innovative drugs that block the body’s production of Lp(a), a mix of lipids and a protein.
    • “Dr. David Maron, a preventive cardiologist at Stanford not involved in the Lilly research, said the evidence of profound and long-lasting reduction in lipoprotein levels with lepodisiran was “thrilling.”
    • “Dr. Martha Gulati, a preventive cardiologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center also not involved in the trial, said the study was “really elegant.”
  • and
    • “Many people use a smartwatch to monitor their cardiovascular health, often by counting the number of steps they take over the course of their day or recording their average daily heart rate. Now, researchers are proposing an enhanced metric, which combines the two using basic math: Divide your average daily heart rate by your daily average number of steps.
    • “The resulting ratio — the daily heart rate per step, or DHRPS — provides insight into how efficiently the heart is working, according to a study conducted by researchers at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University and published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
    • “The study found that people whose hearts work less efficiently, by this metric, were more prone to various diseases, including Type II diabetes, hypertension, heart failure, stroke, coronary atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction.
    • “It’s a measure of inefficiency,” said Zhanlin Chen, a third-year medical student at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University and lead author of the new study; his coauthors included several Feinberg faculty physicians. “It looks at how badly your heart is doing,” he added. “You’re just going to have to do a tiny bit of math.”
  • NPR Shots tells us,
    • “As a measles outbreak in West Texas and New Mexico continues to grow, and other states report outbreaks of their own, some pediatricians across the U.S. say they are seeing a new trend among concerned parents: vaccine enthusiasm.
    • “Our call center was inundated with calls about the MMR [measles, mumps, rubella] vaccine,” says Dr. Shannon Fox-Levine, a pediatrician in Broward County, Fla. She says parents are asking if their child is up to date on their vaccinations. Or “should they get another vaccine? Should they get an extra one? Can they get it early?” * * *
    • “Interest in vaccinations has ramped up ahead of the spring break travel season, says Dr. Susan Sirota, a primary care pediatrician in the Chicago area.
    • “We have many patients calling us because they are traveling to either Texas or places near Texas, or states where they suspect that vaccination rates are lower than we have in Illinois,” Sirota says. “Many families are requesting early MMR [vaccines].” 
  • MedPage Today lets us know, “Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) continued to hold its own against surgery for younger patients at low surgical risk, with the Evolut Low Risk trial now halfway to its goal of 10-year follow-up.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “GSK said on Tuesday that it is studying a group of more than a million older adults in the UK to examine whether its best-selling shingles vaccine lowers the risk of dementia.
    • “The British drugmaker is using the health data of some 1.4 million people, aged 65 to 66, some of whom received its Shingrix shot and some who did not. 
    • “GSK’s chief scientific officer Tony Wood said the data, from the state-run National Health Service’s (NHS) large database, is a unique set of information because due to a tweak in the UK’s shingles immunization program there is effectively a naturally randomized trial already taking place.”
  • and
    • “High-dose oral cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) supplementation significantly reduced disease activity in patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) suggestive of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the randomized, controlled D-Lay MS trial.
    • “Combined with data from previous studies on vitamin D as an add-on therapy, the results of the D-Lay MS trial, which show a stronger effect of vitamin D in patients with vitamin D deficiency compared to others, strongly suggest that patients with vitamin D deficiency should be supplemented, regardless of whether they are already under disease-modifying therapy,” Eric Thouvenot, MD, PhD, University Hospital of Nimes, Neurology Department, Nîmes, France, told Medscape Medical News.
    • “The study was published online on March 10 in JAMA.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Health Care Service Corp. was limited to selling Blue Cross and Blue Shield policies, including Medicare Advantage plans, in Illinois, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas before the deal.
    • “After the Cigna acquisition, Health Care Service Corp. has a much bigger footprint and can offer Medicare Advantage in 25 more states and the District of Columbia, Part D nationally, and Medigap in 48 states and the District of Columbia. The insurer now counts 830,000 Medicare Advantage members, about four times as many as prior to the Cigna purchase.” * * *
    • “Moving up a weight class means facing dominant for-profit Medicare Advantage carriers such as UnitedHealth Group subsidiary UnitedHealthcare, Humana and CVS Health subsidiary Aetna head on. Those three insurers collectively cover 57% of Medicare Advantage enrollees, according to an analysis of Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services data the investment bank Stephens published in February.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “Moody’s has downgraded Health Care Service Corporation’s insurance financial strength rating to A3 from A2 following the company’s acquisition of Cigna’s Medicare business on March 19.
    • “Moody’s cited likely challenges with the integration of the MA business into the company’s primarily commercial insurance operations, along with ongoing headwinds within the MA industry more broadly.  
    • “Another concern is the limited experience the company has with making and integrating major acquisitions in the recent past,” analysts wrote. “The company expects to invest an estimated $1 billion over the next two years into updating systems and for working capital to ensure its success, but this may prove to be insufficient.”
  • Kauffman Hall explains how health systems can create a sustainable approach to corporate shared services.

Friday Report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Fierce Healthcare lets us know,
    • Bipartisan lawmakers have introduced a bill that aims to more closely align Medicare insurers’ prior authorization denials with medical need, as determined by board-certified specialist physicians.
    • The Reducing Medically Unnecessary Delays in Care Act of 2025 was introduced in the House Thursday by Rep. Mark Green, M.D., R-Tennessee, and referred to committee. It is a reintroduction of similar bills brought by the lawmaker in 2023 and 2022.
    • Green—along with Reps Greg Murphy, M.D., R-North Carolina, and Kim Schrier, M.D., D-Washington, who also backed the bill—said the legislation will help streamline necessary care and reduce administrative burden and burnout among providers.
  • Roll Call tells us,
    • “President Donald Trump on Friday threw his support behind the funding fix needed to allow the District of Columbia’s government to avoid $1.1 billion in budget cuts squeezed in the remaining half of the fiscal year, all but ensuring House passage of legislation the Senate passed two weeks ago.
    • “The full-year stopgap spending law, drafted by House Republicans, did not include the typical provision that would allow the D.C. government to tap into its fiscal 2025 budget for operating costs. This would force D.C. to go back to the previous year’s funding levels for the remainder of the fiscal year, which runs through Sept. 30, which local officials say would require steep cuts in critical services like law enforcement and education.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Peter Marks, the top Food and Drug Administration official who oversaw vaccines, gene therapies, and the blood supply, resigned Friday after being told by Trump administration officials he would be fired if he did not step down, according to people familiar with the situation.”
  • and
    • “President Trump has selected Sara Carter, a conservative journalist and Fox News contributor, as the nation’s next drug czar.” * * *
    • “If confirmed by the Senate, Carter would oversee the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, an executive office housed across the street from the West Wing that makes policy recommendations and coordinates efforts between various federal agencies focused on substance use, both from a law enforcement and public health perspective.” 
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. today joined West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey for a press conference at the St. Joseph School in Martinsburg, WV, to celebrate the signing of new legislation banning seven types of harmful food dyes from school lunches beginning August 2025. Governor Morrisey announced at the event that he intends to request a waiver to restrict taxpayer funds from being used to purchase soda through the SNAP program.”

