Thursday Miscellany

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

Happy Summer Solstice in our northern hemisphere of Mother Earth.

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “With both Senate and House lawmakers advancing legislation that aligns with President Joe Biden’s 2% federal pay raise request, civilian federal employees appear to be a step closer to a smaller pay bump for 2025.
    • “The Senate Armed Services Committee’s version of the fiscal 2025 National Defense Authorization Act last week showed support for a 2% raise for DoD civilian workers and a 4.5% raise for military members. In a vote of 22-3 on June 13, committee lawmakers advanced the 2025 NDAA to the full Senate for consideration. The House passed its version of the NDAA last week.
    • “Although the NDAA’s provisions only apply to Defense Department employees, both civilian DoD workers and the rest of the civilian federal workforce on the General Schedule would see the same percentage added to their paychecks, if the raise is enacted.
    • “In House appropriations legislation, committee lawmakers remained silent on the topic of the federal pay raise, indicating a likely alignment with the president’s raise proposal. The GOP-led committee advanced legislation for a fiscal 2025 spending package last week along party lines. The Senate Appropriations Committee has not yet released its versions of fiscal 2025 spending legislation.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “A United States District Court Judge in Texas today ruled in favor of the AHA, Texas Hospital Association, and hospital plaintiffs, agreeing that Department of Health and Human Services “bulletins” that restrict health care providers from using standard third-party web technologies that capture IP addresses on portions of their public-facing webpages were unlawful final rules and vacating the March 2024 Revised Bulletin.
    • “It’s easy for eyes to glaze over at a thirty-page opinion discussing the administrative esoterica accordant with HIPAA compliance,” United States District Court Judge Mark Pittman wrote today. “But this case isn’t really about HIPAA, the Proscribed Combination, or the proper nomenclature for PHI in the Digital Age. Rather, this is a case about power.…  While the Proscribed Combination may be trivial to HHS, it isn’t for covered entities diligently attempting to comply with HIPAA’s requirements.…  The Court GRANTS the Hospitals’ request for declaratory judgment and DECLARES that the Proscribed Combination, as set forth in the HHS Bulletin of March 18, 2024, is UNLAWFUL, as it was promulgated in clear excess of HHS’s authority under HIPAA.”
  • Bravo!
  • In an interview with Healthcare Dive, Micky Tripathi, the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, discusses his agency’s artificial intelligence strategy.
  • The House Committee on Education and the Workforce announced that “On Thursday, June 27, at 10:15 a.m., the Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions, chaired by Rep. Bob Good (R-VA), will hold a hearing titled “Examining the Policies and Priorities of the Employee Benefits Security Administration.”
  • Kevin Moss, writing in the Federal Times, reminds postal annuitants over the age of 65 and without Medicare Part B about the ongoing, late enrollment penalty free Special Enrollment Period. available to future PSHBP members.
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has substantially loosened limits on the first gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy in a decision that could greatly expand its use even as questions remain about its effectiveness.
    • “The agency on Thursday made the therapy, called Elevidys and sold by biotechnology company Sarepta Therapeutics, available to people with Duchenne who are at least four years of age and have mutations in a specific gene, regardless of whether they can still walk.
    • “For those who are still ambulatory the agency also converted Elevidys’ conditional approval to full, meaning its market availability in that setting is no longer contingent on additional tests. The clearance for Duchenne patients who are non-ambulatory is conditioned on the results of a Phase 3 study called Envision that’s currently underway.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Cardiology Business informs us,
    • “The American College of Cardiology (ACC) this week published a report card on the excess cardiovascular mortality among Black Americans between 2000-2022.[1] The ACC said it highlights the “persistent and tragic inequities” in cardiovascular care and outlines the years of life lost to the Black community because of higher cardiovascular disease death rates.
    • “The report showed the Black population experienced 1.6 million excess deaths overall and millions of potential life-years lost. Heart disease was the leading cause of age-adjusted excess mortality among Black Americans. This includes deaths due to ischemic heart disease, hypertension, cerebrovascular disease and heart failure.
    • “Our study reveals that Black Americans, because of their higher cardiovascular mortality rates compared with white Americans, have suffered almost 800,000 excess deaths, which translates to about 24 million additional years of life lost between 2000 and 2022,” Journal of the ACC incoming editor-in-chief Harlan M. Krumholz, MD, SM, FACC, who is also senior author of the study, said in a statement. “This staggering figure highlights the critical need for systemic changes in addressing cardiovascular inequities.”
    • “Krumholz said the goal of the report card is to promote accountability and serve as a catalyst for action that addresses the ongoing problem.”
  • The National Institutes of Health’s Director writes in her blog,
    • “Drug-resistant bacteria are responsible for a rise in serious, hospital-acquired infections, including pneumonia and sepsis. Many of these bacteria are classified as “gram-negative,” and are harder to kill than “gram-positive” bacteria. Unfortunately, the limited number of antibiotics that can help combat these dangerous infections can also damage healthy microbes in the gut, leaving people at risk for other, potentially life-threatening infections. Such antibiotic-induced disruption has also been linked in studies to irritable bowel syndrome, colon cancer, and many other health conditions.
    • “There’s a great need for more targeted antibiotics capable of fending off infectious gram-negative bacteria while sparing the community of microbes in the gut, collectively known as the gut microbiome. Now, in findings reported in the journal Nature , a research team has demonstrated a promising candidate for the job. While the antibiotic hasn’t yet been tested in people, the findings in cell cultures suggest it could work against more than 130 drug-resistant bacterial strains. What’s more, the study, supported in part by NIH, shows that this compound, when given to infected mice, thwarts potentially life-threatening bacteria while leaving the animals’ gut microbiomes intact. * * *
    • “These new findings, while promising, are at an early stage of drug discovery and development, and much more study is needed before this compound could be tested in people. It will also be important to learn how rapidly infectious gram-negative bacteria may develop resistance to lolamicin. Nevertheless, these findings suggest it may be possible to further develop lolamicin or related antibiotic compounds targeting the Lol system to treat dangerous gram-negative infections without harming the microbiome.”
  • Per an NIH press release,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have developed a non-chemotherapy treatment regimen that is achieving full remissions for some people with aggressive B-cell lymphoma that has come back or is no longer responding to standard treatments. The five-drug combination targets multiple molecular pathways that diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) tumors use to survive.
    • “In a clinical trial at NIH’s National Cancer Institute, researchers tested the combination of venetoclax, ibrutinib, prednisone, obinutuzumab, and lenalidomide (called ViPOR) in 50 patients with DLBCL, the most common type of lymphoma. The treatment shrank tumors substantially in 26 of 48 (54%) evaluable patients, with 18 (38%) of those patients’ tumors disappearing entirely, known as a complete response. At two years, 36% of all patients were alive and 34% were free of disease. These benefits were seen mainly in people with two specific subtypes of DLBCL.
    • “The findings were published June 20, 2024, in the New England Journal of Medicine.
  • NIH also posted the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)  Director’s Update for Summer 2024.
  • STAT News points out,
    • “Gestational diabetes affects one in seven expecting women globally and rates of this troubling condition are rising. Blood glucose levels that become elevated for the first time during pregnancy can lead to severe complications, such as preeclampsia, and increase the risk of stillbirth. And while the condition typically resolves after birth, it is linked to a tenfold increase in the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, along with risks for the child including obesity, cardiovascular disease, and neurodevelopmental disorders. 
    • “Gestational diabetes has long been diagnosed between weeks 24 and 28 of pregnancy. But a recent randomized control study called Treatment of Booking Gestational Diabetes Mellitus, or TOBOGM, which was started in 2018 and whose results were published earlier this year, found that treating gestational diabetes before week 20 reduced the risk of severe perinatal complications, including preterm birth, low birthweight, stillbirth, and respiratory distress. The early treatment was most effective in women who had high blood glucose levels after an oral glucose tolerance test, which measures how well the body can metabolize the sugar in a very sweet, Gatorade-like drink. 
    • “In some cases, women are tested early when they have risk factors such as high blood pressure, obesity, or previous gestational diabetes. But between 30% and 70% of all gestational diabetes cases could be detected much earlier — by the twentieth week of a pregnancy, according to a series published on Thursday in The Lancet by an international group of gestational diabetes researchers.” 
  • and
    • When they work, immunotherapy drugs called checkpoint inhibitors can shrink cancers and, in some cases, eradicate tumors altogether. These drugs, which include Keytruda and Opdivo, are prescribed to hundreds of thousands of patients a year for dozens of different kinds of cancer — but they only work for a minority of them. Most patients ultimately end up progressing or relapsing.
    • In two separate [small] clinical trials published in Science on Thursday, researchers found that adding a drug called a JAK inhibitor created an unexpected synergy with checkpoint inhibitor therapy. The combination helped a majority of patients respond to the immunotherapy and, in one trial, overcome resistance to checkpoint inhibitors.
  • Per Biopharma Dive,
    • “Twice-yearly shots of a Gilead Sciences HIV drug were so effective at preventing infections in a large late-stage clinical trial that study monitors recommend the company stop testing early and offer the drug to all participants.
    • “The trial, called Purpose 1 and run in South Africa and Uganda, compared Gilead’s medicine lenacapavir to once-daily Truvada and background HIV infection rates among cisgender women. Lenacapavir proved superior to both, with zero HIV infections reported in the study group, Gilead said Thursday.
    • “Gilead hopes testing of twice-yearly lenacapavir will prove it an effective and more convenient preventive option for people at risk of HIV infection. The company expects data late this year or early next from another study that involves cisgender men who have sex with men as well as certain groups of people who are transgender or gender non-binary.”
  • Optum discusses “New innovative treatments for hemophilia B, RSV, COPD” in its new edition of its Drug Pipeline Insights Report.
  • Per Medscape,
    • “A single course of treatment with emotional awareness and expression therapy (EAET) was associated with a significantly greater reduction in chronic pain severity than cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), the current psychotherapeutic gold standard, a new study suggested.”
    • “Two thirds of the patients who received EAET reported at least a 30% reduction in pain compared with 17% of those who received CBT. The randomized clinical trial also showed that individuals with depression and anxiety responded more favorably to EAET, a novel finding.
    • The study is one of only a few to directly compare EAET with CBT.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Mercer Consulting notes,
    • “Despite higher healthcare cost trends, fewer than half of large employers (those with 500 or more employees) are likely to take cost-cutting measures next year like raising deductibles or copays, according to Mercer’s new Survey on Health and Benefit Strategies for 2025, with nearly 700 employer participants.
    • “Heading into 2025, employers face the challenge of addressing sharply faster cost growth while keeping healthcare affordable for their workers and offering a competitive benefit package. The survey found that medical plan options that save money by steering employees to quality, cost-efficient health providers — and potentially offer members more affordable coverage – now have significant traction with employer health plan sponsors.
    • “These plans take different forms, but over a third of large employers (36%) are now utilizing high-performance network plans or other alternative medical plans, and 29% are considering it in the near-term. * * *
    • “Many large employers indicated they want a consistent offering nationally. If this is a key priority, then an employer could explore the newer variable copay health plan options or high-performance network products offered by certain national carriers that can backfill with their broad network as needed in some geographies for a consistent national offering. Further, while considering disruption to members is important, it shouldn’t mean avoiding change entirely. A high-performance network option could be offered as a choice at enrollment that provides a richer benefit design or lower payroll contribution option as a tradeoff for the different network.
    • “Additionally, the prevalent variable copay plan options are built on top of national broad network options, so in most cases provider disruption would be minimal.
  • Newfront discusses ten spousal incentive HRA compliance considerations. Spousal incentive HRAs are health reimbursement accounts offered to employees who elect primary coverage from their spouse’s group health plan.
  • Beckers Payer Issues relates,
    • Humata Health, a company that uses AI and machine learning to streamline prior authorization for payers and providers, has closed a $25 million investment. 
    • “The funding was led by Blue Venture Fund (majority of BCBS plans) and LRVHealth (nearly 30 health systems and payers), with participation from Optum Ventures, .406 Ventures, Highmark Ventures and VentureforGood, according to a June 20 news release.
    • “The company said it will use the funding to broaden the scope of its generative AI technologies, expand its customer base, and begin partnering with payers and other entities. Founded in 2023, the company has already partnered with 225 hospitals.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Eli Lilly is stepping up its campaign against fake and counterfeit weight-loss drugs with more lawsuits against sellers of unapproved products that market themselves as Mounjaro and Zepbound.
