Monday Roundup

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “The Senate Finance Committee is considering policies to create more stability in Medicare payments for doctors, an update cheered by physician groups that have long lobbied for reforming how the insurance program reimburses clinicians.
    • “Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Ranking Member Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, released the white paper on Friday proposing Medicare adjust payments to account for inflation, a key goal for physicians that argue government reimbursement hasn’t kept pace with rising costs.
    • “The Senate Finance Committee is also interested in exploring ways to use incentives to increase provider participation in alternative payment models, and potential changes to Medicare’s budget neutrality requirements, which require the CMS to cut payment to certain specialties to raise it for others.”
  • Fedweek tells us
    • The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee has passed:
      • S-4035, to require that when FEHB enrollees seek to add a family member to their coverage based on a qualifying life event that the event has occurred and that the individual is eligible for coverage; require the OPM to consider coverage of ineligible individuals when conducting FEHB fraud risk assessments; require a comprehensive audit be conducted of family members currently enrolled; and require OPM to disenroll any ineligible individual found to be receiving FEHB coverage.
  • STAT News lets us know,
    • “Executives from the three major pharmacy benefit manager companies have been invited to testify before the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability next month, four sources familiar with the planning told STAT.
    • “Executives from Optum, CVS Caremark, and Express Scripts, owned by Cigna, were asked to testify before the panel on June 4. * * *
    • “Lawmakers are next eyeing action in December, when a number of health care programs and authorities are expiring.
    • “Ipsita Smolinski, founder and managing director of the consulting firm Capitol Street, said she believes some PBM reforms will pass in December, but not ones that are detrimental to the industry’s business model.
    • “They are largely Medicare and Medicaid, and provide minimal system savings,” she said.”
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management announced,
    • “Today, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) highlights key actions taken to recruit, hire, and train AI and AI-related talent into the federal government. OPM’s efforts support the AI in Government Act of 2020 and President Biden’s landmark Executive Order on Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI.   
    • “Recruiting AI talent ensures the federal government can use the latest technology to tackle global challenges, improve government services, and better support the American public,” said OPM Acting Director Rob Shriver. “As a strategic partner to federal agencies, OPM has taken a number of actions that will set agencies up to compete for top talent in this critical field now and in the future.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post and Consumer Reports tell us about “Heart checkups you should have and those you can probably skip.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Physician enthusiasm for new pulsed field ablation systems suggests the treatment will be rapidly adopted, to the benefit of device makers bringing the products to market, said analysts who attended the Heart Rhythm Society’s (HRS) annual meeting over the weekend.
    • “Talk about pulsed field ablation (PFA), a catheter-based cardiac ablation technique to treat atrial fibrillation (AFib), dominated the meeting in Boston.
    • “The amount of data and discussions on pulsed field ablation (PFA) was almost overwhelming, with late-breaking data presentations packed by physicians,” Citi Research analyst Joanne Wuensch said in a report to clients Sunday. * * *
    • “PFA is seen as a potentially safer alternative to traditional radiofrequency and cryoablation to treat AFib, the most common form of irregular heart rhythm. Shorter operating times are viewed as another advantage.
    • “Antiarrhythmic drugs are currently recommended as the first treatment for AFib but are associated with adverse events, according to the HRS. PFA differs from thermal ablation to disable cardiac cells by using electricity instead of heat or extreme cold.”
  • Medscape discusses how artificial intelligence fits into clinical practice.
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “The FDA approved the first interchangeable biosimilars to aflibercept (Eylea) to treat macular degeneration, according to an announcementopens in a new tab or window from the agency.
    • “As interchangeable biosimilars, aflibercept-jbvf (Yesafili) and aflibercept-yszy (Opuviz) have the same approved indications as the reference product: diabetic macular edema, diabetic retinopathy, macular edema following retinal vein occlusion, and neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Like reference aflibercept, the two biosimilars are administered via intravitreal injection.
    • “The FDA pointed out in the announcement that a biosimilar “has no clinically meaningful differences” from the reference product, which means that patients “can expect the same safety and effectiveness from the biosimilar as they would the reference product.” Interchangeability means that the biosimilar met other requirements and may be substituted for the reference product without consulting the prescriber.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News relates,
    • “Americans, especially Medicare beneficiaries, are getting more medical care these days. Demand from aging Baby Boomers is keeping people in doctor’s offices, and health care providers are continuing to build capacity post-Covid.
    • “Those trends — the same ones that tanked health insurance stocks a few weeks ago — made a strong mark on nonprofit health systems’ first quarter financial reports. STAT took a look at 20 large nonprofit health systems and found that all but four reported higher operating and net margins in the first three months of 2024 compared with the same period in 2023. Hospitals are seeing more patients and cutting down on the expensive contract labor they relied on during the Covid-19 pandemic. And they’re seeing strong investment gains on the non-operating side.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Hims & Hers Health shares soared after the company said it would add injectable weight-loss drugs to its platform, granting access to the popular treatments to its telehealth patients.
    • “The company on Monday said it now offers access to GLP-1 injections in addition to its oral weight-loss treatments, giving users a broader option to choose from. It will be providing a compounded form of the injections that use the same active ingredients as the popular drugs Ozempic and Wegovy, which are facing shortages that are limiting access for some patients.
    • “The price for compounded GLP-1 injections will start at $199 a month. Its oral medication offering starts at $79 a month. Both are not available in all states.
    • “Hims & Hers said it plans to make branded GLP-1 options available to customers once consistent supply is available through the pharmacies’ wholesaler.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Steward offered specifics on how it intends to auction off its assets in motions filed in bankruptcy court last week, including a timeline for selling its hospitals and physician group as well as contingency plans, including possible closures, if the assets fail to lure qualified bidders.
    • “The physician-owned healthcare network, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy earlier this month, operates 31 hospitals and a physician group, Stewardship Health, in Massachusetts, Arizona, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas and Florida. 
    • “All of its assets are up for sale — and Steward is looking to sell quickly, according to the filings.
    • “Steward says it is in advanced discussions with Optum and hopes to finalize an agreement in the near-term for the company to serve as the stalking horse bidder for its physician group, Stewardship Health — the initial bid that sets the floor price during auction.” 
  • NBC News notes,
    • “Many of the ADHD medication shortages that have plagued the U.S. for the last two years have now been resolved, the Food and Drug Administration says. Yet some doctors and patients report they are still struggling to get prescriptions filled.
    • “Dr. Royce Lee, a psychiatrist at the University of Chicago Medicine, said supply has gotten better but it’s still an issue for about a third of the patients he writes prescriptions for. This often means he still has to call around to pharmacies to see if they have the medications in stock, switch patients to different drugs, and deal with insurance companies to confirm coverage.
    • “I do see signs of the shortages easing up,” Lee said. “But there are still enough shortages that every day we’re having to put in a little bit of work for prescriptions that need to be changed or hunted down.”
    • “I think a lot of people are still not getting their treatments,” he added.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management on Thursday introduced a new form of paid leave designed for federal workers to use in connection with instances of domestic violence or other sexual or relationship-based trauma.
    • “In a memo to agency heads, acting OPM Director Rob Shriver said that although the federal government’s paid leave system “was not constructed with concepts of safe leave in mind,” the Biden administration is committed to protecting feds who have undergone relationship-based trauma and their families. * * *
    • “According to a new fact sheet on OPM’s website, the new safe leave will fall into a series of pre-existing leave categories, depending on what the federal employee intends to do while on leave.”
  • The Census Bureau announced,
    • “While the nation’s fastest-growing cities continue to be in Sun Belt states, new population estimates show that some of the top gainers are now on the outskirts of metropolitan areas or in rural areas.
    • “Today’s release of U.S. Census Bureau July 1, 2023, population estimates for cities and towns reveals geographic shifts in population growth compared to pre-pandemic July 1, 2019, estimates.
    • “The estimates also show that, on average, many small and midsize U.S. cities with populations under 50,000 saw relatively higher growth rates in 2023 than in 2019 before the pandemic hit while large cities generally grew at slower rates.
    • “Overall, the most populous cities continued to return to pre-pandemic trends thanks to increased growth rates and smaller population declines.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control lets us know today,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare is low nationally. This week, no jurisdictions experienced moderate, high, or very high activity.
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID-19, influenza, and RSV are at low levels.
    • “Nationally, influenza test positivity decreased and RSV and COVID-19 test positivity remained stable at low levels compared to the previous week.
    • “Nationally, the COVID-19 wastewater viral activity level, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, is minimal.”
  • CNN reports,
    • “Laboratory tests by the US Department of Agriculture haven’t found any H5N1 bird flu virus in raw beef, but they are a good reminder why eating rare hamburgers can be risky.”Laboratory tests by the US Department of Agriculture haven’t found any H5N1 bird flu virus in raw beef, but they are a good reminder why eating rare hamburgers can be risky.
    • “As part of a suite of tests conducted to check safe food handling advice after the detection of H5N1 bird flu virus in dairy cattle, the USDA recently mixed a substitute virus into ground beef and then cooked patties at varying times and temperatures.
    • “Researchers found none of the virus in hamburgers cooked to 145 degrees, roughly the temperature of a medium burger, or well-done burgers cooked to 160 degrees. They did, however, find some live virus in patties cooked to 120 degrees or rare, although the virus was present “at much, much reduced levels,” said Eric Deeble, acting senior adviser for highly pathogenic avian influenza at the USDA.
    • “Whether that small amount of virus could make someone sick is still an unknown.
    • “The USDA already advises consumers to cook ground beef to an internal temperature of 160 degrees, as measured with a food thermometer, to avoid infections from bacteria such as salmonella and E. coli, he noted.
    • “I don’t think that anybody needs to change any of the safe food handling or safe cooking practices that are already recommended,” Deeble said.”
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “New data from two late-stage studies of an experimental Bayer drug show it reduced the frequency and severity of common symptoms of menopause, supporting the company’s case for seeking regulatory approval.
    • “The results were disclosed by Bayer Thursday and will be presented at this year’s annual meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in San Francisco.
    • “Bayer shared the trials’ success in January, but didn’t reveal specific findings. The company also announced positive results from a third Phase 3 study in March, when it confirmed plans to file for marketing authorization of the drug.
    • “Known as elinzanetant, Bayer’s drug would, if approved, compete with a medicine from Astellas called Veozah, which is approved in the U.S. to treat moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms caused by menopause.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “When a patient with a severe traumatic brain injury is comatose, in intensive care, unresponsive and hooked up to a ventilator, but not brain-dead, when is the time to withdraw life support? A small study on the fates of people in such situations suggests that doctors and patients’ families may make better decisions if they wait even a few days longer than usual.
    • “Often, a doctor sits down with family members within 72 hours of the patient’s admission to intensive care to discuss the patient’s prognosis, and whether they want to keep their loved one alive, or to remove life support.
    • “Experts say that many doctors would describe the outlook as grim — most likely death or severe disability. Reported outcomes of patients who had severe traumatic brain injuries show that most times the decision is to remove life support. The patient dies.
    • “The researchers behind the new study say that their limited data suggests that doctors’ predictions so soon after the injury frequently are wrong.
    • The study, published Monday in Journal of Neurotrauma, used a national database that included 1,392 traumatic brain injury patients.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out that “A ‘Digital Twin’ of Your Heart Lets Doctors Test Treatments Before Surgery. Researchers create digital replicas of individual patients’ organs using data from exams and wearable devices: ‘You can run an infinite number of experiments’.”
    • “Kristin Myers, a mechanical engineering professor at New York’s Columbia University, is making digital copies of women’s uteruses and cervixes, hoping this can help in determining how a pregnancy will go. To do this, Myers uses an ultrasound to create 3-D computational models as part of an effort to someday solve the problem of preterm births. 
    • “The idea of digital twins in health is new,” she says. “We can offer better diagnoses. You can run an infinite number of experiments.”  
    • “At the National Cancer Institute, Emily Greenspan, a program director in the informatics and data science program, envisions a novel way to treat oncology patients. Instead of trying a drug and hoping it works, doctors would create a digital twin of the patient to predict how the disease would respond to a certain drug. 
    • “The institute has been working on creating virtual twins for best treatments of lung cancer, for instance. In the next five years the technology will likely become part of clinical decision-making, Greenspan says. 
    • “Predicting the best treatments and screening, these are blue-sky visions,” she said. “There is a lot of foundational research that’s needed.”
  • Amazing.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “Employer adoption of ICHRAs is up 29% since 2023, according to a May 16 report from the HRA Council.
    • “ICHRAs, or individual coverage health reimbursement arrangements, allow employers to offer a defined tax-advantaged contribution used to reimburse premiums for an individual health plan purchased by an employee on their state’s ACA exchange.
    • Key numbers:
      • “1. ICHRA adoption grew 29% year over year between 2023 and 2024.
      • “2. ICHRAs grew 84% among employers with 50 or more employees.
      • “3. Among employers surveyed, 83% were not able to offer health benefits until they offered an ICHRA or Qualifying Small Employer HRA. 17% of employers switched from traditional group coverage.
      • “4. The number of employees offered a defined contribution health benefit now exceeds 200,000, which does not include dependents — some estimates have said more than 500,000 people are enrolled.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “For women who experience musculoskeletal (MSK) and pelvic health issues, the decline in estrogen during menopause can not only worsen existing symptoms but also trigger new joint, muscle and pelvic health issues.
    • “Research shows 71% of women who go through menopause experience joint and muscle pain.
    • “Digital health company Hinge Health expanded its movement- and behavior-based care to help women alleviate common menopause symptoms such as hot flashes, joint and muscle pain and pelvic floor disorders.             
    • “As part of the new movement-based menopause support offering, a physical therapist-led care team provides individuals with personalized exercise therapy and behavior-based lifestyle modifications. The aim is to alleviate joint and muscle pain, maintain muscle mass and bone density, and address vasomotor symptoms like hot flashes and mood swings, according to the company.