From the judicial front,

  • Healthcare Dive points out,
    • “The Department of Justice agrees that Claritev, formerly known as MultiPlan, conspired with health insurers to underpay doctors for medical care, according to a statement of interest filed by antitrust regulators on Wednesday in the consolidated lawsuit from providers against the cost management firm.
    • “Lawyers for the providers said the DOJ’s position affirms the validity of their case, while Claritev reiterated that it believes the lawsuits are without merit.
    • “The DOJ’s interest in the case signals antitrust regulators, including in the Trump administration, are still closely scrutinizing exchanges of potentially sensitive information between companies, along with their use of pricing algorithms.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “After much delay, Novartis has finally won a key FDA go-ahead for Pluvicto, opening up the radioligand therapy to a much broader prostate cancer population.
    • “The new approval, which triples Pluvicto’s eligible patient population, allows the radiopharmaceutical to treat PSMA-positive metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) before taxane-based chemotherapy, Novartis said Friday. Patients will have to have been treated with an androgen receptor pathway inhibitor (ARPI) to be considered.
    • “Pre-chemo mCRPC represents the most important indication in Novartis’ plan for Pluvicto to achieve more than $5 billion in peak sales. Initially cleared by the FDA in 2022 in the post-chemo setting, Pluvicto’s revenue is currently annualizing at about $1.5 billion based on its most recent quarterly number.”
  • and
    • Over the last three years, the FDA has approved six new hemophilia drugs, including three gene therapies.
    • Into this crowded treatment landscape comes another new medicine as the FDA has signed off on Sanofi’s Qfitlia (fitusiran), which sets itself apart as the only treatment for all types of hemophilia.
    • Not only is Qfitlia for those with hemophilia A and B, but unlike most treatments for the disorder, it also can be used by patients regardless of their inhibitor status.
  • Per an FDA press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted marketing authorization to Visby Medical for the Visby Medical Women’s Sexual Health Test. This is the first diagnostic test for chlamydia, gonorrhea and trichomoniasis that can be purchased without a prescription and performed entirely at home. The test is intended for females with or without symptoms and delivers results in approximately 30 minutes.
    • “Home tests can give people information about their health from the privacy of their home. This can be particularly important for sexual health tests for which patients may experience fear or anxiety, possibly resulting in delayed diagnosis or treatment,” said Courtney Lias, Ph.D., director of the Office of In Vitro Diagnostic Devices in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. “Expanding access to tests for sexually transmitted infections is an important step toward earlier and increased diagnosis, which can result in increased treatment and reduced spread of infection.” * * *
    • “This announcement follows last year’s authorization of the first at-home syphilis test, as well as the authorization of the first diagnostic test for chlamydia and gonorrhea with at-home sample collection in 2023, which was the first FDA-authorized test with at-home sample collection for any sexually transmitted infection other than HIV.”
  • Per Managed Health Executive,
    • “Fresenius announced today [March 27, 2025] that the FDA has approved the biologics licensing applications (BLA) for denosumab biosimilars Conexxence (denosumab-bnht) and Bomyntra (denosumab-bnht), according to a news release. Prolia, the reference product for Conexxence, and Xgeva, the reference product for Bomyntra, were both developed by Amgen. As a result of a global settlement between Fresenius and Amgen, both biosimilars are expected to launch in the United States in mid 2025 and in the second half of 2025 in Europe.
    • “Bomyntra and Conexxence are the fourth pair of denosumab biosimilars. Other Prolia biosimilars include Jubbonti, Ospomyv and Stoboclo. Additional Xgeva biosimilars include Wyost, Xbryk and Osenvelt.
    • “Although the active drug ingredient in Conexxence and and Bomyntra is deosumab, they have different indications.
    • ‘Conexxence is approved for patients at high risk for fractures, including osteoporosis patients and patients undergoing cancer treatments that affect bone density. It comes as a 60 mg/mL single-dose prefilled injection to be administered every six months via subcutaneous injection. Adverse reactions varied by indication.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity is declining nationally to low levels. Wastewater levels and emergency department visits are at low levels, and laboratory percent positivity is stable. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are highest in older adults and emergency department visits are also elevated in young children.
      • “There is still time to benefit from getting your recommended immunizations to reduce your risk of illness this season, especially severe illness and hospitalization.
      • “CDC expects the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine to work well for currently circulating variants. There are many effective tools to prevent spreading COVID-19 or becoming seriously ill.
    • “Influenza
      • “Seasonal influenza activity continues to decline; however, CDC expects several more weeks of flu activity.
      • “Additional information about current influenza activity can be found at: Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report | CDC
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity is declining in most areas of the country. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are highest in children and hospitalizations are elevated among older adults in some areas.
    • “Vaccination
      • “Vaccination coverage with influenza and COVID-19 vaccines is low among U.S. adults and children. Vaccination coverage with RSV vaccines remains low among U.S. adults. Many children and adults lack protection from respiratory virus infections provided by vaccines.”
  • The American Hospital Association News adds,
    • “There are 483 confirmed cases of measles in 19 states across the country, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency said 93% of the cases are outbreak-associated. The vaccination status of 97% of cases is classified as “unvaccinated or unknown.”
  • NBC News adds,
    • “We are experiencing an extremely concerning decline in measles vaccination in the very group most vulnerable to the disease,” said Benjamin Rader, a computational epidemiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and the author of a recent study that looked at children’s vaccination rates.” * * *
    • “Rader said that the true MMR vaccination rate among young children can be misrepresented by publicly reported numbers, because MMR surveillance is drawn from older children who are already in kindergarten.
    • “Younger children under the age of 5 are not fully captured in surveillance data because they have not reached kindergarten age — although a 2021 estimate from the CDC notes a subset of younger children, namely those who received at least one MMR dose by 24 months, were 90.6% vaccinated for measles.
    • “In Rader’s study, published online in February in the American Journal of Public Health, his team surveyed approximately 20,000 parents of children under 5 from July 2023 through April 2024, finding only 71.8% reported that their children received at least 1 dose of MMR vaccine — much lower than CDC estimates.
    • “The researchers used a digital surveillance platform that the CDC has used to estimate things like at-home Covid testing, he said.  
    • “Rader downplayed the difference in numbers between his findings and the CDC data, emphasizing that, while accurate, the CDC data does not provide a complete picture — despite its best intentions.
    • Dr. Scott Roberts, associate medical director of infection prevention at the Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, who was not part of the research, called the findings “worrisome.”   
  • Health Day relates,
    • “Tobacco control measures like anti-smoking campaigns and cigarette taxes have prevented nearly 4 million lung cancer deaths during the past five decades, a new American Cancer Society study estimates.
    • “More than 3.8 million lung cancer deaths were averted due to substantial reductions in smoking, gaining a little more than 76 million years of extra life among Americans, researchers say in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.
    • “The substantial estimated numbers of averted lung cancer deaths and person-years of life gained highlight the remarkable effect of progress against smoking on reducing premature mortality from lung cancer,” lead investigator Dr. Farhad Islami, the ACS’ senior scientific director for cancer disparity research, said in a news release. 
    • “In fact, the number of averted lung cancer deaths accounts for roughly one-half of all cancer deaths that were prevented in recent decades, researchers said.
    • “However,” Islami added, “Despite these findings, lung cancer is still the leading cause of cancer death in the United States, and smoking-attributable morbidity and mortality from other cancers or diseases remain high.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “There were 69 nonfatal fentanyl exposures in 2015 and 893 in 2023.
    • “Two-thirds of adolescents who were exposed to fentanyl used it intentionally.” * * *
    • “According to the researchers, nearly 39.4% of all overdoses and 65.7% of those among adolescents involved intentional misuse or abuse. In contrast, 81.7% of overdoses among younger children were reported to be unintentional.
    • “It was surprising that a large portion of adolescents used fentanyl intentionally,” Palamar said. “We often think of pediatric exposures to fentanyl as being unintentional.”