    • “The pharmaceutical company said Thursday that it has filed legal actions against med-spas, wellness centers and other entities that sell products purportedly containing tirzepatide, the antidiabetic medication Eli Lilly sells under the brand names Mounjaro and Zepbound.”
  • STAT News interviews Bold Health’s CEO Amanda Rees on “fall prevention, ageism in health care, and ‘movement is medicine’.”
    • “When Amanda Rees was in her twenties she moved in with her grandmother, who was in her 80s, and saw first-hand the issues older adults face with falls and balance. “It really radicalized how I thought about aging,” she said. Serving as her grandmother’s caretaker inspired her to shift into health care and start Bold, a health tech startup that provides at-home digital exercise programs targeted at adults 65 and older.  
    • “Falls among older adults cost the health care system about $50 billion annually, according to the CDC. Rees hopes Bold can help older adults build strength, prevent falls and reduce hospitalizations. The Los Angeles-based startup works with Medicare Advantage members and raised $17 million during its Series A. Rees sat down with STAT to discuss building Bold, the concept of  “movement is medicine,” and the public health crisis of falls.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “The rate of uninsured Americans is expected to rise over the next decade, largely erasing coronavirus pandemic-era gains as subsidies for plans in the Affordable Care Act marketplaces and policy stipulations keeping low-income people on Medicaid expire, according to new projections from the Congressional Budget Office.
    • “This year, just 7.7% of Americans, or 26 million people, are uninsured, according to the CBO. In comparison, 10.3% or 33.2 million Americans were uninsured in 2019.
    • “Yet an estimated 1.7 million people — mostly working-age adults — will become uninsured on average every year until the uninsured rate swells to 8.9% in 2034, the CBO projects.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Novant Health ended its 16-month pursuit of a $320 million deal to acquire two North Carolina hospitals from Community Health Systems after a federal appellate court on Tuesday dealt it a harsh blow.
    • “The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit hit Novant’s proposed acquisition of Mooresville-based Lake Norman Regional Medical Center when a panel voted 2-1 to grant the Federal Trade Commission’s motion to stop that proposal pending appeal. Lake Norman Regional Medical Center was one of two hospitals Novant sought to purchase from Community Health Systems, along with Statesville-based Davis Regional Medical Center.
    • “A Novant spokesperson said the health system doesn’t see a way to finalize the deal given the FTC’s “continued roadblocks.” Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Novant announced plans in February 2023 to acquire the two hospitals from Franklin, Tennessee-based Community Health Systems.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Spending on drugs purchased at discounted 340B prices across all participating facilities went up 19% annually between 2010 and 2021, according to a June 17 report from the Congressional Budget Office. 
    • Established by Congress in 1992, the 340B drug pricing program allows qualifying hospitals and clinics that treat low-income and uninsured patients to purchase some drugs at a discounted rate of between 25% and 50% off their normal price.
    • “Enrollment in the 340B program has drastically increased in recent years, driving up spending and also leading to more disputes between covered entities who need to obtain affordable medications for uninsured or underinsured patients and drugmakers who need to protect company profits and resources. 
    • “Cancer drugs, anti-infective agents, and immunosuppressants accounted for 70% of total 340B spending in 2021 — up from 58% in 2010 — according to data from the Health Resources and Service Administration, which was analyzed by the Congressional Budget Office.” 
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force today gave a B grade to a recommended that clinicians provide or refer children and adolescents 6 years or older with a high body mass index (BMI) (≥95th percentile for age and sex) to comprehensive, intensive behavioral interventions.
  • STAT News adds,
    • “On Tuesday, the United States Preventive Services Task Force issued recommendations encouraging clinicians to provide or refer children and adolescents 6 years or older with a high body mass index to comprehensive, intensive behavioral interventions. That counters last year’s recommendation by the American Academy of Pediatrics to consider obesity drugs for kids 12 and older whose weight tops growth charts, along with encouraging better nutrition, physical activity, and behavioral therapy from age 6 on up. 
    • “The USPSTF called evidence on the benefits of pharmacotherapy “inadequate” due to the small number of studies and limited data on long-term treatment harms, asserting that at least two years of follow-up are needed to gauge the long-term outcomes of drug therapy. That assessment would go beyond BMI to include metabolic health and psychosocial functioning, among other impacts. 
    • “Wanda Nicholson, task force chair and senior associate dean of diversity and inclusion at the George Washington University School of Public Health, said the evidence is clear to support high-intensity behavioral interventions to help children and adolescents lose weight and gain better quality of life. It’s less than clear for the four drugs discussed in the task force’s analysis of current research, she said. The drugs are semaglutide (sold as Wegovy for weight loss/Ozempic for diabetes), liraglutide (Saxenda/Victoza), orlistat (Xenical, Alli), and phentermine/topiramate (Qsymia). * * *
    • “A child’s BMI — a measure many view as flawed — is considered high if it’s at or above the 95th percentile for age or sex. Nearly 20% of U.S. children fall into that category. The prevalence of high BMI rises with age and is higher among Hispanic/Latino, Native American/Alaska Native, and non-Hispanic Black children and adolescents and among children from lower-income families. The dissonance between the USPSTF’s and the AAP’s positions does not address criticism voiced last year over whether the focus on weight instead of health is misplaced. * * *
    • “USPSTF guidance from 2017 focused on screening before intervention, but the new statement instead moves directly to behavioral methods to promote a healthy weight while stopping short of suggesting GLP-1 drugs such as Wegovy. It’s a recognition that screening has become a routine part of primary care.
    • “Those intensive behavioral interventions, intended to help children achieve a healthy weight while improving their quality of life, entail 26 or more hours over one year with a health professional. That might mean physical activity, support for weight-related behavior change, and information about healthy eating.”
  • MedPage Today also discusses today’s USPSTF recommendationj.

From the public health and medical reseaarch front,

  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans offers guidance on designing the best oncology benefits.
  • The National Cancer Institute posted its latest research highlights.
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “Many physicians in obesity medicine have observed a trend among their patients: Those with obesity begin taking a weight loss drug like Wegovy, and their other chronic conditions improve or clear up entirely. “Many physicians in obesity medicine have observed a trend among their patients: Those with obesity begin taking a weight loss drug like Wegovy, and their other chronic conditions improve or clear up entirely. 
    • “As a result, some physicians are embracing an “obesity first” approach in which they treat obesity first with drugs approved for that purpose, anticipating other related conditions, such as high blood pressure and arthritis, will also improve as patients begin to lose weight, according to  a June 19 report from The New York Times. 
    • “We are treating the medical condition of obesity and its related complications at the same time,” Stefie Deeds, MD, an internist and obesity medicine specialist at a private practice in Seattle, told the Times. Dr. Deeds is also an assistant professor at the University School of Washington in Seattle. 
    • “The approach marks a shift from traditional medical practice in which patients with obesity are prescribed a number of medications to treat conditions that often accompany obesity, and advised to make diet and exercise changes. In some cases, patients are happy to be taking a single drug, experts said. 
    • “But there’s no firm consensus that this approach works, and not all physicians are on board. A primary care physician told the Times he leans toward an “obesity last” approach in which he starts by treating obesity-related conditions with drugs known to work for those conditions. If related conditions didn’t improve, only then would he discuss obesity drugs with patients.” 
  • MedPage Today notes, “Adding financial incentives to meal incentive therapies for for teens with severe obesity helped improve weight and body fat, but not cardiometabolic risk factors, a randomized study found.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Intra-Cellular Therapies plans to seek clearance to sell its medicine Caplyta for patients with depression after a second-late stage study of the drug succeeded. 
    • “Caplyta, also known as lumateperone, is currently approved for patients suffering from schizophrenia and depressive episodes associated with bipolar disorder. Intra-Cellular now wants to add major depressive disorder to the list.
    • T”he latest study followed 480 patients already medicated to treat depression. Patients who randomly received Caplyta as an add-on to existing therapy showed a significantly better response on scales that measure depression symptoms compared with participants who received a placebo, Intra-Cellular said Tuesday.”
  • The Washington Post reports for what it’s worth.
    • “Sedentary coffee drinkers had a 24 percent reduced risk of mortality compared with those who sat for more than six hours and didn’t drink coffee, according to the lead author of a study published recently in the journal BMC Public Health.”
    • “The finding, which was not part of the original article, was calculated at The Washington Post’s request and provided by Huimin Zhou, a researcher at the Medical College of Soochow University’s School of Public Health in China and the lead author of the study on coffee and health.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • MedTech Dive relates,
    • “Boston Scientific has agreed to acquire Silk Road Medical, a maker of stroke prevention devices, for $27.50 per share in cash, or an equity value of about $1.26 billion, the companies said Tuesday.
    • “Silk Road’s products are the only commercially available devices for use during a minimally invasive procedure called transcarotid artery revascularization (TCAR) to treat patients with carotid artery disease, according to Boston Scientific.
    • “We view the deal as largely inexpensive for Boston yet meaningful enough to move the needle on growth in the peripheral interventions business,” J.P. Morgan analyst Robbie Marcus said in a note to clients.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
  • and
    • “Insured patients are often better off buying their generic prescriptions through their health insurance benefits than through Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company, though those without insurance could find cost savings in over a quarter of their pharmacy fills, according to a study published Friday in JAMA Health Forum.
    • “Across a sample of nearly 844 million prescription pharmacy fills logged among 124 generic drugs in 2019, researchers found that nearly 100 million (11.8%) would have reduced out-of-pocket spending for patients if they had been acquired through the billionaire-backed manufacturer and distributor.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management recently posted new Postal Service Health Benefits Program FAQs concerning its May 2024 proposed rule supplementing existing guidance on that program. The public comment period on that proposed rule is next Monday June 24.
    • Here’s an FAQ on a point that the FEHBlog mentioned but he has not seen in any other publication:
      • While the proposed rule reflects that Medicare Part D-eligible annuitants and their Part D-eligible family members would be automatically group enrolled into the Part D EGWP, it reflects that they may choose to opt out of receiving prescription drug coverage through the PSHB Part D EGWP. This proposed rule provides, consistent with the statute, that the Part D EGWP offered by their PSHB plan is the only PSHB prescription drug benefit available for Part D-eligible PSHB annuitants and their Part D-eligible covered family members. As proposed, Medicare Part D-eligible annuitants and their family members who choose to opt out of or disenroll from the PSHB plan’s Part D EGWP would not have access to prescription drug benefits through their PSHB plan and would not pay a lower premium than those enrolled in the Part D EGWP. An individual who opts out of or disenrolls from the Part D EGWP would be allowed to enroll again during the next open season or an applicable Qualifying Life Event (QLE) if they wish.
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “While years in the making, the Office of Personnel Management’s upcoming plans to try to cut down on unneeded health insurance costs will also arrive to open arms from the Government Accountability Office.
    • “Beginning in 2025, OPM is adding stricter eligibility requirements to try to root out ineligible enrollees in the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) program — something that’s been high on GAO’s radar for at least the last few years. A 2022 GAO report showed that OPM spends up to $1 billion each year on ineligible participants erroneously enrolled in FEHB.
    • “One of the biggest benefit systems in the country, and for decades, nobody checked these things,” Comptroller General Gene Dodaro told lawmakers on the House Oversight and Accountability Committee during a June 13 hearing. * * *
    • “Current FEHB eligibility determination and enrollment is highly decentralized and requires cooperation between nearly 100 employing offices responsible for determining eligibility and enrolling more than 8 million members,” OPM said in April. “If funded, OPM could extend this same central enrollment system to all FEHB enrollments, which would allow OPM to manage and make consistent all FEHB enrollments and remove individuals who cease to be eligible for the program.”
    • “OPM, as part of its fiscal 2025 budget request, is proposing legislation to build a centralized enrollment system for FEHB. With a central database, OPM would be able to more quickly address the problem and avoid the spending errors. That system, if it’s implemented, would be modeled after the centralized system OPM just recently built for the upcoming Postal Service Health Benefits program.”
      • FEHBlog note — While all of this is welcome progress, the most glaring, and as yet unresolved, internal control issue is that OPM reports enrollment and premiums to carriers separately rather than using the HIPAA standard electronic enrollment roster transaction 820 which would allow carriers to reconcile each enrollee with his or her premium payments. Carriers are entitled to this reconcilable information because they hold the insurance risk on these plans. Moreover, shouldn’t we make sure that the enrollee is paying the correct premium before checking family member eligibility?
