Thursday Report

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Senate Democrats took the threat of a government shutdown off the table, following a grueling intraparty fight in which lawmakers struggled with how best to resist President Trump’s fast-paced efforts to slim down federal agencies.
    • “Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) said he would vote to advance a Republican measure, set for Friday morning, to fund the government through September. Earlier, in a closed-door lunch, he also said that enough Democrats would join him to help the Republicans clear the chamber’s critical 60-vote hurdle, people familiar with the matter said.
    • “I will vote to keep the government open and not shut it down,” Schumer said on the Senate floor, characterizing Democrats’ alternatives as a Hobson’s choice with no good option. He said that in a shutdown, Trump could decide “to cherry pick which parts of the government to reopen in a protracted shutdown.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The White House March 13 withdrew the nomination of former Republican congressman Dave Weldon for director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “Meanwhile, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions advanced the nominations of Jay Bhattacharya for director of the National Institutes of Health and Marty Makary for commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Both nominees will next be considered by a full Senate vote.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “The Postal Service is letting a team from the Department of Government Efficiency take a closer look at its reform plans.
    • “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, in a letter sent to congressional leaders Thursday, said he signed an agreement last night with DOGE representatives and the General Services Administration to “assist us in identifying and achieving further efficiencies.”
    • “DeJoy told lawmakers that USPS is heading in the right direction under his 10-year Deliverying for America reform plan and that DOGE’s work is “aligned with our efforts.”
    • “While we have accomplished a great deal, there is much more to be done. We are happy to have others to assist us in our worthwhile cause,” DeJoy wrote.”

From the judicial front,

  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • “A federal judge has ordered six federal agencies to reinstate thousands of probationary employees who were fired last month, dealing a blow to the Trump administration’s efforts to rapidly scale back the size of the federal workforce.
    • “The Trump administration has encountered a number of legal challenges in its push to slash the government’s size and spending, including a lawsuit from a coalition of 20 states over plans to eliminate nearly half of the staff of the Education Department.
    • “The Education Department, with around 4,500 employees as of last year, is the smallest cabinet-level agency. Polls show most Americans oppose eliminating the department.”
  • FEHBlog note — The Justice Department has noticed an appeal of the reinstatement order to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
  • Bloomberg Law adds,
    • “A US judge in Maryland directed 18 agencies to temporarily rehire thousands of terminated employees, dealing another judicial defeat to Trump administration efforts to shrink the federal sector.
    • “The government gave no advance notice before firing newer workers, known as probationary employees, and conducted no individual assessments to justify their discharge based on performance, Judge James Bredar of the US District Court for the District of Maryland said Thursday in granting a temporary restraining order. 
    • “Bredar, an Obama appointee, found the terminations were unlawful workforce reductions that negatively impacted 19 states and the District of Columbia, which sued to challenge the firings.
    • “The ruling will apply for 14 days to workers at agencies including the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Energy departments; the Environmental Protection Agency; the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; and the US Agency for International Development. 
    • “It comes after a separate federal judge in California ordered six federal agencies to rehire probationary employees they fired since Feb. 13. Both decisions add to mounting setbacks for President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk, who have attempted to cull the federal workforce in the name of efficiency.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Cardiovascular Business points out,
    • “U.S. patients are significantly less likely to die from heart failure-related cardiac arrest now than they were 25 years ago, according to new data published in the American Journal of Cardiology. However, the authors noted, certain disparities still exist, suggesting cardiologists and other healthcare providers have much more work to do. 
    • Heart failure currently affects over 64 million adults worldwide, with about 6 million impacted in the United States, a number expected to rise to 8 million by 2030, wrote corresponding author Sivaram Neppala, MD, an assistant professor with the cardiology division at The University of Texas Health Sciences Center, and colleagues. “Patients diagnosed with heart failure face a significantly higher risk of cardiac arrest, contributing to 30-50% of mortality cases within this population. Those with systolic dysfunction are six to nine times more likely to experience sudden cardiac death. Cardiac arrest and heart failure can lead to irregular heart rhythms and myocardial fibrosis, increasing the risk of ventricular arrhythmias and highlighting the need for urgent care.”
    • “Neppala et al. explored U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data from 1999 to 2023, tracking changes in the overall age-adjusted mortality rate (AAMR) for cardiac arrest in patients with heart failure. All patients included in their analysis were 25 years old or older.
    • “Overall, the researchers found that the AAMR for heart failure-related cardiac arrest dropped from 25.3 per 100,000 adults in 1999 to 20.6 in 2023. The reduction was the most pronounced from 1999 to 2011, with an annual percentage change of -2.95%, but then remained largely unchanged from 2011 to 2018. The overall AAMR then increased from 2018 to 2021—a time when the COVID-19 pandemic was at its most severe—before dropping yet again from 2021 to 2023. 
    • “The subsequent decline from 2021 to 2023 (APC: -4.05%) indicates recovery and improved access to healthcare, highlighting the pandemic’s effects on cardiovascular outcomes and the necessity for resilient healthcare systems,” the authors wrote.”
  • STAT News discusses the importance of improving the availability of HIV self-testing.
    • “In May 2024, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health released a troubling report on a cluster of HIV infections, with more than 200 new cases since 2018 attributable to injection drug use in the Boston region. These findings have national implications: Similar HIV outbreaks have been described nationwide during the overdose crisis, including in West VirginiaIndiana, and Ohio. The increase in HIV cases amid the U.S. drug overdose crisis underscores the urgent need for a comprehensive response tailored to the unique challenges faced by people who use drugs. The importance of such efforts cannot be understated. In fact, in Massachusetts, 14% of new HIV diagnoses every year are attributed to injection drug use — nearly twice the national average.
    • “One potential solution is HIV self-testing, which would allow for rapid identification and treatment. Identifying HIV cases is the first step in addressing clusters, and quickly learning one’s status allows people to rapidly seek both treatment and prevention. Unlike traditional laboratory-based testing, which may take several days for results delivery, HIV self-testing relies on saliva and provides results in 20 minutes. The test is easily performed outside of a clinical setting by swabbing gums and collecting a sample of saliva. HIV self-testing has been available since 2012 and is recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for accurate HIV diagnosis. It’s even part of the Department of Health and Human Services’ plan for Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) by 2030.
    • “But HIV self-testing remains underutilized among not only the general public, but especially people who use drugs. As the nation emerges from the Covid-19 pandemic, during which self-testing for infectious diseases became commonplace, increasing HIV self-testing among people who use drugs may limit the spread of a virus that, while manageable with medication, can lead to significant health risks if left untreated.”
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “Better midlife diet was tied to better brain connectivity and white matter integrity later in life.
    • “Lower waist-to-hip ratio was associated with better memory and executive function at 70.
    • “Diet improvements over time were linked with better white matter integrity in several brain regions.”
  • The National Cancer Institute aggregated its latest research news while the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases reflects on its 75th anniversary.
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “A recently approved drug for acute ischemic stroke works as well as the treatment used in most U.S. hospitals and may offer advantages for some patients, according to a study led by a researcher from Dallas-based UT Southwestern Medical Center. 
    • “The study, published March 12 in JAMA Network Opencompared the newly approved tenecteplase in a single quick injection to alteplase, the stroke treatment that has been used for decades and requires an hourlong infusion. “

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Cigna is revamping its C-suite and consolidating oversight of its two main businesses — insurance and health services operations — under one executive, the company announced Thursday.
    • “Brian Evanko, currently chief financial officer and the head of Cigna’s health insurance division Cigna Healthcare, will serve as Cigna’s chief operating officer, managing both Cigna Healthcare and health services division Evernorth. Ann Dennison, who was deputy CFO under Evanko, will step up as enterprise CFO. The changes are effective at the end of this month.
    • “Meanwhile, Eric Palmer, the current CEO of Evernorth, is departing the company at the end of April, an apparent victim of the restructuring. A spokesperson for Cigna did not respond to a request for comment on the reason behind Palmer’s departure.”
  • Modern Healthcare notes,
    • “Highmark Health’s insurance business challenges weighed on the organization’s overall financial performance in 2024, the company reported Thursday.
    • “The nonprofit Blue Cross Blue Shield licensee saw its net income plummet 90.6% to $50 million while revenue rose nearly 9% to $29.4 billion. The company also reported operating losses of $209 million, compared with an operating gain of $338 million in 2023.
    • “Our entire industry faces strong financial headwinds. That underscores the need for a more economically sustainable approach that delivers better health experiences and outcomes,” Highmark Health President and CEO David Holmberg said on a telephone briefing announcing the financial results.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Mallinckrodt and Endo Pharmaceuticals, which have struggled through bankruptcies related to opioid litigation, said Thursday that they will merge in a cash and stock transaction that will leave a combined company valued at $6.7 billion.
    • “Shareholders of Mallinckrodt will end up with 50.1% of the combined company and current Mallinckrodt CEO Siggi Olafsson will take the top job at the new entity as well. Per deal terms, Endo shareholders will receive Mallinckrodt stock and a share of $80 million in cash.
    • “After the merger, a business made up of Endo’s sterile injectables and both companies’ generic pharmaceuticals will be separated out. The companies haven’t yet decided what that separation will look like, Olafsson told analysts and investors on a conference call. The board will “make the best decision going forward” after the combination of the businesses, he said.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Vivani Medical said Wednesday it plans to spin off its neurostimulation business to form an independent, publicly traded company. 
    • “Formerly Second Sight Medical Products, the independent company will trade as Cortigent and advance brain implants to help people recover body functions such as vision and movement.
    • “Vivani, which is focused on GLP-1 implants, acquired the neurostimulation technology through a merger in 2022 and first filed paperwork to list Cortigent as an independent company in 2023.”