From the AI front,

  • Per an NSF news release,
    • “Powered exoskeletons that enable humans to move faster or lift heavy objects more easily have been envisioned for decades. In science fiction, advanced exoskeletons such as the power loader in the movie “Aliens” or Marvel Comics’ Iron Man’s suit provide the wearer with superhuman capabilities with nearly zero limitations.
    • “There are exoskeletons in use today, but current technology falls short of the vision laid out in science fiction, and widespread use of exoskeletons is hampered because to work properly, a suit must be tested and adapted to work with each user individually, a complicated and lengthy process.
    • “Now, engineering researchers supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation have made a breakthrough, creating a new method that takes advantage of artificial intelligence and computer simulations to improve the process of enabling users and exoskeletons to work together. This framework is compatible with a variety of assistive devices and could improve the lives of millions of able-bodied and mobility-impaired individuals.
    • “This marks a major advance in exoskeleton engineering by eliminating one of its biggest hurdles: individualized calibration,” said Alexander Leonessa, program director for the NSF Mind, Machine and Motor Nexus program. “Using AI and human-robot simulations, the team developed a scalable, adaptable system that assists a wide range of users without lengthy setup. It is a key step toward making exoskeletons practical, versatile and accessible for both industry and mobility-impaired individuals – smart, human-centered engineering at its best.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • FiercePharma reports,
    • “A rival bidder has emerged to acquire struggling gene therapy specialist bluebird bio.
    • Ayrmid has offered to buy bluebird for $4.5-apiece upfront, plus a one-time contingent value right (CVR) of $6.84 per share tied to a sales milestone, bluebird said Friday.
    • “The upfront tag is 50% higher than the $3-per-share selling price that bluebird has previously penned with Carlyle and SK Capital Partners. That private equity duo’s buyout offer also includes a $6.84-per-share CVR.
    • “For now, bluebird’s board has not changed its mind and the company remains bound by the original merger agreement. But it’s willing to look at the new unsolicited non-binding written proposal.
    • “Consistent with its fiduciary duties, the bluebird Board of Directors is carefully reviewing the Ayrmid proposal in consultation with its legal and financial advisors,” the Massachusetts biopharma said Friday.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Insight Hospital and Medical Center Trumbull and Hillside Rehabilitation Hospital, both in Warren, Ohio, paused all inpatient, outpatient and emergency room services March 27 due to ongoing bankruptcy and financial disruptions from former owner Dallas-based Steward Health Care.
    • “Tom Connelly, local president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, told NBC affiliate WFMJ March 28 that the hospitals also laid off the director of nursing, the assistant director of nursing, the administrative secretary and the human resources coordinator.
    • “A spokesperson for Insight Health refuted the claims to Becker’s and denied upper management layoffs.
    • “Existing patients at both Insight hospitals are being transferred, with appointments being canceled to protect patient safety, an Insight Health spokesperson said in a March 27 statement shared with Becker’s.
  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “Enrollment in provider-sponsored Medicare Advantage plans declined by nearly 60,000 members for 2025, according to a report from Chartis. 
    • “The healthcare consulting firm published an analysis of CMS Medicare Advantage enrollment data March 25. 
    • “Overall, Medicare Advantage plans gained 1.3 million new enrollees, a smaller growth rate than the program has seen in previous years. 
    • “Kaiser Permanente saw the largest membership growth for 2025 among provider-sponsored plans, gaining 58,000 new members. Trinity Health and UPMC Health Plan each added 11,000 MA members.” 

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call lets us know,
    • “Senate Majority Leader John Thune told GOP senators Wednesday that a compromise budget resolution could hit the floor for a “vote-a-rama” as soon as next week, which would allow the House to adopt it the following week before the two-week April recess.
    • “This accelerated time frame, if both chambers can adhere to it, would let Republicans hit the ground running after the recess to write the “big, beautiful” budget reconciliation bill that President Donald Trump wants.
    • “Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has set an informal deadline of Memorial Day to send the measure to Trump, including a massive tax cut package, more money for defense and border security, domestic energy incentives, a debt limit increase and trims to mandatory spending.
    • “As recently as Tuesday, Thune, R-S.D., had been telling colleagues that Senate consideration could slip to the week of April 7, which likely wouldn’t give the House time to act before the recess.
    • “But discussions made a big leap on Wednesday with a new strategy: provide a different, lower set of spending cut targets for Senate committees than their House counterparts. Under this scenario, the final budget resolution adopted by both chambers would “instruct” House and Senate committees differently.” * * *
    • “Both sets of instructions would be in the final budget resolution, and then the two chambers could hammer out differences later on what the actual reconciliation details look like.
    • “What needs to ultimately be reconciled is the final bill. The resolution’s looking different in two chambers, I don’t think anybody’s getting worked up about that,” Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., said Wednesday. “But eventually everybody does kind of need to unlock the process, which is what the resolution is for.”
    • “The working theory is that eventually what matters for “Byrd rule” enforcement in the Senate is whether that chamber’s reconciliation instructions are adhered to.”
  • and
    • “President Donald Trump on Thursday announced he would withdraw the nomination of New York Rep. Elise Stefanik to be U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, citing a need for Republicans to keep her seat amid narrow margins in the House. 
    • “With a very tight Majority, I don’t want to take a chance on anyone else running for Elise’s seat,” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. “The people love Elise and, with her, we have nothing to worry about come Election Day. There are others that can do a good job at the United Nations.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The AHA March 27 voiced opposition to the Physician Led and Rural Access to Quality Care Act (H.R. 2191), a bill that would lift the ban on the establishment of physician-owned hospitals in certain rural areas and permit the unfettered expansion of POHs nationwide, regardless of location. In place since 2010, current law includes an exceptions process that allows existing POHs to expand if they accept Medicaid patients and are located in areas where beds are needed. 
    • “By performing the highest-paying procedures for the best-insured patients, physician-owners inflate health care costs and drain essential resources from community hospitals, which depend on a balance of services and patients to provide indispensable treatment, such as behavioral health and trauma care,” AHA wrote in comments to Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Va., the bill’s author. “By increasing the presence of these self-referral arrangements, H.R. 2191 would only further destabilize community care.” 
  • Per a news release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced a dramatic restructuring in accordance with President Trump’s Executive Order, “Implementing the President’s ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ Workforce Optimization Initiative.”
    • “The restructuring will address this and serve multiple goals without impacting critical services. First, it will save taxpayers $1.8 billion per year through a reduction in workforce of about 10,000 full-time employees who are part of this most recent transformation. When combined with HHS’ other efforts, including early retirement and Fork in the Road, the restructuring results in a total downsizing from 82,000 to 62,000 full-time employees.
    • “Secondly, it will streamline the functions of the Department. Currently, the 28 divisions of the HHS contain many redundant units. The restructuring plan will consolidate them into 15 new divisions, including a new Administration for a Healthy America, or AHA, and will centralize core functions such as Human Resources, Information Technology, Procurement, External Affairs, and Policy. Regional offices will be reduced from 10 to 5.
    • “Third, the overhaul will implement the new HHS priority of ending America’s epidemic of chronic illness by focusing on safe, wholesome food, clean water, and the elimination of environmental toxins. These priorities will be reflected in the reorganization of HHS.
    • “Finally, the restructuring will improve Americans’ experience with HHS by making the agency more responsive and efficient, while ensuring that Medicare, Medicaid, and other essential health services remain intact.” * * *
    • For more detailed information, please visit our fact sheet.
  • The HHS reorganization is worth a shot in view of the thirty yearlong federal budget outlook from the Congressional Budget Office.
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, offers federal retirement advice in these uncertain times.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Medpage Today informs us,
  • and
    • “A flea-borne disease that was once largely eradicated from the U.S. may be making a resurgence, CDC researchers said during a clinician-focused call on Thursday.
    • Murine typhus became so rare after public health efforts against it in the 1940s that it eventually stopped being a nationally notifiable disease.
    • “But now, cases are on the rise in two states that actively monitor the disease — Texas and California — and the illness may be going undiagnosed, experts said.”
  • Per a National Cancer Institute news release,
    • “Scientists have long been exploring ways to kill cancer cells by starving them of the nutrients they need to survive. A new study suggests that genetically modified fat cells could help researchers realize this goal.
    • “In the study, researchers genetically engineered white fat cells—the most common type of fat in the body—to aggressively consume nutrients such as glucose and fatty acids. When the engineered fat cells were implanted near tumors in mice, the tumors grew more slowly than tumors in mice without the engineered cells.
    • “The approach slowed the growth of cancer in mice even when the engineered fat cells were implanted far from a tumor, the researchers reported in Nature Biotechnology on February 4. 
    •  “We believe the engineered cells are outcompeting tumors for essential nutrients, suppressing the proliferation of cancer cells,” said study leader Nadav Ahituv, Ph.D., director of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Institute for Human Genetics. “The findings suggest that engineered fat cells could be a new form of cellular therapy.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “Survivors [of metastatic breast cancer] who participated in [telephone-delivered] acceptance and commitment therapy reported less fatigue interference with functioning.
    • “Researchers are studying the approach for people with advanced gastrointestinal cancer.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “Nonprofit hospitals’ 2024 financial performances are beating the prior year’s tough numbers, though even the stronger organizations remain “well below pre-pandemic levels,” Fitch Ratings said.
    • “In a Thursday brief describing the financial profiles of its rated nonprofit hospitals, the agency attributed the year-to-year improvements to stronger revenues and volumes as well as slightly mitigated, but still pressured, labor spending.
    • “Fitch said the median operating margin among hospitals with early fiscal year ends (often June 30) was 1.2%, a flip from the prior year’s -0.5%. The agency said it expects the calendar year 2024 median margin for the remainder of its rated hospitals “will at least be in line” with the former group.”
    • “Persistent” labor pressures continue to push base salary and wage expenses upward by a median 6.9% among the rated hospitals, which Fitch said “would have been even higher without the sector’s ongoing efforts to recruit and retain talent, streamline operations and optimize supply chains.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “Doylestown (Pa.) Health will officially join the University of Pennsylvania Health System on April 1, marking a significant expansion of Penn Medicine’s reach into Philadelphia’s northern suburbs. 
    • “The transaction follows regulatory reviews and approvals from the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office and the Federal Trade Commission.
    • “Under the new structure, Doylestown Health and its affiliates will be rebranded as Penn Medicine Doylestown Health. The integration combines one of the country’s leading academic health systems with a regional health system.” 
  • and
    • “Four blockbuster GLP-1 medications are expected to be among the 10 best-selling drugs in 2026, accounting for $66.8 billion in global sales, according to market research company Statista
    • “Statista predicts Ozempic will yield $22.3 billion in 2026, followed by Mounjaro with $19.8 billion, Wegovy with $13.4 billion and Zepbound with $11.3 billion.” 
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “When Florida Blue wanted its call center employees to demonstrate greater emotional intelligence when dealing with customers, the nonprofit health insurance company enlisted a tutor incapable of emotion.
    • “A generative artificial intelligence, or genAI, chatbot instructs 30 Florida Blue customer service representatives on how to behave like human beings when interacting with other human beings. The chatbot guides workers on human behaviors, such as when to slow their speech, when to hasten a call to its conclusion and what to recommend to policyholders. The company plans to expand this pilot program to its entire 1,600-person call center team this year.
    • “A lot of the time, people carry emotion into calls with health insurers. When you’re upset, it just comes out. One of the prompts is to remind the advocate, ‘Hey, this member appears to be stressed. Make sure you’re pausing and listening to them,’” said Anne Hoverson, vice president of digital transformation at Florida Blue, a subsidiary of Guidewell.
    • “Insurance companies already used genAI for processing claimspredicting clinical needs and performing administrative functions, but this latest trend is different, said Josh Streets, a senior consultant at the International Customer Management Institute, which advises business on call centers.”
  • and
    • “GE HealthCare announced Thursday the commercial launch of Flyrcado, its PET imaging agent that assesses blood flow to the heart muscle, in select U.S. markets.
    • “The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services granted Flyrcado pass-through status starting April 1, allowing separate payments for the imaging agent and the PET/CT scan in hospital outpatient settings.
    • “In late September, the company announced that Flyrcado received Food and Drug Administration approval to detect coronary artery disease. It provides more accurate diagnostics than SPECT imaging, the current standard in cardiac nuclear medicine imaging, according to GE HealthCare.
    • “Since Flyrcado has a half-life of 109 minutes, which is significantly longer than other similar PET imaging agents, healthcare facilities don’t need to produce it on-site. Instead, it can be manufactured at off-site pharmacies and delivered as needed.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • It turns out that at yesterday’s markup meeting, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee did clear HR 2193, the FEHB Protection Act of 2025, for floor consideration, along with the other bills considered during the markup.
  • The Senate confirmed James Bishop to be Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget by a 53-43 vote.
  • CMS today released a “Revised Final 2026 Actuarial Value (AV) Calculator Methodology.”
    • “The only changes that are being made to the Final 2026 AV Calculator as part of this Revised Final 2026 AV Calculator are the following:
      • “The de minimis range for bronze, silver, gold and platinum plans was expanded to +2
      • percentage points to -4 percentage points;
      • “The de minimis range for expanded bronze plans was expanded to +5 percentage points
      • to -4 percentage points;
      • “The de minimis range for income-based silver CSR plans was expanded to +1 percentage
      • points to -1 percentage points;
      • “The MOOP limit was updated to $10,600; and
      • “The AV Calculator version number was updated, and the AV Calculator label was
      • updated to “Revised Final 2026 AV Calculator”.
    • “These changes do not affect the AV calculation methodology. All AV calculations are the same
    • in both the Final 2026 AV Calculator and the Revised Final 2026 AV Calculator.”
  • The Congressional Research Service has summarized the federal requirements on private health insurance plans.
  • Per the American Hospital Association (“AHA”) News,
    • “The FBI March 26 advised that, after extensive investigation and intelligence review, they have not identified any specific credible threat targeted against hospitals in any U.S. city. The FBI advised if they receive credible threat information, they will immediately advise any identified potential targets and, if appropriate, alert the broader health care sector through the AHA, the Health-ISAC (Information Sharing and Analysis Center) and other appropriate channels. 
    • “On March 18, the AHA and Health-ISAC received multiple reports from the field regarding a public social media post alleging active planning of a coordinated, multi-city terrorist attack targeting hospitals in the coming weeks. 
    • “Out of an abundance of caution, the AHA and Health-ISAC notified the field of the potential threat, indicating that no further information was available to either corroborate the threat or dismiss it as not credible. The AHA and Health-ISAC today distributed an updated bulletin to members with the latest update from the FBI.” 