    • “Regular physical activity can reduce the frequency and severity of some disruptive symptoms that occur with menopause,” said Tamara Grisales, M.D., an urogynecologist at Hinge Health. “Exercise-focused programs complement traditional treatments like Hormone Replacement Therapy, providing a holistic approach to managing menopause.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “Walgreens will sell a low-cost, over-the-counter version of the opioid overdose antidote naloxone, the company said May 15. 
    • “The Walgreens-brand nasal spray medication will retail for $34.99, a lower price than other branded versions of the drug (Narcan) sold by the retailer. The naloxone spray is currently available online and will hit store shelves nationwide by the end of the month.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Hill informs us,
    • “Blockbuster weight-loss drug Wegovy could bankrupt the U.S. health care system unless the price drops, according to a staff report released Wednesday from the office of Senate Health Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). 
    • “Unless prices dramatically decline, Wegovy and weight loss drugs could push Americans to spend $1 trillion per year on prescription drugs, the report concluded.
    • “Pricing drugs based on their value cannot serve as a blank check, or the sole determinant for how we understand what to pay for essential goods,” the report stated. As important as these drugs are, they will not do any good for the millions of patients who cannot afford them.” 
    • “The report ups the pressure from Sanders on Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk to lower the price of Wegovy and Ozempic.”
  • The good Senator has a point here. Drug manufacturers need a dose or two of price reasonableness.
  • STAT News reports,
    • “A House subcommittee on Thursday advanced legislation that would extend some pandemic-era telehealth policies in Medicare for two years, bringing the panel’s approach in line with another committee.
    • “During the pandemic, Congress extended flexibilities that changed what kinds of care Medicare beneficiaries could receive over telehealth and where. Originally, the House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee had considered a bill that would have enacted the policies permanently, but amended the legislation Thursday to pare it down to a two-year extension. The bill passed to the full committee unanimously on a 21-0 vote.
    • “The approach is in line with that of another panel, the House Ways and Means Committee, which passed a two-year extension earlier this month. Both bills include similar provisions that would pay for the extension in part through reforms to the way in which pharmacy middlemen operate.”
  • American Hospital Association News shares,
    • “The AHA shared a series of proposals to strengthen rural health care with the Senate Finance Committee for a hearing May 16 titled, “Rural Health Care: Supporting Lives and Improving Communities.” The proposals include policies promoting flexible payment options; ensuring fair, timely and adequate reimbursement; bolstering the workforce; and improving maternal health. During the hearing, several members focused on access to obstetric services and augmenting the number of medical residency slots awarded to rural hospitals. Jeremy P. Davis, MHA, president and CEO of AHA-member Grande Ronde Hospital in La Grande, Ore., and other health care leaders and policy researchers testified.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services celebrates the Administration’s mental healthcare accomplishments.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved an innovative new treatment for patients with a form of lung cancer. It is to be used only by patients who have exhausted all other options to treat small cell lung cancer, and have a life expectancy of four to five months. * * *
    • “Each year, about 35,000 Americans are diagnosed with small cell lung cancer and face a grim prognosis. The cancer usually has spread beyond the lung by the time it is detected. * * *
    • “The drug tarlatamab, or Imdelltra, made by the company Amgen, tripled patients’ life expectancy, giving them a median survival of 14 months after they took the drug. Forty percent of those who got the drug responded.
    • “After decades with no real advances in treatments for small cell lung cancer, tarlatamab offers the first real hope, said Dr. Anish Thomas, a lung cancer specialist at the federal National Cancer Institute who was not involved in the trial.
    • “I feel it’s a light after a long time,” he added.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, discusses FEHB annuitant reactions to Part D EGWP offerings in various FEHB plans for 2024.
  • Federal News Network notes,
    • After a couple years of uncertainty, satisfaction among federal employees is beginning to rise at many agencies.
    • In a preview of the latest Best Places to Work in the Federal Government rankings, out of the top 10 agencies in each of the four categories — large, midsize and small agencies, as well as agency subcomponents — prioritizing employee engagement was the common thread, the Partnership for Public Service said.
    • “At a time when our nation faces both critical challenges and exciting opportunities at home and abroad, an engaged federal workforce is vitally important,” Max Stier, president and CEO of the Partnership for Public Service, said in a statement. “The top-ranked agencies have excelled at keeping their workforces engaged and motivated and, as a result, they are well positioned to deliver results for the public.” * * *
    • “The Environmental Protection Agency, Energy Department, Office of Personnel Management and National Credit Union Administration all moved up in the rankings and increased their overall scores.” 
  • The CDC is promoting its new and improved website.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times informs us,
    • “With Pride events scheduled worldwide over the coming weeks, U.S. officials are bracing for a return of mpox, the infectious disease formerly called monkeypox that struck tens of thousands of gay and bisexual men worldwide in 2022. A combination of behavioral changes and vaccination quelled that outbreak, but a majority of those at risk have not yet been immunized.
    • “On Thursday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned of a deadlier version of mpox that is ravaging the Democratic Republic of Congo and urged people at risk to be vaccinated as soon as possible. No cases of that subtype have been identified outside Africa so far. But the escalating epidemic in Congo nevertheless poses a global threat, just as infections in Nigeria set off the 2022 outbreak, experts said.
    • “This is a very important example of how an infection anywhere is potentially an infection everywhere, and why we need to continue to improve disease surveillance globally,” said Anne Rimoin, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Los Angeles. * * *
    • “The C.D.C. is focusing on encouraging Americans at highest risk to become vaccinated before the virus resurges. The agency’s outreach efforts include engaging with advocacy groups and social media influencers who have broad appeal among the L.G.B.T.Q. community. In December, the agency urged clinicians to remain alert for possible cases in travelers from Congo.”
  • and
    • “Heart disease, diabetes and kidney disease are among the most common chronic illnesses in the United States — and they’re all closely connected.
    • “Adults with diabetes are twice as likely to have heart disease or a stroke compared with those who don’t have diabetes. People with diabetes — Type 1 and Type 2 — are also at risk of developing kidney disease. And when the kidneys don’t work well, a person’s heart has to work even harder to pump blood to them, which can then lead to heart disease.
    • “The three illnesses overlap so much that last year the American Heart Association coined the term cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic syndrome to describe patients who have two or more of these diseases, or are at risk of developing them. A new studysuggests that nearly 90 percent of American adults already show some early signs of these connected conditions.
    • “While only 15 percent of Americans meet the criteria for advanced stages of C.K.M. syndrome, meaning they have been diagnosed with diabetes, heart disease or kidney disease or are at high risk of developing them, the numbers are still “astronomically higher than expected,” said Dr. Rahul Aggarwal, a cardiology fellow at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and co-author of the study.
    • “The research suggests that people should pay attention to shared risk factors for these diseases early on — including excess body fat, uncontrolled blood sugar, high blood pressure and high cholesterol or triglyceride levels.”
  • BioPharma Dive points out,
    • “An experimental Roche drug helped people with obesity lose an average of nearly 19% of their body weight over six months, after adjusting for placebo, in an early-stage trial, the company said Thursday.
    • “Roche is awaiting additional data from a study of the drug, called CT-388, in people with diabetes as well as obesity. It also didn’t provide specifics on the drug’s side effect profile. CT-388 is currently only in a Phase 1 program involving 96 people. Larger and longer trials are needed before the company can ask the Food and Drug Administration for approval.
    • “Roche acquired CT-388 through a $2.7 billion acquisition of biotechnology startup Carmot Therapeutics in December. The deal was part of a rush by pharmaceutical companies to capture a share of a market estimated to be worth more than $100 billion annually by early next decade.”
  • and
    • “A once-weekly form of insulin being developed by Eli Lilly proved just as effective at controlling blood sugar in adults with diabetes as commonly used daily injections, according to results from two clinical trials that were released by the drugmaker Thursday.”A once-weekly form of insulin being developed by Eli Lilly proved just as effective at controlling blood sugar in adults with diabetes as commonly used daily injections, according to results from two clinical trials that were released by the drugmaker Thursday.
    • “Lilly is betting that its experimental drug, dubbed insulin efsitora alfa, could provide a longer-lasting and more convenient option than daily treatment for managing diabetes. 
    • “With efsitora, we have an opportunity to provide an innovative once-weekly solution that safely achieves and maintains A1C control, reduces treatment burden of traditional daily injections and potentially improves adherence for people with diabetes,” said Jeff Emmick, a senior vice president of product development for Lilly, in a statement on the trial results.” 
  • The National Institutes of Health Director, in her blog, discusses “Speeding the Diagnosis of Rare Genetic Disorders with the Help of Artificial Intelligence.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “People were more likely to develop a type of treatment-resistant hypertension when they experienced adverse effects of economic and social conditions that influence individual and group differences in health status, known as social determinants of health. Additionally, this risk was higher among Black American adults than white American adults, according to a study funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), part of the National Institutes of Health.”People were more likely to develop a type of treatment-resistant hypertension when they experienced adverse effects of economic and social conditions that influence individual and group differences in health status, known as social determinants of health. Additionally, this risk was higher among Black American adults than white American adults, according to a study funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), part of the National Institutes of Health.
    • “Factors linked to this increased risk included having less than a high school education; a household income less than $35,000; not seeing a friend or relative in the past month; not having someone to care for them if ill or disabled; lack of health insurance; living in a disadvantaged neighborhood; and living in a state with low public health infrastructure. Apparent treatment-resistant hypertension is defined as the need to take three or more types of anti-high blood pressure medication daily and is associated with an increased risk for stroke, coronary heart disease, heart failure, and all-cause mortality.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force released a final research plan for “Unhealthy Alcohol Use in Adolescents and Adults: Screening and Behavioral Counseling Interventions.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review alerts us,
    • “In 2023, patient falls were once again the most common sentinel event reported by healthcare organizations, according to a May 15 report from The Joint Commission.
    • “The Joint Commission defines a sentinel event as a patient safety event that results in death, permanent harm, severe temporary harm or intervention required to sustain life.
    • “The accrediting body received 1,411 reports of sentinel events in 2023, on par with the volume reported in 2022. Only a small portion of all sentinel events are reported to The Joint Commission, meaning conclusions about the events’ frequency and long-term trends should not be drawn from the dataset, the organization said.
    • “In total, 96% of healthcare organizations voluntarily reported sentinel events. About 18% of events were associated with patient death, 8% with permanent harm or loss of function, 57% with severe temporary harm and 12% with unexpected additional care or extended healthcare stays.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “One reason U.S. inflation is still high: Increases in prices for procedures to prop open clogged arteries, provide intensive care for newborns and biopsy breasts.
    • “Hospitals didn’t raise prices as early in the pandemic as supermarkets, retailers and restaurants. But they have been making up ground since then. Their increases have contributed to stubbornly high inflation readings from the consumer-price index, which in April increased 3.4% from a year ago. 
    • “Hospital prices specifically jumped 7.7% last month from a year ago, the highest increase in any month since October 2010, the Labor Department said Wednesday. * * *
    • Economists said they expect higher hospital inflation to persist as recent years’ labor-market disruption continues to ripple through wages and health-insurance contracts. 
    • “We’re not expecting much slowing,” said Alan Detmeister, an economist for UBS. “This was a very large shock that we saw in the healthcare industry over Covid, and it takes years for those to pass through to the prices.”
    • Hospital price increases are responsible for about 23% of the growth in U.S. health spending each year, on average, according to an analysis by federal actuaries for the Journal. Health-insurance premiums last year shot up at the fastest rate in a decade
    • Premiums rise with health spending. Public employees in California saw premiums increase 11% this year, largely because of rising prices, which alone raised their premiums by 8%, said the California Public Employees’ Retirement System. 
  • Healthcare Finance adds,
    • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ January [2024] expansion of the two-midnight rule to include Medicare Advantage plans has contributed to higher inpatient volumes and revenue growth in the first quarter of the year, according to a Strata Decision Technology report.
    • This is because inpatient services have higher reimbursement levels compared to outpatient services and the two-midnight rule concerns inpatient care.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Though held in check by inflation, Cleveland Clinic’s first-quarter operations trickled past last year’s tally thanks to a jump in volumes and revenues.
    • The nonprofit system reported this week a $50.2 million operating gain (1.3% operating margin), as opposed to the prior year’s $32.3 million (0.9% operating margin). Operating revenues rose 10.2% year over year to nearly $3.9 billion while operating expenses followed close behind with a 9.8% increase.
    • “Cleveland Clinic enjoyed “strong demand for both inpatient and outpatient services” during the quarter, management wrote in commentary on its operations. Compared to the prior year, acute admissions rose 6.7%, total surgical cases by 3.7% and outpatient evaluation and management visits by 3.9%.
    • “The system’s 9.4% increase in net patient service revenue was also boosted by rate increases among Cleveland Clinic’s managed care contracts that went into effect with the new year. Additionally, management wrote, “over the last few years, the system initiated national, regional and local revenue management projects designed to improve patient access throughout the system while striving to ensure the safety of patients, caregivers and visitors.”
  • According to Healthcare Dive,
    • “[Philadelphia based] Jefferson Health and [Allentown, PA, based] Lehigh Valley Health Network signed a definitive agreement Wednesday to merge. The health systems expect the deal to close later this summer, pending regulatory approval, according to a press release. Deal terms were not disclosed.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “UnitedHealth Group’s investments in affordable housing have topped $1 billion, with the program a keystone in its overarching strategy to address health equity and disparities.
    • “The company has made investments in housing since 2011 and, in that time, has supported the development of affordable and mixed income units across 31 states and the District of Columbia, creating more than 25,000 homes for people and families who face housing insecurity.
    • “The investments include direct funding from the company as well as those made through Low-Income Housing Investment Tax Credits and Community Reinvestment Act loans, UnitedHealth said. The company has backed both new development and rehabilitation for older locations in urban, suburban and rural markets. * * *
    • “UnitedHealth is tracking the health benefits of these investments and spent two years measuring outcomes against a baseline set by Stewards of Affordable Housing for the Future and the National Affordable Housing Trust. It found that people living in the properties it backed were more likely to receive annual checkups, with 95% having one in the past year.
    • “In addition, residents living in these locations reported better mental health compared to low-income individuals across the country.”