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The U.S. surgeon general, Dr. Vivek Murthy, announced on Monday that he would push for a warning label on social media platforms advising parents that using the platforms might damage adolescents’ mental health.
    • “Warning labels — like those that appear on tobacco and alcohol products — are one of the most powerful tools available to the nation’s top health official, but Dr. Murthy cannot unilaterally require them; the action requires approval by Congress.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “His call to action on Monday was more strident, garnering praise from advocates of stricter social media controls, especially for young people. “Yes, this is a consumer product that is unsafe for children and teens,” wrote NYU social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, a strong proponent of limiting phone time, on X.
    • “But for several experts operating in this field, the type and extent of social media harm exacted on children isn’t quite as clear as Murthy seems to suggest. Indeed, said Michaeline Jensen, a psychologist at the University of South Carolina, Greensboro, there isn’t sufficient evidence to conclude social media is safe — but there isn’t enough to conclude the opposite, either.
  • STAT News also lets us know,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Monday approved Merck’s new pneumococcal vaccine for adults 18 and older.
    • “The vaccine, which will be sold under the name Capvaxive, is designed to protect against pneumococcal pneumonia, which hospitalizes about 150,000 adults in the United States every year and kills about 1 in 20 who develop it, according to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. * * *
    • “Before Capvaxive can be put into use, it must receive a recommendation from the CDC. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which advises the CDC on vaccination policy, meets next week for one of its three regularly scheduled meetings. A draft agenda for the meeting shows that a vote on Capvaxive is scheduled for Thursday, June 27.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced on Monday that is gearing up to end a program that offered financial assistance to providers impacted by the cyberattack on Change Healthcare.
    • “The agency said that the accelerated and advance payment program launched in response to the hack will end on July 12. The initiative sought to ease cash-flow disruptions that were caused by the cyberattack.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “The hope for many cancer patients who go through surgery is that they’ll be cured after the surgeon removes the tumor. The question that lingers is whether they got it all out — if the surgery happened in time before cancer cells scattered off of the primary tumor to seed unseen metastases or if some microscopic malignancy was left behind near the original cancer site.
    • “To answer this question, clinicians are increasingly turning to blood tests that detect circulating tumor DNA, known as ctDNA. The idea is that finding tumor DNA in the blood probably means that cancer cells are still growing somewhere in the body, even at a low level. These tests are starting to be used in a variety of cancers — and for the most part, clinicians agree that if the test is positive, the cancer will likely recur. The trouble is that scientists aren’t sure what should happen next.
    • “We are all recognizing that if a patient has detectable circulating tumor DNA, it’s not a question of if the cancer’s coming back, but when,” said Van Morris, a gastrointestinal medical oncologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center. “The field recognizes the power of this tool, but I think there remain many questions of how best do we utilize that in the day-to-day management of patients.”
    • “Some of those questions include whether clinicians should step up the intensity of treatment if patients are positive for ctDNA, whether they should step down treatment if patients are negative for ctDNA, or how long they should treat patients. And if you do any of these things, it’s still not clear if that would have any meaningful impact on patients’ overall survival or quality of life in most settings. The only way to answer these questions will be by confirming hypotheses in prospective randomized trials, which are ongoing.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “New data showcase promise, growing pains of CAR-T in autoimmune disease.
    • “While one expert described clinical trial results to date as “unprecedented,” reports of relapses in some patients drew questions about the therapies’ ultimate potential.”
  • The Washington Post and Consumer Reports points out,
    • “Five diet changes that can help lower blood pressure.
    • “Adding potassium and cutting back on alcohol can help reduce the need for meds if you have hypertension, or even prevent it in the first place.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Born last November, Fern had blood drawn from her heel for North Carolina’s mandatory newborn screening, which tested for more than 60 medical conditions. Nothing was found. That could have been the end of the story. Instead, Tiffany and her husband, Matthew Vogt, a physician and scientist in Durham, decided to take the nonprofit research institute RTI International up on a groundbreaking offer.
    • “Free of charge, parents in North Carolina can have experts conduct a more extensive scan and review their baby’s entire genetic blueprint for 200 different conditions. One is Pendred syndrome, a condition not covered by the standard, more limited newborn screening.
    • “Researchers in North Carolina and New York are studying whether this far more comprehensive approach can save lives and improve children’s health. Two decades after scientists sequenced the first human genome, the two studies reflect the rapid emergence of a new kind of health care called genomic medicine, spawned by that landmark achievement.
    • “Early results show that genome sequencing is identifying conditions not disclosed through the traditional newborn screening required by all 50 states. Since the study in North Carolina began in September 2023, researchers have examined the genomes of more than 1,800 babies; 40 were deemed likely to have medical conditions that were not previously diagnosed. One newborn was flagged as likely to have two previously undiagnosed conditions.
    • “Some of those were for potentially life-threatening conditions,” said Holly Peay, lead investigator for the Early Check program led by RTI International.
    • “Since launching the GUARDIAN program with its collaborators in September 2022, New York State has sequenced the genomes of more than 10,000 babies; 299 tested positive for one of the 450 conditions the state has focused on.
    • “For one child, it was even lifesaving,” said Wendy Chung, head of pediatrics at Boston Children’s Hospital, who is leading New York’s study.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “The prevalence of chronic hypertension in pregnancy in the United States doubled from 2007-2021, but only about 60% of those with the potentially life-threatening condition were treated with antihypertensive medications, according to a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported study of nearly 2 million pregnancies. The study, which was funded by NIH’s National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), did not explore the reasons for the increase, but rising maternal age, growing obesity rates, and other factors likely played a role, according to researchers. The findings were published today in the journal Hypertension.
    • “These findings are deeply concerning because of the high rate of U.S. maternal mortality, which is linked to chronic hypertension in pregnancy,” said study lead Stephanie Leonard, Ph.D., an epidemiologist at Stanford University School of Medicine in California. “Despite the availability of safe and effective treatments for chronic hypertension, the study speaks to an urgent need for improvement in care for this serious condition.” * * *
    • “To manage hypertension during pregnancy, experts recommend that women check their blood pressure at home and keep it under control, visit with a doctor often, and take antihypertensive medications as prescribed.”
  • Per a Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration press release,
    • “Researchers from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that among a cohort of 137,000 Medicare beneficiaries who experienced a nonfatal overdose in 2020, almost 24,000 (17.4%) experienced a subsequent nonfatal overdose, and about 1,300 (1%) died from overdose in the following year. Results were published today in JAMA Internal Medicine, identifying both effective interventions and significant gaps in care.
    • “People who have experienced one overdose are more likely to experience another,” said Miriam E. Delphin-Rittmon, Ph.D., HHS Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use and the leader of SAMHSA. “But we found that when survivors received gold-standard care such as medications for opioid use disorder and naloxone, the chances of dying from an overdose in the following year drop dramatically. In short, medications for opioid use disorder, opioid overdose reversal medications, and behavioral health supports save lives.”
    • “The study identifies effective, lifesaving interventions following initial nonfatal overdoses. The odds of dying from a subsequent lethal overdose decreased among cohort members who received methadone (58% lower odds), buprenorphine (52% lower odds), or behavioral health assessment or crisis services (75% lower odds). The risk of overdose mortality among those who filled a prescription for naloxone was also reduced by 30%.
    • “However, significant gaps in care were also noted. Only 4.1% of the cohort received medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), and only 6.2% filled a prescription for naloxone, commonly known as Narcan, despite these being gold-standard interventions. Beneficiaries receiving MOUD waited a mean of 72 days between their nonfatal overdose and receiving medication.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “E-cigarettes were about as effective at helping people quit smoking as the gold-standard pharmaceutical drug, varenicline, according to a clinical trial published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • “The trial randomized 458 people who smoked daily and wanted to quit to receive either a nicotine-containing e-cigarette and placebo tablets, varenicline and an e-cigarette without nicotine, or a placebo tablet and a nicotine-free e-cigarette for 12 weeks. All three groups were also given intensive tobacco cessation counseling.
    • “After 26 weeks, roughly equal percentages of participants using varenicline and e-cigarettes — 43.8 percent and 40.4 percent, respectively — had stopped smoking. The difference in quit rates between the two groups was not statistically significant.
    • “The JAMA study is the first published randomized controlled trial to compare varenicline, also known as Chantix, directly to e-cigarettes. Several studies have demonstrated that e-cigarettes can help adults quit smoking. However, most studies have compared e-cigarettes to placebo alone, or to nicotine replacement therapy, such as patches and lozenges, which help smokers manage their withdrawal symptoms.
    • “The trial is likely to cause a stir within the tobacco-control community, which has been bitterly divided over the question of whether e-cigarettes are a help or hindrance for adults who smoke cigarettes, and whether they should be recommended by doctors as a way to kick a smoking habit. While countries like the United Kingdom actively encourage smokers to use these products to help them quit cigarettes, nations including the United States and Japan have been far more conservative. Backers of e-cigarettes say this study shows the U.K. has the right idea.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • In Medicare Advantage STAR ratings news, Modern Healthcare tells us,
    • “Nonprofit health insurance companies historically have outperformed for-profit competitors on star ratings and could be disadvantaged when their rivals are boosted, but the Alliance of Community Health Plans doesn’t see a concern.
    • “It is equitable that plans that are going to have their scores recalculated for ’24 and have a change in their revenue have a chance to modify their ’25 bids because they were at a different place when they submitted it,” said Michael Bagel, associate vice president of public policy at the trade group for nonprofit insurers.
    • “Allowing only insurers that get increased scores to resubmit bids could provoke lawsuits, Meekins said. “There’s still the potential for legal challenges to that because there’s a bit of game theory that goes into the bid process and what you think other people are going to do,” he said.
    • “CMS has not said how it will handle star ratings for 2025, whether it will reinstitute the methods the courts overturned on technical grounds or whether it will appeal the Elevance Health and SCAN Health Plan decisions.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review identifies “37 health systems with strong operational metrics and solid financial positions, according to reports from credit rating agencies Fitch Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service released in 2024.”
  • Fierce Healthcare offers a special report naming “the top 10 nonprofit health systems by 2023 operating revenue.”
  • MedCity News relates
    • “Retailers are facing several headwinds in healthcare in 2024. Walmart and Dollar General both recently ended healthcare endeavors, and CVS Health is reportedly looking for a private equity partner for Oak Street Health (which it acquired in 2023). VillageMD, which is backed by Walgreens, is shuttering numerous clinics.
    • “Still, Mary Langowski, executive vice president and president of U.S. healthcare at Walgreens Boots Alliance, sees a strong future for retailers in healthcare.
    • “I happen to be very bullish on the role of retail in healthcare and frankly, having a very central role in healthcare,” she said. “And part of that is because over 80% of people want health and wellness offerings in a pharmacy and in a retail setting. Consumers want the ease, they want the convenience of it. And those are important things to keep in mind, that demand is there.”
    • “Langowski, who joined Walgreens in March, made these comments during a Tuesday fireside chat at the AHIP 2024 conference held in Las Vegas. She added that what the industry is seeing is not an “evolution” of whether retailers will exist in healthcare, but a shift around what the “right model is going to be.” 
  • The Washington Post notes,
    • “If your doctor can’t see you now, maybe the nurse practitioner can.
    • “Nurse practitioners have long been a reliable backstop for the primary-care-physician shortfall, which is estimated at nearly 21,000 doctors this year and projected to get worse.
    • “But easy access to NPs could be tested in coming years. Even though nearly 90 percent of nurse practitioners are certified to work in primary care, only about a third choose the field, according to a recent study.
    • “Health-care workforce experts worry that NPs are being lured toward work in specialty practices for the same reason that some doctors steer clear of primary care: money.”


Happy Flag Day!

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal confirms,
    • “The federal government plans to redo this year’s quality ratings of private Medicare plans, a move that will deliver hundreds of millions in additional bonus payments to insurers next year.
    • “The decision by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services was announced late Thursday, after The Wall Street Journal reported the agency’s plans. It comes in the wake of two court rulings that faulted the agency’s ratings, in cases filed by insurers SCAN Health Plan and Elevance Health.