Midweek Report

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) threw a wrench into a Republican plan to avert a government shutdown this weekend, saying there wasn’t enough Democratic support to advance the measure funding federal agencies through Sept. 30.
    • “Republicans “do not have the votes in the Senate,” to move the resolution forward, Schumer said on the Senate floor, indicating that his party was prepared to block it. He blamed Republicans, saying they “chose a partisan path” in their bill without any input from congressional Democrats.  
    • “As an alternative, Schumer floated a shorter-term plan that would fund the government for a month. “I hope my Republican colleagues will join us to avoid a shutdown on Friday,” he said.
    • “Government funding will lapse at 12:01 a.m. Saturday if Congress doesn’t act. The GOP-led House left town after it approved Republicans’ resolution on Tuesday, effectively giving the Senate no time to revise the bill—but to simply pass it or reject it.”
  • The Hill adds,
    • Some Democrats floated the idea that an amendment vote on the 30-day CR, which would fail, could be won in exchange for the requisite number of votes to advance the GOP bill. Some Republicans could support it, according to Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), but not enough that it would be adopted. 
    • “It remains unclear whether Republicans would go along with that though. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) did not fully shoot down the idea. 
    • “I think there would have to be some understanding,” he told The Hill on Wednesday evening. “We’ll see. I’m not sure exactly what their demand is — if they just need a vote on that, and if in exchange for that they’ll give us the votes to fund the government.”
    • “Thune added that discussions are “going on right now” on a path forward, but he also panned the idea of a full shift to a 30-day CR in order to finish 2025 appropriations bills.”
  • The Wall Street Journal further tells us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plans to terminate four demonstration projects at the end of 2025, closing out models affecting primary care, kidney care and healthcare payments in the state of Maryland.
    • “The agency will also make changes to other projects, including dropping a planned initiative that would offer certain generic drugs to Medicare enrollees for $2. CMS said its planned terminations would save nearly $750 million, and an agency official said the projects would affect millions of patients.”
  • Per Modern Healthcare,
    • “Johnson & Johnson MedTech said Wednesday its Monarch Quest robotic platform received clearance from the Food and Drug Administration.
    • “Robotic-assisted bronchoscopy is a minimally invasive technique that allows surgeons to reach airways and suspicious lung nodules.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Measles continues to spread in West Texas and New Mexico, with more than 250 people infected — many unvaccinated school-age children. Two cases in Oklahoma, for which state officials have not provided a location, have also been linked to these outbreaks. Twelve other states have reported isolated measles cases, typically linked to international travel.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish patients knew about measles.
  • STAT News reminds us,
    • “The 2020s have inarguably been Covid-19’s decade. 
    • “Since the coronavirus outbreak was acknowledged as a pandemic exactly five years ago, the pandemic has killed well over 1 million Americans, derailed the global economy, and sparked political upheaval that continues today. It also yielded what many hail as the greatest scientific accomplishment in human history: the development of effective vaccines in under a year. 
    • “Yet in dominating the early 2020s, Covid-19 also distracted from what is arguably a more significant public health emergency. Even at the height of the pandemic, more young Americans died of drug overdose than Covid. And in the last year, the overall death toll from the country’s drug crisis has exceeded the Covid-19 pandemic as the deadliest health event this generation.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “Using only targeted models of syphilis screening in the emergency department (ED) would miss large proportions of active syphilis cases as well as new HIV diagnoses and acute HIV cases, according to new research.
    • “Only screening patients for syphilis who came to the ED for gonorrhea and chlamydia testing would have missed 76.4% of positive syphilis screens as well as 68.7% of new HIV diagnoses, reported Kimberly Stanford, MD, MPH, of the University of Chicago Medical Center.”
  • Healio informs us,
    • “An increase in depressive symptoms was observed among U.S. teenagers without, rather than with, behavioral risk factors, underscoring the need for greater screening in this population, data show. 
    • “Over the last decade, national survey data has revealed a sharp rise in depressive symptoms among U.S. adolescents,” Tanner J. Bommersbach, MD, MPH, child and adolescent psychiatrist and assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, told Healio regarding the research presented in The Lancet Regional Health Americas. “Yet, surprisingly little is known about what is driving this increase and which adolescents are most affected.”
  • Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, explains what to do about ear pain.
  • Per a National Institutes of Health press release,
    • “The antiviral drug tecovirimat used without other antivirals did not reduce the time to clinical resolution of clade II mpox lesions or improve pain control among adults in an international clinical trial sponsored by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The trial enrollment was stopped in late 2024 when an interim analysis showed that tecovirimat monotherapy was ineffective in the study population. Detailed results were presented at the 2025 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in San Francisco.
    • “This study brought us a step forward in better understanding mpox disease and potential treatment strategies,” said Jeanne Marrazzo, M.D., M.P.H., director of NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which sponsored and funded the trial. “We are grateful to the study team and participants for their contributions to groundbreaking research on a disease that we still do not know enough about.”
  • The National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Information Highlights cover the following topics this week: “AI and Immunotherapy | Breast Reconstruction | Multiple Myeloma Research.”
  • Food Safety Magazine alerts us,
    • “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has released a summary analyzing the causes of foodborne illness outbreaks that occurred between 2014 and 2022. Data included in the analysis was drawn from the Foodborne Disease Outbreak Surveillance System (FDOSS), via the National Outbreak Reporting System (NORS).
    • “According to CDC, approximately 800 foodborne illness outbreaks occur in the U.S. each year, causing an estimated 15,000 illnesses, 800 hospitalizations, and 20 deaths, annually.
    • “An overall trend revealed in the FDOSS data for 2014–2022 included that many foodborne illness outbreaks occur because of contamination of food by an animal or environmental source before arriving at the point of final preparation. Additionally, most viral outbreaks are caused by contamination from ill food workers. The data showed that common contributing factors to bacterial outbreaks are 1) allowing foods to remain out of temperature control for a prolonged period, and 2) inadequate time and temperature control during cooking.”
  • The American Hospital Association News relates,
    • “The AHA and Press Ganey March 12 released a new report showing hospital and health system patients reporting improvements in overall care experience and perception of safety alongside gains in key safety outcomes. It also shows that the health care workforce has had a rebound in their reported experience, resilience and perceptions of safety culture.
    • “The insights report, “Improvement in Safety Culture Linked to Better Patient and Staff Outcomes,” highlights how hospitals that foster a strong culture of safety also report a better experience for patients and the health care workforce.
    • “Key report findings include: 
      • “13 million patients surveyed after hospital stays report improvements in their overall care experience and perception of safety.
      • “Surveys of 1.7 million members of the health care workforce show a rebound in their reported experience, resilience and perceptions of safety culture, following the enormous strain of the COVID-19 pandemic.
      • “Improvements in key safety outcomes like falls and infections across more than 25,000 units in 2,430 hospitals.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Capstan Medical says it has notched a first in the treatment of structural heart disease, employing a robot to implant two people with mitral valve replacement devices.
    • “Current treatment options for heart valve disease exclude too many patients who are not good candidates for existing procedures, said Capstan CEO Maggie Nixon, and the company hopes its approach will provide them with a new alternative.
    • “The Santa Cruz, California-based startup is developing a valve implant, catheter and robotic delivery platform to expand structural heart intervention to a broader group of people.
    • “There need to be more percutaneous, minimally invasive options to help treat valve disease,” Nixon said in an interview.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Blue Shield of California President and CEO Lois Quam is out at the company two months after taking the helm.
    • “The company declined to explain the circumstances of Quam’s immediate departure.
    • “Chief Financial Officer Mike Stuart will serve as interim president and CEO until the board names a permanent successor, the company said in a news release Tuesday. Stuart has worked at the nonprofit insurer for more than a decade, the company said.
    • “Quam joined the company as president in August after having served as CEO of Pathfinder, a nonprofit global health organization. She was named CEO in early January as part of a corporate restructuring and was touted as its first female CEO.”
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Health technology company Innovaccer launched a new platform that seeks to make it easier for insurers to manage risk adjustment and quality improvements.
    • “On Wednesday, Innovaccer unveiled the 360-Degree Gap Closure Solution, which assist payers in improving coding accuracy and patient outcomes. The tool comes at a time when the industry is under significant scrutiny from regulators over coding practices.
    • “The platform enables better engagement across different care settings, greater automation and data governance, Innovaccer said. Health plans can deploy one-click campaigns that address care gaps in a way that reaches provider offices, pharmacies and home healthcare.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Roche has raised its bet on obesity, agreeing to pay Zealand Pharma $1.65 billion to license an experimental shot the Danish company put into a Phase 2b trial in December, Zealand said Wednesday.
    • “Per deal terms, Roche will pay $1.4 billion immediately and $250 million in anniversary payments to license petrelintide. With further milestone payments, Zealand could receive up to $5.3 billion. Roche and Zealand will co-commercialize the shot in the U.S. and Europe, and share in any profits and losses.
    • “The deal gives Roche access to a type of experimental drug known as an amylin analog, a class the Swiss pharmaceutical company didn’t obtain when it acquired Carmot Therapeutics 15 months ago. Roche plans on testing petrelintide with one of those drugs, for which Zealand could reimburse Roche $350 million.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Labcorp will pay up to $225 million to acquire the oncology diagnostics businesses of BioReference Health, a subsidiary of Opko Health, to expand its portfolio of tests used in cancer care.
    • “The deal, announced Tuesday, includes $192.5 million to be paid at closing and a payment of up to $32.5 million based on performance. 
    • “The assets, including certain customer accounts, generate about $85 million to $100 million in annual revenue, according to the announcement. Labcorp expects the acquisition to be accretive to earnings in the first year after closing.”
  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “Hospital operator Landmark Holdings of Florida filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protections on March 9, becoming the latest in a growing number of embattled providers to restructure amid financial headwinds. 
    • “In first day court filings, Landmark, which owns or operates six long-term acute care hospitals across three states, said rising labor and pharmaceutical costs, as well as stagnating Medicare reimbursements, had dinged Landmark’s profitability and threatened the provider’s ability to make timely loan repayments.”
    • “Still, Landmark told the court it expects to have enough cash on hand to keep its hospitals open through the bankruptcy process.:
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • While there are no official statistics on the number of end-of-life doulas in the United States as this emerging field is still largely unregulated, Fortune reports that the National End-of-Life Doula Alliance (NEDA) has significantly grown its membership, especially after the pandemic. In 2024, NEDA had over 1,500 registered members, compared to about 250 in 2019. 
    • “The term “end-of-life-doula” was first formally used in the early aughts. In 2001, the Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services launched the “Doula to Accompany and Comfort Program,” a pilot program that trained volunteers to aid and support people who would otherwise die alone. 
    • “Sometimes known as “death doulas,” [these] professionals * * *help people navigate what can be a confusing and overwhelming time.”

Tuesday Report

Photo by Michele Orallo on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

Capitol Hill News

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • The House [of Representatives] narrowly approved a Republican proposal to fund the government into the fall, as GOP lawmakers remained largely united following a last-minute push from the White House, overcoming Democratic opposition and setting up a fight in the Senate. 
    • Funding for the federal government expires this weekend. The GOP proposal would extend funding through Sept. 30 at fiscal 2024 spending levels, but it includes $13 billion in cuts in nondefense spending and $6 billion in increased military spending. It allocates additional money for border enforcement and forces Washington, D.C., to cut $1 billion from its budget. 
    • The measure passed 217-213, with Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky being the only Republican to vote against it. Democrats were largely united in opposition, with one Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, voting yes. * * *
    • “The matter now heads to the Senate, where Republicans will need Democratic support to advance the bill. Senate Democrats were wrestling over the matter Tuesday. Some saw the funding deadline as their only leverage to push back against GOP efforts to dismantle federal programs, while others were wary of playing hardball and triggering a government shutdown. 
    • The House left town after Tuesday’s vote, effectively giving the Senate the option of approving or blocking the House measure—but not revising it.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “Rep. Greg Murphy, M.D., R-N.C., posted on X Monday night that Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune have agreed to include a doc pay fix in Congress’ budget reconciliation, which is expected to be finished in May to align with President Donald Trump’s first 100 days.
    • “A doc pay fix, which would counteract a 2.83% cut to Medicare physicians’ payment rates that went into effect Jan. 1, has been a central focus for provider lobbying groups as well as for physician members of the legislature. It was seen as the driving force behind passing an expanded healthcare package.
    • “The Energy and Commerce committee has an $880 billion deficit reduction target. E&C will identify those cuts from programs within its jurisdiction like Medicaid and other healthcare programs. It could identify some of those savings from items in the December healthcare package that did not make it into last year’s funding bill, such as PBM reform.”
  • Per Govexec,
    • “Also on Tuesday, Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., who chairs the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, announced during a hearing he will put forward legislation that will also seek to put some constraints on the Trump administration’s efforts to remake the Veterans Affairs Department’s workforce. He said VA must work closely with Congress and stakeholders such as veterans service organizations when seeking to make staffing cuts. The Republican chairman added he has voiced his reservations to VA Secretary Doug Collins.”

HHS News

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is making one of his first official moves aimed at increasing oversight of the chemicals found in the nation’s food supply — a key component of his “Make America Healthy Again” agenda to root out chronic disease and childhood illness.
    • On Monday, Kennedy, who serves as the nation’s top health official, announced he was directing the Food and Drug Administration to “explore potential rulemaking” to tighten a decades-old loophole allowing food companies to put chemicals in their products without notifying the nation’s food regulators.
    • The practice Kennedy is targeting, known as “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS), can occur when companies self-certify the safety of a food additive. Companies aren’t required to tell the FDA when they include some chemicals and substances in their products, meaning there are probably hundreds of such ingredients added to the food supply without government oversight.
  • Per a March 10, 2025, CMS news release,
    • “Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released a proposed rule to address the troubling amount of improper enrollments impacting Affordable Care Act (ACA) Health Insurance Marketplaces across the country. CMS’ 2025 Marketplace Integrity and Affordability Proposed Rule includes proposals that take critical and necessary steps to protect people from being enrolled in Marketplace coverage without their knowledge or consent, promote stable and affordable health insurance markets, and ensure taxpayer dollars fund financial assistance only for the people the ACA set out to support.” * * *
    • “View the 2025 Marketplace Integrity and Affordability Proposed Rule (CMS-9884-P) here: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/MarketplacePIRule2025.pdf
    • “For additional information on the rule and its proposals, view the CMS fact sheet:  https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/2025-marketplace-integrity-and-affordability-proposed-rule” 
  • Per Modern Healthcare,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services increased its voluntary buyout offer for some employees for further layoffs this week as the agency faces pressure to reduce headcount, according to an email viewed by Bloomberg. 
    • “In addition to a $25,000 lump-sum buyout offer, some HHS workers would also receive around two months of paid administrative leave if they chose to accept the buyout. * * *
    • “The buyout offer was available to employees this week and expires Friday. The original buyout offer was extended to a “broad population of HHS employees,” according to an email. However, the Food and Drug Administration told staff Monday that employees responsible for reviewing drugs, medical devices and tobacco products aren’t eligible for the buyout program. 
    • “The HHS buyout offers are in addition to an early retirement program that relaxed service requirements for retirement.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued a final recommendation on screening for food insecurity which received an inconclusive “I” grade.
    • “For children, adolescents, and adults:
      “The USPSTF concludes that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for food insecurity on health outcomes in the primary care setting.”
  • Per Axios,
    • “The federal government’s free at-home COVID test distribution program has been suspended and is no longer accepting orders” as of March 9, 2025.
    • “For some previously distributed tests, expiration dates were extended to account for data that revealed a longer-than-expected shelf life.
    • “A full list of approved tests and their revised expiration dates is posted on the FDA website.”

FDA News

  • Per Cardiovascular Business,
    • “Google has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for Loss of Pulse Detection, a new smartwatch feature that detects when a person’s heart stops beating and then automatically alerts emergency services. 
    • “Loss of Pulse Detection asks the user if they are OK when it first detects the loss of pulse. If no response is provided, it triggers an audio alarm and countdown to when emergency services will be notified. If the countdown reaches zero, the alert is officially sent out.
    • “This feature is already available in 14 different countries. It will be made available in the United States for Google’s Pixel Watch 3 in the weeks ahead.”
  • Per Modern Healthcare,
    • “Siemens Healthineers has received clearance from the Food and Drug Administration for its Naeotom Alpha class of photon-counting computed tomography scanners.
    • “The company unveiled the two scanners in December, touting the Naeotom Alpha.Pro and Naeotom Alpha.Prime as more affordable options to its original Naeotom Alpha photon-counting CT, which received FDA clearance in September 2021.
    • “Photon-counting CT is a new technology that uses lower radiation doses than conventional CT and produces clearer images with fewer distortions.
    • Siemens Healthineers’ photon-counting CTs are the only commercially available scanners of their kind available for clinical use but competitors are working to bring their versions to market.”