Midweek Update

From Washington DC

Photo by Thought Catalog on Unsplash
  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “U.S. Senators Sheldon Whitehouse and Bill Cassidy want to reform how primary care providers get paid through Medicare, and they also want to hear from the healthcare industry about the best way to do it.
    • “Whitehouse, a Democrat from Rhode Island, and Cassidy, a physician and Republican from Louisiana, introduced a bipartisan bill, the Pay PCPs Act, S. 4338, on Wednesday to better support and improve pay for high-quality primary care providers. 
    • “The legislation serves as a marker for future primary care legislation and is intended to solicit feedback on a number of important policy questions, the lawmakers said. * * *
    • “Whitehouse and Cassidy also issued a request for information for feedback on policy questions. Feedback can be submitted to physician_payment@cassidy.senate.govuntil July 15, 2024.”
  • Govexec informs us about a mark-up of federal employee telework bills at a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee meeting today.
  • Barrons reports,
    • “Social Security recipients could receive a 3.2% raise next year, according to an estimate based on Wednesday’s inflation result. * * *
    • “The Social Security Administration will announce the actual COLA for 2025 in October, once inflation data from the third quarter are complete. The raise will be equal to the percentage gain in the average level of CPI-W for the third quarter of 2024 from the average for the same period in 2023.
    • In their annual report, the Medicare Trustees estimated that the standard monthly Part B premium could rise to $185 next year, a 5.9% increase from this year’s $174.70. Part B premiums, which are automatically deducted from Social Security checks, are one of the fast-growing costs in retirement, [independent consultant Mary] Johnson says.
  • Plan Sponsor lets us know,
    • “The ERISA Advisory Council voted during a meeting Wednesday to focus its attention on issues related to welfare plan claims and appeals and qualified default investment alternatives. The council will study these issues and make recommendations to the Employee Benefit Security Administration later this year as per its mandate from the Department of Labor. * * *
    • “Members also considered a review of pension death audit service providers in light of the Central States and Special Financial Assistance controversy in which the Central States pension fund received $127 million in SFA funds for 3,479 dead participants. This error occurred because the plan did not have access to the Social Security death master file and the money was repaid. Since death audit providers also lack access to the DMF, there was concern among some members about how an auditor can certify a death audit at all.”
    • In the FEHBlog’s opinion, it is dumbfounding that pension and health benefit plans are not allowed access to the DMF.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The U.S. saw a slight decline in the number of new overdose deaths last year, marking a rare improvement in a still-raging national fentanyl crisis, preliminary federal data show. 
    • “There were about 107,500 overdose deaths in 2023, down 3% from the year before and the first decline in five years, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One factor was fewer deaths pegged to opioids including the nation’s deadliest drug, the potent synthetic fentanyl, the CDC’s preliminary numbers show. 
    • “It’s the direction we want to be going,” said Mary Sylla, director of overdose prevention policy and strategy at the National Harm Reduction Coalition, which advocates for measures such as easy-to-access medicine to reverse overdoses.
    • “I just hope we can continue the trend, and I hope we double-down on the evidence-based interventions that save peoples’ lives,” Sylla said.”
    • FEHBlog note — Amen to that.
  • The Centers for Disease Control announced,
    • “Approximately 4,000 unintentional drowning deaths occur annually in the United States, and demographic disparities exist.
    • “Compared with unintentional drowning death rates in 2019 (pre–COVID-19 pandemic), rates were significantly higher during 2020, 2021, and 2022, with highest rates among children aged 1–4 years, non-Hispanic American Indian and Alaska Native persons, and non-Hispanic Black or African American persons. National survey data revealed that 55% of U.S. adults have never taken a swimming lesson, and swimming lesson participation differed by demographic characteristics.
    • “The U.S. National Water Safety Action Plan provides recommendations for drowning prevention actions, including increasing access to basic swimming and water safety skills training for all persons, which could reduce disparities in unintentional drowning deaths.”
    • FEHBlog observation — Focus on training children aged 1-4 years.
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 were more likely to die than those hospitalized with influenza during the fall and winter of 2023-2024, according to an analysis of Veterans Affairs data.
    • “Among over 11,000 patients hospitalized for either illness during this past fall and winter, 5.7% of patients with COVID-19 died within 30 days of admission versus 4.24% of patients with influenza, reported Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, of the VA St. Louis Health Care System, and colleagues.
    • “After adjusting for variables, the risk of death in people hospitalized for COVID-19 was 35% higher (adjusted HR 1.35, 95% CI 1.10-1.66), the authors detailed in a research letter in JAMA.”
  • Cardiovascular Business adds,
    • “Heart failure (HF) patients who received a COVID-19 vaccine are significantly less likely to be hospitalized for HF symptoms or die for any reason, according to new data presented at Heart Failure 2024, a scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC)
    • “The analysis included data from more than 651,000 adult Korean residents with HF. The average patient age was 69.5 years old, and 50% were men. Approximately 83% of patients were fully vaccinated against COVID-19, meaning they received two or more doses of an approved vaccine. 
    • “The study’s authors compared 73,559 vaccinated patients with 73,559 unvaccinated patients, matching them 1:1 according to age, sex, comorbidities and other relevant patient attributes. The median follow-up period was six months. 
    • “Overall, COVID-19 vaccination was associated with an 82% lower risk of all-cause mortality, 47% lower risk of hospitalization for HF and 13% lower risk of testing positive for COVID-19. Vaccinated patients also had lower rates of stroke, heart attack, myocarditis/pericarditis and venous thromboembolism during that six-month period.”  
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “Ozempic, Mounjaro and other GLP-1s do not increase the risk of surgical complications, according to research published May 14 in Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism
    • “Nearly a year after the American Society of Anesthesiologists recommended patients skip a dose of their GLP-1s — which are medications approved for Type 2 diabetes and weight loss — because of regurgitation and aspiration risks, a review of 130 million patient records found no increased risk. 
    • “GLP-1s can delay gastric emptying, which can minimize the effect of normal fasting rules before elective surgeries. Soon after the ASA published the guidance, surgery departments across the U.S. updated their preoperative care processes to align with the guideline.” 
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration this week moved to expand screening for potentially lethal cervical cancer by allowing women to collect test samples themselves, a move that reproductive health advocates view as crucial to stamping out the preventable disease.
    • “For the first time, women will be able to gather samples for testing in private rooms inside offices of primary-care doctors, at urgent-care clinics and even pharmacies — an advance that could presage home testing.
    • “Advocates hope the method will make it easier for women of color and those living in rural and underserved communities to screen for human papillomavirus — HPV — which can lead to a cancer that afflicts 11,000 each year. It comes as the National Cancer Institute has ramped up study of self-collection, partnering with 25 medical schools and cancer centers across the country to gauge use of collecting vaginal samples at home and at health-care facilities. * * *
    • “The collection method was greenlit for the previously approved HPV test Onclarity, manufactured by BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company). The test is expected to be available in summer and will be part of a study of self-collection, the company said in a news release Wednesday.
    • “Roche also received sign off for the self-collection method for its cobas HPV Test, and has been collaborating with the NCI’s study, the company said in a news release. * * *
    • “This literally just opens up another option for a different demographic of people that might not feel comfortable, that might not have access [and] may not have time” to get tested otherwise, said Irene O. Aninye, chief science officer for the Society for Women’s Health Research, a group focused on advancing women’s health and promoting research.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Eisai and Biogen said today that they’ve filed an application with the FDA to sell their Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi through an autoinjector for maintenance dosing. That means patients would first go through an initiation phase with the current regimen of IV infusions, but then transition into weekly injections for maintenance.
    • “If approved, this would be a significantly more convenient option for patients, since infusions require patients once every two weeks to travel to a medical facility and receive the infusion for an hour.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review reports,
    • “Chicago-based CommonSpirit is pushing for change in the dynamics of payer-provider relationships and is “taking a firm stance on contract renewals so payers absorb a share of inflation,” management said in financial documents published May 15. 
    • “The 142-hospital system said one of the most critical levers for health systems to maintain financial stability is to receive the revenue and cash flow they are entitled to for services provided. 
    • “The news comes shortly after CommonSpirit split with Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Colorado. The breakup, which affects commercial and Medicare Advantage members, means 11 of CommonSpirit’s hospitals and more than 40,000 of its patients in the state are now out of network with the insurer. 
    • “It was never our intent to leave the Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield network, only to work together in good faith toward a balanced agreement,” CommonSpirit said in a statement on its website
    • “The system said that it is willing to continue working toward a new agreement with Anthem but its previous proposals “failed to offer terms that fairly reimburse for services provided to its members, and equitably cover the burden to get reimbursed timely and accurately.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Uber Health will begin rolling out a new solution designed for caregivers this summer, the company announced at its annual product event Wednesday. 
    • “Uber Caregiver will allow individuals to add a caregiver to their Uber profile. That caregiver can then see and spend that person’s health benefits on eligible services, request rides to doctors’ appointments or order groceries. The caregiver will get real-time updates along the way and have access to a chat feature to communicate with the Uber driver as needed.
    • “Individuals will need to use the Uber app to participate. Uber also offers a way for those who need help to request a ride by calling 1-833-USE-UBER from a phone with texting capabilities. The phone line also supports some health benefits cards.”
  • and
    • “Digital maternal health company Babyscripts announced a partnership Tuesday with Lyft Healthcare to offer sponsored rides for people who are pregnant or postpartum and face barriers to transportation.
    • “Though Babyscripts is a digital-first, tele-maternal health company, it acknowledges that pregnant individuals also need in-person care. 
    • “Access is one of the biggest challenges to maternal health and infant health—and a patient’s outcomes can come down to whether or not they go to their doctor appointments,” Anish Sebastian, CEO and co-founder of Babyscripts, said in a statement.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec lets us know,
    • “The U.S. Postal Service is pausing some of the most controversial reforms to its mailing network as its leadership has agreed to the demands of a growing, bipartisan chorus in Congress. 