    • “The agency said it would recalculate all of the 2024 quality ratings, but only apply the results if a plan’s ratings go up under the new methodology. If a plan’s ratings go down, the change won’t be implemented, CMS said in a guidance document.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Novo Nordisk CEO Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen will testify before the Senate after Sen. Bernie Sanders threatened to subpoena the company over its pricing of the popular diabetes drug Ozempic and the obesity drug Wegovy, the Senate health committee announced Friday.
    • “The agreement is a finale to a farcical public back-and-forth over apparent difficulties between the Senate health committee and Novo in scheduling a hearing. Sanders’ team claimed that Novo was uncooperative with his requests, but the company said they had told the senator’s team that the company was willing to testify.”
  • The American Hospital Association News lets us know,
    • “The Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor and the Treasury today announced a 120-day extension for parties impacted by the cyberattack on Change Healthcare to open disputes under the No Surprises Act independent dispute resolution process. Parties have until Oct. 12 to file disputes and must attest that their ability to open a dispute was impacted by the incident, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said. The departments published an attestation that parties must submit along with the standard IDR form during the extension period. The AHA previously advocated for the departments to create the extension.”
  • Bloomberg News adds,
    • “Medical providers continue to beat out insurers in most surprise billing arbitration disputes, often pocketing awards of at least double the in-network rate for a given service, according to new federal agency data.
    • “Providers were the prevailing party in about 82% of payment determinations made in No Surprises Act arbitration in the second half of 2023, according to a data report released Thursday by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. A total of 125,478 disputes resulted in award decisions in that period, the report showed, a 50% increase from the first half of 2023.”
  • Per a Department of Health and Human Services press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), announced notices of funding opportunities aimed at improving behavioral health for racial and ethnic minorities, and other underserved populations, providing training and technical assistance to programs serving these populations, and integrating primary and behavioral health care. The funding totals $31.4 million and supports the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to address the mental health and overdose crises, two key pillars of the President’s Unity Agenda for the nation, as well as continuing efforts to advance heath equity and address the consistent and disproportionate impact of HIV on racial and ethnic minorities.  
    • “These grant programs additionally support HHS’ Overdose Prevention Strategy, the HHS Roadmap for Behavioral Health Integration, and SAMHSA’s strategic priorities: preventing substance use and overdose; enhancing access to suicide prevention and mental health services; promoting resilience and emotional health for children, youth, and families; integrating behavioral and physical health care; and strengthening the behavioral health workforce. ”   
  • The Labor Department’s Assistant Secretary for Employee Benefit Security, Lisa Gomez, writes in her blog about “avoiding elder financial abuse.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control tells us today,
    • Summary
      • “Seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and RSV activity is low nationally.
    • COVID-19
      • “Most key indicators are showing low levels of activity nationally. However, COVID-19 test positivity has increased to 5.4% from 4.6% in the previous week. Wastewater viral activity is showing increases in some states. We also estimate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in 34 states and territories, declining or likely declining in 1 state or territory, and are stable or uncertain in 14 states and territories, based on CDC modeled estimates of epidemic growth. An increasing proportion of the variants that cause COVID-19 are projected to be KP.3 and LB.1 (CDC COVID Data Tracker: Variant Proportions).
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • “Nationally, RSV activity remains low.
    • Vaccination
  • Radiology Business informs us,
    • “Gen X is experiencing larger cancer incidence increases than generations before it, according to a new analysis published Monday in JAMA Network Open.
    • “Increases among this group (born between 1965 to 1980) are “substantial” when compared to the baby boomers who came before them (1936 to 1960). For instance, Gen X Hispanic women have seen a nearly 35% increase in cancer incidence while Latino men have recorded a 14% uptick.
    • “The findings are based on an analysis of data from 3.8 million individuals with invasive cancer.”
    • “The substantial increases we identified in Generation X versus both the baby boomers and their proxy parents surprised us,” lead author Philip S. Rosenberg, PhD, principal investigator at the National Cancer Institute, wrote June 10. “Numerous preventable causes of cancer have been identified. Cancer control initiatives have led to substantial declines in tobacco consumption. Screening is well accepted for precancerous lesions of the colon, rectum, cervix, uterus and breast. However, other suspected carcinogenic exposures are increasing.”
    • “For the study, Rosenberg and the NCI’s Adalberto Miranda-Filho, PhD, gathered data from the institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program spanning 1992-2018. They used a tool called the age-period-cohort model to project cancer incidence among the varying generations.”
  • Health Day notes,
    • “The death rate for type 1 diabetes has fallen 25% over the past few decades, and there are more seniors than ever with the illness
    • “Uncontrolled blood sugar was the prime driver behind poor outcomes with type 1.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Lilly’s Weight-Loss Drug Is a Huge Hit. Its CEO Wants to Replace It ASAP.
    • “Dave Ricks is pushing his scientists to find an even more potent anti-obesity treatment. ‘Lilly’s got a lead, and we plan to exploit that lead.’”
  • Beckers Hospital Review explains how “Kaiser Permanente’s phone and video visit rates remain significantly higher than pre-pandemic levels.” Check it out.
  • mHealth Intelligence relates,
    • “Most Americans said they would be willing to participate in hospital-at-home programs to return home sooner, according to a new survey.
    • “The survey, conducted by remote patient monitoring (RPM) technology developer Vivalink, polled 1,025 United States adults over 40.
    • “An overwhelming majority of US adults are likely to participate in a hospital-at-home monitoring program to get back home more quickly, with 39.15 percent saying they are very likely and 45.27 percent saying they are somewhat likely to participate in these programs. Only 15.58 percent said they are not likely to participate in a hospital-at-home program to return home sooner.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “AbbVie is securing its place in an emerging gastrointestinal disease drug field, paying China-based FutureGen Biopharmaceutical $150 million in immediate and near-term fees for rights to an antibody drug targeting TL1A, a molecule linked to heightened immune responses in inflammatory bowel disease.
    • “The Illinois-based drugmaker is following rivals like Merck, Roche, Teva and Sanofi, which have piled billions of dollars into acquisitions to gain ownership of TL1A-targeting drugs.
    • “Per terms of the deal announced Thursday, AbbVie will gain global rights to the drug, called FG-M701, and will be responsible for its development, manufacturing and commercialization. FutureGen could receive up to $1.56 billion in additional fees based on hitting development, regulatory and sales milestones.”
  • and
    • “The failure of a Pfizer medicine for Duchenne muscular dystrophy adds new uncertainty around the effectiveness of gene therapy for the muscle-wasting condition, days before the Food and Drug Administration is expected to decide on expanding use of a similar treatment from Sarepta Therapeutics.
    • “On Wednesday, Pfizer said the treatment missed its mark in a definitive Phase 3 study of boys between 4 and 7 years of age with Duchenne. Pfizer didn’t disclose specifics, but said the therapy didn’t lead to a significant difference versus placebo on a measure of motor function, or on key secondary measures such as timed tests for how quickly study participants could stand or walk. The results will be presented at future medical and patient advocacy meetings.”
    • “The study’s failure makes it much less likely there will soon be a second gene therapy option for people with Duchenne, a progressive and deadly condition with no cure and limited treatment options. Pfizer had previously expected to file for a regulatory approval of its medicine if study results were positive. Now the company says it is “evaluating appropriate next steps” for the program. Multiple Wall Street analysts expect Pfizer to discontinue research.
    • “The results are “a discouraging blow to our community, particularly devastating to those who participated in the study,” said Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy, a patient advocacy group, in a statement.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington DC,

  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “For federal employees, a bill pending in the Senate would bring expanded coverage of fertility treatments through the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) program.
    • “But the Right to IVF Act, which Sens. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) introduced last week, did not garner the 60 votes needed to move forward with a floor vote Thursday afternoon. Almost all Republicans voted against the measure to advance the legislation, resulting in a 48-47 tally.
    • “The legislation rolls together three previous bills all aiming to improve access and insurance coverage for in-vitro fertilization (IVF). In part, the bill would have impacts specifically on FEHB enrollees. One component of the Right to IVF Act aims to set higher requirements for FEHB carriers to offer IVF coverage.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management increased FEHB carrier requirements for IVF treatments for plan year 2024. But the legislation looks to further extend the requirements of IVF to cover both treatments and medications, as well as expanding to more types of assisted reproductive technology (ART).”
  • Many large FEHB plans cover ART procedures. Competition will cause other plans to follow their lead.
  • Federal News Network also identifies House of Representatives policy riders to FY 2025 appropriations bills that are relevant to federal employees and their benefit programs.
  • The American Hospital Association News relates,
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee June 13 held a hearing about transitioning to value-based care. The AHA submitted a statement to the subcommittee for the hearing, expressing support for value-based care and sharing principles the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation should consider when designing alternative payment models. Those principles include adequate on-ramp and glidepath to transition to risk; adequate risk adjustment; voluntary participation and flexible design; balanced risk versus reward; guardrails to ensure participants don’t compete against themselves when they achieve optimal cost savings and outcomes; and upfront investment incentives.” 
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “The Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously ruled an anti-abortion group contesting the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of the abortion pill mifepristone does not have a legal basis to sue, putting an end to a drawn-out and high-profile court battle.
    • “The court held the plaintiffs’ “desire to make a drug less available to others” did not give them standing to challenge the FDA’s actions around mifepristone.
    • “The plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that FDA’s relaxed regulatory requirements likely would cause them to suffer an injury in fact,” Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in the court’s opinion. “For that reason, the federal courts are the wrong forum for addressing the plaintiffs’ concerns about FDA’s actions.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “An appeals panel [in August 2023] rolled back much of the [district court’s] ruling, saying it was too late to challenge the drug’s original approval. But the appeals court did find that the plaintiffs had standing to sue, and it ruled the FDA’s efforts beginning in 2016 to make the pill more available were unlawful. The Supreme Court had previously put that ruling on hold, preserving the status quo of widespread mifepristone access while it considered the case. * * *
    • “The pill case won’t be the last time the justices weigh in on abortion access this term. The court in the next couple of weeks is expected to decide a separate case out of Idaho that centers around the question of whether a federal law that requires hospitals to provide stabilizing care for patients at risk of death or serious injury trumps state abortion bans that allow doctors to perform the procedure only if a woman’s life is in jeopardy.”
  • STAT News notes,
    • “Both President Biden and former President Trump love to claim credit for getting more Americans $35 insulin.
    • “But the credit should actually go to a giant pharmaceutical company — just the type that both men claim to have challenged.
    • “Eli Lilly, an $800 billion pharma giant and one of three insulin manufacturers in the United States, first proposed an experiment allowing Medicare insurance plans to offer $35 monthly insulin in 2019, CEO David Ricks and former Medicare agency chief Seema Verma said in interviews with STAT.
    • “It is true. We approached CMS with that idea,” Ricks said, referring to the government Medicare agency.
    • “Verma gave Ricks credit. “He is an unsung hero. He was actually the mastermind of all of this,” she said.”
  • Per Department of Health and Human Services press releases,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), awarded more than $11 million to 15 organizations to establish new residency programs in rural communities. HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra and White House Domestic Policy Advisor Neera Tanden announced the new awards while visiting rural health clinic in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin today. Building on HRSA’s Enhancing Maternal Health Initiative, one program will create the first obstetrics and gynecology Rural Track Program in the country, and six others will develop new family medicine residency programs with enhanced obstetrical training in rural communities.”
    • “For more information about the Rural Residency Planning and Development Program, visit https://www.hrsa.gov/rural-health/grants/rural-health-research-policy/rrpd.”
  • and
    • “The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), part of the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR) within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), is announcing up to $500 million in Project NextGen funding to plan and execute multiple Phase 2b clinical trials evaluating novel vaccines administered as a nasal spray or as a pill to protect against symptomatic COVID-19.
    • “We learned a lot during the COVID-19 pandemic that we can use to better prepare for future public health crises. That includes finding new ways to administer vaccines to make it even easier for everyone to protect themselves from illness,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “We are making progress on the development of cutting-edge treatments, such as vaccines administered as a nasal spray or as a pill. The Biden-Harris Administration won’t stop until we have the next generation of innovative vaccines, therapeutics, and other tools to protect against COVID-19, or any other pathogen that could threaten the American public.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Avoid raw milk. Lay off cheeses made with unpasteurized milk. And cook your beef to medium- or well-done temperatures.