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “A federal judge has ordered the acting head of the Office of Personnel Management to testify at a court hearing examining the legality of the Trump administration’s mass firings of federal employees, but the key workforce official has informed the court he will ignore the order. 
    • “Acting OPM Director Charles Ezell was slated to appear in a U.S. District Court in San Francisco on Thursday after Judge William Alsup ruled Monday on Monday that he must do so, but he will now face a to-be-determined sanction. The Trump administration had sought to block his testimony, saying it would raise constitutional concerns, but the judge rejected the argument. Ezell has already submitted written testimony, Alsup said, and now must be subject to cross examination. 
    • “After initial publication of this story, the Trump administration Tuesday evening informed the court Ezell would not testify and withdrew his written declaration suggesting he did not order the probationary firings across government. It called live testimony “not necessary” for Ezell or any other official. The plaintiffs in the case are seeking testimony from human resources personnel throughout government.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Healio lets us know,
    • “The diabetes mortality rate in the U.S. dropped from 28.1 deaths per 100,000 people in 2000 to 19.1 deaths per 100,000 in 2019.
    • “Reductions in diabetes mortality were observed for all racial and ethnic groups.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “GLP-1s, including Ozempic, show promise in preventing age-related conditions like Alzheimer’s, osteoarthritis and certain cancers.
    • “GLP-1s work by suppressing appetite and reducing inflammation, potentially contributing to their preventive health benefits.
    • “While promising, more robust studies are needed to confirm the causal effects of GLP-1s on longevity and healthspan.”
  • The National Institutes of Health offers a research bulletin on the following topics: “Predicting preeclampsia | Liver gene editing | Mapping MS-like brain lesions.”
  • MedPage Today tells us five things that patients with low back pain need from their doctors and
    • “BMI was lower in kids whose mothers received a responsive parenting intervention in the INSIGHT randomized clinical trial.
    • “Across ages 3 to 9 years, children in a responsive parenting group had a lower mean BMI than those in a control group.
    • “The impact appeared significant only for girls.”
  • Per a news release,
    • “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) announced today that it will assess the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of brensocatib (Insmed Incorporated) for the treatment of non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis (NCFB).
    • “The assessment will be publicly discussed during a meeting of the CTAF in September 2025, where the independent evidence review panel will deliberate and vote on evidence presented in ICER’s report.
    • “ICER’s website provides timelines of key posting dates and public comment periods for this assessment.”
  • The National Cancer Institute informs us,
    • “For men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, an initial treatment that combines enzalutamide (Xtandi) and talazoparib (Talzenna)may help them live longer than just getting enzalutamide alone, according to updated results from a large clinical trial. Enzalutamide is a type of drug known as an androgen receptor antagonist and talazoparib is part of a group of drugs called PARP inhibitors.” * * *
    • “More information about the trial, which was funded by Pfizer, the maker of talazoparib, is available in this Cancer Currents story.”
  • Fierce Pharma adds,
    • “After Gilead Sciences’ lenacapavir made waves with stellar clinical results as a twice-yearly HIV prevention candidate, the drug has shown promise being dosed even further apart at only once a year.
    • “Two different once-yearly formulations of lenacapavir achieved blood concentrations that exceeded those associated with the strong HIV prevention efficacy that twice-yearly lenacapavir showed in phase 3 preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) studies.
    • “The pharmacokinetic results came from a small phase 1 trial presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections and simultaneously published in The Lancet.
    • “Based on the early-stage data, Gilead plans to start a phase 3 program for once-yearly lenacapavir in the second half of this year, with the potential for regulatory filings in 2027, Jared Baeten, M.D., Ph.D., Gilead’s vice president of HIV clinical development, told Fierce Pharma.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Hinge Health filed Monday for a proposed initial public offering.
    • “The virtual musculoskeletal health company, which contracts with employers, pharmacy benefit managers and large insurance companies to provide physical therapy and pain relief services, has been considered a potential IPO candidate since last year.”
  • and
    • “Tampa General Hospital and Mass General Brigham are teaming up to open a radiation oncology center in Florida.
    • “The 10,000-square-foot facility in Palm Beach Gardens will be co-branded and jointly owned. Tampa General will handle daily operations, while Mass General Brigham will provide oversight on quality and safety, according to a Tuesday news release.
    • “The center is scheduled to open in early 2026, the release said.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “At its sprawling complex in Durham, N.C., Merck has opened a new $1 billion, 225,000-square-foot manufacturing plant slated to produce bulk substance for its megablockbuster HPV vaccine Gardasil.
    • “Merck built the new plant on the 262-acre campus it has occupied since 2004, where the pharma giant produces a variety of vaccines including shots to prevent chickenpox, measles and rubella.
    • “The complex manufactured more than 70 million doses last year, with the figure expected to increase this year, a Merck spokesperson said in an email. The campus now employs more than 1,000 people.”
  • Per STAT News,
    • “In the last two years, hundreds of businesses have cropped up to meet the surge in demand for the obesity and diabetes medications known as GLP-1s. The majority prescribe compounded copies of the drugs — a tenuous business strategy as shortages of the branded versions of the medications have come to an end
    • “Now, some businesses are setting their sights on another opportunity in compounding: hormones.
    • “Dozens of wellness and direct-to-consumer telehealth companies offering GLP-1s have begun marketing cash-pay hormone replacement therapy to women in perimenopause and menopause, and testosterone replacement therapy to men. Noom, best-known for its weight loss app and more recent GLP-1 offering, launched an HRT program for menopause in late February, and telehealth company Hims & Hers plans to roll out at-home testing over the next year to enable care for low testosterone, perimenopause, and menopause.
    • “Patients and physicians have long advocated for better access to hormone-based care. Men with low testosterone levels due to hypogonadism can face stigma as they seek care, and many women struggle to receive medically appropriate estrogen and progesterone to address serious hot flashes and help prevent osteoporosis. But clinicians and health policy researchers expressed concern that the emerging commodification of hormone replacement therapies — often marketed as a personalized fix for low energy, libido, and other age-related concerns — could lead to inappropriate prescriptions and put patients at risk.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “In August, Kaiser Permanente embarked on the largest rollout of generative AI in healthcare to date.
    • “The Oakland, Calif.-based health system offered Abridge, an ambient AI listening tool that drafts clinical notes for the EHR, to tens of thousands of providers.
    • Becker’s caught up with Brian Hoberman, MD, executive vice president of IT and CIO at the Permanente Federation, at the HIMSS conference in Las Vegas to find out how the implementation is going.”
    • Here’s a link to that interview.
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “Last year, some cancer patients in Tennessee and Mississippi got a startling offer: Instead of videoconferencing with oncology specialists located hours away, they could see a hologram doctor, courtesy of the same special effects that have projected the Jonas Brothers and other celebrities at concerts and live events.
    • “The offer came from West Cancer Center & Research Institute, a health system that employs about 61 doctors and serves about 19,240 new patients a year across 12 locations in Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas. The system’s main clinic is in Germantown, Tenn., a suburb of Memphis.
    • “Its doctors typically spend hours on the road each week getting to the satellite clinics to see patients in more rural locations, while also relying heavily on videoconferencing for check-ins. Now, however, two of those clinics are replacing the video calls with life-size hologram-like displays, part of a cross-industry push to take videoconferencing to the next level.”

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call lets us know,
    • “President Donald Trump alleged Sunday that “the Democrats want” a government shutdown at the end of this week, but he predicted that a lapse in appropriations probably will not take place this time.
    • “I think the CR is going to get passed. We’ll see. But it could happen,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, referring to a continuing resolution that would extend current funding until the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. The current funding extension expires at the end of Friday.”
  • Modern Healthcare adds,
    • “Physicians looking to Congress for relief from falling Medicare payments may have to keep waiting.
    • “House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) unveiled what’s known as a continuing resolution, or CR, on Saturday to keep the government open through the end of fiscal 2025 on Sept. 30, and Congress may vote on the measure as soon as Tuesday. The legislation does not address the 2.9% Medicare reimbursement cut for physicians that took effect Jan. 1.
    • “The Johnson legislation would, however, extend telehealth and hospital-at-home authorities under Medicare and delay cuts to Medicaid disproportionate share hospital payments for safety-net providers. The bill also includes six-month funding extensions for community health centers, graduate medical education and other health programs that are due to expire on March 31.”
  • The Senate confirmed Lori Chavez-DeRemer to be Secretary of Labor by a 67-32 vote.
  • The Associated Press reports,
    • “Most of the 80,000 federal workers responsible for researching diseases, inspecting food and administering Medicare and Medicaid under the auspices of the Health and Human Services Department were emailed an offer to leave their job for as much as a $25,000 payment as part of President Donald Trump’s government cuts.
    • “Workers cannot start opting in until Monday and have until 5 p.m. on Friday to submit a response for the so-called voluntary separation offer. The email was sent to staff across the department, which includes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, and the National Institutes of Health as well as the Food and Drug Administration, both in Maryland.
    • “The mass email went out to a “broad population of HHS employees,” landing in their inboxes days before agency heads are due to offer plans for shrinking their workforces. HHS is one of the government’s costliest federal agencies, with an annual budget of about $1.7 trillion that is mostly spent on health care coverage for millions of people enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid.”
  • Govexec offers us the opportunity to meet the 2025 inductees into the Government Hall of Fame.

From the judicial front,

  • The Washington Post lets us know,
    • “The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to take up a Christian therapist’s challenge to a state law barring “conversion therapy” that attempts to change a young person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
    • “Kaley Chiles, who practices in Colorado, says the state law banning such treatment is unconstitutional and has forced her to deny counseling to potential clients who share her faith, in violation of her religious beliefs.
    • “More than 20 states and the District of Columbia restrict mental health counseling that attempts to change a young person’s gender identity or sexual orientation.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • GoodRx informs us,
    • “Women consistently spend nearly 30% more out of pocket on prescriptions than men, totaling $8.5 billion more in 2024 alone.
    • “Women visit doctors more often, fill more prescriptions, and manage more chronic conditions — leading to higher total out-of-pocket costs across the board.
    • “Women 18 to 44 years old face the steepest price gap, spending up to 64% more than men — all while balancing career, family planning, and caregiving.
    • “Women also significantly outspend men on mental health treatments. Women spend 113% more on depression medications and 103% more on anxiety treatments.”
  • Health Day points out,
    • “Getting essential vitamins and minerals during pregnancy can help a woman maintain healthy blood pressure into middle age, new research suggests.
    • “High levels of the minerals copper and manganese in pregnant women were associated with lower blood pressure decades later, as well as a reduced risk of high blood pressure, researchers reported.
    • “Higher levels of vitamin B12 also were associated with lower blood pressure in later life, according to findings published March 6 in the journal Hypertension.”
  • The American Medical Association relates “What doctors wish patients knew about prostate cancer.”
  • The Washington Post points out that “Over 15 percent (15.5) of young adults ages 21 to 24 used electronic cigarettes in 2023, according to a report from the National Center for Health Statistics.”
  • Per Cardiovascular Business,
    • “New technology that directly visualizes inflammation in a patient’s coronary arteries could potentially transform the preventive cardiology landscape. It can evaluate a patient’s risk of a heart attack in a way that goes beyond what we learn from traditional cholesterol readings.
    • “Researchers at Oxford University developed the novel imaging technology, which detects coronary inflammation using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) scans and artificial intelligence (AI) to show inflammation in the perivascular fat surrounding the vessels. It is now being commercialized by Caristo and pending U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) final review. 
    • “It has always been the holy grail of cardiovascular prevention to be able to pick up coronary inflammation, because if you know which artery is inflamed and which patient needs treatments to prevent heart attacks. Up until now, we had only simply biomarkers like high sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP), which are nonspecific. So, we have developed a technology the last few years that allows you to measure coronary inflammation by analyzing the fat that surrounds arteries,” explained by Charalambos Antoniades, MD, the British Heart Foundation Chair of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Oxford. He spoke with Cardiovascular Business about the technology at the American Heart Association (AHA) 2024 meeting, where he presented data on it at multiple sessions.”
  • ECRI lists the top ten threats to patient safety in 2025:
    • “Dismissing patient, family and caregiver concerns
    • “Insufficient governance of artificial intelligence
    • “Spread of medical misinformation 
    • “Cybersecurity breaches 
    • “Caring for veterans in non-military health settings
    • “Substandard and falsified drugs
    • “Diagnostic errors in cancers, vascular events and infections 
    • “Healthcare-associated infections in long-term care facilities 
    • “Inadequate coordination during patient discharge
    • “Deteriorating working conditions in community pharmacies” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “CVS is rolling out a dozen new stores focused primarily on pharmacy services, reducing retail offerings as the company responds to a prolonged decline in retail sales, The Wall Street Journal reported March 8. 
    • “The new stores, averaging less than 5,000 square feet, or less than half the size of a normal CVS store, will open over the next year across the U.S.” 
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Novo Nordisk’s experimental drug CagriSema helped people who are overweight or obese and have diabetes lose about 14% of their body weight over 68 weeks, or 11 percentage points more than those given placebo, the company said Monday.
    • “The Danish company aims to position CagriSema as a more potent successor to its popular obesity drug Wegovy, which recorded sales of 58 billion kroner, or about $8.4 billion, in 2024. But earlier trial results in people without diabetes also fell short of expectations, casting doubt on CagriSema’s potential.
    • “Novo Nordisk shares fell nearly 10% following the announcement, continuing a monthslong stock slide fueled by concerns over the company’s competitive standing versus top rival Eli Lilly. The company has already outlined plans for a new Phase 3 trial to test whether CagriSema can generate greater weight loss at higher doses.”
  • and
    • “An experimental drug from Mineralys Therapeutics succeeded in a pair of trials in people with stubbornly high blood pressure, the biotechnology company said Monday.
    • Mineralys has been developing the drug, dubbed lorundrostat, in people whose high blood pressure can’t be adequately treated with existing medications. The company says more than half of people with hypertension have this “uncontrolled” and “resistant” form, which in many cases is linked to high levels of a blood pressure-regulating hormone released by the kidneys.”