    • “The mailing agency has halted its plans to consolidate dozens of processing facilities until at least Jan. 1, 2025, ensuring the network overhaul is paused until after the upcoming presidential election in which millions of Americans will be voting by mail. A large swath of lawmakers across the ideological spectrum have called on Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to delay or cease the changes, some of which would shift the bulk of mail processing across state lines. 
    • “The decision marks a reversal for DeJoy, who just last week remained resolute in defending his vision as the only viable path forward for his agency. He called the issue an existential one, saying his reforms were “what we must continue to do to survive.” 
  • HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality posted its March 2024 “NATIONAL HEALTHCARE QUALITY AND DISPARITIES REPORT CHARTBOOK ON PATIENT SAFETY.”
  • Per an FDA press release, “[o]n Monday [May 13], the FDA issued a safety communication to warn patients, caregivers, and health care providers not to use Cue Health’s COVID-19 Tests due to an increased risk of false results. The FDA had also issued a Warning Letter to Cue Health after an inspection revealed that the company made changes to these tests and that the changes reduced the reliability of the test to detect SARS-CoV-2 virus.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The coronavirus has once again evolved, in a familiar echo of past years. Unlike earlier iterations of the virus, this new variant is not sparking widespread havoc.
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it is monitoring a variant called KP.2 and does not see evidence it causes more severe illness than other strains. Laboratory tests have shown that KP.2 is not causing a surge in infections or transmission, the agency said.
    • “The CDC has identified a second emergent variant, KP.1.1. But it is KP.2 that is leading the pack. Both new variants belong to a group of coronavirus variants dubbed “FLiRT” by scientists. The acronym was coined to describe a combination of mutations found in the spike protein of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. * * *
    • “KP.2 has symptoms similar to earlier versions of the virus, including fever, chills, cough and muscle or body aches.”
    • The current vaccines are effective against KP.2. [“H]ealth experts predict that the new formulation of the coronavirus expected for the fall could offer even stronger protection because it will probably be tailored to thwart the new variant.”
  • Beckers Hospital News informs us,
    • “On average, people taking Novo Nordisk’s weight loss drug Wegovy see a 10% reduction in weight, which is sustained for four years, according to findings from a major trial published May 13.  * * *
    • “Wegovy is tied to a 20% reduced risk of heart attacks and other cardiovascular events — a benefit that was seen across the board, irrespective of how much weight people lost.” 
  • STAT News adds,
    • “Novo Nordisk will test whether its GLP-1 drugs can help people with alcohol-associated liver disease, and, as part of that, will study if the treatments will change the amount of alcohol people drink.
    • “This appears to be the first time the company is getting involved in research to see if the booming class of GLP-1 diabetes and obesity drugs can affect substance consumption, a question that academic researchers have been probing but the pharmaceutical industry has so far avoided.
    • “The nine-month study will try three drugs alone and in combinations against placebo. The primary outcome being tested is change in liver scarring, or fibrosis, and one of the secondary outcomes is changes in alcohol consumption. The news of the study was first reported by Bloomberg.
    • “The medications that will be tested include the blockbuster semaglutide, sold as the diabetes drug Ozempic and obesity drug Wegovy, as well as CagriSema, a drug Novo is developing that combines semaglutide with the dual amylin and calcitonin receptor agonist cagrilintide. A third drug, NNC0194-0499, targets FGF-21, a hormone produced by the liver that plays a role in inflammation.”
  • NIH’s All of Us Program posted its latest newsletter.
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Research press release,
    • “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today posted its revised Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine-assisted psychotherapy (MDMA-AP; Lykos Therapeutics) for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). * * *
    • Key Clinical Findings
    • “Although ICER attempted to explore the concerns raised about MDMA-AP and the MAPP trials, ICER was not able to assess the extent that bias influenced reporting of benefits or the frequency with which there may have been misreporting of harms. As such, ICER concluded that the current publicly available evidence is insufficient (“I”) to assess the overall net benefit of MDMA-AP. 
    • Key Cost-Effectiveness Findings
    • “Given the “I” rating, the economic analyses of MDMA-AP in this Evidence Report are only exploratory analyses that provide insights into costs and benefits if it is assumed that the results of the MAPP trials are accurate. ICER did not calculate a health-benefit price benchmark for MDMA-AP.”
  • Benefitfocus released an “Employee Benefits Strategy Playbook for Mental Healthcare.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “The majority of the nation’s leading for-profit hospital systems by revenue reported net gains during the first quarter led by stronger than expected inpatient volumes.
    • “The boost in inpatient volumes and associated revenue comes just a quarter after providers said they would be betting more heavily on outpatient services to drive growth
    • “Increases in inpatient revenues is an area to watch as providers weigh whether and how to adjust their portfolios. Community Health Systems, for example, has been on a selling spree recently in an attempt to deleverage its balance sheets, while HCA Healthcare, Tenet Healthcare and Universal Health Services are expanding services in key markets. 
    • “Should inpatient care utilization continue to rise over multiple quarters, it could influence hospitals’ capital spending, according to research notes from analysts.”
  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “Biosimilars are gaining ground. The IRA could push them further next year.
    • “As commercial momentum builds, coverage incentives for the Medicare market are expected to favor biosimilars in 2025.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • Behavioral health provider Talkspace rolled out services Tuesday to 13 million Medicare members across 11 states and will expand to 33 million members nationwide by the end of the year.
    • Talkspace services are available to those with traditional Medicare in California, Florida, New York, Ohio, New Jersey, Virginia, Missouri, Maryland, South Carolina, New Mexico and Idaho. The company plans to offer services to Medicare Advantage members later on, as well.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Govexec reports,
    • “In the face of mounting pressure from lawmakers of all political stripes, watchdogs, stakeholders and even members of its own governing board, as well as another financial quarter in the red, leadership of the U.S. Postal Service is doubling down on its controversial plan to overhaul the agency. 
    • “USPS posted a net loss of $1.5 billion in the second quarter of fiscal 2024, though management noted that was trimmed to a $300 million loss after dispensing with costs outside of its control. USPS leaders boasted they have turned a $200 million profit in the first half of the fiscal year using that same metric, which marked a $600 million turnaround compared to the first six months of fiscal 2023.
    • “While First-Class mail volume has continued its longstanding decline, revenue grew in the quarter by nearly $500 million due in large part to the dramatic price increases USPS has instituted. The Postal Service has cut $100 million in costs, driven largely by a reduction in transportation expenses and slashing 9 million work hours. 
    • “On-time delivery of mail, however, has plummeted as USPS has instituted significant reforms to its network as laid out in Postmaster General Louis DeJoy’s 10-year Delivering for America plan.” 
  • HHS posted a fact sheet on new government efforts to reduce the impact of spread of avian flu H5N1
  • Senators John Fetterman (D PA) and Tina Smith (D MN) announced a bill, “the United States Senate Commission on Mental Health Act of 2024. The bill would establish a U.S. Senate Commission on Mental Health tasked with providing Congress and the president independent, expert policy recommendations to improve access to and affordability of mental health care services. * * * Full text of the bill can be found here.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control tells us today,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare continues to decrease across most areas of the country. This week, no jurisdictions experienced moderate, high, or very high activity.
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed influenza are decreasing. Emergency department visits with COVID-19 and RSV remain stable at low levels.
    • “Nationally, influenza and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week. COVID-19 test positivity remained stable at low levels.
    • “Nationally, the COVID-19 wastewater viral activity level, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, is minimal.”
  • STAT News reports “Harvard scientists unveil the most detailed map of the brain ever: ‘It’s an alien world inside your own head’”.
    • “On Thursday, [Dr. Jeffrey’ Lichtman and his partners unveiled the results of their [decade long] efforts in the prestigious journal Science, and also posted to the internet renderings of the human brain unlike any ever seen. They came complete with a program that allows viewers to move through a microscopic alien landscape so detailed Lichtman can’t resist waxing poetic when he talks about it.
    • “It’s an alien world inside your own head,” he said. “Neurons themselves are truly awe inspiringly beautiful. There’s no two ways about it.”
    • “True, the insights gleaned from the tiny sample have not yet unraveled the mysteries of autism, schizophrenia, or depression. They can’t yet explain the mechanics of human learning, memory, and personality on the cellular level. But they represent an important first step in that direction, and provide a tantalizing preview of the kind of insights we might see in the decades ahead.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Bristol Myers Squibb said on Friday that its trial evaluating a combination of cancer treatments failed to meet its primary endpoint.
    • “The company’s trial was evaluating the cancer-drug Opdivo and concurrent chemoradiotherapy, followed by Opdivo plus Yervoy, the brand name for a monoclonal antibody, in treating unresectable, locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer. The trial’s primary endpoint was progression-free survival.
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb said it would fully evaluate the data and work with investigators to share results with the scientific community.
    • “Opdivo and certain combinations with Opdivo are approved treatments for eligible patients with non-small cell lung cancer.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Cancer diagnoses are on the rise among younger adults, and a new guidebook seeks to arm employers with the tools necessary to tackle this issue.
    • “The Northeast Business Group on Health’s new toolkit highlights actions employers can take to proactively address growing rates for five types of cancer in their workforce: breast cancer, colorectal cancer, head and neck cancer, cancer of the reproductive organs and skin cancer.
    • “There’s a clear business case for putting a focus on cancer, as the cost of therapies continues to increase and patients often require treatment for the long haul, NEBGH Medical Director Mark Cunningham-Hill, M.D., told Fierce Healthcare.
    • “He said that many employers, especially larger firms, have established sophisticated and comprehensive wellness and health programs for their workers. But they can do more to “connect the dots” between those offerings and critical preventive care around cancer and conditions that increase risk factors, like obesity.”
  • USA Data relates,
    • One out of every 42 babies born in the United States in 2021 was conceived using IVF or other assisted reproductive technologies.  
    • Parents who started treatments in 2021 gave birth to 97,128 babies, a 49% increase from 2012. In 2021, 238,126 patients initiated 413,776 IVF or similar treatment cycles, up 135% from 2012. 
    • IVF was most common in Washington, DC, with 5.8% of babies conceived via IVF, Massachusetts (5.4%), and New Jersey (5.0%). Less than one percent of infants born in Puerto Rico were conceived via IVF (0.4%). Alabama (0.6%) and Arkansas (0.7%) also had low rates.  