    • “These are the precautions that public health officials and doctors recommend as they track the H5N1 bird flu outbreak in U.S. cattle. Ten states have H5N1 outbreaks in cows, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and at least three U.S. dairy farmworkers have been diagnosed with bird flu. 
    • “A man in Mexico contracted a different strain of bird flu—H5N2—earlier this month and died, though he died from underlying conditions, according to the Mexican government.
    • “Doctors and federal officials say the public health risk of getting H5N1 is currently very low unless you work on a farm, and stress that there has been no evidence of human-to-human transmission. What’s raised concern is that the most recent case—found in a dairy worker in Michigan earlier this month—had respiratory symptoms unlike the previous two cases where the primary symptom was pinkeye. 
    • “Viruses with respiratory symptoms are more contagious and transmissible than conjunctivitis, or pinkeye, so doctors and scientists say they are watching closely. For now, it has been more than a week since the worker tested positive and there have been no known cases of transmission.”  
  • The NIH director in her weekly blog tells us,
    • We know stress can take a toll on our mental health. Yet, it’s unclear why some people develop stress-related mental health disorders and others don’t. The risk for developing a stress-related mental health disorder such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or major depressive disorder (MDD) depends on a complex interplay between the genetic vulnerabilities we are born with and the impact of traumatic stress we experience over our lifetimes.
    • Given this complexity, it’s been difficult for researchers to pinpoint the underlying biological pathways in the body that ultimately produce changes associated with PTSD, major depression, or other mental health conditions. Now, a study reported in a special issue of Science on decoding the brain uses a comprehensive approach to examine multiple biological processes across brain regions, cell types, and blood to elucidate this complexity. It’s an unprecedented effort to understand in a more holistic way the essential biological networks involved in PTSD and MDD. * * *
    • “There’s clearly much more to discover in the years ahead. But these insights already point to important roles for known stress-related pathways in fundamental brain changes underlying PTSD and MDD, while also revealing more novel pathways as potentially promising new treatment targets. With further study, the researchers hope these findings can also begin to answer vexing questions, such as why some people develop PTSD or major depression after stressful events and others don’t.”
  • STAT News points out that “With placenta-on-a-chip, researchers hope to gauge how drugs and toxins impact pregnancy.”
    • “[Mechanical engineer Nicole] Hashemi and her colleagues received a three-year, $350,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to advance their current placenta-on-a-chip model. They plan on designing systems that can be integrated into the model to help collect data in real time. Hashemi told STAT that one system could look at changes in the shapes of cells when exposed to chemicals or physical stressors.
    • “The placenta-on-a-chip technology is simple but potentially powerful, and similar efforts are being made to replicate the environments of other human organs. The small chip is usually about the size of a rubber eraser, etched with tiny channels through which fluids move — offering a simplified, functional model of an organ to test drugs or to study the progression of disease. Researchers can grow cells and run fluids that act like blood through chambers in the chip to create environments similar to those in the human body.
    • “According to Dan Huh, a professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania and a leader in developing many organs-on-a-chip including the placenta and lung, maintaining the environment is almost like tricking the cells into thinking that they’re still in the body so that they “do what they’re supposed to do.”
  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “Disrupted access to prescription stimulants for patients with attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may increase risks of injury or overdose, the CDC warned on Thursday following the indictment of an online ADHD medication prescriber over fraud allegations.
    • “Several ADHD stimulants such as immediate-release amphetamine (Adderall) are already in shortage, and the new federal healthcare fraud indictment may further disrupt care for as many as 50,000 patients with ADHD, the CDC detailed.
  • The Journal of the American Medical Association released a research letter about trends in Naloxone dispensing from U.S. retail pharmacies.
    • “Naloxone prescriptions dispensed from retail pharmacies increased from 2019 to 2023, with the largest single-year increase observed in 2022. This increase may reflect efforts to expand naloxone prescribing, including state-level standing orders3 and clinical practice guidelines. Although statistically significant increases were observed among most prescriber specialties between 2019 and 2023, nearly two-thirds of dispensed naloxone was prescribed by advanced practitioners and primary care specialties in 2023. Continued efforts such as evidence-based academic detailing and electronic health record alerts can support clinicians in prescribing naloxone.
    • “The observed decrease in retail pharmacy–dispensed naloxone prescriptions during Q3 and Q4 2023 may be due to naloxone becoming available over the counter,4 though trend analysis indicated the decline was not statistically significant. Studies have found that over-the-counter naloxone has a higher out-of-pocket cost than insurance-paid naloxone prescriptions,5 indicating the continued importance of prescribed naloxone and naloxone accessed in community-based settings. * * *
    • “Although naloxone dispensing has increased in recent years, opportunities remain to expand access given the continued high burden of opioid overdoses,1 such as by increasing co-prescribing of naloxone for patients with high-risk opioid prescriptions2,6 and reducing financial barriers.5

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports good news for Medicare Advantage insurers,
    • “The federal government plans to redo this year’s quality ratings of private Medicare plans, according to people familiar with the matter, a move that would deliver hundreds of millions in additional bonus payments to insurers next year.
    • “The decision by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could be announced as soon as Thursday. It comes in the wake of two court rulings that faulted the agency’s ratings, in cases filed by insurers SCAN Health Plan and Elevance Health.
    • “By paving the way for higher payments, the CMS move would provide a win for Medicare insurers at a time when their business is under pressure from rising healthcare costs and rates for next year that came in lower than investors had expected.'”
  • Mercer Consulting explores “Unlocking the power of [healthcare] price transparency data.”
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • “Philips has launched its Duo Venous Stent System in the U.S. to treat patients with blockages in their veins, the company said Wednesday.
    • “The implant, which won approval in December, is designed to address the root cause of chronic deep venous disease and comes in two forms for use in different types of veins. 
    • “Philips acquired the device in its 2022 takeover of Vesper Medical. The company paid 227 million euros upfront for Vesper to expand its image guided therapy business.”
  • and
    • “Medline has asked hospitals to remove thousands of endotracheal tubes because of a risk that components can tear or detach, blocking a patient’s airway. 
    • “The company recalled more than 168,000 Medline Sub-G Endotracheal Tubes and more than 13,000 kits, according to a Food and Drug Administration notice posted on May 28. The tubes are used for mechanical ventilation and have ports to prevent fluid from draining into patients’ lungs and causing pneumonia. 
    • “Medline recalled the products because the inflation tube and other components can detach or tear from the main tube, causing it to leak or deflate. If the device comes apart during use, it could also obstruct the patient’s airway or cause choking, the FDA said in a Tuesday notice.
  • and
    • “Abbott is recalling a system monitor used with the Heartmate cardiac pump because screen display issues could pose a risk to patients. The Class 1 recall affects 4,842 monitors distributed in the U.S. and worldwide, according to a June 7 database entry by the Food and Drug Administration.
    • “In an urgent medical device correction letter to physicians in May, Abbott said no serious adverse health consequences were reported and no devices are being removed from the market.
    • “The latest recall follows three others from earlier this year involving the Heartmate left ventricular assist system, the only such mechanical circulatory support device on the U.S. market after Medtronic stopped selling its Heartware pump in 2021.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Chief Healthcare Executive lets us know,
    • Telehealth advocates have said this year represents the Super Bowl for virtual healthcare, and the game is about at halftime.
    • On the upside, telehealth leaders remain confident that Congress will approve legislation that would allow health systems and providers to continue offering virtual care and hospital-at-home programs.
    • But lawmakers may not act until late in the fourth quarter [in other words, the expected lame duck session following the November’s national election].
  • Roll Call informs us,
    • “The Supreme Court will decide a dispute about hospital reimbursement rates under Medicare, with hundreds of hospitals arguing the government had shorted them for treating low-income patients.
    • More than 200 hospitals in more than 30 states, led by Advocate Christ Medical Center in Illinois, have asked the justices to overturn a lower court ruling that allows the Department of Health and Human Services to reimburse a lower rate for treating a high proportion of low-income patients. The dispute, which the hospitals said could affect more than $4 billion in federal funds, hinges on how to determine which patients count toward that reimbursement rate and follows a 2022 Supreme Court decision over the same program.
    • The justices announced Monday that they would decide the case, which means oral arguments and a decision would come in the next term that starts in October.
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Chief Human Capital Officers (CHCO) Council has a new face taking the lead to collaborate on human capital initiatives and strategies across government.”
    • “Colleen Heller-Stein, formerly deputy CHCO at the Treasury Department, has stepped in as executive director of the CHCO Council, Federal News Network has learned. The senior-level position within the Office of Personnel Management leads agency CHCOs and other human capital leaders to innovate on best practices for managing the recruitment and retention of the federal workforce.
    • “Heller-Stein is the first career federal executive to serve in the CHCO Council leadership role. She took over the position a few weeks ago from Latonia Page, who had been working as acting executive director of the CHCO Council since September 2023. Prior to Page’s time on the job, Margot Conrad — currently deputy chief of staff at OPM — served as the council’s executive director for about two and a half years.”‘

From the public health and medical research front,

  • KFF expresses concern about the general unavailability of bird flu tests.
    • “A recent rule that gives the FDA more oversight of lab-developed tests may bog down authorization. In a statement to KFF Health News, the FDA said that, for now, it may allow tests to proceed without a full approval process. The CDC did not respond to requests for comment.”
    • “But the American Clinical Laboratory Association has asked the FDA and the CDC for clarity on the new rule. “It’s slowing things down because it’s adding to the confusion about what is allowable,” said Susan Van Meter, president of the diagnostic laboratory trade group.
    • “Labcorp, Quest Diagnostics, and other major testing companies are in the best position to manage a surge in testing demand because they can process hundreds per day, rather than dozens. But that would require adapting testing processes for their specialized equipment, a process that consumes time and money, said Matthew Binnicker, director of clinical virology at the Mayo Clinic.
    • “There’s only been a handful of H5N1 cases in humans the last few years,” he said, “so it’s hard for them to invest millions when we don’t know the future.”
  • The Wall Street Journal offers guidance on how people can improve the deathbed experiences of loved ones.
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “Baltimore-based Johns Hopkins School of Nursing is addressing community needs by taking primary care door to door, NPR reported June 11.
    • “The Neighborhood Nursing pilot program consists of a team of nurses and community health workers that make weekly visits to three apartment buildings in Johnston Square, a predominantly Black disadvantaged neighborhood. The visits are free to patients and are not dependent on health status, income or what type of insurance, if any, they have. Visits are done in people’s homes, senior centers, lobbies, libraries and anywhere else people can be found. 
    • “In the time it has run, Neighborhood Nursing has successfully helped patients receive care and has expedited physicians’ appointments as needed. However, the greatest challenge is funding.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “From 2010 to 2021, most high and moderate risk factors for preeclampsia increased in the U.S.
    • “Multifetal gestation and nulliparity were the only preeclampsia risk factors to decrease during this period.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Pharmaceutical companies employ many different strategies when building their cancer drug pipelines, but one recent commonality among them is a belief in the future of targeted therapies known as antibody-drug conjugates.
    • “Many of the leading cancer drugmakers have at least one or two antibody-drug conjugates, or ADCs, in development. Others, such as PfizerJohnson & Johnson and Merck & Co., have used buyouts or partnerships to build an ADC portfolio.
    • “One of the best-selling ADCs on the market is AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo’s Enhertu, which brought in combined sales of $2.5 billion in 2023, almost double the year before. The two companies formed a $7 billion alliance around Enhertu in 2019 and since then, the drug has secured multiple approvals and changed the way some breast cancers are treated.
    • “Over that time, AstraZeneca has made ADCs a more substantial part of its overall pipeline alongside radiopharmaceuticals and immunotherapies, giving the company many potential combinations to work with, said Carlos Doti, vice president and head of medical affairs for its U.S. oncology division.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues notes,
    • “CMS must recalculate the Medicare Advantage star ratings for Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia, a federal judge ruled June 10. 
    • “The judge ruled partially in favor of Elevance Health, which sued to challenge CMS’ star ratings methodology in December. The insurer sought new ratings for several of its subsidiaries, but the judge ruled CMS needs to recalculate ratings only for BCBS of Georgia. 
    • “Elevance’s challenge focused on CMS’ use of the Tukey method, a change announced by CMS in a 2020 final rule and implemented in 2024 star ratings. The method removes extreme outliers from measure scores to prevent outliers from affecting all MA contracts, making it more difficult for plans to earn a high star rating. In 2022, a final star ratings rule from CMS did not mention the new change, which the agency added back in the 2023 rule, citing an inadvertent removal. 