From the judicial front,

  • Bloomberg Law informs us,
    • “The US Supreme Court suggested [during an oral argument today] it’s likely to uphold a federal program that uses more than $8 billion in fees imposed on phone bills to subsidize the cost of telecom services for poor people, rural residents, schools and libraries.
    • “Hearing arguments in Washington on the decades-old Universal Service Fund, some conservative justices voiced concern that Congress had unconstitutionally handed off its taxing power to the Federal Communications Commission without imposing sufficient limits [also known as the non-delegation doctrine].”

In Food and Drug Administration news,

  • BioPharma Dive relates,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved the first treatment for the insatiable hunger associated with the rare disease Prader-Willi syndrome, a long-awaited decision that follows an unorthodox pitch from the drug’s developer.
    • “The agency on cleared Vykat XR, from biotechnology company Soleno Therapeutics, for this hyperphagia that’s caused by Prader-WilliTreatment has specifically been approved for adults and children at least four years of age. Soleno hasn’t yet disclosed the drug’s list price. 
    • “The approval is a milestone for research into a disease that’s proven difficult to target. Prader-Willi affects an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 people in the U.S. and causes multiple cognitive and behavioral symptoms.”
  • Per a National Cancer Institute (NCI) news release,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has given an accelerated approval to zenocutuzumab (Bizengri), making it the first drug that targets tumors with a very rare genetic alteration called an NRG1 fusion. Under the approval, zenocutuzumab can be used to treat people with pancreatic or non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumors have an NRG1 fusion and whose disease has gotten worse despite standard treatments.
    • “The approval was based on the results of a clinical trial in which one-third of patients treated with zenocutuzumab had sustained tumor shrinkage of at least 30% that lasted a median of 11 months. Most of the patients in the study had either NSCLC or pancreatic cancer.
    • “This is a patient population that has a very high unmet need,” said the study’s lead investigator, Alison Schram, M.D., of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. “This approval gives these patients, who have very few effective therapeutic options, a new treatment option.”
    • “Because it’s an accelerated approval, Partner Therapeutics, which licensed zenocutuzumab from Merus, must conduct additional studies to confirm that the drug helps patients clinically, which can include helping them live longer than with other treatments.’