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Kaiser Family Foundation released a “KFF Health Tracking Poll May 2024: The Public’s Use and Views of GLP-1 Drugs.” Here are the key finding from the poll:
    • “The latest KFF Health Tracking Poll finds that about one in eight adults (12%) say they have ever taken a GLP-1 agonist – an increasingly popular class of prescription drugs used for weight loss and to treat diabetes or prevent heart attacks or strokes for adults with heart disease – including 6% who say they are currently taking such a drug. The share who report ever taking these drugs rises to four in ten (43%) among adults who have been told by a doctor that they have diabetes, a quarter who have been told they have heart disease, and one in five (22%) who have been told by a doctor that they are overweight or obese in the past five years1. Public awareness of GLP-1 drugs has increased in the past year, with about one-third (32%) of adults now saying they have heard “a lot” about these drugs, up from 19% in July 2023.
    • “Most adults who have taken GLP-1 drugs say they took them to treat a chronic condition including diabetes or heart disease (62%), while about four in ten say they took them primarily to lose weight.
    • “About half (54%) of all adults who have taken GLP-1 drugs say it was difficult to afford the cost, including one in five (22%) who say it was “very difficult.” While most insured adults who have taken these drugs say their insurance covered at least part of the cost, even among insured adults about half (53%) say the cost was difficult to afford2.
    • “While 8% of adults ages 65 and older say they have taken a GLP-1 medication for a chronic condition, just 1% say they have ever taken a GLP-1 drug to lose weight, which may reflect Medicare’s lack of coverage for prescription drugs used for weight loss. Nearly four in ten (37%) adults ages 65 and older report being told by a doctor they are overweight or obese in the past five years.
    • “With Medicare currently prohibited by law from covering prescription drugs used for weight loss, six in ten adults say they think Medicare should cover the cost of these drugs when prescribed for weight loss for people who are overweight, including more than half of Democrats, independents and Republicans. Similar shares of the public continue to support Medicare coverage of these drugs for weight loss even after hearing arguments for and against this proposal.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Sanofi will pay vaccine maker Novavax $500 million and take a small equity stake in the Maryland-based company as part of a broad COVID-19 shot alliance, the companies announced Friday.
    • “Through the deal, Sanofi will gain rights to co-market Novavax’s protein-based COVID vaccine globally, excepting certain countries, and a license to combine it with Sanofi’s existing influenza shots. Sanofi will also hold a non-exclusive right to use Novavax’s soap bark tree-derived adjuvant in other products it develops.
    • “Starting next year, Sanofi will book sales of Novavax’s COVID shot and pay Novavax double-digit percentage royalties. The French pharmaceutical company will also support certain R&D, regulatory and commercial expenses.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Tandem Diabetes Care is recalling a version of its t:connect app for iPhone because of a fault that could drain insulin pump batteries, the Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday.”Tandem Diabetes Care is recalling a version of its t:connect app for iPhone because of a fault that could drain insulin pump batteries, the Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday.
    • “After updating the app in February, Tandem received 224 injury reports in about two months. The reports related to an issue that caused the app to crash and relaunch, resulting in excessive use of Bluetooth and potentially draining the battery of the connected insulin pump.
    • “The FDA categorized the event as a Class I recall because of the life-threatening potential for pumps to deliver too little insulin. Tandem corrected the fault in an app update in March.”
  • The Wall Street Journal explains why “Getting Alzheimer’s treatment to those who need it poses particular challenges.” For example
    • “The problem isn’t this drug. Sure. It has risks, et cetera,” said Jason Karlawish, co-director, of the Penn Memory Center at the University of Pennsylvania. “But the problem was the drug and the system — namely with a system of care for its delivery.”
    • “Karlawish said his memory center infused its first patient with Leqembi on November 16. He said that in the six months since, the number of patients who have received the drug there has climbed into the double-digits, reaching roughly 50 people. That, he said, required setting up an infrastructure that “either didn’t exist or existed in bits that had to be put together.”
  • MedCity new points out,
    • “Navigation challenges are the top reason consumers stop seeing healthcare providers, while experience issues are the main reason consumers leave their health insurer, a new survey found.
    • “The Accenture report, released last week, surveyed more than 9,700 insured consumers and 8,000 consumers who sought or received care in the prior year. The survey is a follow-up to a 2021 report, which examined why people are loyal or not loyal to their payer or provider.
    • “We wanted to leverage our patient and member experience surveys to continue to track the state of consumerism in health care, assessing how providers and health insurers perform across a number of key touchpoints that drive selection, loyalty, value and ease of use,” said Sarah Sinha, a managing director in Accenture’s health business, in an email.”
  • Insurance Business tells us,
    • “Offering support across a variety of functions including customer service, claims processing, underwriting, and fraud detection, the capability of AI to analyze large datasets and process information will continue to revolutionize insurance.
    • “Nirmal Ranganathan, vice president of engineering, AI, at Rackspace Technology, spoke with Insurance Business on how insurance companies can take advantage of AI to generate cost savings across their businesses.”
    • Check it out.