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “New legislation advanced by a voice vote March 4 would codify 14 pre-deductible healthcare services through high-deductible health plans (HDHPs).
    • “It codifies guidance from President Donald Trump’s first term increasing flexible coverage options for HDHPs. The bill would allow medical products and services like beta-blockers, blood pressure monitors, glucometers, inhalers and cholesterol drugs to be more easily covered by insurance by letting insurers pay for low-cost services before a deductible is reached.
    • “This legislation provides employers and their employees with greater flexibility to design healthcare coverage options that expand access to treatments for chronic diseases,” said Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith, R-Missouri, in a statement on the House floor. “By providing flexible coverage options for more people living with chronic health conditions, we can help lower their costs and improve their health and well-being.” * * *
    • “The bill must still be passed by the full Senate.”
  • Roll Call tells us,
    • “Senate Republicans called on the Trump administration Wednesday to use the formal rescissions process to claw back money already appropriated by Congress that the “Department of Government Efficiency” has identified as wasteful.
    • “It’s also a way to avoid legal setbacks that have befallen the White House in its push to freeze agency budgets and programs, including foreign aid accounts.
    • “One day after President Donald Trump singled out small-dollar examples of waste in his joint address to Congress, the de facto leader of the DOGE effort, Elon Musk, came to the Capitol to soothe concerns over how some of the cuts have been implemented. Many lawmakers have expressed alarm at the wholesale gutting of agencies and the firing of thousands of federal employees.
    • “Hoping to regain some of their power of the purse, senators asked Musk at a private lunch to have the White House submit a rescissions package for congressional approval for any funding it deems fraudulent or wasteful. Congress would then have 45 days to approve the request, or else the money must be spent as appropriated once the clock runs out.
    • “What we got to do as Republicans is capture their work product, put it in a bill and vote on it,” Senate Budget Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told reporters. “So the White House, I’m urging them to come up with a rescission package.”
    • “Graham said Musk was receptive to the idea and hadn’t known about the rescissions process as an available tool to cut spending.”
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Marty Makary, the Johns Hopkins surgeon who President Donald Trump chose to lead the Food and Drug Administration, fended off pressure from Republican and Democratic senators Thursday over a canceled agency meeting on influenza vaccines. 
    • “Questioned by several lawmakers at a hearing held to evaluate his nomination, Makary would not commit to reconvening the meeting, at which agency advisers were set to discuss the composition of this year’s flu shots. Members of the panel were notified last week that they would not meet as scheduled. 
    • “Instead, Makary seemed to indicate he would take a broader look at the role the advisory committee plays in the FDA’s vaccine decision-making and whether it is providing useful advice. 
    • “You have my commitment to review what the committees are doing [and] how they are being used,” Makary told Senator Bill Cassidy, R-La., who serves as chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee reviewing Markary’s nomination.” 
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) alerted providers of their obligation to protect American children from often irreversible chemical and surgical mutilation, including interventions that cause sterilization. Hospital providers were alerted of serious quality and safety concerns associated with harmful, medical interventions for gender dysphoria. CMS also announced it may begin taking steps to align its policies and regulations with medical evidence and to safeguard children from often irreversible experiments. CMS will continue to follow any applicable substantive and procedural requirements in taking any future action.” * * *
    • “Similar alerts are also being sent by other HHS agencies to grantees. View the CMS alert here: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/QSSAM-25-02-Hospitals.pdf”  
  • Govexec informs us,
    • “Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger said in a statement to Government Executive that he is dropping his lawsuit to reverse his removal by Donald Trump, enabling the president to name his own person to lead the office that protects federal employees and whistleblowers from prohibited personnel practices.
    • “A district judge on March 1 blocked Dellinger’s firing, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit on Wednesday allowed for him to be removed while it considers the Trump administration’s appeal.”
  • Federal News Network interviewed Tammy Flanagan about RIFs and early retirement for federal employees.

From the judicial front,

  • Thompson Reuters relates,
    • A federal trial court [in Maine} has dismissed a proposed class action lawsuit against an insurer/health plan administrator alleging discrimination under Affordable Care Act (ACA) Section 1557 for failure to cover weight-loss drugs. The participant alleged that the insurer’s plan violated Section 1557 (which prohibits discrimination in certain health programs and activities based on race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disability) because it excluded prescription drug coverage for commonly prescribed weight-loss medications if they were prescribed solely to treat obesity. She argued that she did not have access to the prescription medications required to treat her obesity (which she alleged was a disability and diagnosed health condition), while other participants had access to prescription medications medically necessary to treat their diagnosed health conditions, including the same or similar medications.
    • Concluding that the participant’s allegations did not support a finding of disability under Section 1557, the court dismissed the case. It determined that the participant had not plausibly shown that she was disabled merely as a function of her body mass index, nor that the insurer had ever regarded her as disabled. Pointing out that disability is an essential element of a Section 1557 disability discrimination claim, the court held that the participant had failed to state a claim for relief.
  • Fierce Health notes,
    • “Dozens of providers have filed new lawsuits against Blues insurers, arguing that the plans colluded to block competition and reimburse them at lower rates.
    • “The payers reached a tentative $2.8 billion settlement agreement in Alabama court in October, but the new lawsuits opt out of it and instead press for a jury trial. The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association and 33 of its affiliates are named in the new suits.
    • “Providers who have signed on to the filings include the University of Pennsylvania Health System, Geisinger, MedStar, CommonSpirit and physician staffing firm TeamHealth. They argue that the alleged collusion between Blues plans violated antitrust laws.”

From the Food and Drug Administration,

  • Cardiovascular Business reports,
    • “Genentech, part of the Roche Group, has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for tenecteplase, the company’s new intravenous treatment for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) in adult patients. Genentech will be marketing and selling tenecteplase under the brand name TNKase
    • “Tenecteplase is only the second clot-busting medication for stroke to gain approval from the FDA—and the first in decades. The only other one, alteplase, is also sold by Genentech under the brand name Activase.
    • ‘Tenecteplase is a tissue plasminogen activator given to patients through a single five-second intravenous bolus. This is much faster than alteplase, which was administered by giving patients an IV bolus that is then followed by a 60-minute infusion.”
  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News adds,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration March 5 announced that Baxter Healthcare Corporation recalled its Spectrum infusion pumps due to the potential for missing motor mounting screws. The FDA said missing motor mounting screws could lead to insufficient or excessive therapy, interruption in therapy or delay in therapy, which can result in serious adverse health consequences. Baxter has reported one serious injury related to the issue.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Philips stopped selling an implant used to repair damaged arteries after reports of 20 injuries and some devices needing to be removed.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration said in a Monday recall notice that all customers should stop using Philips’ Tack Endovascular System immediately. The agency classified the recall as Class I, the highest risk category.
    • “Philips is not aware of serious harm or death accompanying the use of the device, a company spokesperson wrote in an email. The FDA said no deaths were reported.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The AHA News points out,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention March 4 announced it sent agency experts to Texas to assist local officials in responding to the state’s measles outbreak. The CDC said the partnership, known as an Epi-Aid, is a rapid response effort by the agency’s Epidemic Intelligence Service to respond to urgent public health issues such as disease outbreaks. EIS officers will provide onsite support for one to three weeks. 
    • “As of March 4, there were 159 measles cases identified, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. Twenty-two patients have been hospitalized and a school-aged child died Feb. 26. Texas DSHS officials said additional cases are likely to occur.” 
  • The New York Times reports
    • “Women’s brains are superior to men’s in at least in one respect — they age more slowly. And now, a group of researchers reports that they have found a gene in mice that rejuvenates female brains.
    • “Humans have the same gene. The discovery suggests a possible way to help both women and men avoid cognitive declines in advanced age.
    • “The study was published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances. The journal also published two other studies on women’s brains, one on the effect of hormone therapy on the brain and another on how age at the onset of menopause shapes the risk of getting Alzheimer’s disease.”
  • and
    • “Postpartum depression affects about one in every seven women who give birth, but little is known about what happens in the brains of pregnant women who experience it. A new study begins to shed some light.
    • “Researchers scanned the brains of dozens of women in the weeks before and after childbirth and found that two brain areas involved in the processing and control of emotions increased in size in women who developed symptoms of postpartum depression.
    • “The results, published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, constitute some of the first evidence that postpartum depression is associated with changes in the brain during pregnancy.”
  • The Washington Post adds,
    • “Bacterial vaginosis, a common vaginal infection also known as BV, has long been treated as a women’s condition; but a new study adds to evidence that it is a sexually transmitted infection and suggests that treating a male partner can help reduce recurrence.
    • “BV affects nearly 1 in 3 women of reproductive age globally. It has been associated with increased risk of adverse birth outcomes, HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, according to the World Health Organization. It has a high recurrence rate, with more than half of those who are treated experiencing the condition again within three months.
    • “The study, led by a team of Australian researchers, was published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force released for public comment a Draft Research Plan regarding Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults: Screening. The public comment deadline is April 2, 2025.
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “In a retrospective study, semaglutide use leading up to bariatric surgery was not linked with greater weight loss a year after surgery.
    • “Rates of diabetes remission and complications were also comparable between semaglutide users and controls.
    • “Previous studies have found that taking semaglutide after surgery can help patients shed more pounds.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “Using visualized coronary calcium scoring independently reduced plaque progression among patients at intermediate risk vs. usual care.
    • “Improvements in lipid profiles were also reported.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Reports of children in the United States with influenza-associated encephalopathy or encephalitis (IAE) increased from none during the 2020-2021 flu season to a preliminary 14% for the 2024-2025 season, based on a new analysis from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
    • “IAE involves a range of neurologic syndromes triggered by flu infection of the respiratory tract, with diagnosis based on brain lesions detectable on imaging, wrote Amara Fazal, MD, and colleagues at the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.
    • “A series of anecdotal reports of pediatric cases with IAE in January 2025 prompted the CDC’s investigation; the findings were published in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR).”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review offers five takeaways from this week’s HIMSS conference and lets us know the amount of cash on hand for 35 U.S. healthcare systems as of December 31, 2024.
  • Beckers Payer Issues lets us know,
    • Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina has restructured to become a subsidiary of a new parent holding company, CuraCor Solutions.
    • CuraCor will include Blue Cross NC and other fully owned companies, allowing the new organization “to quickly partner and invest in new health programs and technologies to benefit customers,” according to a March 6 news release shared with Becker’s.
    • Blue Cross NC members will experience no changes to coverage, services or the open enrollment process. Insurance cards, provider networks and Medicaid and Medicare offerings will also remain the same.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Datavant is beefing up its data retrieval network with a new layer of artificial intelligence that will allow health plans and risk-bearing providers to improve operations and patient care by accessing and analyzing a trove of clinical data.
    • “Value-based care arrangements require health plans and risk-bearing providers to navigate complicated requirements for managing patient data and monitoring population health. While providers and health plans face increasing cost pressure and administrative burden, Datavant touts that the enhanced platform will ease the administrative burden of locating and analyzing patient and member data.
    • “Datavant’s new Clinical Insights Platform is the result of Datavant’s integration with Apixio. It acquired the company’s connected care platform and value-based care solutions in September 2024. With the release of the Clinical Insights Platform, the Apixio brand will sunset and the combined Datavant-Apixio product will be sold.”

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal offers a summary of seven takeaways from the President’s speech on Tuesday night.
  • Bloomberg Law tells us,
    • “A battle over legislation that would make it easier for Medicare cancer patients to get their drugs may reignite this week when a key Republican lawmaker is expected to reintroduce the proposal.
    • “The measure (H.R. 5526) was passed in the House in September 2024 but stalled in the Senate amid opposition from the pharmacy industry. Rep. Diana Harshbarger (R-Tenn.), a pharmacist, said in a statement to Bloomberg Law the legislation “is one of my top healthcare priorities, and I expect to reintroduce it this week.”
    • “This legislation had strong bipartisan support in Congress last year because it would greatly benefit the lives of countless seniors who need life-saving medications but might not be able to access them easily,” Harshbarger said. “I’m looking at all legislative opportunities to advance this bill and get it enacted into law.”
    • “The legislation, and S. 3458 introduced last Congress by former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.), would have amended the physician self-referral law and restored a Covid-19 pandemic-era waiver that allowed Medicare patients to receive their oral cancer medications through the mail, by courier, or via pick-up by family members.”
  • Wolters Kluwer lets us know,
    • “On March 2, 2025 the United States Department of the Treasury announced that with respect to the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), it will not enforce any penalties or fines associated with the beneficial ownership information reporting (BOIR) rule under the current deadlines, and it will further not enforce any penalties or fines against United States citizens or domestic reporting companies or their beneficial owners after a forthcoming rule change takes effect. 
    • “The Treasury Department also announced that it will be issuing a proposed rulemaking that will narrow the scope of the BOI reporting rule to foreign reporting companies only. Treasury stated that it was taking this step “in the interest of supporting hard-working American taxpayers and small businesses and ensuring that the rule is appropriately tailored to advance the public interest.”
    • The Treasury Department’s press release can be read in full here: https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sb0038
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Trump administration’s Office of Personnel Management has revised its guidance on probationary employees, now stating that OPM was not directing agencies to fire federal workers.
    • “An update to OPM’s Jan. 20 memo on Tuesday adds a paragraph clarifying that any decision to fire employees should be left to individual agencies.
    • “Please note that, by this memorandum, OPM is not directing agencies to take any specific performance-based actions regarding probationary employees,” the updated memo states. “Agencies have ultimate decision-making authority over, and responsibility for, such personnel actions.”
  • Kevin Moss, writing in Federal News Network, discusses how federal annuitants can control their FEHB premiums.
  • Per an FDA news release,
    • On Monday, the FDA approved the first generics of Xarelto (rivaroxaban), 2.5 mg, tablets to reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events in adult patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and to reduce the risk of major thrombotic vascular events in adult patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD), including patients who have recently undergone a lower extremity revascularization procedure due to symptomatic PAD. Anticoagulants (blood thinners) are among the most commonly prescribed medications in the U.S., and Monday’s approval of the first generics of rivaroxaban, 2.5 mg, tablets will make a direct impact on American patients who rely on anticoagulant medications. Approving safe and effective generics to help provide patients more treatment options continues to be a priority for the FDA.