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • Measles cases in Kansas more than doubled in the last week, bringing the tally to 20, while another outbreak in Ohio has sickened 10 people, local public health officials reported on Wednesday.
    • There have been several large outbreaks in the United States this year, including one in West Texas that has spread to more than 320 people and hospitalized 40. Health officials have worried that the Texas outbreak may be seeding others.
    • More than 40 measles cases have been reported in New Mexico, and seven have been identified in Oklahoma. In both states, health officials said the infections were connected to the Texas outbreak.
    • In Kansas, the virus has mainly infected unvaccinated children in the southwest corner of the state. Genetic sequencing has suggested a link to the Texas and New Mexico outbreaks, state health officials told The New York Times on Wednesday.
  • Per the AHA News,
    • “A study published March 26 by the National Institutes of Health and the University of Oxford found that individuals who engaged in light and moderate-to-vigorous daily physical activity had a lower cancer risk than those with more a sedentary lifestyle. The study found that higher daily step counts, but not pace, was also associated with a lower cancer risk. In comparison to cancer risk for individuals taking 5,000 steps per day, risk was 11% lower for those taking 7,000 steps per day and 16% lower for those taking 9,000 steps per day. Risk reduction plateaued beyond 9,000 steps.”
  • This week’s Cancer Information Highlights from the NCI discuss “Quit Smoking | Metastatic Prostate Cancer | Kidney Cancer.”
  • The National Institute of Standards and Technology informs us,
    • “A rare but painful disorder can make it difficult for people to swallow food. The symptoms include weight loss and chest pain after eating. Scientists are working to better understand this condition, known as corkscrew esophagus, in hopes of finding more treatment or prevention options.
    • “We are working to contribute to that effort with an approach you may not associate with medical research. It involves math, physics and computer modeling.”
  • Medscape points out,
    • “In a recent final analysis of a phase 3 trial, the bivalent respiratory syncytial virus prefusion F (RSVpreF) vaccine [which are FDA approved] maintained high efficacy and a favorable safety profile against RSV-associated lower respiratory tract illness (RSV-LRTI) over two seasons in people aged ≥ 60 years.”
  • STAT News tells us, “Study suggests mRNA vaccine could make humans resistant to ticks that transmit Lyme bacteria. New tool shows how the human immune system responds to components of ‘tick cement.’”
    • “Ticks, once latched onto a fleshy target with their barbed, needle-like mouths, are ready for almost anything. They glue themselves to the skin using a complex, cement-like substance. And then, like a “little pharmacological company,” they dole out proteins to keep the blood flowing, make it relatively painless, and hamper any immune response that might reveal their parasitic presence, Yale University researcher Erol Fikrig says.
    • “It’s in those days of quiet blood-thirst that ticks pass along bacteria that causes conditions like Lyme disease, a growing problem driven in the U.S. by black-legged ticks (or Ixodes scapularis). Researchers have been trying for decades to understand just how the tiny tick is able to evade the human body’s defenses and pass along pathogens. 
    • “A new study by Fikrig and other researchers, published Wednesday in Science Translational Medicine, uses a powerful monitoring system to reveal how the human immune system is responsive to a litany of tick triggers — some of which might be leveraged to create a protective mRNA vaccine.” 
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Johnson & Johnson has produced the most convincing data to date that its combination of Rybrevant and Lazcluze could replace AstraZeneca’s Tagrisso as the new standard of care in first-line EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer—proof it could extend patients’ lives.
    • “The Rybrevant-Lazcluze combo significantly reduced the risk of death by 25% versus Tagrisso in patients with newly diagnosed advanced EGFR-mutated NSCLC, according to data from the phase 3 Mariposa trial presented at the European Lung Cancer Congress (ELCC) 2025.
    • “While the median overall survival time was not yet reached for the combo, investigators expect that the J&J regimen could offer at least an extra year of life versus Tagrisso, on which patients have logged a median 36.7 months of survival.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Fewer physicians are considering leaving the profession in 2025 than in 2024, according to a new survey from the Harris Poll and electronic health record provider Athenahealth.
    • “Part of physicians’ improved job satisfaction was driven by increased adoption of artificial intelligence, the researchers said. Fewer physicians reported the technology was over-hyped this year, and they saw the most promise in transcription services and capabilities.
    • “Still, physicians shared concerns about the fate of the industry long-term and only 3 in 10 physicians were optimistic about the direction of U.S. healthcare generally. Respondents were most concerned about interoperability challenges, their organization’s financial health and meeting regulatory requirements.”
  • Per a press release,
    • “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today posted its revised Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of sonpiretigene isteparvovec (Nanoscope Therapeutics) for the treatment of advanced retinitis pigmentosa.”
      • Key Clinical Findings
        • “For adults with advanced retinitis pigementosa and severe vision loss, ICER rated the current evidence on sonpiretigene isteparvovec as promising but inconclusive (“P/I”) due to concerns about durability of benefits and unknown short-term and long-term harms.
      • Key Cost-Effectiveness Findings
        • “Sonpiretigene isteparvovec has not yet been approved by the FDA for retinitis pigmentosa, and the manufacturers have not yet announced a US price for the therapy if approved. 
        • “ICER has calculated a health benefit price benchmark (HBPB) to be between $67,400 and $101,300 for treatment in one eye.”
  • The Brown & Brown consulting firm has posted an executive summary of its 2025 Employee Health and Benefits Strategy Survey.
  • Beckers Health IT survey notes,
    • “Amazon is testing a generative AI-powered health assistant, dubbed Health AI, on its website and mobile app, CNBC reported March 25.
    • “The chatbot is designed to answer health and wellness questions, suggest common care options for various medical needs, and recommend products. Some responses are marked with a “clinically verified” badge, indicating that the information has been reviewed by U.S.-based licensed clinicians, according to Amazon.
    • “In addition to providing health guidance, Health AI directs users to Amazon’s online pharmacy and clinical services from One Medical, the primary care provider Amazon acquired for $3.9 billion in 2022.”

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC,

  • Bloomberg Law tells us,
    • “The Senate voted to confirm Jay Bhattacharya, a Stanford University health economist and physician, to lead the National Institutes of Health. 
    • “Senators confirmed him Tuesday evening 53-47 on a party line vote.” 
    • “The Senate also confirmed Marty Makary, a surgeon at Johns Hopkins Medicine, to oversee the Food and Drug Administration. Unlike many of President Donald Trump’s nominees for health positions, a few Democrats chose to support Makary as well. The Senate confirmed him by a 56-44 vote.
  • The American Hospital News informs us,
    • “The Senate Finance Committee March 25 advanced Mehmet Oz’s nomination for administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services by a vote of 14-13. Oz, a doctor and former television show host, will soon be considered by the full Senate for confirmation.” 
  • Govexec relates,
    • “[The] House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Tuesday debated legislation that would set up a process for Congress to approve President Donald Trump’s overhauls of federal agencies. 
    • “The Reorganizing Government Act of 2025 (HR 1295), which is scheduled to receive a panel vote at 6:30 p.m., would resurrect a lapsed authority enabling the president to submit a plan for restructuring agencies that Congress must vote on within 90 days. Such a plan is not subject to the filibuster, meaning the Senate can clear it with a simple majority instead of the usual 60-vote threshold. 
    • “Still, the bill itself would need 60 votes for the Senate to pass it, which is unlikely.” 
  • At this markup session, the Oversight and Reform Committee was poised to approve HR 2193, the FEHB Protection Act of 2025 in a bipartisan fashion, but due to the length of the markup session, the Chairman postponed roll call votes until a later date. HR 2193 would tighten oversight over FEHB family member eligibility.
  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “Former Postmaster General Louis DeJoy avoided several third-rail issues, as part of his plans to modernize the Postal Service — including privatizing the agency, closing post offices or cutting the number of delivery days each week.
    • “Leaders of three USPS unions say they aren’t so sure DeJoy’s successor or the Trump administration will agree to the same red lines, as the White House envisions major changes for the independent mail agency.”