Midweek Update

From Washington, DC

  • Modern Healthcare tells us,
    • “Congress took the first step Wednesday to extend expiring telehealth rules, hospital at home services and other programs aimed at rural hospitals.
    • “The House Ways and Means Committee passed the Preserving Telehealth, Hospital, and Ambulance Access Act of 2024 by a vote of 31-0, setting it up for passage by the full House later this year. * * *
    • “One potentially controversial provision in the bill requires pharmacy benefit managers that work with Medicare Part D plans to de-link the compensationthey pay themselves from the rebates they secure based on drugs’ high list prices. Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.) said the provision will save the government about $500 million, although official estimates were not yet available. The provision does not apply to the broader commercial market, though Schneider and Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.) both called for expansion of the provision to the commercial market. Large PBMs oppose such provisions.”
  • Govexec lets us know,
    • “A new report from the Congressional Budget Office found that a gap between the combined pay and benefits of federal workers and their private sector counterparts has nearly disappeared between 2015 and 2022, raising new questions about President Biden’s proposed 2% average pay raise for the federal workforce in 2025.
    • “Federal policymakers generally rely on one of two reports comparing the compensation of federal and private sector workers. First is an annual analysis compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for review by the Federal Salary Council, which compares only the wages of similar jobs, is the preferred citation of Democrats and federal employee unions. * * *
    • “CBO’s analysis, which is typically conducted every five years and is preferred by conservatives, compares “total compensation”—wages plus the cost of benefits like health care, paid leave and retirement—of federal and private sector employees with similar educational backgrounds. This model has traditionally concluded that the cost of federal employees’ pay and benefits is moderately higher than their counterparts in the private sector, although federal workers with master’s or professional degrees still tend to earn less.
    • “The latest version of CBO’s report, which was released last month, covers only 2022, rather than the traditional 2015-2020 period, due to the economic upheaval caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. It found that the total compensation gap between federal and private sector jobs cratered between 2015 and 2022, falling from 17% in its last analysis to just 5%.”
  • Per May 8 HHS press releases,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), is announcing the Increasing Organ Transplant Access (IOTA) Model. The proposed model, which would be implemented by the CMS Innovation Center, aims to increase access to kidney transplants for all people living with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), improve the quality of care for people seeking kidney transplants, reduce disparities among individuals undergoing the process to receive a kidney transplant, and increase the efficiency and capability of transplant hospitals selected to participate. This proposed model would build on the Biden-Harris Administration’s priority of improving the kidney transplant system and the collaborative efforts between CMS and the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) to increase organ donation and improve clinical outcomes, system improvement, quality measurement, transparency, and regulatory oversight.” * * *
    • “The proposed rule on the Increasing Organ Transplant Access Model can be accessed from the Federal Register at https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/current. Standard provisions are included in the proposed rule that would be applicable to all Innovation Center model participants that begin participation in a model on or after January 1, 2025.
    • View – PDF a fact sheet on the Increasing Organ Transplant Access Model.
    • “More information on the Increasing Organ Transplant Access Model is available on the model webpage.”
  • and
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), announced $46.8 million in notices of funding opportunities to promote youth mental health, grow the behavioral health workforce, improve access to culturally competent behavioral care across the country, and strengthen peer recovery and recovery support. President Biden made tackling the mental health crisis and beating the opioid epidemic key pillars in his Unity Agenda for the nation. Today’s announcement will help communities transform how they address behavioral health.”
  • Beckers Clinical Leadership notes,
    • “Starting this summer, rural health clinics seeking Medicare reimbursement can apply through a new accreditation program from The Joint Commission. 
    • “On May 7, The Joint Commission said it has received deeming authority from CMS for a new rural health clinic accreditation program, which is meant to support patient safety improvements by reducing variation and risks in the delivery of primary care and personal health services.” 

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Geneoscopy received Food and Drug Administration approval for its Colosense noninvasive colorectal cancer screening test, the company said Monday.
    • “The stool-based test, which Labcorp will offer, is approved for screening people aged 45 years or older who are at average risk of developing colorectal cancer. The indication puts Geneoscopy in competition with Exact Sciences’ Cologuard test.
    • “Geneoscopy focused on the opportunity in people aged under 50 years in its statement about the approval. Around 2% of people in that cohort used a stool-based test in 2021, but Evercore ISI and TD Cowen analysts expect Colosense to have a limited impact on Exact.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “The Apple Watch has secured a new qualification from the Food and Drug Administration that could make the smartwatch an appealing tool for medical device companies hoping to illustrate the benefits of a common heart procedure.
    • “Last week, the Apple Watch’s Atrial Fibrillation History feature became the first digital tool qualified under the Medical Device Development Tools (MDDT) program. Released in 2022, the feature estimates a user’s A-fib burden, or how much time they spend in atrial fibrillation, which is an irregular heart rhythm that can cause shortness of breath and fatigue, and is also linked to an increased risk of stroke.
    • “The qualification means that FDA has determined in advance that sponsors can use the feature as a secondary endpoint in clinical trials without having to do additional work. Specifically, the Apple Watch is qualified for use as a secondary endpoint in clinical trials for cardiac ablation devices, which reduce the electrical signals that cause A-fib by scarring the heart with extreme heat or cold energy. Pulsed field ablation is the latest version of the technology, using a controlled electric field to scar tissue rather than the riskier thermal energy.”
  • Regulatory Focus notes,
    • “The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is piloting a program to enhance communication between drugmakers, investigators, and its drug shortage team during inspections to prevent facilities from unnecessarily shutting down and potentially contributing to shortages of essential drugs, said Patrizia Cavazzoni, MD, director of the agency’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER).
    • “Cavazzoni made these remarks during a webinar hosted by the Alliance for a Stronger FDA on Monday, during which, she said “we strongly encourage manufacturers not to stop manufacturing as the result of an inspection.” She added that manufacturers sometimes shut down production lines based on what they are hearing during the inspection, which she said could worsen shortages.”

From the public health and medical research front

  •  The Washington Post reports that “Olive oil use [is] associated with lower risk of dying from dementia. An observational study has found that regular olive oil consumption may have cognitive health benefits.”
    • Vasilis Vasiliou, a professor and the chair of the department of environmental health sciences at Yale School of Public Health, said the Harvard study “has been done very carefully,” and there is a broader effort to try to “find a mechanism” as to why olive oil, or other parts of the plant, could be beneficial to cardiovascular or cognitive health.”Vasilis Vasiliou, a professor and the chair of the department of environmental health sciences at Yale School of Public Health, said the Harvard study “has been done very carefully,” and there is a broader effort to try to “find a mechanism” as to why olive oil, or other parts of the plant, could be beneficial to cardiovascular or cognitive health.
    • “We don’t believe it’s one compound or two. The olive oil has the phenolic antioxidants, which are very important for protecting against oxidative stress,” Vasiliou said. “But there is a lot of other stuff that’s going on there.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Use of cannabis and nicotine together during pregnancy was associated with higher risks for infant death and maternal and neonatal morbidity compared with no exposure to either substance, with dual-use risk estimates higher than with either substance alone, a retrospective population-based cohort study.
    • “Compared with use of neither substance, the risk of infant death was more than twice as high with combined use in pregnancy after controlling for possible confounders (adjusted risk ratio [aRR] 2.18, 95% CI 1.82-2.62), reported Jamie O. Lo, MD, MCR, of Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, and colleagues.
    • “By comparison, risks were 65% higher with cannabis use only (aRR 1.65, 95% CI 1.41-1.93) and 62% higher with nicotine use only (aRR 1.62, 95% CI 1.45-1.80) versus no exposure, the researchers detailed in JAMA Network Open.
    • “Lo told MedPage Today in an email that she and her colleagues were surprised to see the increased infant death rate in the combined cannabis and nicotine users compared with those using each substance alone.
    • “We also did not expect so many maternal and neonatal/infant outcomes to be worse with combined cannabis/nicotine use,” she added.”
  • The National Cancer Institute posted its periodic cancer information highlights.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) will launch clinical trials to investigate potential treatments for long-term symptoms after COVID-19 infection, including sleep disturbances, exercise intolerance and the worsening of symptoms following physical or mental exertion known as post-exertional malaise (PEM). The mid-stage trials, part of NIH’s Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) Initiative, will join six other RECOVER studies currently enrolling participants across the United States testing treatments to address viral persistence, neurological symptoms, including cognitive dysfunction (like brain fog) and autonomic nervous system dysfunction. The new trials will enroll approximately 1,660 people across 50 study sites to investigate potential treatments for some of the most frequent and burdensome symptoms reported by people suffering from long COVID.
    • “People 18 years of age and older who are interested in learning more about these trials can visit trials.RECOVERCovid.org(link is external) or ClinicalTrials.gov and search identifiers NCT06404047NCT06404060NCT06404073NCT06404086NCT06404099NCT06404112.” 
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “A profoundly deaf baby who received Regeneron’s experimental gene therapy was able to hear normally within six months, the company announced Wednesday.
    • “The data, presented at a medical conference, build on initially promising research released in October. The baby was dosed at 11 months of age, one of the youngest children in the world to receive gene therapy for genetic deafness, Regeneron said. A second patient, treated at age 4, also showed hearing improvements at a six-week assessment, the company said.
    • “Both children suffer from a type of deafness caused by mutations in a gene known as otoferlin. The initial research on Regeneron’s DB-OTO therapy is part of an ongoing Phase 1/2 trial known as CHORD enrolling infants and children in the U.S., U.K. and Spain.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • MedCity News informs us,
    • “About a third of employers are integrating value-based care into their employer-sponsored insurance, according to a new survey. Another third of employers are determining the “best-fit strategies for their organization” when it comes to accountable care.
    • “The report was published Sunday by the Milken Institute with support from Morgan Health, a JPMorgan Chase healthcare unit for employer-sponsored insurance. The Milken Institute is a nonprofit think tank focused on financial, physical, mental and environmental health. The survey received responses from 72 employers of varying sizes and industry types.
    • “The researchers found that when making health benefit decisions, expanding preventive care, improving access to primary care and focusing on whole-person health are the top three tenets of accountable care. The lowest-ranked tenets are reducing health outcome disparities and increasing access to digital care.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “Employers are in a strong position to lead the charge in changing the conversation around obesity care, according to a new report from the Milken Institute.
    • “The group released a how-to guide employers of all sizes can use to push for obesity to be recognized as a chronic condition, driving a more multifaceted model for care and addressing the stigma that exists around weight.
    • “The guidebook notes that obesity and conditions related to it are having a major impact on healthcare costs, accounting for $425.5 billion in costs for the civilian workforce, according to a recent study. This includes higher medical costs for both employers and employees as well as costs related to absenteeism.
    • “Sarah Wells Kocsis, director of the Center for Public Health at the Milken Institute and one of the paper’s authors, told Fierce Healthcare that employers are starting to take notice of this issue and lead a conversation that’s “decades in the making.”
    • “We’re really at an inflection point,” she said. “Our goal here is to put this in writing and explain what a strong case there is to think about obesity as a chronic disease.”
  • HealthDay explains,
    • “Worries over health-related costs are plaguing the minds of older Americans of all backgrounds, a new poll suggests.
    • “Five of the six health-related issues that most people found very concerning had to do with health care costs, according to results from the University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging. 
    • “And the sixth issue – financial scams and fraud – also had to do with money, results show.
    • “In this election year, these findings offer a striking reminder of how much health care costs matter to older adults,” Dr. John Ayanian, director of the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, where the poll is based, said in a news release. The poll is supported by AARP and Michigan Medicine, U-M’s academic medical center.
    • “Overall, 56% of people over 50 said they’re concerned about the cost of medical care for older adults, poll results show.”
  • Per mHealth Intelligence,
    • New research reveals that a text message and telephone-based virtual care approach can improve rates of screening, identification, and treatment of maternal mental health conditions.
    • Published in Health Affairs, the study assessed an intervention that addresses various barriers to adopting maternal mental health screening and referral to treatment. Medical University of South Carolina researchers noted that perinatal mental health disorders, perinatal substance use disorders (SUDs), and intimate partner violence are common during pregnancy and the postpartum year. According to data from the Mental Health Leadership Alliance, maternal mental health conditions affect 800,000 families each year in the United States.
  • BioPharma Dive offers a helpful database of patent expiration dates for thirty top-selling medicines.