From the judicial front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group notched a major court win in a legal challenge over its Medicare Advantage (MA) billing practices that is stretching into its second decade.
    • “The suit was first filed by a whistleblower in 2011, and the Department of Justice (DOJ) joined the case in 2017. The court-appointed special master released its report this week, in which, after reviewing the evidence, it determined “that the government is lacking any evidence in support of two essential elements of its False Claim Act and related common law claims.”
    • “The suit alleges that UnitedHealth conducted reviews of patients’ medical records that allowed it to identify underpayments while ignoring instances of overbilling. This would enable the company to juice its risk scores and thus its MA payouts.” * * *
    • “In the lawsuit, the feds argue that the billing practices allowed UHG to pocket $2.1 billion. The special master rebuffed an analysis from a government expert who identified 1.97 million codes among 28 million that were allegedly unsupported by the patients’ diagnoses.
    • “The special master noted in its report that the expert did not review medical charts before making this determination.” * * *
    • “The special master’s report recommends that the courts grant UHG a summary judgement and reject the DOJ’s request for partial summary adjudication.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Katelyn Jetelina, a/k/a Your Local Epidemiologist, remarks
    • “If you’re 65+ or moderately/severely immunocompromised, a spring Covid-19 vaccine is available. Last October, CDC recommended a second dose of the 2024-2025 Covid-19 vaccine for this spring. It’s a 6-month recommended interval, so the first people will be eligible this week.
    • Are they still working? Yes. Data published last week showed Covid-19 vaccines provided 45% additional protection against hospitalizations this winter.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out that the Health and Human Services Department under its new leadership is heightening its scrutiny of vaccines.
  • In this week’s online Research Matter, NIH discusses “Tracking diet from stool samples | Diabetes & antibiotic resistance | Cancer cell cooperation.”
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • An observational study supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) found that infants who had more diverse bacteria in their gut had lower childhood blood pressure, and this protective association was stronger if they were breastfed for at least six months. The findings published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
    • For the research, investigators reviewed data from 526 children enrolled in a prospective study in Denmark. They looked for connections between infant gut bacteria, which can be influenced by nutrition and supports a variety of health functions, and childhood blood pressure. To assess this, they collected fecal samples to analyze bacteria in the infants’ intestines during their first week, month, and year of life. Three and six years later, they measured the children’s blood pressure.
    • The researchers found children with more diverse gut bacteria at one month had lower blood pressure six years later. They then assessed the influence of breastfeeding, which was measured in this study for durations of at least six months. They discovered that among children breastfed for at least six months, the blood-pressure lowering effect of having more diverse bacteria in their gut was even stronger. Specifically, those with a greater diversity of gut bacteria throughout the first month of life had systolic blood pressure that was about 2 mm Hg lower six years later if they were breastfed for at least six months.
  • The National Cancer Institute points out,
    • “A new study has identified a group of genetic changes that are likely involved in the development of cancer in children. According to the findings, genomic changes affecting large pieces of DNA, called structural variants, contribute to an estimated 1% to 6% of pediatric solid tumors.” * * *
    • “Overall, the researchers estimated that structural variants are involved in the development of 1% to 6% of neuroblastomas, Ewing sarcomas, and osteosarcomas. That is a rough estimate limited by the relatively small number of children in the study and the exclusion of certain types of structural variants due to technical limitations, the team noted.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “It’s easy to think cervical cancer could be 100% preventable. Along with lung, breast, and colorectal cancer, it has screening tests to find precancerous changes that can be treated before full-blown cancer develops. Even more, there is a highly effective vaccine against HPV, the virus that causes most cervical cancer diagnoses.
    • “Still, those two forms of prevention are not enough if people aren’t getting them, a research letter published Monday in JAMA Network Open reports. The cross-sectional study found incidence and mortality rates have been climbing in rural counties in the United States since 2012, going in the wrong direction after declining since 2001. Cases were 25% higher and deaths were 42% higher in rural counties compared to urban counties through 2019. 
    • “Researchers said those jumps in incidence and mortality showing up in rural areas may be a result of lower screening, diagnosis, and treatment rates, all an offshoot of reduced options for care outside cities.
    • “There was also a trend toward higher incidence among Black women starting in 2017, but that rise was not statistically significant. Other research, from the American Cancer Society, has concluded the mortality rate for Black women is roughly 65% higher than the rate for white women.”
  • BioPharma Dive relates,
    • “Merck & Co.’s cancer immunotherapy Keytruda is one of the pharmaceutical industry’s biggest successes. The drug’s arrival in 2014 introduced a new way of treating cancer and, over time, it became standard therapy for a panoply of different tumors. Clinical achievements brought about commercial performance, making Keytruda the world’s best-selling medicine.
    • “After the repeated failure of past attempts to improve on Keytruda, a new class of drugs might finally offer a better backbone for immunotherapy’s next decade.
    • “Last September, biotechnology companies Summit Therapeutics and Akeso revealed clinical trial results showing one of these drugs significantly outperformed Keytruda. Called ivonescimab, it cut the risk of lung cancer progression in half compared to Keytruda in a Phase 3 study — a result so striking it sparked a wave of investment in oncology research practically overnight.
    • “This really was a ‘black swan’ event,” said Allen Yang, Summit’s chief medical officer. “It’s clearly what everybody’s been looking for.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare shares news from this week’s HIMSS conference being held in Las Vegas.
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Lightning-fast evolution in artificial intelligence and growing adoption of the models is giving rise to concerns that AI could exacerbate existing divides between technological haves and have-nots in the healthcare industry.
    • “But all types of providers — regardless of location or finances — can adopt AI, experts said Monday at the HIMSS conference in Las Vegas.
    • “It’s just a question of knowing how.
    • “Rural hospitals, smaller systems and health clinics without a massive IT infrastructure should reach out to AI companies to discuss potential partnerships, said Graham Walker, co-director of advanced development at Kaiser Permanente’s medical group, during a panel.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Walgreens Boots Alliance is closing in on a deal with private-equity firm Sycamore Partners that would take the struggling drugstore chain off the public market for around $10 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. 
    • “The sides are aiming to complete a deal as soon as Thursday, assuming a last-minute snag doesn’t delay the talks or end them entirely, the people said. 
    • “They have been discussing Sycamore paying between $11.30 a share and $11.40 a share in cash, the people said. The deal could also include contingent value rights that would increase the value if certain targets are later reached, they added. 
    • “Should Sycamore complete the deal for the whole company, it is expected to maintain the core U.S. retail business and sell off or take public the other parts of the company, the people said.”
  • Modern Healthcare informs us,
    • “CVS Health has dealt its Medicare Shared Savings Program accountable care organization business to Wellvana, the companies announced Tuesday.
    • “As part of the all-stock transaction, CVS Health took a minority stake in Wellvana, a privately held physician-enablement vendor. The companies did not disclose the terms of the deal and did not immediately respond to interview requests.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan reported a loss of $1.02 billion on enterprise revenue of $40.6 billion in 2024, driven by rising utilization of expensive medical services and costs for prescription and specialty drugs.
    • “The company reported an underwriting loss of $1.7 billion in 2024, resulting in a negative operating margin of -4.2%. These losses were partly offset by strong performance from the company’s investment portfolio. 
    • “In 2024, Blue Cross saw an increase of $3 billion for medical and pharmacy claims costs compared to 2023. There was an increase of $900 million in pharmacy claims costs, including $544 million for specialty drugs, of which $215 million was for new indications on autoimmune drugs. GLP-1 drugs alone produced $1.1 billion in claims in 2024, a 29% increase from 2023.
    • “Total membership stands at 5.1 million. There are 663,000 Medicare Advantage members, 286,000 Medicaid members, and 160,000 ACA members.”
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Novant Health and Durham, North Carolina-based Duke University Health System will partner to build an unspecified number of new campuses across North Carolina, according to a Monday press release.
    • “The partnership aims to increase patient access to primary care and advanced specialty treatment, as well as shorten wait times for care.
    • “Construction on the first sites will begin this summer, and facilities will open approximately 18 months after work begins, according to the news release.” 

Wednesday Report

Photo by Michele Orallo on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

Capitol Hill News

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Lawmakers who support tough rules on pharmacy benefit managers reaffirmed their ambitions to reanimate legislation that nearly passed Congress in December.
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee relaunched the push at a hearing Tuesday that featured declarations from majority Republicans and minority Democrats that they will tackle high pharmaceutical prices and limited competition in the PBM market through bills that have lingered for more than a year without final action.
    • “I can tell you it is a priority of mine to ensure these commonsense and bipartisan policies become law,” Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) said at the hearing.”
  • Per a Senate news release,
    • “In a Wall Street Journal letter to the editor, Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) welcomed Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s support for enhanced transparency regarding direct-to-consumer (DTC) prescription-drug advertisements. Grassley and Durbin are leading bipartisan legislation to require price disclosures in DTC commercials.”
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “Once again, House lawmakers have introduced a bill to alter a key provision of the Inflation Reduction Act in response to arguments that the federal law is discouraging investment in developing so-called small molecule medicines.
    • “The legislation, known as the Ensuring Pathways to Innovative Cures Act, would allow Medicare to begin negotiating with pharmaceutical companies over the prices of small molecule medicines 13 years after they reach the market. Currently, negotiations begin after nine years and the legislation — which was re-introduced by Rep. Greg Murphy (R-N.C.) — would shift the timetable so that it is the same as for large molecule medicines, also known as biologics.
    • “By making this change, the legislation would remove what the pharmaceutical industry and its investors claim is a disincentive for pursuing small molecule drugs, since these medicines would have less time on the market before Medicare would be able to negotiate set prices. This process means there will be small returns on investments for small molecule drugs, according to those who support the bill.”
  • The American Hospital Association News (AHA) tells us,
    • “Both chambers of Congress have reintroduced AHA-supported legislation, the Conrad State 30 and Physician Access Reauthorization Act (S. 709]/H.R. 1585), to reauthorize and expand the program that allows foreign-born medical graduates to practice medicine in rural and underserved areas. The bipartisan legislation extends the program for three years and would increase current state allocations from 30 to 35 physicians per year. It would also provide flexibility to expand the number of waivers in states where demand exceeds that limit.” 

White House News

  • The AHA News lets us know,
    • “The White House yesterday issued an executive order that directs the Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and Treasury to improve upon and increase enforcement of the hospital and insurer price transparency requirements in the Hospital Price Transparency and Transparency in Coverage regulations. Specifically, the White House instructs the departments to “rapidly implement and enforce” the regulations, including by taking actions in the next 90 days to increase enforcement and standardization and ensure that “actual prices,” rather than estimates are disclosed.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues offers six notes for payers on this Executive Order.
  • Per Govexec,
    • “The Trump administration has given federal agencies until March 13 to deliver their plans to dramatically slash their workforces through layoffs as the Trump administration moves to the second phase of its initiative to cut federal employees. 
    • “The plans will focus on the “maximum elimination” of functions not required by law, Office of Management and Budget director and Office of Personnel Management acting Director Charles Ezell said in new guidance on Wednesday, and include a resulting “significant reduction” in employees. As a starting point for the cuts, Vought and Ezell said, agencies should focus on employees whose jobs are not required in statute and who face furloughs in government shutdowns—typically around one-third of the federal workforce, or 700,000 employees
    • “Pursuant to the president’s direction, agencies should focus on the maximum elimination of functions that are not statutorily mandated while driving the highest-quality, most efficient delivery of their statutorily required functions,” Vought and Ezell said.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Trump administration is giving federal agencies until mid-April to suggest relocations of bureaus and offices out of the D.C. region, a move that would have widespread impacts on the local economy.
    • “In a guidance issued Wednesday to the heads of all executive departments and agencies, the directors of the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Personnel Management laid out steps for compliance with President Donald Trump’s order to eliminate “waste, bloat and insularity” in the government. Part of that is a directive to submit “any proposed relocations of agency bureaus and offices from Washington, D.C. and the National Capital Region to less-costly parts of the country” by April 14.” * * *
    • “Also on Wednesday, Trump issued an executive order giving agencies seven days to submit an inventory of their real property and 30 days to identify all leases that can be terminated. Within 60 days, the order stated, the General Services Administration — the government’s real estate arm — must come up with a plan to dispose all property deemed “no longer needed.”
  • Bloomberg Law informs us,
    • “US health officials are reevaluating a $590 million contract for bird flu shots that the Biden administration awarded to Moderna Inc., people familiar with the matter said.
    • “The review is part of a government push to examine spending on messenger RNA-based vaccines, the technology that powered Moderna’s Covid vaccine. The bird flu shot contract was awarded to Moderna in the Biden administration’s final days, sending the company’s stock up 13% in the two days following the Jan. 17 announcement.”

CMS News

  • Fierce Healthcare notes,
    • “Just over 34.4 million people were enrolled in Medicare Advantage (MA) plans as of Feb. 1, representing fairly slim growth across the program’s annual enrollment period.
    • “Enrollment grew by 3.8% from February 2024 to February 2025, according to anticipated data released this week from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. This would make for the lowest growth rate in more than a decade, according to researchers at KFF.
    • “The KFF analysts said enrollment in MA has more than doubled since 2010.”
  • and
    • “While lobbyists are supplicating President Donald Trump and the Republican-led Congress to continue their leadership on telehealth and extend expiring flexibilities—which Trump began during the COVID-19 pandemic—they no longer are asking for a concrete timeline.
    • “Three hundred and fifty organizations signed a letter to congressional leadership Monday urging lawmakers to extend expiring Medicare telehealth flexibilities and to restore telehealth access lost by commercially insured patients in December.
    • “The organizations told Congress that they prefer to make the telehealth flexibilities permanent. However, in a messaging shift, the groups said they “recognize this could be a multi-year process” and asked Congress to consider a “long-term” extension.”