From the judicial front,

  • Roll Call points out,
    • “The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in a pair of cases Wednesday over how much power Congress can give to executive agencies without running afoul of the Constitution, which could end up shaping how legislation is written.
    • “The arguments center on whether Congress handed over too much power to the Federal Communications Commission when it created the Universal Service Fund. The fund collects money from telecommunications companies and distributes funds intended for telecommunications services nationwide.
    • “Several experts said the cases come as a majority of the members of the conservative-controlled Supreme Court have expressed interest in imposing new limits on what’s called the “nondelegation doctrine” — or how much legislative power Congress can cede to other entities. Depending on how the justices handle the complicated case, experts said, it could have wide-ranging impacts on federal agencies.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Medscape delves into “Avian Influenza: What Infectious Disease Physicians Need to Know.”
  • FiercePharma reports,
    • “GSK is opening the door to a new era in urinary tract infection (UTI) treatment with its Blujepa, the first in a new class of oral antibiotics for the condition in nearly 30 years.
    • “Blujepa, also known as gepotidacin, has been cleared by the FDA to treat uncomplicated UTIs (uUTIs) that can be tied to E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Citrobacter freundii complex, Staphylococcus saprophyticus or Enterococcus faecalis in women 12 years of age and older. “These types of UTIs are the most common infection for women, with more than half of all women experiencing one in their lifetime, making the antibiotic a much-needed new option for the up to 16 million U.S. women who are impacted annually. 
    • “GSK tested the antibiotic in the phase 3 Eagle-2 and Eagle-3 trials, pitting its twice-daily option against longtime standard-of-care nitrofurantoin for five days.” 
  • JAMA Online considers
    • Question   Which health conditions, types of care, and counties are associated with the highest levels of spending?
    • Findings   This observational study showed considerable variation in spending across health conditions, types of care, age groups, payers, and counties—with spending being greatest for type 2 diabetes. Across counties, there was more variation in utilization rates rather than price and intensity of care.
    • Meaning   Further investigation into unexplained variation in spending, focusing on the health conditions with the most spending, could help inform health care policies aimed at lowering costs and improving access to care.
  • The NIH Research Matters Bulletin discusses “Norovirus antibodies | Non-opioid pain relief | Tardigrades & cancer care.”
  • Per Cardiovascular Business,
    • “A new drug has shown early potential to slow the progression of aortic stenosis (AS) and potentially limit the number of heart patients who require transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) or surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR). 
    • “The team behind this breakthrough, a group of healthcare researchers out of Mayo Clinic, shared its early progress in Circulation.
    • “The drug in question, ataciguat, is able to reactivate oxidized soluble guanylate cyclase, which then limits signals in the body that can lead to fibrocalcific aortic valve stenosis (FCAVS). After observing this phenomenon in action in animal models and in vitro, the Mayo Clinic researchers performed a phase I clinical trial that showed ataciguat is well tolerated in patients with FCAVS. The group then compared ataciguat with a placebo in a phase II clinical trial, finding that six months of treatment with the drug was associated with a significant reduction—nearly 70%—in the progression of aortic valve calcification in patients who presented with moderate FCAVS. Treatment with ataciguat also “tended to slow other changes in valvular and ventricular dysfunction, reflective of disease progression,” in these patients.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Demand for GLP-1 drugs is causing spending on traditional drugs to grow at a faster clip than spending on specialty drugs, according to new research. That could put further stress on employers and health plans struggling to contain already sky-high spending on prescription drugs.
    • “Spending growth for traditional drugs — simple-to-administer medications used to treat common health problems — outstripped spending growth for specialty drugs — pricey medications used to treat complex and chronic conditions — for the first time in 2023, according to a report released Tuesday by Evernorth, the health services division of national insurer Cigna.
    • “The trend isn’t expected to revert, at least in the next few years, amid sustained demand for GLP-1s for weight loss and as the drugs become approved for more conditions, Evernorth said.”
  • Fierce Pharma adds,
    • “Novo Nordisk has quickly expanded its discounted Wegovy program, now offering all eligible cash-paying customers its popular weight-loss med at $499 per month.
    • “Novo had only launched the cheaper Wegovy option earlier this month originally through its own NovoCare Pharmacy and at that time indicated an expansion to traditional retail channels “in the near future.”
    • “Now, less than three weeks later, all cash-paying patients can purchase any Wegovy injection doses—from 0.25mg to 2.4mg—at their local pharmacies for $499 for a 28-day supply, Novo said Monday. The new price tag marks a further cut from Novo’s previous policy that offered self-pay patients Wegovy at a cost of $650 per month.”
  • Per STAT News,
    • “The net prices that health plans paid for medicines — after subtracting rebates, discounts, and fees — rose a modest 0.4% in last year’s fourth quarter, but that compared unfavorably with a 3% decline in the same period a year earlier, according to the latest data from SSR Health, a research firm that tracks the pharmaceutical industry and its pricing trends.
    • “A key reason was that net prices rose for so-called protected oncology medicines, one of six classes of drugs for which Medicare Part D generally covers an entire category. Typically, these six classes have smaller and more stable discounts compared with other medicines in the marketplace. As a result, net prices rose faster for protected classes, but it is not clear why this occurred more so with cancer drugs.
    • “Tugging in the other direction was a type of medicine known as disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, such as Humira, which are used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and other maladies. Ongoing pricing pressure caused by a growing number of biosimilars — nearly identical variants of brand-name biologic medicines that yield the same health outcomes but at a lower cost — stifled further rises in net prices.
    • “Meanwhile, list prices for all drugs grew 1.4% in the first quarter of the year compared with 5.4% a year earlier. Most of the slower growth rate was traced to major insulin makers — Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, and Sanofi — that lowered prices for many patients with private insurance, but also to comply with the Inflation Reduction Act, which required capping monthly out-of-pocket costs at $35 for Medicare beneficiaries.”
  • The American Benefits Council has posted a detailed report titled “Destination 2030: A Road Map for the Future of Employer-Provided Benefits.” “This 2030 strategic plan describes the five most pressing challenges facing employer-sponsors today, provides four goals to address each challenge and then offers detailed policy recommendations for meeting those goals.”

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy will leave the Postal Service’s top job by the end of the day Monday, after he announced plans to leave the agency last month.
    • “I have today informed the Postal Service Board of Governors that today will be my last day in this role,” DeJoy said in a statement.
    • “DeJoy announced last month he was preparing to step down as postmaster general and urged the USPS Board of Governors to begin the search for his successor.
    • “Deputy Postmaster General Doug Tulino will lead USPS until its Board of Governors selects a new postmaster general.”
  • The Wall Street Journal informs us,
    • “President Trump nominated the acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to lead the agency permanently, after dropping his first pick for the job.  
    • “Susan Monarez was named acting director of the CDC early in the Trump administration and has worked closely with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s leadership team to fight a measles outbreak in Texas.
    • “Dr. Monarez will work closely with our GREAT Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert Kennedy Jr. Together, they will prioritize Accountability, High Standards, and Disease Prevention to finally address the Chronic Disease Epidemic and, MAKE AMERICA HEALTHY AGAIN!” Trump wrote Monday on Truth Social.
    • “Monarez has a Ph.D. in microbiology and immunology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and subsequently studied at Stanford University.
    • “She would be the first CDC director without a medical degree in more than 70 years. She must be confirmed by the Senate.”
  • The Wall Street Journal also seeks to explain how the Medicaid program works in charts.
  • “U.S. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) announced the Committee will mark up the nomination of Dr. Mehmet Oz to be Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator during an executive session on Tuesday, March 25, at 9:30 AM.” 