Midweek Update

Photo by Thought Catalog on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The No Surprises Act regulators alert us,
    • “On October 6, 2023, the Departments and OPM issued FAQs About Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 Implementation Part 62 (FAQs Part 62). In FAQs Part 62, the Departments and OPM acknowledged the impact of the TMA III decision on QPAs and the significant resources and challenges associated with recalculating QPAs. Therefore, the FAQs stated that the Departments and OPM would exercise their enforcement discretion under the relevant No Surprises Act provisions for any plan or issuer, or party to a payment dispute in the Federal IDR process, that uses a QPA calculated in accordance with the methodology under the July 2021 interim final rules and guidance in effect immediately before the decision in TMA III, for items and services furnished before May 1, 2024, the first day of the calendar month that is 6 months after the issuance of FAQs Part 62. Under FAQs Part 62, this exercise of enforcement discretion applies to QPAs for purposes of patient cost sharing, providing required disclosures with an initial payment or notice of denial of payment, and providing required disclosures and submissions under the Federal IDR process.
    • “FAQs Part 62 stated that HHS would also exercise enforcement discretion under the relevant No Surprises Act provisions for a provider, facility, or provider of air ambulance services that bills, or holds liable, a participant, beneficiary, or enrollee for a cost-sharing amount based on a QPA calculated using the aforementioned method.”
    • The regulators have extended the safe harbor to services or supplies rendered before November 1, 2024. The regulators do not expect to further extend the safe harbor.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “As part of the government’s quest to improve American eating habits, the Food and Drug Administration is considering requiring food manufacturers to put new labels on the front of packages. The labels might flag certain health risks, such as high levels of salt, sugar or saturated fat.
    • “Don’t expect to see a warning label in your grocery store soon, because the FDA is still weighing its approach. But the agency hopes that clearer food labeling could help us make healthier choices as it tackles the rise of diet-related health problems such as Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses the new HHS rule here.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “More than two decades ago, the shocking results of a major women’s health study challenged the safety of menopause hormones, and overnight, millions of women and their doctors abandoned the drugs — a reluctance that lingers today.
    • “Now, a long-term follow-up of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) shows that the reaction was largely overblown. The new research found that for many younger menopausal women — typically those under 60 — the benefits of the drugs probably outweigh the risks for the short-term treatment of menopause symptoms, including hot flashes and night sweats.
    • “The new analysis, published in JAMA, shows that younger women starting menopause and experiencing symptoms can take hormone treatments for several years with a lower likelihood of adverse effects.
    • “Women in early menopause with bothersome symptoms should not be afraid to take hormone therapy to treat them, and clinicians should not be afraid to prescribe them,” said JoAnn Manson, chief of the division of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the paper’s first author.”
  • The New York Times informs us,
    • “Baby aspirin is routinely prescribed to people who survive heart attacks. But there’s another vulnerable group who benefit from daily low-dose aspirin: pregnant women at risk of developing pre-eclampsia, life-threatening high blood pressure.
    • “It’s a factor in up to one in 20 pregnancies in the United States, and one of the leading causes of maternal mortality nationwide. Pre-eclampsia is the top cause of maternal death among Black women, who die of pregnancy-related complications at rates almost triple those of white women.
    • “But not enough pregnant women are getting the word that low-dose aspirin can help. Now leading experts are hoping to change that.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Extensive testing of pasteurized commercially purchased milk and other dairy products from 38 states has found no evidence of live H5N1 bird flu virus, Food and Drug Administration officials said at a press briefing Wednesday.
    • “The results confirmed findings of earlier testing of a more limited number of samples and add weight to the FDA’s conclusion that pasteurized milk products are safe for consumption despite a widespread outbreak of cows infected with H5N1.
    • “These additional, preliminary results further affirm the safety of the U.S. commercial milk supply,” Donald Prater, acting director of the FDA’s Center of Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, told reporters.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Recurring feelings of anger may increase a person’s risk of developing heart disease by limiting the blood vessels’ ability to open, according to a new study supported by the National Institutes of Health. The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association (JAHA), shows for the first time that anger is linked to this vascular impairment — a precursor to the kind of long-term damage that can lead to heart attack and stroke.
    • “We’ve long suspected, based on observational studies, that anger can negatively affect the heart. This study in healthy adults helps fill a real knowledge gap and shows how this might occur,” said Laurie Friedman Donze, Ph.D., a psychologist and program officer in the Clinical Applications and Prevention Branch of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which funded the study. “It also opens the door to promoting anger management interventions as a way to potentially help stave off heart disease, the leading cause of death in this country.”
    • “While a brief spurt of occasional anger is normal and generally has a benign impact on the heart, it is recurring or frequent anger the researchers said raises concern. “If you’re a person who gets angry all the time, you’re having chronic injuries to your blood vessels,” said study leader Daichi Shimbo, M.D., a cardiologist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City. “It’s these chronic injuries over time that may eventually cause irreversible effects on vascular health and eventually increase your heart disease risk.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive notes,
    • “CVS had a significantly worse first quarter than the healthcare giant — or Wall Street — expected, after its insurance arm failed to adequately prepare for seniors’ high use of medical care, especially in inpatient facilities.
    • “The Rhode Island-based company’s health services segment — usually a reliable driver of growth — also saw its revenue and income fall in the quarter as its pharmacy benefit manager adjusted to the loss of a major contract with insurer Centene.
    • “CVS slashed its earnings expectations for 2024 on Wednesday following the results. It’s the second time the company has lowered financial expectations this calendar year.” 
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “CVS has quietly acquired Hella Health, a startup Medicare Advantage (MA) broker based in New York City, according to a post on LinkedIn.
    • “Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Hella Health CEO and founder Rafal Walkiewicz wrote in the post that the combination allows the healthcare giant to further bolster its suite of technology platforms, especially those offered directly to the senior population.
    • “Through this combination, CVS Health will expand its multi-payer technology platform to include a wide range of insurance offerings, supported by trusted advisors and agents, to provide a simple, direct-to-consumer Medicare shopping and enrollment experience,” Walkiewicz wrote.”
  • The Leapfrog Group released its Spring 2024 Hospital Safety Grades.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “GSK on Wednesday raised its financial forecasts for the year following strong quarterly sales of its vaccines and HIV medicines. 
    • “GSK said vaccine sales surged 16% compared to the same period a year ago, a number driven by revenue totals for its shingles shot Shingrix and RSV vaccine Arexvy. New public immunization programs in Europe and other international market drove sales of Shingrix, while Arexvy continued to take more market share than Pfizer’s rival RSV shot Abrysvo.  
    • “The company now expects its 2024 sales to grow at the higher end of the 5% to 7% range it previously projected, and for annual adjusted earnings per share to climb 8% to 10%. Still, GSK warned that growth could slow later this year amid shifting seasonal patterns for vaccinations and changes in market dynamics.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DCm