Food and Drug Administration News

  • The New York Times relates,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has taken a crucial step toward expanding access to the antipsychotic medication clozapine, the only drug approved for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, among the most devastating of mental illnesses.
    • “The agency announced on Monday that it was eliminating a requirement that patients submit blood tests before their prescriptions can be filled.” * * *
    • “In 2015, federal regulators imposed a regimen known as risk evaluation and mitigation strategies, or REMS, that required patients to submit to weekly, biweekly and monthly blood tests that had to be uploaded onto a database and verified by pharmacists.
    • “Physicians have long complained that, as a result, clozapine is grossly underutilized.
    • “Dr. Frederick C. Nucifora, director of the Adult Schizophrenia Clinic at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, said he believed that around 30 percent of patients with schizophrenia would benefit from clozapine — far more than the 4 percent who currently take it.
    • “I have had many patients who were doing terribly, who struggled to function outside the hospital, and cycled through many medications,” he said. “If they go on clozapine, they really tend to not be hospitalized again. I’ve had people go on to finish college and work. It’s quite remarkable.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “A child who tested positive for measles died in West Texas, the state health department said, marking the first death in an outbreak that has sickened nearly 140 people. 
    • “The Texas Department of State Health Services said a school-age child died after being hospitalized in Lubbock. The child wasn’t vaccinated, the state health department said.
    • “The child’s death marked the first measles-related death in the U.S. since 2015.” * * *
    • “The reality of this outbreak is pushing more people to get vaccinated, said Katherine Wells, director of public health in Lubbock. The public-health department has administered around 100 more measles vaccines over the past week or two than they do normally. More than half of those went to children receiving the vaccine for the first time. School nurses also checked students’ vaccine records and alerted parents if their sons or daughters hadn’t received their second dose yet, Wells said.
    • “The goal right now is to find pockets of unvaccinated people who have not yet been exposed and just get our vaccination rates up as high as possible,” Wells said. “That’s what’s going to slow this down.”
  • CBS News points out,
    • “This season’s influenza vaccine may have been a poor match to a strain of the flu virus that caused many infections this winter, early data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests.
    • “The CDC’s latest data come as much of the U.S. is finally seeing signs of a slowdown in influenza activity after waves of illness this past fall and winter that climbed to the worst rates recorded from hospitals and doctor’s offices since the 2009 swine flu pandemic.”
  • The National Cancer Institute tells us whether “AI Help Predict Which Cancer Patients Should Be Treated with Immunotherapy?” and offers Cancer Information Highlights about “Metastatic Prostate Cancer | Prenatal Blood Test | Nivolumab via Injection.”
  • Health Day adds,
    • “Frequent exercise can help colon cancer survivors live longer, perhaps even outlasting average folks, a new study suggests.
    • “Colon cancer patients who were very physically active had three-year survival rates that were slightly higher than the general population, researchers report in the journal Cancer.
    • “This new information can help patients with colon cancer understand how factors that they can control — their physical activity levels — can have a meaningful impact on their long-term prognosis,” lead researcher Justin Brown, director of the Cancer Metabolism Program with the Pennington Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University, said in a news release.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “Pregnant women with low vitamin D levels during the first trimester were four times more likely to give birth prematurely compared with women with adequate vitamin D levels, researchers wrote in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
    • “Testing for vitamin D status is not currently part of standard prenatal care in the U.S.,” Alison D. Gernand, PhD, MPH, RD, associate professor of nutritional sciences at Pennsylvania State University, told Healio. “Clinical care providers should consider talking to pregnant patients about vitamin D during the first prenatal visit — asking whether they have vitamin D-rich foods in their diet and how much vitamin D is in the supplement they are taking.”
  • and
    • “Among populations with low adherence to colorectal cancer screening, annual fecal immunochemical testing was the cheapest and most effective noninvasive screening method, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “AstraZeneca said Wednesday that its experimental drug camizestrant delayed tumor progression in a Phase 3 testing its use as a first-line treatment in people with a certain type of breast cancer. The drug, an oral, hormone receptor protein-degrading therapy known as a SERD, was tested alongside an approved CDK4/6 inhibitor in people whose HR-positive, HER2-negative tumors have an “emergent” ESR1 mutation. People in the study were receiving standard hormone therapy and a CDK4/6 drug and then either continued, or swapped out the hormone treatment for camizestrant, once a tumor scan showed signs of an ESR1 mutation. The result was a “highly statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement” in progression-free survival for camizestrant recipients, AstraZeneca said. Menarini Group’s similar drug Orserdu is available in the second line setting, while others from ArvinasEli Lilly and Roche are in advanced testing.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Drugmaker Eli Lilly plans to build four new manufacturing plants in the U.S., a $27 billion investment that the company expects will create 3,000 high-skilled jobs and employ 10,000 construction workers.
    • “Three of the new sites would produce active pharmaceutical ingredients for its drugs, and the fourth would produce sterile injectable medicines such as diabetes drug Mounjaro, Lilly said Wednesday. The company hasn’t picked the locations yet. It expects the plants to be making medicines within five years.
    • “The announcement, by one of the country’s biggest drugmakers, is the latest by a company outlining a major capital push in the U.S. while President Trump seeks to revive domestic manufacturing.
    • “It comes as Lilly and other pharmaceutical companies seek warm relations with the new administration and press it to pursue industry objectives, including the extension of corporate tax cuts enacted during the first Trump administration.
    • “We hadn’t built a new site in the U.S. in more than 40 years until the first set of Trump tax cuts, so we need to see those either extended or improved to support this,” Lilly Chief Executive David Ricks said in an interview.”
  • Per Modern Healthcare,
    • “Mobile medical units will deliver hospital-at-home care to patients in rural communities as part of a five-year pilot program aimed at expanding healthcare access in underserved areas.
    • “The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health recently awarded an undisclosed amount of funding to Boston’s Mass General BrighamUniversity of Utah’s Huntsman Cancer Institute and Kentwood, Michigan-based Homeward Health to develop programs that will extend hospital-level care to patients in remote communities using mobile platforms.
    • “Health systems have used hospital-at-home as a way to ease overcrowding and free up beds. More than 380 hospitals have Medicare waivers allowing them to provide acute care to patients where they live at the same reimbursement rate as an inpatient stay. While the waiver is set to expire at the end of March, there has been bipartisan support to continue it and hospitals continue to launch in-home acute care programs.
    • “But the concept has not taken off in rural America, in part because the CMS waiver requires patients to live within 25 miles of a participating hospital. Staffing can also be a challenge, as well as patient buy-in.”
  • and
    • “Teladoc posted a net loss of just over $1 billion in 2024 related to ongoing struggles at its direct-to-consumer BetterHelp business that are expected to continue this year.
    • “The annual net loss of $1 billion, or $5.87 per share, reported Wednesday, compared with a 2023 loss of $220 million, or $1.34 per share. The company took a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $790 million attributed to BetterHelp. Revenue tied to BetterHelp, which Teladoc acquired in June 2015 for $4 million, decreased 8% in 2024. Overall revenue declined 1%.
    • “Compared with a year ago, fourth-quarter revenue decreased 3% and its net loss was 68% worse.
    • “The outlook for this year isn’t encouraging. The company said it expects BetterHelp revenue to decline nearly 10%. Still, during an earnings call, CEO Chuck Divita was bullish on the direct-to-consumer segment and said Teladoc will pursue strategies to turn the company around.”
  • Tech Target discusses “How healthcare consumerism is driving provider revenue growth.”
    • “Sixty-five percent of healthcare executives are prioritizing growth strategies to increase revenue, according to the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions. And health system leaders expect consumers to play a major role in their organizations’ organic growth.
    • “The survey from Deloitte underscored a shift from merger and acquisition activity as a means of growing revenue to consumer attraction and retention. However, to attract new consumers and drive organic growth, over half of health system executives (and about half of health plan leaders) said they need to improve consumer engagement, trust and the overall patient experience.”

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Hill reminds us,
    • “The calendar will officially turn to March this week, putting Congress in the same month as the looming March 14 government shutdown deadline. Despite that date fast-approaching, however, lawmakers in both parties have still not struck a deal to keep the lights on in Washington past the middle of next month — raising the possibility of a shutdown.”
  • Federal News Network notes,
  • HUB International discusses the Labor Department and CMS 2023 Mental Health Parity Compliance reports.
    • While not an exclusive or comprehensive list of all possible violations, the [article’s] list provides some guidance on the types of issues the Departments view as violations (particularly on the NQTL side). Employers should review their plan designs for any potential MHPAEA violations based on the [article’s] enforcement data and work with their providers to rectify any noncompliant design elements.
  • The Labor Department’s Inspector General released a report on Mental Health Parity Enforcement encouraging more resources be given to the enforcers. The FEHBlog believes that this additional cost can be avoided by simplifying the Mental Health Parity rule.
  • The HHS Inspector General reports “Medicare Part D Spending for 10 Selected Diabetes Drugs [including GLP-1 drugs] Totaled $35.8 Billion in 2023, an Increase of 364 Percent From 2019.”
  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “The FDA approved adaptive deep brain stimulation (DBS) technology (BrainSense adaptive DBS and BrainSense electrode identifier) for people with Parkinson’s disease, Medtronic announced Monday.
    • “Like other DBS devices, the newly approved technology uses a surgically implanted neurostimulator to transmit electrical signals. The adaptive feature adjusts therapy based on a patient’s neural activity in real time, reducing the need to manually adjust stimulation.
    • “Adaptive deep brain stimulation will help revolutionize the approach to therapeutic treatment for patients with Parkinson’s disease,” said Helen Bronte-Stewart MD, MSE, of Stanford University School of Medicine in California, in a statement. “The transformative personalized care we can achieve through automatic adjustment greatly benefits patients receiving therapy that adapts to their evolving needs.”

From the judicial front,

  • Per Govexec,
    • “An independent federal oversight agency has deemed at least some of President Trump’s mass firings of probationary period employees unlawful, creating a pathway for those employees to regain their jobs. 
    • “The Office of Special Counsel, the agency responsible for investigating illegal actions taken against federal employees, issued its decision for six employees, each at different agencies. While the decision was technically limited in scope, it could have immediate impact on all terminated staff at those six agencies and could set a wide-ranging precedent across government. It has not been made public and was provided to Government Executive by a source within the government. OSC, which did not provide the document to Government Executive, verified its authenticity. 
    • “OSC has turned the case over to the quasi-judicial Merit Systems Protection Board for enforcement of its findings and is so far requesting a 45-day stay on the firing decisions. The agency said it will use that time to further investigate the dismissals and determine the best way to mitigate the consequences from the apparent unlawful actions. 
    • “MSPB has three business days to issue a decision on the stay request. If it does not act by that deadline, the stay will go into effect.”
  • It’s worth adding that the Scotusblog explains
    • “The Supreme Court on Friday [February 21] left in place for now an order by a federal judge in Washington, D.C., that instructed President Donald Trump to temporarily reinstate the head of an independent federal agency [the Office of Special Counsel] tasked with protecting whistleblowers from retaliation. The justices did not act on a request from the Trump administration to block the order by U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, which had restored Hampton Dellinger as head of the Office of Special Counsel for 14 days, beginning on Feb. 12. Instead, the justices explained in a brief order, they put the government’s request on hold until Jackson’s order expires on Feb. 26.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Express Scripts, Caremark and Optum Rx are turning to an appeals court to try to reverse a legal setback in their ongoing feud with the Federal Trade Commission.
    • “The PBMs said on Friday they will ask the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals to halt the agency’s suit against them for allegedly inflating the cost of insulin, three days after a Missouri district judge ruled the FTC’s case could move forward.
    • “The PBMs — known as the “Big Three” for their outsized control of the U.S. prescription drug market — also asked the district judge again for an injunction halting the FTC’s suit pending their appeal. Express Scripts, Caremark and Optum Rx intend to ask the 8th Circuit for an injunction in one week unless the district court complies.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States and accounted for 941,652 deaths in 2022, according to a report published by the American Heart Association.
    • “In the United States in 2022, heart disease and stroke killed more people than all forms of cancer and accidental deaths. Coronary heart disease was the leading cause of death attributable to cardiovascular disease (39.5 percent), followed by stroke (17.6 percent), other cardiovascular diseases (17 percent), hypertensive diseases (14 percent), heart failure (9.3 percent) and diseases of the arteries (2.6 percent), the AHA said. More people died of cardiovascular causes in 2022 than 2021, when there were 931,578 cardiovascular deaths, according to the report.
    • “The report also notes that between 2017 and 2020, nearly half of U.S. adults (48.6 percent) had some form of cardiovascular disease. According to the AHA, 59 percent of non-Hispanic Black women and 58.9 percent of non-Hispanic Black men had cardiovascular disease.
    • “Advances in clinical diagnosis and treatment have lessened the burden of heart disease over time, but more needs to be done to treat major risk factors, including obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes, said Keith Churchwell, a physician and clinical professor of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine who serves as volunteer president of the American Heart Association.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know “what doctors wish patients knew about cancer screening and prevention.”
  • Healio informs us,
    • “Paxlovid may not decrease the risk for hospitalization or death in older adults vaccinated against COVID-19 as much as previously thought, according to research published in JAMA.
    • “Since the strongest predictor of severe COVID-19 is advanced age, it has been crucial to obtain evidence on whether the results of the Pfizer trials” — which showed Paxlovid reduced COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths in unvaccinated adults — “generalized to older and vaccinated populations,” John Mafi, MD, MPH, associate professor-in-residence of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, said in a press release.
    • “At best, Mafi and colleagues wrote, Paxlovid could reduce COVID-19-related hospitalization by 1.3 percentage points, or 4 times less than the 5.5 percentage-point risk reduction reported in Pfizer’s original trial among unvaccinated adults.
    • “Our study effectively rules out the notion that Paxlovid causes large reductions in hospitalization in vaccinated older adults,” Mafi said. “While we cannot rule out a small reduction in COVID-19 hospitalization, our results indicate that, at best, Paxlovid’s potential effect on COVID-19 hospitalization among vaccinated older adults is four times weaker than the effect originally reported in Pfizer’s 2022 clinical trial.”
  • Consumer Reports< writing in the Washington Post, explores “How to keep your bones strong. Worried about osteoporosis? Here are the tests, moves, meds and foods you need to know about.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Frozen shakes served in hospitals and nursing homes have been recalled after being linked to a deadly outbreak of listeria, resulting in 12 deaths and sickening at least 38 people in 21 states.
    • The shakes, sold under the brands Lyons ReadyCare and Sysco Imperial, were made in the same facility in Fort Wayne, Ind., and have been recalled by both companies.
    • Listeria can cause serious illness, especially in newborns, older people, and those with weakened immune systems, and can survive on surfaces for long periods.
  • and
    • “Red-light therapy, a treatment involving exposure to low levels of red or near-infrared light, is gaining popularity for its purported benefits in weight loss, antiaging and mood balance.
    • “While some research shows promise in areas like dermatology and mood disorders, more evidence is needed to confirm its broader health benefits.
    • “Consumers should be cautious when purchasing red-light therapy devices, as there are no established standards for wavelength, intensity and length of treatment, and some products may not be effective or safe.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The American Hospital Association News fills us in on its ongoing rural healthcare leadership conference.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Summit Therapeutics and Pfizer on Monday said they will test an experimental Summit immunotherapy with Pfizer’s antibody drug conjugates in trials evaluating two of the sector’s most closely watched types of cancer medicines.
    • “Pfizer will oversee the clinical trials, which will involve Summit’s ivonescimab and multiple different Pfizer ADCs against certain solid tumors. The two companies will retain commercialization rights to their respective products, Summit said.
    • “According to Summit, the deal “will allow us to quickly advance beyond our promising late-stage development plan,” which already includes multiple studies in lung cancer. The companies didn’t provide specifics, but said the trials will begin in the middle of the year and aim to find “potentially landscape-changing combinations.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues relates,
    • Bon Secours Mercy Health and Cigna Healthcare will be out of network across eight Virginia hospitals [listed in the article] on April 1.
    • Almost all of Cigna’s business with Bon Secours is through employer-sponsored plans that are self-funded. If Bon Secours Mercy Health leaves our network, OAP and PPO members will be affected.
  • Beckers Hospital Review discusses “the twofold challenge of an older population — and how systems are adapting.”
    • “In less than a decade, older Americans are projected to outnumber children for the first time in U.S. history, sparking conversations about the need for age-friendly healthcare. 
    • “At the same time, declining birth rates and longer life expectancies — half of babies born in 2020 are expected to live past 100 years — pose potential workforce challenges.
    • Becker’s connected with four health system leaders [in this article] to explore the challenges this demographic shift presents and how they are preparing to address it.”