    • “CMS also limits scoring changes to 5% annually. In the lawsuit, Elevance said CMS should have factored in those limits before adding the Tukey change back in 2023 versus the other way around.
    • “Randolph Moss, a judge for the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C, ruled CMS violated the Administrative Procedure Act in applying the Tukey methodology. However, Mr. Moss ruled Elevance proved the Tukey method affected the star rating only for BCBS of Georgia and not the other plans for which it sought revised ratings.” 
  • This opinion and last week’s Scan Health opinion may wind up before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Just three days before bankrupt Steward Health Care was set to run out of funds, the health system said it’s struck a deal to capture $225 million of additional debtor-in-possession financing to keep its operations afloat during Chapter 11 proceedings.
    • “The funds come from Steward’s FILO lenders, which include private credit lenders Sound Point Capital and Brigade Agency Services, as well as Chamberlain Commercial Funding, according to a press release shared with Healthcare Dive. 
    • “Steward will present the deal — which the system says is sufficient to finance operations prior to its July asset sales — for approval in bankruptcy court later this week.”
  • According to BioPharma Dive,
    • “Approval of Eli Lilly’s experimental Alzheimer’s disease drug donanemab would help drive sales of Eisai and Biogen’s rival medicine Leqembi, analysts wrote after a Food and Drug Administration panel on Monday supported clearance of donanemab.
    • “A rising tide lifts all boats, in our view,” wrote Myles Minter, an analyst at William Blair, in a client note. Donanemab works similarly to Leqembi by eliminating from the brain a toxic protein called amyloid that scientists see as linked to Alzheimer’s progression.”
  • McKinsey & Co. discusses the ongoing digital transformation in healthcare.
  • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans shares useful insights on the final rules amending the Fair Labor Standards Act that take effect on July 1.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Big tobacco companies and their critics agree on at least one thing: The illegal, fruit-flavored, disposable vapes that are popular among teenagers have flooded the U.S. market and federal regulators haven’t done enough to stop it.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration and Justice Department said Monday they are stepping up enforcement by forming a multiagency task force to go after the illegal distribution and sale of e-cigarettes.
    • “Disposable vaping devices, almost none of which are authorized for sale by the FDA, represent more than 30% of U.S. e-cigarette sales in stores tracked by Nielsen, according to an analysis by Goldman Sachs. Many of them are imported from China. Breeze Pro and Elfbar, both of which were ordered off the market last year by the FDA, remain the top two disposable e-cigarette brands in the U.S.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “An experimental and closely watched medicine for Alzheimer’s disease is one step closer to approval, after receiving support from a panel of experts who advise the Food and Drug Administration. “An experimental and closely watched medicine for Alzheimer’s disease is one step closer to approval, after receiving support from a panel of experts who advise the Food and Drug Administration.
    • “On Monday, the panel unanimously voted that the medicine, developed by Eli Lilly and known as donanemab, appears to be an effective treatment for certain Alzheimer’s patients. The experts also concluded, by an 11-0 vote, that the drug’s benefits outweigh its risks, despite some safety concerns.
    • “I thought the evidence is very strong and the trials [show] the effectiveness of the drug,” said Dean Follman, a panelist and assistant director of biostatistics at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is billing the Postal Service’s survival from the worst days of the COVID-19 pandemic as an unsung comeback story — but the agency is still writing its next chapter, as it figures out how to stay financially healthy in the long term.
    • “DeJoy, speaking Monday at the National Postal Forum in Indianapolis, said he inherited a “broken business model” when he took office in June 2020 — and that the agency was months away from running out of cash at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • “Failure to adequately adapt to social, economic, technological, and industrial changes have destroyed giants in their industry – Kodak, Motorola, Blockbuster – in just a few short years,” DeJoy said in his keynote address. “The demands of the changes experienced by the Postal Service were magnitudes greater. In addition, these organizations did not have a Congress or a regulator to contend with.”
    • “Four years into his tenure as postmaster general, DeJoy is defending USPS changes under this 10-year reform plan — some elements of which USPS is temporarily pausing, after bipartisan scrutiny from Congress.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Moderna on Monday said a combination flu and COVID-19 shot it’s developing met the goal of a late-stage study, eliciting higher immune responses to the two viruses than did available vaccines when tested among adults 50 years or older.
    • “Dubbed mRNA-1083, the shot is made up of Moderna’s second-generation COVID vaccine and a candidate for influenza, which have each been tested on their own in separate trials. The company pit mRNA-1803 against Spikevax, its approved COVID vaccine, and against flu shots from drugmakers Sanofi and GSK.
    • “Moderna said the data showed a single dose of mRNA-1083 was statistically equivalent, or “non-inferior,” to giving those vaccines together. It plans to present full results at an upcoming medical meeting, and to discuss next steps with regulators.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “It’s a familiar scene for patients during a routine primary care visit. The doctor scans blood test results, notes high cholesterol flagged by a standard calculator to assess risk of heart attack or stroke, then decides — and ideally discusses — whether to recommend taking a statin to cut the risk over time.
    • “That conversation may happen less often if changes in the risk model presented by the American Heart Association in November translate into new guidelines for prescribing statins. Those guidelines haven’t been recalibrated yet, but a new analysis suggests that the new risk model could mean far fewer Americans — as many as 40% less than current calculators say — would be candidates for cholesterol-lowering drugs to prevent cardiovascular disease.”
  • NBC News informs us,
    • “New research points to a better way to measure obesity than body mass index.” New research points to a better way to measure obesity than body mass index.
    • “Body mass index was first developed in 1832 and has been the standard way to estimate a person’s body fat since the 1980s. The calculation, however, has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years.
    • “One major critique of BMI is that it doesn’t look at how much of a person’s weight is fat, and where fat is distributed around the body. It also doesn’t take into account the other elements that make up a person’s body composition beyond fat, including muscle, bone, water and organs.
    • “Fat distribution and body composition can vary dramatically among different people with the same BMI,” Wenquan Niu, a professor at the Capital Institute of Pediatrics in Beijing, wrote in an email.
    • “Because muscle is much denser than fat, BMI skews higher in people who are very muscular but have less body fat, like athletes, Niu said. On the other end of the spectrum, BMI can be underestimated in older people with much less muscle mass and more body fat.
    • ‘In a study published last week in JAMA Network Open, Niu and his colleagues showed that a different measurement, called the body roundness index, is a more precise way to estimate obesity.”
    • While BMI estimates a person’s body fat using just two measurements, height and weight, BRI also incorporates hip and waist circumferences to estimate how much total fat and visceral fat someone has. Visceral fat is a type of deep belly fat that surrounds the organs and can be more harmful to health.
  • Medscape offers an update on new oral weight loss drugs and tells us,
    • Fewer than one in five people eligible for lung cancer screening reported being up to date with screening in 2022, though patient navigation added to usual care could be a way of increasing these rates, according to two studies published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • Among nearly 26,000 respondents in a nationwide cross-sectional study, the overall prevalence of up-to-date lung cancer screening was 18.1% but varied across states (range 9.7% to 31%), with relatively lower rates in Southern states that have a high lung cancer mortality burden, noted Priti Bandi, PhD, of the American Cancer Society, and colleagues.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Altarum Institutes posted a report titled “Utilization and Price Drivers of Increasing Health Care Spending (2010-2023).”
    • “Following the 2022 slowdown in health care spending that led to the overall health care sector reaching its smallest share of the economy since 2014 (17.3%), there has been a gradual resurgence in health care spending beginning in early 2023. This resurgence, driven predominantly by the greater use of care (and particularly a return of elective and outpatient services), is following the pandemic-affected period of very slow spending growth, postponed care, and health care labor shortages from 2020 through 2022. Higher utilization has been observed in data such as our monthly Altarum health care spending and prices briefs, as well as other industry sources such as hospital and insurer financial reports. In this blog, we put 2023’s above-average health care utilization increases into perspective historically and break down utilization trends by the different major health care spending categories.
    • “Following the 2022 slowdown in health care spending that led to the overall health care sector reaching its smallest share of the economy since 2014 (17.3%), there has been a gradual resurgence in health care spending beginning in early 2023. This resurgence, driven predominantly by the greater use of care (and particularly a return of elective and outpatient services), is following the pandemic-affected period of very slow spending growth, postponed care, and health care labor shortages from 2020 through 2022. Higher utilization has been observed in data such as our monthly Altarum health care spending and prices briefs, as well as other industry sources such as hospital and insurer financial reports. In this blog, we put 2023’s above-average health care utilization increases into perspective historically and break down utilization trends by the different major health care spending categories.
    • Over the past fifteen years, rising U.S. health care spending has been driven both by increased utilization and higher prices, with utilization increases contributing more to higher spending (Figure 1). Since 2010, utilization of personal health care (spending on health goods and services, excluding spending on program administration, net cost of insurance, public health activities, and investment) has increased 47% (contributing about 60% of the overall spending growth), while underlying prices for care have increased 31%. Greater utilization since 2010 has been affected by increases in overall population rates of health insurance coverage, an aging population, greater direct government support for health care during the pandemic and increases in the intensity of care provided for many health care needs.” 
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Abbott said Monday it will launch two over-the-counter continuous glucose monitors after receiving clearance from the Food and Drug Administration.” Abbott said Monday it will launch two over-the-counter continuous glucose monitors after receiving clearance from the Food and Drug Administration.
    • “One product is the company’s Lingo device, sold as a wellness product for people who do not have diabetes. The other is Abbott’s new Libre Rio device, which is intended for adults with Type 2 diabetes who do not use insulin, posing a direct challenge to Dexcom’s Stelo device. 
    • “After Lingo was cleared last week, RBC Capital Markets analyst Shagun Singh wrote the over-the-counter nod could offer a more than $1 billion sales opportunity for Abbott.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Bobby Mukkamala, M.D., was voted in as president-elect of the American Medical Association (AMA) at the group’s annual meeting in Chicago. He will take over for immediate past president Jesse Ehrenfeld, M.D., whose last day in office is Tuesday, June 11. “Bobby Mukkamala, M.D., was voted in as president-elect of the American Medical Association (AMA) at the group’s annual meeting in Chicago. He will take over for immediate past president Jesse Ehrenfeld, M.D., whose last day in office is Tuesday, June 11. 
    • “Mukkamala will serve a one-year term for the physician advocacy group, which has been focused on reforming Medicare physician pay, reducing prior authorization burden and mitigating provider burnout, including through the use of technology to augment provider workflow. 
    • “Mukkamala is an otolaryngologist from Flint, Michigan, who has served in leadership roles within the American Medical Association and for local health initiatives in Michigan. He chairs the Substance Use and Pain Care Taskforce of the AMA and served on its board of trustees in 2017 and 2021.”
  • and
    • “Thought leaders from across the insurance industry will descend on Las Vegas this week for AHIP’s annual conference, kicking off three days of discussions on the biggest issues facing payers.”
    • “The Fierce Health Payer team will also be making the journey to Sin City, so keep an eye out for our coverage over the next several days. Ahead of the event, here’s a look at three key trends we expect to hear plenty about across panels, keynotes and meetings.”
      • GLP-1 Drug Costs and Shortages Remain Center-Stage
      • Continued Talk about Implementation of Value-Based Care, and
      • Cutting through the AI Hype.
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Teladoc Health has named a new CEO, months after the virtual care company’s long-term chief executive abruptly departed following flagging financial performance at the telehealth vendor.
    • “Charles “Chuck” Divita III will take on the role effective immediately, the company said Monday.
    • “His appointment comes about two months after Jason Gorevic, the former CEO who held the position since 2009, left the company.
    • “We are confident we have selected an innovative and visionary leader capable of delivering growth at scale, value for our clients and positive relationships with all our partners and colleagues,” David Snow Jr., chairman of Teladoc’s board of directors, said in a statement.
    • “Divita joins the virtual care company from GuideWell, a healthcare insurance and services company that includes Florida Blue, where he served as executive vice president of commercial markets and previously chief financial officer. He also worked as CFO at FPIC Insurance Group, which focuses on medical professional liability.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplas

From Washington, DC,

  • The Washington Post reports
    • Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) this week wrote to eight pharmaceutical company CEOs, urging them to remove 130 patents from a key federal registry, according to letters shared with The Washington Post. The Democrats are targeting Novo Nordisk, including some of its patents related to expensive drug Ozempic; GlaxoSmithKline; and other companies that produce asthma and diabetes medications.