From the judicial front,

  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “The Justice Department asked the Supreme Court on Monday to block a judge’s order requiring it to reinstate more than 16,000 federal employees, as administration officials vow to seek the justices’ intervention in clearing away lower-court rulings that have slowed Trump policies. 
    • “Earlier this month, a federal district judge in San Francisco ordered the government to reinstate probationary employees fired at a half dozen agencies under the Trump administration’s fast-moving plan to shrink the federal government. U.S. District Judge William Alsup found that the administration had failed to comply with legal procedures required for the layoffs. 
    • “Alsup’s order, and a similar one from a federal judge in Maryland, require agencies to offer the employees their jobs back while litigation over the legality of the layoffs proceeds. 
    • “In her Supreme Court brief, acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris argues that the case should have been thrown out of court because it was filed by labor unions and other organizations rather than the terminated employees themselves. Federal law requires government employees to raise complaints through an internal process before going to court, Harris said.” 
  • Bloomberg Law tells us,
    • “A group of former Wells Fargo employees failed to prove the bank neglected its fiduciary duties over its health plan’s prescription drug costs because they could not prove concrete harm, a federal judge in Minnesota ruled Monday.
    • “The workers sued in July in the US District Court for the District of Minnesota, alleging the plan paid excessive administrative fees and prescription drug prices compared to other large employer plans. Wells Fargo & Co. also violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act by allowing pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts to keep drug manufacturer rebates instead of passing them back to the plan, the employees argued.
    • “The high-profile case is part of a wave of legal challenges to rising employer health plan costs, with workers suing employers and employers suing their benefit administrators. The lawsuits follow legislative and regulatory changes strengthening transparency and fiduciary requirements for insurers and employers—scrutiny that is expected to continue from lawmakers and the Trump administration.
    • “The court agreed with the plaintiffs “in theory” that they could be injured by Wells Fargo’s PBM contract. But the former employees ultimately failed to prove standing because the plan covers a broad range of drugs beyond those cited in the complaint, and because the plan picks up costs after the plaintiffs hit their deductibles, the court concluded.
    • “There are simply too many variables in how Plan participants’ contribution rates are calculated to make the inferential leaps necessary to elevate Plaintiffs’ allegations from merely speculative to plausible,” Judge David T. Schultz wrote in his order dismissing the case.”
    • FEHBlog note — Judge Laura M. Provinzino wrote the decision, not Judge Schultz.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The AP relates,
    •  “Tuberculosis continued to rise again in the U.S. last year, reaching its highest levels in more than a dozen years. 
    • “More than 10,300 cases were reported last year, an 8% increase from 2023 and the highest since 2011, according to preliminary data posted this month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 
    • “Both the number of cases and the rate of infections rose. Rates were up among all age groups, and 34 states reported an increase. 
    • “CDC officials say the rise is the mainly due to international travel and migration. The vast majority of U.S. TB cases are diagnosed in people born in other countries. Other illnesses that weaken the immune system and allow latent TB infections to emerge may also be at play.”
  • NBC News reports,
    • “Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers, although recent research suggests that the United States is backsliding in efforts to detect the disease early, when it is most curable.
    • “A new study shows that the percentage of women screened for cervical cancer fell from 47% in 2019 to 41% in 2023.
    • “Rural women are 25% more likely to be diagnosed and 42% more likely to die from cervical cancer than women who live in cities, a trend that likely reflects lower screening rates in less populated areas, according to the study, published in JAMA Network Open this month.” 
  • Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, explains “How to find a home health aide. Having the right person can make caring for a loved one much easier. Here are tips for finding and affording the help.”
  • Per a National Institutes of Health news release,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have developed eye drops that extend vision in animal models of a group of inherited diseases that lead to progressive vision loss in humans, known as retinitis pigmentosa. The eye drops contain a small fragment derived from a protein made by the body and found in the eye, known as pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF).  PEDF helps preserve cells in the eye’s retina. A report on the study is published in Communications Medicine.
    • “While not a cure, this study shows that PEDF-based eye drops can slow progression of a variety of degenerative retinal diseases in animals, including various types of retinitis pigmentosa and dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD),” said Patricia Becerra, Ph.D., chief of NIH’s Section on Protein Structure and Function at the National Eye Institute and senior author of the study. “Given these results, we’re excited to begin trials of these eye drops in people.”

From the healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Novo Nordisk agreed to pay up to $2 billion for the rights to a developmental weight-loss and obesity drug from Chinese pharmaceutical company the United Bio-Technology (Hengqin) Co., as it looks to boost its pipeline of next-generation drugs.
    • “Novo Nordisk, which earlier Monday lost its crown as Europe’s most valuable company, said it signed an exclusive global licensing deal for UBT251, a drug that targets three different hormones to treat obesity, type 2 diabetes, and other diseases.
    • “The Danish pharmaceutical company will pay $200 million up front and potential milestone payments of up to $1.8 billion, as well as tiered royalties.
    • “Novo Nordisk has exclusive rights to develop, manufacture, and commercialize UBT251 globally, excluding the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.
    • “UBT251 differs from Novo Nordisk’s current portfolio as it takes a three-pronged approach to weight-loss and blood-sugar control. It combines a GLP-1–the same class of drugs as Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster Wegovy and Ozempic–with GIP to reduce appetite and blood sugar, and glucagon to prevent low blood-sugar levels.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • 23andMe has filed for bankruptcy but assures customers that their genetic data will remain protected and managed in accordance with applicable laws.
    • Consumers can delete their 23andMe account data and destroy any stored genetic material by following the instructions provided in the article [and quoted below].
    • In the event of a bankruptcy sale, consumer data may be sold as part of the transaction, but protections may be in place to ensure responsible handling of sensitive information.
      • Log in to your 23andMe account and go to the “Settings” section of your profile. Then scroll to a section labeled “23andMe Data” at the bottom of the page. Click “View” next to “23andMe Data.” You can download your genetic data if you want a copy for personal storage.
      • “After that, scroll to the “Delete Data” section and click “Permanently Delete Data.” You will receive an email from 23andMe. Follow the link in the data to confirm your deletion request. 
      • “Some customers who tried to delete their data Monday said they received error messages. Those trying to resolve the issue reported long customer service wait times. A company spokesman didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.”
  • Fierce Healthcare fills us in one the latest Match Day for medical school seniors.
    • “Match Day 2025 has come and gone with the largest-ever total of applicants and positions as well as upticks in primary care and emergency medicine.
    • “The 73-year-old National Resident Matching Program’s (NRMP’s) breakdown of the annual event also outlined ongoing interest in obstetrics and gynecology—despite shifting reproductive care policies in the wake of the Dobbs decision—and a jump in participation among non-U.S. citizen international medical graduates.
    • “Applicants learned of their matches at 12:00 p.m. ET on Friday.
    • “All told, there were 52,498 total applicants, up 4.1% over last year, competing for 43,237 positions, up 4.2%.”

  • Beckers Payer Issues ranks payers by 2025 Part D membership
    • “Centene’s Medicare Part D enrollment is nearing 8 million members.
    • “According to CMS enrollment data from March 2025, Centene leads the nation in Medicare Part D membership with 7.92 million enrollees. The company has gained nearly 1 million members since the end of 2024, when its Part D enrollment was 6.93 million.”

Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call adds,
    • Both the House and Senate come back from recess this week to begin a busy three-week period that’s expected to focus on Republicans’ budget reconciliation agenda, including extending and expanding tax cuts and tightening immigration policy.
    • The top items on the House agenda this week, meanwhile, will include more measures to overturn Biden administration rules. And the Senate will continue to vote on more of President Donald Trump’s nominations. The headliners this week are the nominees to lead the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration.
    • With a stopgap spending law now in effect through Sept. 30, the Republican majorities in both the House and Senate can fully turn their attention to their budget reconciliation agenda.
    • This work period on Capitol has just three weeks, followed by the traditional two-week recess that coincides with Easter and Passover. By then, House and Senate Republicans will want to make progress on resolving differences on how to execute the process that allows them to pass legislation without the risk of filibusters in the Senate.
  • Roll Call also gives us the 119th Congress in numbers, mid-March edition.
  • On Tuesday morning at 10 am, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee will mark up the following batch of bills,
    • H.R. 1295, the Reorganizing Government Act of 2025; 2) H.R. 1210, the Protecting Taxpayers’ Wallet Act; 3) H.R. ___, the Preserving Presidential Management Authority Act; 4) H.R. 2174, the Paycheck Protection Act; 5) H.R. 2193, the FEHB Protection Act of 2025; 6) H.R. ___, the Federal Accountability Committee for Transparency (FACT) Act; 7) H.R. 2056, District of Columbia Federal Immigration Compliance Act; 8) H. Res. 187, Of inquiry requesting the President to transmit certain information to the House of Representatives referring to the termination, removal, placement on administrative leave, moved to another department of Federal employees and Inspectors General of agencies; 9) H. Res. 186, Of inquiry requesting the President to transmit certain documents to the House of Representatives relating to the conflicts of interest of Elon Musk and related information.
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “A postponed meeting of vaccine advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now scheduled to take place in April, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed.
    • “The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, had originally been scheduled to meet Feb. 26 to Feb. 28, but was unexpectedly delayed soon after Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime critic of U.S. vaccination policies, took office as health secretary. At that time, an HHS spokesperson said the rescheduling was to allow extra time for public comment.” * * *
    • “ACIP, which includes outside vaccine experts as well as federal health officials, will now convene on April 15 and April 16, Andrew Nixon, HHS’ director of communications, wrote in an email to BioPharma Dive.” 
    • “A notice posted Friday ahead of publication Monday in the federal register indicated that advisers will discuss the current measles outbreak, as well as vaccines for COVID-19, human papillomavirus, monkeypox, respiratory syncytial virus and other pathogens.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the nation’s health secretary, on Saturday instructed leaders of the nonprofit he founded to take down a web page that mimicked the design of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s site but laid out a case that vaccines cause autism.
    • “The page had been published on a site apparently registered to the nonprofit, the anti-vaccine group Children’s Health Defense. Mr. Kennedy’s action came after The New York Times inquired about the page and after news of it ricocheted across social media.
    • “The page was taken offline Saturday evening.” 
  • Pharmacy Practice News informs us,
    • “The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) recently alerted healthcare providers to a concerning trend: hackers tapping into patient electronic health records (EHRs) to steal doctors’ DEA registration numbers. Armed with those numbers, the thieves have been able to generate tens of thousands of bogus prescriptions and sell them online, the agency explained in a YouTube video.
    • “Electronic prescription fraud is a real emerging trend that we’re seeing all across the country,” said Erin Hager, a DEA diversion investigator in the Phoenix-Tucson Tactical Division Squad. “What’s happening is … bad actors … who have been conducting prescription drug fraud are now utilizing the internet and electronic health record platforms to create electronic prescriptions that they can then send nationwide.”
    • “These activities can result in “a thousand fraudulent prescriptions using an unsuspecting doctor’s DEA number within a 14-hour time frame,” Ms. Hager said.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports, “Dementia May Not Always Be the Threat It Is Now. Here’s Why. The number of cases will increase, but the rates seem to be declining with every birth cohort that reaches advanced ages, researchers said.”
    • Eric Stallard, an actuary and co-director of the Biodemography of Aging Research Unit at Duke University, read the [recent dementia] study and thought the team “seemed very competent at their analysis” of individual risk.
    • But when it came to the projection that cases would double, which assumed that the incidence of dementia would remain stable over the next 40 years, “I don’t believe it,” Mr. Stallard said.
    • “The notion that the number of people with dementia will double over the next 25, 30 or 35 years due to the aging of baby boomers is widespread, it’s pervasive — and it’s wrong,” he added.
    • “He and two other Duke researchers recently published a commentary in JAMA pointing out that the age-specific prevalence of dementia in this country had steadily declined for 40 years.
    • “If your risks are lower than your parents’ risks and this trend continues, you won’t see the doubling or tripling of dementia that’s been projected,” said Dr. Murali Doraiswamy, director of the Neurocognitive Disorders Program at Duke and a co-author of the JAMA article.
    • “To be clear, experts agree that the number of people with dementia will climb in coming decades, simply because the disorder rises so steeply with age and the number of older adults in the United States will increase.
    • “But Mr. Stallard estimates that the increase will be more like 10 to 25 percent by 2050. “It will still be a significant challenge for the health system in the U.S.,” he said.”
  • The University of Minnesota CIDRAP lets us know,
    • Another study is raising questions about whether compliance with a federally mandated hospital protocol aimed at improving sepsis care and management is associated with better outcomes.
    • The study, published this week in JAMA Network Open, found that sepsis patients who received care that was noncompliant with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock Management Bundle (SEP-1) tended to be older, have more comorbidities, and have more complex clinical presentation than those who received compliant care. When those factors were accounted for, SEP-1 compliance was no longer associated with improved mortality.
    • The study comes on the heels of a systematic review and meta-analysis, published last month in the Annals of Internal Medicine, that found no evidence that SEP-1 compliance was associated with improved mortality.
  • and
    • “People who started taking the antiviral drug ensitrelvir within 72 hours after a household member tested positive for COVID-19 were significantly less likely to be infected, according to results from an international phase 3 clinical trial presented last week at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in San Francisco.
    • “Made by Japanese pharmaceutical firm Shionogi, ensitrelvir is approved in Japan for the treatment of mild to moderate COVID-19.  * * *
    • “In addition to vaccination, post-exposure prophylaxis with timely use of an oral antiviral would be a valuable way to help prevent COVID-19 illness in people who have been exposed, especially people at high risk for severe disease,” Frederick Hayden, MD, a University of Virginia School of Medicine professor emeritus who helped design the trial and presented the findings, said in a university news release.
    • “This is the first clinical trial of an oral antiviral drug to show significant protection against COVID-19 [infection],” he added. “If approved by the [US] Food and Drug Administration for this purpose, it would be an important addition to current preventive strategies.”
  • A Wall Street Journal reporter tells us “A Year After I Stopped Taking a [GLP-1} Weight-Loss Drug, I’ve Lost 20 More Pounds. I’m one of the millions of people trying to keep the weight off without taking expensive drugs like Mounjaro or Ozempic for life. It wasn’t easy, but I found ways.”
    • “My first mistake in stopping the medicine [after reaching his target weight in five months] was that I didn’t wean myself off it more slowly. I stopped cold turkey, and my hunger pangs and food noise came back with a vengeance. Some doctors and researchers have begun to recommend stopping more gradually, as well as taking appetite suppressants like phentermine to ease the transition. This has helped reduce weight regain in some patients.
    • “My second mistake was not having a structured nutrition plan at the ready. The medicine had helped winnow my bad habits down to a number I could actually manage, from perhaps 25 or 30 entrenched eating behaviors (really!) down to more like five or six (I still can’t shake my addiction to impulsive runs to the 7-Eleven, for example). But even a few bad habits—when they meet with what feels like insatiable hunger—can do a lot of damage.
    • “After a few months, I found a highly structured nutrition program, one with expert coaching that focused on a low-carb diet. While the transition was difficult, it eventually helped me bring my cravings under control. 
    • Virta Health, a startup I turned to for a few months, has users test their blood daily. The results, which measure glucose levels and another indicator of dietary compliance, are beamed through an app to a nutrition coach. Being aware that someone was watching—and would know if I had cheated—was immensely helpful as I sought to improve my nutrition and manage hunger.
    • “Without wading into the nutrition wars over the keto or Atkins or Mediterranean diet or any other, I’ve found that I have generally been far less hungry when I’ve eaten more protein, fiber and healthy fats. Meanwhile, drastically limiting carbohydrates has had another benefit: forcing me to eat more vegetables. Gobs and gobs of them.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The Longevity Business Is Booming—and Its Scientists Are Clashing. The antiaging movement has raced ahead amid fierce debates; critics of a grandfather of the field, Leonard Guarente, include former protégés and rivals.”
  • and
    • “Doctors Are Just as Frustrated as You by Our Messed-Up Healthcare System. Trust between doctors and patients is fraying, but there are ways to mend it.”
      • “One of doctors’ biggest gripes: largely corporate institutions that effectively set patient quotas and require extensive documentation. One physician said he and other doctors are allowed 15 minutes with patients; exceeding that leads to poor performance reviews and “being out of compliance.”
      • “These doctors think patients lose trust because they don’t understand who or what is in control. “Physicians have lost autonomy,” says Dr. Corinne Rao, an internal medicine physician and hospitalist. “Their decisions are subject to the financial interests of their employer.” 
      • “Doctors also say that trust—and respect—go both ways. “It’s like a marriage,” says Dr.  James Schouten, a family physician. Each side has to give 100%. Implying that a loss of trust is entirely the doctor’s fault, he says, suggests the patient has no role in establishing or maintaining trust.
      • “They do, he and others say.”