Friday Report

Happy Washington’s Birthday (one day early)

First in war, first in peace, first in the hearts of his country

From Washington, DC,

  • “The American Medical Association News reports,
    • “The U.S. Senate voted 52-48, after a 10-hour “vote-a-rama” session, to adopt a budget resolution for fiscal year 2025 focusing on the border, military and energy. The bill would authorize roughly $340 billion in spending and be fully offset by corresponding spending cuts. The budget resolution is a blueprint for one of two budget reconciliation bills the Senate hopes to enact this year, with the second focusing on extending tax cuts and cutting spending.
    • “Meanwhile, the House of Representatives next week plans to vote on its own budget resolution focusing on the Trump administration’s agenda on border security, defense, energy and taxes. The budget resolution calls for $2 trillion in spending cuts that could potentially impact Medicaid and other key health care programs. The proposal also allows for up to $4.5 trillion in spending for tax cuts. President Trump this week expressed his preference for the House’s one-bill approach.” * * *
    • “Both chambers must pass a common budget resolution to move forward with the reconciliation process.”
  • MSN lets us know,
    • “President Donald Trump warned drugmakers in a private meeting [yesterday] that tariffs are coming and said companies should hustle to move overseas manufacturing to the US, according to two people familiar with the conversation.
    • “Trump also didn’t commit to pushing Congress to water down a drug pricing program enacted under President Joe Biden that the pharmaceutical industry has been seeking relief from. 
    • “The president’s tone suggests the pharmaceutical industry’s bid to win an ally in the White House might be more difficult than executives had hoped. Despite his pro-business leanings, Trump had a rocky relationship with drug companies in his first term, at one point accusing them of “getting away with murder” on the price of medicines.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal informs us,
    • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration declared that the shortage of Novo Nordisk’s weight-loss medications Wegovy and Ozempic has been resolved, according to its website.
    • The FDA announcement confirms that the U.S. supply of both prescription-only drugs now meets or exceeds the current and projected demand in the country, Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk said Friday.
    • The popularity of Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster GLP-1 drugs had forced the FDA to include Wegovy and Ozempic in its official shortage list, despite the company’s efforts to ramp up production.
    • Ozempic, which treats diabetes, and Wegovy, sold for obesity, have spent over two years on the FDA’s list. During that time, compounding pharmacies–those which produce custom medications–were legally entitled to produce copies of both semaglutide drugs, which were also cheaper than Novo Nordisk’s versions.
    • The regulator’s decision to take them off of the shortage list means that compounding pharmacies will need to stop making and selling knock offs.
  • Modern Healthcare adds
    • “The Food and Drug Administration issued a notice on Friday classifying its recall of the Boston Scientific Accolade pacemaker devices as the most serious type of recall.
    • “To date, 832 injuries and two deaths tied to the devices have been reported. The recall affects about 13% of Accolade devices manufactured before September 2018.
    • “The pacemakers treat slow heart rhythms by pacing the upper and lower chambers of the heart and adjusting the pacing rate to meet the body’s needs. Due to a manufacturing issue with the battery cathode, the pacemakers might enter safety mode under certain conditions, and as a result may not properly regulate the heart’s rhythm and rate, according to the FDA.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management is laying off its entire procurement team as the federal government’s human resources agency continues to reduce its footprint.
    • “Employees were informed Friday that their positions were being “abolished” and they would be separated from federal service in 60 days. The decision is separate from the ostensibly for-cause firings that OPM kicked off internally earlier this month and have subsequently swept up agencies throughout the government. 
    • “The employees impacted by Friday’s moves received reduction-in-force notices from acting OPM Director Charles Ezell, who said he was issuing the layoffs due to three separate executive orders issued by President Trump.” 
  • The IRS issued guidance about “Health Coverage Reporting Required by Sections 6055 and 6056,” the IRS 1095-B and 1095-C forms following up on a statutory change that occurred last December.

From the judicial front,

  • Politico reports.
    • “A federal judge blocked President Donald Trump’s bid to deprive federal funding from programs that incorporate “diversity, equity and inclusion” initiatives.
    • “U.S. District Judge Adam Abelson ruled that Trump’s policy likely violates the First Amendment because it penalizes private organizations based on their viewpoints. And the judge said the policy is written so vaguely that it chills the free speech of federal contractors concerned they will be punished if they don’t eliminate programs meant to encourage a diverse workforce.
  • Per Govexec,
    • “A federal judge in Washington, D.C., on Friday ended a weekslong-halt on the Trump administration’s plan to put the vast majority of employees at the U.S. Agency for International Development on administrative leave, denying unions’ request to issue a preliminary injunction in the case.
    • “The American Foreign Service Association and the American Federation of Government Employees sued to block the apparent effort to decimate the agency and reposition it under the auspices of the State Department. More than 2,000 employees were briefly placed on paid administrative leave before the court’s initial intervention earlier this month, and another 2,000 workers mostly stationed overseas also are on the at-least-temporary chopping block.
    • “U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, had devoted most of his attention during hearings to concerns regarding the continued safety of those overseas workers stationed in high-risk regions. But recent filings from Peter Marocco, the agency’s day-to-day chief under Acting Administrator and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, stating that overseas employees will continue to have access to security-related systems like the SAFE Alert system and the SCRY Panic smartphone app, assuaged the judge’s fears.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review relates,
    • “The Trump administration plans to defend the ACA requirement that requires insurers to fully cover certain preventive services for their members. 
    • “On Feb. 18, the Justice Department filed a brief with the Supreme Court, arguing in favor of maintaining the Biden administration’s stance regarding the landmark case that centers on whether employers can exclude covered services on religious grounds. Specifically, the case addresses the authority of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) in mandating coverage for preventive services, including medications such as PrEP for HIV prevention.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated across the country. COVID-19 activity is elevated in many areas of the country. RSV activity is declining in most areas of the country.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity is elevated in many areas of the country. Though wastewater levels are high, 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 remains elevated across the country. Additional information about current influenza activity can be found at: Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report | CDC.
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity remains elevated but 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.
    • “Additional Respiratory Illnesses
      • “Pertussis
        • “Reported cases of whooping cough (pertussis) continue to be elevated nationwide. Whooping cough is very contagious and can spread easily from person to person. Babies younger than 1 year old are at highest risk of severe disease and complications. The best way to prevent complications from whooping cough is to get vaccinated. Learn more: About Whooping Cough | Whooping Cough | CDC.
      • “Mycoplasma pneumoniae
        • “Respiratory infections caused by the bacteria Mycoplasma pneumoniae have declined from their peak in late 2024 but remain high nationwide, especially in young children. M. pneumoniae infections are generally mild but can sometimes be severe, causing what’s known as “walking pneumonia.” Most people will recover without medicine, but some need antibiotics to get better. Learn more: About Mycoplasma pneumoniae Infection | M. pneumoniae | CDC.
      • “Group A Strep
        • “Respiratory infections caused by group A Streptococcus bacterium, such as strep throat and scarlet fever, are elevated nationwide. This is typical for this time of year. Healthcare providers can do a quick test to see if someone has strep throat or scarlet fever and if treatment with antibiotics can help. Learn more: About Strep Throat | Group A Strep | CDC.
    • Season Outlook
      • “The CDC has determined that the highest hospital demand for COVID-19, flu, and RSV to date this season occurred during the week ending February 1, 2025, and it was lower than the peak demand from last season. However, influenza activity remains high in most areas.
      • “The peak hospital demand due to COVID-19 during this fall and winter respiratory season was lower than all previous seasons, and nearly 50% lower than the peak demand last season.
      • “CDC does not anticipate producing additional respiratory disease outlook updates during the remainder of the 2024-2025 season. Read the entire 2024-2025 Respiratory Season Outlook – February Update (2/19/2025)”
  • Per Medscape, “A weekly alcohol intake exceeding the limits recommended by US guidelines was associated with an increased risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) among young and middle-aged men and women. Women had a higher risk for CHD than men, especially when heavy episodic drinking was involved.”
  • ABC News reports,
    • “Rates of drug overdose deaths decreased in the United States for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began, according to new federal data published early Thursday.
    • “The rate of overdose deaths fell from 32.6 deaths per 100,000 people in 2022 to 31.3 per 100,000 people in 2023, a 4% decrease, according to the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics.
    • “Dr. Aitzaz Munir, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School and associate program director for the Rutgers Addiction Medicine Fellowship Program, told ABC News the drop in the overdose death rate was “surprising” to him but a positive sign.”
  • The National Cancer Institute lets us know,
    • “Women who are pregnant routinely undergo prenatal blood testing to screen their fetuses for chromosomal disorders such as Down syndrome. However, in rare cases, this noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT) will result in an abnormal or inconclusive finding that isn’t related to the fetus but rather, to the mother’s DNA. 
    • “The results of a study of more than 100 women with unusual NIPT findings but a normally developing fetus now show that such findings can have serious implications for the mother. Nearly half of the women in the study turned out to have cancer Exit Disclaimer, the researchers reported December 5 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “Most of these cancers were only detected through whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which is not yet routinely used by doctors to follow up on abnormal NIPT results. In contrast, standard diagnostic tests, such as physical exams and blood work, missed many of the cancers.
    • “These cancers tend to be truly hidden,” said co-lead investigator Amy Turriff, M.S., of the National Human Genome Research Institute. “Our study found that whole-body imaging is critical to sufficiently evaluate women who receive these [abnormal] results for cancer.”
    • “I hope [these findings] will increase awareness of these types of results and what should be done to triage these patients to the appropriate levels of care,” said Neeta Vora, M.D., of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, who studies prenatal genetic testing and maternal cancers but was not involved in the study.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review identifies the most common reasons for hospitalizations.
    • “Maternal and neonatal stays accounted for 22% of hospitalizations in 2021, a recent KFF report found.
    • “The report is based on data from the American Hospital Association annual survey, the American Medical Association physician practice benchmark survey, the Census Bureau delineation files and population estimates, the healthcare cost and utilization project national inpatient samples, RAND hospital data and other sources.
    • “Maternal stays accounted for 1 in 10 hospitalizations and neonatal stays accounted for the same; hospital stays for mothers and newborns were recorded separately. Medicaid covered about 41% of births nationally.
    • “Other hospitalizations were categorized as medical (50%), surgical (18%), injury (5%), and mental health and substance abuse (5%) discharges.”
  • Per AIS Health,
    • “When it comes to how the country’s three dominant PBMs cover the blockbuster drug Humira (adalimumab) and its many biosimilars, one year has made a major difference.  
    • “As of 2025, AbbVie’s Humira either “has or will vanish from PBMs’ standard formularies,” Drug Channels CEO Adam Fein, Ph.D., wrote in his annual post analyzing which drugs were excluded on the standard commercial formularies offered by The Cigna Group’s Express Scripts, CVS Health Corp.’s Caremark and UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Rx, as of January 2025.”
  • Kauffman Hall offers an infographic about “The State of Trust in Public Health in AmericaMedCity”
  • MedCity News shares seven announcements from the VIVE Conference, a few of which already were included in the FEHBlog.
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Pfizer is pulling further away from the gene therapy field with its decision to discontinue hemophilia product Beqvez.
    • “The New York pharma is ending global development and commercialization of Beqvez less than a year after an FDA approval for the gene therapy to treat hemophilia B. The one-time treatment carried a list price of $3.5 million per person.
    • “Several reasons led to the discontinuation, including limited interest from patients and doctors toward hemophilia gene therapies to date, a Pfizer spokesperson told Fierce Pharma in a statement.
    • “No patients seem to have received commercial Beqvez since its FDA nod in April 2024. The Pfizer spokesperson said the company will communicate the news to patients and providers that are in the treatment qualification process, adding that the company remains committed to supporting those who received the med in any clinical trial.
    • “Following Beqvez’s exit from the market, Pfizer has no commercial or clinical-stage gene therapies left in the works, according to its website. The spokesperson confirmed that the company doesn’t have any active gene therapy programs at the moment.”