    • The 130 patents are among more than 300 patents that the Federal Trade Commission in April identified as “junk patent listings” that should be removed from the registry and are blocking competitors from producing cheaper alternatives. Monday is the deadline for the companies to remove the patents or reaffirm that they believe the patents are legal, according to a person who spoke on the condition of anonymity to detail the private enforcement process.
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Friday expanded the approval for GSK’s vaccine to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, authorizing its use for at-risk adults as young as 50.”The Food and Drug Administration on Friday expanded the approval for GSK’s vaccine to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, authorizing its use for at-risk adults as young as 50.
    • “Arexvy, which was the first RSV vaccine approved, now becomes the first to be available to adults under the age of 60 who are not pregnant. Prior to this FDA decision, Arexvy was licensed for use in people 60 and older.”
  • Tammy Flanagan writing in Govexec discusses the state of federal civil service retirement: CSRS and FERS.
  • Govexec adds,
    • “The government’s backlog of pending retirement claims from federal workers hit an eight-year low last month. “The government’s backlog of pending retirement claims from federal workers hit an eight-year low last month.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management’s retirement process and subsequent backlog has long dogged the federal government’s HR agency, frustrating agencies and departing federal employees alike, in large part due to paper-based legacy personnel systems.
    • “But last year, OPM instituted a number of measures to try to make immediate improvements to the process, including dedicating more resources and manpower during the early-year busy season for retirement claims and setting up a new dashboard for claimants to better understand the process and avoid common pitfalls.
    • “In May, OPM received 6,751 new retirement applications, a slight decrease from the 6,901 it received the previous month. But after a modest decrease in the number of claims actually processed in April, the agency increased its pace again last month, processing 8,793 claims.
    • “By the end of the month, the backlog had fallen to 14,035, compared to 16,077 pending claims at the end of April. That marks the smallest retirement backlog OPM has experienced since May 2016, when it also finished the month with a backlog of 14,035 applications.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control informs us,
    • Summary
      • Seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and RSV activity is low nationally.
    • COVID-19
      • Most key indicators are showing low levels of activity nationally. However, COVID-19 test positivity has increased to 4.5%. Wastewater viral activity is showing increases in some states. We also estimate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in 30 states and territories, declining or likely declining in 1 state or territory, and are stable or uncertain in 18 states and territories, based on Rt estimates of epidemic growth. An increasing proportion of the variants that cause COVID-19 are projected to be KP.3 and LB.1 (CDC COVID Data Tracker: Variant Proportions).
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • Nationally, RSV test positivity remains low. Hospitalization rates are low in all age groups.
    • Vaccination
  • The Washington Post offers background on bird flu — How it spreads, milk and egg safety and more.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The American Cancer Society has begun an ambitious, far-reaching study focusing on a population that has long been overlooked, despite high rates of cancer and cancer-related deaths: Black women.”The American Cancer Society has begun an ambitious, far-reaching study focusing on a population that has long been overlooked, despite high rates of cancer and cancer-related deaths: Black women.
    • “The initiative, called VOICES of Black Women, is believed to be the first long-term population study of its size to zero in specifically on the factors driving cancer prevalence and deaths among Black women.
    • “Researchers plan to enroll 100,000 Black women without cancer, ages 25 to 55, in Washington, D.C., and 20 states where most Black American women reside. The subjects will be surveyed twice a year about their behaviors, environmental exposures and life experiences, and followed for 30 years; any cancers they may develop will be tracked.
    • “Similar studies by the American Cancer Society in the past yielded critical lessons about what causes cancer — for example, identifying cigarette smoking as a cause of lung cancer and linking red- and processed-meat consumption to increased risk of colon cancer.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “The moment when a person stops taking their antidepressant is fraught. Not only can patients see their psychiatric symptoms return, but they can experience a wide variety of new symptoms in the days and weeks immediately following the medication change.
    • “Symptoms like nausea and headache can be manageable, and typically begin and end within days of ending the medication. But more disruptive effects like insomnia, irritability, and sensory disturbance, or even severe ones like suicidal ideation or lethargy, can lead patients to reconsider their decision to stop treatment, even when they resolve relatively rapidly.
    • “A new systematic review of studies on antidepressant discontinuation published on Tuesday in The Lancet Psychiatry provides insight into the frequency and gravity of those symptoms. The review, which included 79 studies capturing 21,000 patients, found that about 15% experienced withdrawal symptoms after weaning from antidepressants. In 2 to 3% of the cases, the symptoms were severe.
    • “The analysis “is an important and long overdue contribution to the research literature,” said Awais Aftab, a professor of psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, who did not participate in the study. It confirms that withdrawal symptoms do happen with clinically relevant frequency, and should be managed with care. But it demonstrated a lower incidence than recent estimates based on online surveys, which generated public alarm when they suggested symptoms may occur in half or more of the patients.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Humana and CVS, two of the largest Medicare Advantage insurers in the country, are poised to seriously downgrade their plan benefits and geographic presence next year as they chase profits in the privately run Medicare program.”Humana and CVS, two of the largest Medicare Advantage insurers in the country, are poised to seriously downgrade their plan benefits and geographic presence next year as they chase profits in the privately run Medicare program.
    • “As a result, hundreds of thousands of Medicare Advantage seniors — and the billions in revenue they represent — could come up for grabs, representing a significant opportunity for insurers looking to take on more members despite ongoing challenges in MA.
    • “The size of the turnover depends on a number of factors. Deciding which benefits to cut versus keep is a tough calculus, and there are guardrails from the federal government limiting cutbacks, experts say.
    • “Those decisions have been made — bids were due to the CMS on Monday. However, it will be months before the industry knows how much turbulence Humana and CVS might cause in their drive to bolster profits next year, and which insurers might benefit.
    • “Of the national payers, market leader UnitedHealth may be best situated to pick up switching seniors, solidifying its dominance in MA, experts say.
    • “I think there will be a huge shakeup,” Alexis Levy, the managing director of health consultancy Chartis’ payer advisory practice, said.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues notes,
    • “Artificial intelligence has the potential to lower internal and member costs, for insurers while also increasing profits, but the industry has largely not embraced these opportunities, according to a June 5 analysis from McKinsey.”Artificial intelligence has the potential to lower internal and member costs, for insurers while also increasing profits, but the industry has largely not embraced these opportunities, according to a June 5 analysis from McKinsey.
    • “Incremental approaches will continue to yield only minor savings, as we have seen to date across most of the industry,” the analysts wrote. “To capture full value, payers must reimagine the end-to-end processes of each domain.”
    • Three key takeaways: 
      • 1. “If payers fully implemented already available generative AI and automation technologies, on average they could save 13-25% on administrative costs, 5-11% on medical costs and increase revenues by 3-12%.
      • 2. “Marketing and sales, utilization management, and IT are the divisions with the largest potential opportunities when using AI.
      • 3. “Payers that want to better use AI technology should have these six key things: a strategic plan, the right talent, a conducive operating model, technological capabilities, consumable data and the ability to ensure adoption and scale.
      • “In general, most payers are ill-equipped to pursue this opportunity,” the analysts wrote. “To do so, they have to close the gap that exists between their current capabilities and those needed to fully address the six areas outlined above.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Amid rising concern over prescription drug shortages, a new report finds that the number of shortages has increased over the past decade, most are lasting longer than ever before, and the problem is affecting medicines used to treat a wide range of maladies.
    • “Specifically, the average shortage lasted for more than three years in 2023 compared to about two years in 2020, and 27 of the 125 drugs in short supply were not available for more than five years. And 53% of new shortages occurred among generic sterile injectable medicines, according to the report from U.S. Pharmacopeia, an independent organization that develops standards for medicines.
    • “Meanwhile, most medicines for which shortages existed cost less than $5; nearly one-third of injectables cost less than $2; and two-thirds of solid oral medicines cost $3 or less. These low prices also translated into more product discontinuations, which rose by 40% from 2022 to 2023, and from 100 drugs to 140 during that time. This was also the highest rate of product discontinuations since 2019.
    • “A key culprit, according to U.S. Pharmacopeia, often are thin profit margins. “Economic pressures, especially the very low prices that generics manufacturers recover for many medicines, along with contracts that are frequently broken, have left our generic medicine supply chain fragile,” said Anthony Lakavage, senior vice president for global external affairs, in a statement.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Following up on the House Appropriations subcommittee’s approval of the Financial Services and General Government bill yesterday, Fedweek notes,
    • “By taking no position on a raise, the measure effectively endorses President Biden’s proposal for a 2 percent increase in January. That would follow the practice of most recent years of allowing the recommendation to take effect by default, and would result in the smallest raise since the 1 percent paid in January 2021. The measure however does continue longstanding language tying raises for wage grade employees to those of GS employees in an area, even though the two pay systems operate under separate locality-based rules.”
  • The Washington Post reports Biden wants hospitals to report data on gunshot wounds.”
    • “The Biden administration is enlisting America’s doctors to help combat gun violence.
    • “About 160 health-care executives and officials have been invited to the White House today and Friday to promote public health solutions to the epidemic. A top priority, I’m told: The White House wants hospital emergency departments to collect more data about gunshot injuries their physicians treat, as well as routinely counsel patients about the safe use of firearms.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “A federal judge ruled Wednesday Novant Health can move forward with its plans to purchase two North Carolina hospitals from Community Health Systems, despite a request from the Federal Trade Commission to stall the deal.”A federal judge ruled Wednesday Novant Health can move forward with its plans to purchase two North Carolina hospitals from Community Health Systems, despite a request from the Federal Trade Commission to stall the deal.
    • “The antitrust agency sued to block the deal in January, claiming it would decrease competition and drive up consumer prices in the greater Lake Norman, North Carolina, area by allotting Novant more than 65% control of the region’s inpatient market.
    • “U.S. district judge Kenneth Bell denied the FTC’s request for an injunction, saying the hospitals are likely to shutter absent a deal.”
  • On a related note, the Wall Street Journal continues its series on hospital consolidation.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports
    • “A 59-year-old male resident of Mexico died after being infected with a bird flu subtype never before confirmed to have spread to humans, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.”
    • “The man, who suffered from other underlying health conditions, had no known exposure to poultry or other animals before being formally diagnosed by a laboratory with the H5N2 subtype of avian flu. The case marks the first time a human has been confirmed to be infected with this subtype, and the first time an avian H5 virus was confirmed in a person in Mexico.
    • “Due to the constantly evolving nature of influenza viruses, WHO continues to stress the importance of global surveillance,” WHO said in a statement. “This case does not change the current WHO recommendations on public health measures and surveillance of influenza,” it added, rating current risks to the general population as “low.”
  • and
    • “‘Unusual’ cancers emerged after the pandemic. Doctors ask if covid is to blame.”‘Unusual’ cancers emerged after the pandemic. Doctors ask if covid is to blame.
    • “It’s not a new idea that viruses can cause or accelerate cancer. But it will probably be years before answers emerge about covid and cancer.”
  • Mercer Consulting offers bird flu considerations for employers.
  • The NIH Director in her blog relates,
    • “The ability to communicate using only your thoughts might sound like the stuff of science fiction. But for people who don’t have the ability to speak or move due to injury or disease, there’s great hope that this may one day be possible using brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) that can “read” relevant brain signals and translate them into written or spoken words. A research team has made a preliminary advance in this direction by showing for the first time that a computerized brain implant can decode internal speech with minimal training.
    • “In the new NIH-supported study, researchers implanted such a device in a brain area known to be important for representing spoken words called the supramarginal gyrus in two people with tetraplegia, a condition marked by full body paralysis from the neck down due to cervical spinal cord injury. The researchers found that the device could decode several words the participants “spoke” only in their minds. While we are far from using such a device to decode whole sentences or even phrases, and the exact mechanisms of internal speech are still under study, the findings, reported in Nature Human Behavior , are notable because it had been unclear whether the brain signals involved in thinking words could be reproducibly translated. * * *
    • “While there is much more to learn about how to decode internal speech more reliably across individuals, the findings offer proof-of-concept for a high-performance internal speech BCI. The new research adds to a growing portfolio of rapidly advancing technologies supported by the BRAIN Initiative that could one day routinely restore the ability to communicate for those who can no longer speak or even move, including people with brain injuries, paralysis, or diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration will need to weigh whether Eli Lilly’s experimental Alzheimer’s disease drug donanemab is widely effective or should be restricted only to people who have deposits in their brains of a toxic protein called tau, according to documents released Thursday ahead of a key regulatory meeting next week.
    • “The FDA will also ask its advisers to provide guidance on whether and when it’s safe for people to stop taking donanemab based on reductions in another toxic protein called amyloid, as well as on the risks of mild brain swelling that can result from donanemab and other drugs of its type.”The FDA will also ask its advisers to provide guidance on whether and when it’s safe for people to stop taking donanemab based on reductions in another toxic protein called amyloid, as well as on the risks of mild brain swelling that can result from donanemab and other drugs of its type.
    • “If approved, donanemab would be the third amyloid-targeted drug to launch. Biogen has withdrawn the first, called Aduhelm, after much controversy and few sales. Eisai, along with Biogen, more recently won approval of a second, called Leqembi, which brought in sales of $19 million in the first quarter.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Health Affairs offers advice to employers about how to help employees reduce their healthcare costs.
    • “Employers, and especially small employers, may have limited ability to affect the direct causes of increasing spending—notably high prices. However, they do have some options that could lower the burden of out-of-pocket costs for their employees. Employers could partner with insurers to use more innovative cost-sharing structures in the health insurance benefits offered to their employees. In addition, they could increase the use of benefit designs that distribute costs more equitably, which may improve affordability for low- to middle-income workers.”
  • HR Dive tells us,
    • “In an era when retirement is frequently at the forefront of ageismdiversity and benefits conversations, older adults now make up a larger share of American workforce members over the age of 55. The Employee Benefit Research Institute found that adults aged 65 and older made up 29.5% of the workforce in 2023, compared to an estimated 23% in 2000.
    • “Additionally, EBRI noted that the share of Hispanic workers aged 55 and older more than doubled, with the share of older White workers dropping from about 87% to 81%.
    • “The changing demographic characteristics of the older workforce are “important considerations for employers to understand, as older workers and a more diverse work force calls for additional or new answers to the optimal design of employee benefit plans,” Craig Copeland, director of wealth benefits at EBRI, said in a release.”
  • EBRI also released a Fast Facts publication informing us that “HSAs Reduce Use of Outpatient Services and Prescription Drugs, Increase Use of Inpatient Services; Overall Spending Unaffected.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The House Appropriations Committee tells us, “Today, the House Appropriations Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee met to consider its Fiscal Year 2025 bill. The measure was approved by the Subcommittee.”
  • This bill provides appropriations for OPM and the FEHBP. The Committee summary of the bill describes its OPM appropriations as follows —
    • “Provides $477 million for the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), which is $31.4 million below the FY25 Budget Request and $29.1 million above the FY24 enacted level.”
  • Govexec informs us,
    • “Senate Democrats have vowed to move quickly on legislation protecting Americans’ access to in vitro fertilization and other forms of assistive reproductive technology, including a provision expanding federal workers’ access to those treatments as part of the government’s employer-sponsored health insurance program.
    • “On Monday, Sens. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Cory Booker, D-N.J., introduced the Right to IVF Act, a repackaging of three separate previously introduced bills on reproductive health services.
    • “Included is the Family Building FEHB Fairness Act, first introduced last year by Duckworth, which would require the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program to cover additional costs associated with IVF, and would expand coverage to all types of assisted reproductive technology, such as gamete and zygote intrafallopian transfer.”
  • Govexec also pointed out this OPM Inspector General brief that summarizes OPM OIG recommendations that have been open for more than six months as of March 31, 2024. The FEHBlog understands why the FEHB open recommendations remain outstanding
  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Congress appears to be inching toward injecting more transparency into a controversial program that forces drugmakers to give safety-net hospitals steep discounts on drugs.
    • “It would be a win for pharmaceutical manufacturers, which have long lobbied that hospitals be required to account for their savings in the 340B program — or that it be overhauled entirely.
    • “The latter appears unlikely, after lawmakers on both sides of the aisle expressed blanket support for 340B during a House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee hearing on Tuesday. However, members said they approved of more oversight to try and stop financial gaming in the program.
    • “Though “we’re all in support of 340B … I think nearly all of us agree that the status quo is not acceptable,” said Rep. Larry Bucshon, R-Ind.”
  • Yesterday, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force released a final recommendation concerning “Falls Prevention in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: Interventions.” Its recommendations align with the recommendations currently in force.
  • Thompson Reuters Practical Law relates,
    • “In litigation under the No Surprises Act (NSA), a district court concluded that there is no cause of action for health providers to enforce awards involving surprise billing disputes under the NSA’s independent dispute resolution (IDR) process (Guardian Flight LLC & Med-Trans Corp. v. Health Care Serv. Corp.(N.D. Tex. May 30, 2024)).”
  • The American Hospital Association News shares the organization’s “comments [submitted’ June 5 on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ inpatient prospective payment system proposed rule for fiscal year 2025, expressing support for several provisions, including certain policies supporting low-volume and Medicare-dependent hospitals, and several aspects of CMS’ quality-related proposals. However, AHA raised concerns about the rule’s proposed payment updates.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CNN reports,
    • “About 61% of US adults will have cardiovascular disease by 2050, new research from the American Heart Association predicts. The biggest driver of this trend will be the large number of people who have or will develop high blood pressure, which makes them much more likely to develop dangerous problems like a heart attack or stroke.
    • “Other cardiovascular problems include heart attacks, arrhythmias like atrial fibrillation or a-fib, heart failure and congenital heart disease. * * *
    • In the research published Tuesday, the association predicts that 45 million adults will have some form of cardiovascular disease – excluding high blood pressure – or will have a stroke in 2050, up from 28 million in 2020.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • One of the nation’s premier medical advisory organizations has weighed in on long Covid with a 265-page report that recognizes the seriousness and persistence of the condition for millions of Americans.
    • More than four years since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, long Covid continues to damage many people’s ability to function, according to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, a nongovernmental institution that advises federal agencies on science and medicine.
  • and
    • “A committee of advisers to the Food and Drug Administration voted on Wednesday to update the formula for the Covid vaccine ahead of an anticipated fall immunization campaign, now an annual step to try to offer better protection against versions of the virus in circulation.
    • “The unanimous vote by the 16 advisers recommends a formula aimed at combating the variant JN.1, which dominated infections in the United States in February, or a version of it. In recent weeks, JN.1 has been overtaken by descendants known as KP.2 and KP.3.
    • “In the coming weeks, the F.D.A. is expected to formally recommend a variant target for vaccine makers for the next round of shots in the late summer or early fall. Any decision involves some educated guesswork, given that any new vaccine formula won’t be available until months after a variant becomes dominant.
    • “It’s becoming clear that the ideal timing for a vaccine composition decision remains elusive,” said Jerry Weir, an official with the F.D.A.’s vaccine division.”
  • Per Biopharma Dive,
    • “A saliva test may improve screening for prostate cancer by identifying people at higher risk based on genotype, researchers said Friday.”A saliva test may improve screening for prostate cancer by identifying people at higher risk based on genotype, researchers said Friday.
    • Data presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting suggest the test can support prostate cancer diagnosis in people who are missed by other screening methods.
    • “The researchers are now comparing the saliva test to several screening methods such as fast MRI scans and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood tests to determine the best approach.”
  • and
    • “Eli Lilly’s drug tirzepatide — sold as Zepbound for obesity — continues to show promise in the liver disease MASH. Clinical trial data disclosed in an abstract ahead of a European medical conference indicates that, after one year, the shot helped improve liver fibrosis without worsening MASH in just over half of treated participants, compared with 30% of those given placebo. Lilly had hinted at the study’s success earlier this year, but the full data will provide a more complete view of tirzepatide’s potential. The abstract’s release comes one day after Viking Therapeutics released trial data for its MASH pill VK2809 and less than two months after Madrigal Pharmaceuticals won U.S. approval of the first MASH drug.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research “today posted Protocol outlining how it will conduct the fourth annual assessment of how well major insurers’ prescription drug coverage policies align with a set of fair access standards. These standards were developed by ICER with expert input from patient advocates, clinician specialty societies, payers, pharmacy benefit managers, and life science companies.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “The CDC finalized new guidelines that recommend doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis (doxy PEP) for at-risk gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) to prevent bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs).”The CDC finalized new guidelines that recommend doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis (doxy PEP) for at-risk gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) to prevent bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
    • “Healthcare providers should discuss and offer doxy PEP to people in these populations with a history of at least one bacterial STI — specifically syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea — in the last 12 months, Lindley Barbee, MD, of the CDC’s National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, and colleagues wrote in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.”
    • “Doxy PEP represents the first new STI prevention tool in decades, at a time when innovation in the nation’s fight against STIs is desperately needed,” said Barbee in a CDC statement.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, has released its plan for advancing H5N1 influenza basic research and translating those findings into strategies and interventions that can benefit people. The research agenda focuses on four key objectives: increasing understanding of the biology of H5N1 viruses and the factors that influence their ability to transmit and cause disease; developing and evaluating prevention strategies, such as vaccines; advancing existing and novel treatments, including antivirals and monoclonal antibodies; and supporting strategies for detecting H5N1 virus. The NIAID Research Agenda for 2024 H5N1 Influenza – May 2024 aligns with the NIAID role in the federal public health response to the U.S. outbreak of H5N1 influenza in people, dairy cows and other animals.”The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, has released its plan for advancing H5N1 influenza basic research and translating those findings into strategies and interventions that can benefit people. The research agenda focuses on four key objectives: increasing understanding of the biology of H5N1 viruses and the factors that influence their ability to transmit and cause disease; developing and evaluating prevention strategies, such as vaccines; advancing existing and novel treatments, including antivirals and monoclonal antibodies; and supporting strategies for detecting H5N1 virus. The NIAID Research Agenda for 2024 H5N1 Influenza – May 2024 aligns with the NIAID role in the federal public health response to the U.S. outbreak of H5N1 influenza in people, dairy cows and other animals.”
  • The Washington Post reports, “Male birth control gel shows promise in early-stage clinical trials. “A National Institutes of Health official said the findings marked a milestone, even if the product is probably years away.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • KFF informs us,
    • The Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) limits the amount of premium income that insurers can keep for administration, marketing, and profits. Insurers that fail to meet the applicable MLR threshold are required to pay back excess profits or margins in the form of rebates to individuals and employers that purchased coverage.
    • In the individual and small group markets, insurers must spend at least 80% of their premium income on health care claims and quality improvement efforts, leaving the remaining 20% for administration, marketing expenses, and profit. The MLR threshold is higher for large group insurers, which must spend at least 85% of their premium income on health care claims and quality improvement efforts. MLR rebates are based on a 3-year average, meaning that rebates issued in 2024 will be calculated using insurers’ financial data in 2021, 2022 and 2023 and will go to people and businesses who bought health coverage in 2023.
    • This analysis, using preliminary data reported by insurers to state regulators and compiled by Mark Farrah Associates, finds that insurers estimate they will issue a total of about $1.1 billion in MLR rebates across all commercial markets in 2024. Since the ACA began requiring insurers to issue these rebates in 2012, a total of $11.8 billion in rebates have already been issued to individuals and employers, and this analysis suggests the 2012-2024 total will rise to about $13 billion when rebates are issued later this year.
  • TechTarget calls our attention to the fact that “As providers seek to advance patient-centered care, many behavioral health organizations are turning to their EHR vendors to support integrated care models, according to a KLAS report.” Yippee.
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “U.S. bankruptcy Judge Chris Lopez authorized the sale dates for Dallas-based Steward Health Care’s 31 hospitals during a June 3 hearing. “U.S. bankruptcy Judge Chris Lopez authorized the sale dates for Dallas-based Steward Health Care’s 31 hospitals during a June 3 hearing. 
    • “The sales will be conducted in two rounds. The first round, which includes the health system’s physician group, Stewardship Health, and all Steward hospitals excluding its Florida facilities and some of the Texas hospitals, will have a bid deadline of June 24 and a first sale hearing July 11.
    • “The second round includes Steward’s Florida hospitals and four of its Texas facilities, with a bid deadline of Aug. 12 and a sale hearing of Aug. 22.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues tells us about the payers that landed on the 2024 Fortune 500.