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Senate Republicans moved to take their first step Thursday toward funding new spending on border security and the military, while Democrats prepared to put GOP lawmakers on the record on uncomfortable issues at the start of President Trump’s new term.
    • ‘The Senate was set to start a series of votes related to Republicans’ budget blueprint aimed at unlocking $342 billion in spending—and the same amount of offsetting cuts—over four years, which is expected to culminate in the plan’s passage sometime Friday morning. 
    • “The process of debating and amending the budget resolution was slated to begin late Thursday. A budget resolution—if passed by both chambers—unlocks a process known as budget reconciliation, which allows the Senate to bypass its filibuster rules and pass legislation with a simple majority instead of the 60-vote threshold for most measures. The process would allow Republicans to pass Trump’s fiscal agenda later this year without needing Democratic help. The Senate and House then would have to agree on final legislation. 
    • “But the reconciliation process also will empower Democrats to propose as many amendments as they want, leading to what is expected to be an all-night “vote-a-rama.” While the amendments are nonbinding, they offer a rare chance for the minority party to force the majority to follow its lead.
    • “Democrats are going to hold the floor all day long—and all night long—to expose how Republicans want to cut taxes for billionaires while gutting things Americans care about most: healthcare, jobs, public safety, national security, housing, education,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) said.”
  • Per a Senate news release,
    • “Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), a senior member and former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, joined Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) in reintroducing the Safe and Affordable Drugs from Canada Act. The bipartisan bill would allow Americans to safely import prescription drugs from Canada – lowering costs, increasing access and strengthening competition in the pharmaceutical market. 
    • “Congress must take an all-of-the-above approach to lowering the price of prescription drugs. Our commonsense, bipartisan bill would provide Americans increased access to safe, affordable prescription drugs available in Canada, while boosting much-needed competition in the pharmaceutical industry,” Grassley said
    • “Americans pay the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs,” Klobuchar said. “Our bipartisan legislation would save Americans money by allowing them to import their medications from pharmacies in Canada. Brand-name prescription drugs that we invent here in America cost more than twice as much in the United States as in Canada. Americans deserve better. Building on my legislation to allow Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug costs, I will continue to work to increase competition in the pharmaceutical market, so Americans no longer get ripped off by Big Pharma.” 
    • “Find bill text HERE.” 
  • Fierce Pharma tells us,
    • “As the second Trump administration settles in, the U.S.’ top pharmaceutical trade group is drafting its ambitions for the next four years ahead of a planned meeting with the president on Thursday.
    • “The sit-down between President Donald Trump and leaders from the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) will provide the trade group’s head, Stephen Ubl, and CEOs from several of the world’s top drugmakers with a potential avenue to sway the commander in chief’s views on policies affecting the industry, Bloomberg reported, citing people close to the matter.
    • “In particular, the industry wants to garner support for adjustments to certain drug pricing provisions baked into 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the news service said.” * * *
    • “As for what that government-industry collaboration might look like, PhRMA this week released its 2025 policy agenda (PDF), which broadly seeks to promote pro-innovation regulatory and trade positions, challenge features of the IRA price negotiations, curb hospital drug markups and clamp down on pharma middlemen.”
  • Yesterday, the Congressional Research Service posted an In Focus paper on U.S. healthcare spending and coverage.
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, explains “What happens to my insurance when I leave the federal government?”
  • NCQA has opened its HEDIS measures public comment period.
    • “NCQA’s public comment period is open and ready for your input.
    • “NCQA seeks public feedback on proposed new measures, changes to existing measures and measure retirements, and NCQA acknowledges that the health care policy environment is rapidly evolving at this time. Reviewers are asked to submit comments to NCQA in writing via the Public Comment website by 5:00 p.m. (ET), Thursday, March 13. NCQA will take into account all comments received and the evolving environment as NCQA moves forward to prepare the final versions of these measures.
    • “NCQA seeks comments on the following:
      • “Three new HEDIS measures.
      • “Revising six HEDIS measures.
      • “Retiring one HEDIS measure.
      • “Cross-cutting item for HEDIS to align with federal standards for race and ethnicity.
      • “Three new measures for the Diabetes Recognition Program.” * * *
    • The public comment period ends at 5:00 p.m. (ET) on Thursday, March 13. Visit My NCQA to submit comments. For details on proposed changes, visit the NCQA website.
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) took action to support President Trump’s executive orders defending children and restoring biological truth in civil rights and health information privacy enforcement.
    • “As directed by President Trump’s Executive Order 14187, “Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation,” HHS OCR rescinded prior Administration guidance entitled “HHS Notice and Guidance on Gender Affirming Care, Civil Rights, and Patient Privacy,” issued March 2, 2022 (“2022 OCR Notice and Guidance”).  This rescission supports Administration policy in Executive Order 14187 that HHS will not promote, assist, or support “the so-called ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another, and it will rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these destructive and life-altering procedures.”  This rescission also aligns with Administration policy in Executive Order 14168, “Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government.”
    • “Today’s rescission provides important notice to the regulated community that the 2022 OCR Notice and Guidance no longer represents the views or policies of HHS OCR,” said OCR Acting Director Anthony Archeval.  “The rescission is a significant step to align civil rights and health information privacy enforcement with a core Administration policy that recognizes that there are only two sexes:  male and female.”
    • “Under the prior Administration, HHS through OCR provided notice to the public of how OCR intended to interpret civil rights and health information privacy authorities to protect the chemical and surgical mutilation of children, what the prior Administration referred to as “gender-affirming care.” Section 5 of Executive Order 14187 specifically directs HHS to rescind this guidance.
    • “OCR’s action is part of a larger initiative to defend women and children and restore biological truth to the federal government.
    • “OCR’s rescission of the 2022 OCR Notice and Guidance is available here: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/ocr-rescission-february-20-2025-notice-guidance.pdf – PDF

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec informs us,
    • “A federal judge on Thursday denied the National Treasury Employees Union and other federal employee unions’ request to block the mass firings of their members who are probationary employees, future large-scale layoffs across agencies pursuant to a Trump executive order and any renewal of the “deferred resignation” program for federal employees. 
    • “U.S. District Judge Christopher R. Cooper, an Obama appointee, said in his preliminary ruling that the unions likely must first bring their claims before the Federal Labor Relations Authority, whose chairwoman Trump recently fired ahead of the expiration of her term. 
    • “Although district court review may appear more efficient or convenient to NTEU, its preference does not insulate its claims from the [Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute] review scheme,” Cooper wrote.”
  • FEHBlog note — This is the same legal outcome that occurred in the preliminary injunction challenge to the Fork in the Road program in federal district court in Boston.
  • Reuters reports,
    • “Regeneron (REGN.O) has won a court ruling that will make it harder for U.S. authorities to win a lawsuit accusing it of paying illegal kickbacks through a charity to promote the use of its expensive eye drug Eylea.
    • In a unanimous opinion, on Tuesday, a three-judge panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the United States must prove that the alleged kickbacks directly caused Medicare, the federal health insurance program for Americans aged 65 and older, to make payments for Eylea that it otherwise would not have made.
    • “The government had argued that proving illegal kickbacks alone would be enough.
    • “We are pleased with the decision from the appellate court and look forward to presenting our case to a jury,” Regeneron said in a statement.”

From the U.S. public health and medical research front,

  • ABC News lets us know,
    • “Nature versus nurture: Scientists are gathering more evidence on which has more of an impact on human well-being amid the aging process.
    • “While both environmental exposures and genetics are known to play important roles in shaping human aging, living conditions and lifestyle choices impact human health much more than genetics, according to a new study published Wednesday in Nature Medicine.
    • “Researchers from Oxford Population Health used data from nearly 500,000 participants in the U.K. to assess the influence of 164 environmental factors and genetic risk scores for 22 age-related diseases and premature death, according to the paper.
    • “The data showed that environmental factors accounted for 17% of the variation in risk of death, compared to less than 2% explained by genetic predisposition.
    • “Smoking, socioeconomic status, physical activity and living conditions had the most impact on mortality and biological aging, the study found.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “A new analysis of long COVID patients has identified five distinct subtypes that researchers say will help doctors diagnose the condition.
    • “The new five-type index, developed by federal researchers with the National Institutes of Health’s RECOVER COVID Initiative, identified the most common symptoms in 14,000 people with long COVID, with data from an additional 4000 people added to the updated 2024 index.
    • “By using the index, physicians and researchers can better understand the condition, which is difficult to treat and diagnose because no standard definitions or therapies have been developed. Doctors can use the index to offer more targeted care and help patients manage their symptoms more effectively.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Four years after Apple announced a study to explore how its products could be used to support people with asthma, an application developed from that research is now available to the public.
    • “Called Asthma Tool, the free software allows users to track their symptoms and triggers and to use wearable devices to monitor vitals, like resting heart rate, for signs that asthma may be acting up.” * * *
    • “Asthma Tool is an outgrowth of Apple’s Asthma Digital Study with insurer Anthem (now Elevance Health) and researchers at the University of California Irvine School of Medicine. Apple announced the study alongside two other research projects in 2020, saying it hoped to investigate how the Apple Watch’s new feature for measuring blood oxygen could be used in future health applications. In 2023, the collaborators released preliminary data suggesting that the asthma study helped Medicaid beneficiaries stay out of the emergency department.
    • “Despite the promising data, Apple has so far chosen not to release an asthma product on its own. The new Asthma Tool was released by CareEvolution, a clinical trials software company that developed the app used in the asthma study. The product is available as a module through the company’s MyDataHelps platform that lets people collect data for personal tracking and allows them to participate in research. MyDataHelps can be used on the web and or as an app on Apple or Android smartphones.”
  • The American Journal of Managed Care points out,
    • “The rollout of 2 major interventions to prevent severe respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in infants—the RSV prefusion F (RSVpreF; ABRYSVO) vaccine for pregnant individuals and the monoclonal antibody nirsevimab (Beyfortus) for newborns—has shown high uptake in a recent cohort study.
    • “Conducted at a single academic center, the study found that 64% of eligible pregnant individuals received the RSVpreF vaccine, while 70% of eligible infants received nirsevimab before hospital discharge.
    • “This retrospective cohort study is published in JAMA Network Open.
  • Per Health Day,
    • “A blood test can help people with irritable bowel syndrome cut out specific trigger foods most likely to worsen their condition, a new study suggests.
    • “About 60% of IBS patients who followed a diet guided by the results of the blood test wound up suffering less stomach pain, researchers reported recently in the journal Gastroenterology.
    • “By comparison, 42% of IBS patients who didn’t get the blood test experienced a reduction in stomach pain, results show.
    • “The test “requires additional validation but could move us one step closer to a ‘precision nutrition’ approach, in which providers can offer personalized dietary recommendations to each patient with IBS,” researcher Dr. William Chey, chief of gastroenterology and hepatology at the University of Michigan, said in a news release.
    • “The blood test, called inFoods IBS, tests for the potential of 18 foods to worsen IBS symptoms in specific patients. These include wheat, oat, rye, whole egg, yeast, cow’s milk, black tea, cabbage, corn, grapefruit, honey, lemon and pineapple.
  • NBC News reports that “mRNA vaccines show promise in pancreatic cancer in early trial. Personalized mRNA vaccines show promise as pancreatic cancer treatment, a phase 1 clinical trial published Wednesday in Nature found.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “Patients with COPD had better inhaler adherence when invited to enroll in a program that lowers cost sharing for maintenance inhalers and offers medication management services, according to results published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • “These findings contribute to the limited evidence of interventions that can improve inhaler adherence in COPD, a disease with high morbidity whose costs are disproportionately incurred by Medicare, and the even more limited evidence addressing cost-related nonadherence, a growing concern given the high prices of inhalers,” Sumit D. Agarwal, MD, MPH, PhD, physician and health economist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and colleagues wrote.” * * *
    • “To better align insurance coverage with clinical benefit, insurers might consider selectively lowering cost sharing and providing medication management services for clinically effective, high-value services,” Agarwal and colleagues wrote.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • Community Health Systems’ losses widened in 2024 to $516 million, up from $133 million in 2023, as the health system struggled with cost pressures, including rising medical specialist fees and payer denials.
    • “The system also attributed its losses to divestitures. CHS has been chasing at least $1 billion in profits from hospital sales as it looks to pay down debt, but sales have dinged the provider’s operating income.
    • “This year, CHS expects to take in between $12.2 billion and $12.6 billion in revenue, with adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization ranging from $1.5 billion to $1.6 billion. The health system could upwardly revise its EBITDA projections if state supplemental payment programs are approved as planned, CHS CFO Kevin Hammons told investors Wednesday morning.”
  • Beckers Hospital CFO Report adds,
    • “Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems expects to offload two North Carolina hospitals and two Florida hospitals in the first quarter for about $540 million in gross proceeds, executives said during the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call on Feb. 19.
    • “CHS plans to sell ShorePoint Health Port Charlotte (Fla.) and certain assets of ShorePoint Health Punta Gorda to Altamonte Springs, Fla.-based AdventHealth for $265 million in cash. The deal is expected to close in the first quarter, subject to regulatory approvals and closing conditions.
    • “The for-profit system also plans to sell Lake Norman Regional Medical Center in Mooresville, N.C., to Duke University Health System. Durham, N.C.-based Duke aims to purchase the 123-bed hospital and its related assets for about $280 million.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “CVS Health’s MinuteClinic is collaborating with Emory Healthcare Network to extend primary care services to more patients in Georgia.
    • “With the new partnership, MinuteClinic now offers in-network primary care services at all 35 clinics in the state to most payers through Emory’s integrated network. Patients also have access to Emory’s network of acute care, specialty care, labs, radiology and diagnostic services, according to a Thursday news release.
    • “A CVS spokesperson said the Emory collaboration marks the first time MinuteClinic has expanded into primary care services in partnership with a health system. The 35 locations are co-branded.”
  • Per a Talkspace news release,
    • “We closed out 2024 with a strong fourth quarter, delivering revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth as expected. We continued to broaden our reach, drive awareness and adoption, enhance the provider and member experience, and deliver high-quality care. I’m proud of all that Talkspace has accomplished this year to build a sustainable, profitable business,” said Dr. Jon Cohen, CEO of Talkspace.
    • “Dr. Cohen continued, “Over the last three years, we’ve undergone a significant strategic shift, focusing on the payor market and growing our total covered lives to nearly 200 million. We’ve leveraged our well-known brand to drive awareness of Talkspace as an affordable way to access care for not just commercially insured adults, but also teens, seniors, and active members of the military. Talkspace has established a clear competitive advantage in the marketplace with the comprehensive nature of our solution, and we remain dedicated to meeting the escalating demand for accessible, high-quality behavioral health services in the U.S.”
  • From a Him and Hers news release,
    • “Hims & Hers today announced its plans to introduce at-home lab testing through its platform. The new capability will empower customers to take control of their health with deeper insights and enable providers to access a breadth of data and biomarkers that can help identify risk of disease before it develops, for more precise clinical decision-making. 
    • “The company has acquired an at-home lab testing facility, Sigmund NJ LLC marketed as Trybe Labs, which will allow Hims & Hers to support at-home blood draws and more comprehensive whole-body testing. The acquisition will broaden the company’s ability to offer a wide range of personalized treatments, supplements and medications and accelerate the expansion into new high-impact clinical categories including low testosterone, perimenopausal and menopausal support.”