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “House Democratic leaders said they would block any effort to remove Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.), moving to protect the Republican leader from retaliation by his hard-right flank following the passage of a sweeping foreign-aid package that included funding for Ukraine.”
  • This is a smart move because accord to what the FEHBlog has been reading, the Democrats are likely to retake the House of Representatives in the fall election.
  • The Journal also relates,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission is challenging hundreds of pharmaceutical patent listings in an effort to smooth the path to more affordable alternatives to brand-name drugs—including blockbusters such as Ozempic and Victoza.
      • “The crackdown is the latest assault against what the agency regards as drugmakers’ patent ploys intended to stall generic competition.
      • “At issue is what is called the Orange Book, a document published by the Food and Drug Administration that lists patents relevant to brand-name pharmaceuticals. Under a law meant to encourage generics, if a generics maker can successfully challenge listed patents, it can be granted a period of exclusivity before other generics are approved. But a challenge to an Orange Book patent, should a brand-name manufacturer decide to fight in court, also delays a generic’s approval for 30 months.
      • “The FTC says that drugmakers needlessly list oodles of extra patents in the Orange Book, delaying generic alternatives and artificially keeping prices high.”
  • HealthLeaders Media adds,
    • “Medicare Part D saved nearly $15 billion over six years with the use of “skinny label” generics, a new report says.
    • “However, the program is imperiled by a lawsuit claiming patent infringement, researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School said in a research letter published on Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine.
    • “The researchers are urging Congress to “reinforce the skinny-label pathway by creating a safe harbor that protects manufacturers engaged in skinny labeling from induced patent infringement laws.”
    • Skinny labels permit the use of generics for conditions that are not specified by brand-name drug makers and allow the cheaper generics to enter the market before the patent of the brand-name drug expires. 
  •  The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force finalized a breast cancer screening recommendation today.
    • The Task Force now recommends that all women get screened for breast cancer every other year starting at age 40 [previously age 50 for USPSTF purposes and 40 for Affordable Care Act purposes] and continuing through age 74. This is a B grade. More research is needed about whether and how additional screening might help women with dense breasts stay healthy and on the benefits and harms of screening in women older than 75. These are I statements.
  • The New York Times adds,
    • “In 2009, the task force raised the age for starting routine mammograms to 50 from 40, sparking wide controversy. At the time, researchers were concerned that earlier screening would do more harm than good, leading to unnecessary treatment in younger women, including alarming findings that lead to anxiety-producing procedures that are invasive but ultimately unnecessary.
    • “But now breast cancer rates among women in their 40s are on the rise, increasing by 2 percent a year between 2015 and 2019, said Dr. John Wong, vice chair of the task force. The panel continues to recommend screening every two years for women at average risk of breast cancer, though many patients and providers prefer annual screening. * * *
    • “Weighing in again on a hotly debated topic, the task force also said there was not enough evidence to endorse extra scans, such as ultrasounds or magnetic resonance imaging, for women with dense breast tissue.
    • “That means that insurers do not have to provide full coverage of additional screening for these women, whose cancers can be missed by mammograms alone and who are at higher risk for breast cancer to begin with. About half of all women aged 40 and older fall into this category.”
  • For Affordable Care Act preventive services coverage purposes, HHS’s Human Resources and Services Administration, not the USPSTF, is the final decision maker regarding the scope of women’s healthcare preventive services.

From the public health and medical research fronts,

  • STAT News lets us know today.
    • “Research is still being done to determine if all pasteurization techniques — there are multiple approaches — inactivate the [H5N1] virus. But the findings so far are reassuring. Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., have reported that while they could find genetic evidence of the virus in milk bought in stores, they could not grow live viruses from that milk, suggesting pasteurization kills H5N1. * * *
    • “But given the concentration of virus that researchers are seeing in milk from infected cows, they believe that raw milk — milk that has not been pasteurized — is an entirely different story.
    • “If cows that produce milk destined for the raw milk market got infected with H5N1, people who consume that milk could drink a large dose of the virus, scientists say. Thijs Kuiken, a pathologist in the department of viroscience at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, said he’s heard of concentrations that would be the equivalent of a billion virus particles per milliliter of milk. He told STAT he thought authorities should ban raw milk sales while the outbreak is underway.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Postpartum depression is a leading cause of maternal death, but its diagnosis and treatment is spotty at best, negligent at worst.
    • “Now San Diego-based start-up Dionysus Digital Health is pitching a blood test to check for the condition, even before symptoms appear. The company says it has pinpointed a gene linking a person’s moods more closely to hormonal changes. The test uses machine learning to compare epigenetics — how genes are expressed — in your blood sample with benchmarks developed during a decade of research into pregnant people who did and didn’t develop postpartum depression.
    • “Researchers at Dionysus’s academic partners, the Royal’s Institute of Mental Health Research and UVA Health, have published peer-reviewedpapers affirming their findings, and the company is partnering with the Department of Defense and the National Institutes of Health for clinical trials, with the eventual goal of making the $250 test widely available and covered by insurance.” 
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • Sleep apnea and low oxygen levels while sleeping are associated with epilepsy that first occurs after 60 years of age, known as late-onset epilepsy, according to a new study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and published in Sleep. The link was independent of other known risk factors for late-onset epilepsy and sleep apnea including hypertension and stroke. The findings may help to better understand the relationship between sleep disorders and late-onset epilepsy, as well as identify potential targets for treatment.
    • “There’s increasing evidence that late-onset epilepsy may be indicative of underlying vascular disease, or neurodegenerative disease, even potentially as a preclinical marker of neurodegenerative disease,” said Rebecca Gottesman, M.D., Ph.D., chief of the Stroke Branch at the NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), and an author on the study. “Compared to other age groups, older adults have the highest incidence of new cases of epilepsy – up to half of which have no clear cause. Sleep apnea is common among people with epilepsy, but the association is not well understood.”
  • and
    • “Researchers have discovered that the smooth muscle cells that line the arteries of people with atherosclerosis can change into new cell types and develop traits similar to cancer that worsen the disease. Atherosclerosis is characterized by a narrowing of arterial walls and can increase risk of coronary artery disease, stroke, peripheral artery disease, or kidney disorders. The findings, supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), could pave the way for the use of anti-cancer drugs to counteract the tumor-like mechanisms driving the buildup of plaque in the arteries, the major cause of cardiovascular disease.
    • “This discovery opens up a whole new dimension for our understanding about therapeutic strategies for the prevention and treatment of atherosclerosis,” said Ahmed Hasan, M.D., Ph.D., program director in the Division of Cardiovascular Sciences at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, part of NIH. “Previous research has suggested that atherosclerosis and cancer may share some similarities, but this association has not been fully described until now.”
  • The Wall Street Journal tells us,
    • “An emerging field of research called chrononutrition indicates that choosing the right foods and meal times may improve our sleep. Some key findings: Eat dinner early. Keep consistent schedules. And, yes, drink milk.
    • You already know that fruits, veggies and lean protein are good for your health. But they can boost your sleep, too. These foods are the basis for the Mediterranean diet, which research shows may improve sleep quality, reduce sleep disturbances and boost sleep efficiency—the amount of time you spend asleep when you are in bed.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Walmart is closing its network of health clinics after failing to make them profitable, in a major setback for the retail giant’s push into healthcare.”Walmart is closing its network of health clinics after failing to make them profitable, in a major setback for the retail giant’s push into healthcare.
    • “Walmart Health launched as a one-store pilot in Georgia in 2019, and has since grown to 51 centers in five states, along with a virtual care offering. Yet the network has shown recent signs of trouble: Earlier this month, Walmart decelerated its expansion plans for the centers, which offer inexpensive, fixed-cost medical services like primary and dental care.
    • “Walmart is now closing the clinics entirely due to a challenging reimbursement environment and escalating operating costs resulting in a lack of profitability, according to a Tuesday press release. * * *
    • “In the end of Walmart Health illustrates that size alone is not a recipe for success in providing health services, according to Forrester’s Trzcinski. Walmart is the largest retailer in the U.S., with revenue of $648 billion in its most recent fiscal year.
    • “Despite building out the clinics, Walmart didn’t invest in driving adoption, including through digital health and customer experience, Trzcinski said. That caused it to fall behind other retailers that are surging ahead, such as Amazon and CVS.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Eli Lilly raised its revenue forecast for the year by $2 billion as sales of its GLP-1 medicines for diabetes and obesity continue to climb rapidly amid surging demand.
    • “The Indianapolis drugmaker currently can’t make its drugs Mounjaro and Zepbound fast enough, indicating in an earnings statement Tuesday that sales growth will “primarily be a function of the quantity the company can produce and ship.”
    • “Lilly is expanding manufacturing and expects greater capacity in the second half of the year. Revenue from Mounjaro, which is sold for diabetes, totaled $1.8 billion in the first quarter, while Zepbound revenue hit $517 million in its first full quarter on the U.S. market as an obesity treatment.”
  • and
    • “Lilly and Novo [Nordisk] aim to maintain their current hold on the market. Both companies are testing several experimental drugs with the goal of launching oral versions or even more effective treatments than their current products.
    • “Novo is already close to completing a Phase 3 trial program testing an oral form of Wegovy. It also has in late-stage development a combination of Wegovy with a compound called cagrilintide that acts on a gut hormone called amylin.
    • “Lilly has two drugs in Phase 3: an oral GLP-1 dubbed orforglipron that is approaching key data readouts next year and an injectable treatment called retatrutide that stimulates GLP-1, GIP and a third hormone known as glucagon. Results in obesity are due in 2026.
    • “Lilly has four experimental drugs in Phase 1 or 2, while Novo has five.
    • “[Lilly and Novo] cover all the bases,” said Clive Meanwell, CEO of Metsera, a newly launched startup that has two obesity drugs in clinical testing. “Our belief is it’s going to be a portfolio play, with mix and match, with different clinical circumstances and different markets.”
    • The article discusses similar projects from other companies.
  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “CMS and the NCQA are extending the quality data submission deadline for health plans by two weeks due to “extraordinary circumstances” caused by the cyberattack on Change Healthcare in late February.
    • “Payers will now have until 5pm Eastern Time on June 28 to report their performance on Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) measures to the two organizations, according to an April 29 memo from CMS. * * *
    • “The Change Healthcare cyberattack has created unprecedented challenges to healthcare organizations across the country,” Eric Schneider, MD, EVP, Quality Measurement and Research Group at NCQA, said in a statement to Becker’s. “This disruptive incident, falling in the middle of the substantial effort and commitment required for quality reporting efforts, has significantly strained resources. Recognizing these extraordinary circumstances and in alignment with CMS, we are granting a deadline extension for the submission of HEDIS Measurement Year 2023 results.” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • MedTech Dive reports
    • “The Food and Drug Administration released a final rule on Mondaystrengthening its authority over laboratory developed tests (LDTs), advancing a policy that has drawn fierce opposition from healthcare industry groups.
    • “The rule amends agency regulations to make explicit that in vitro diagnostics are devices under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, including when the manufacturer of the IVD is a laboratory.
    • “The FDA said it will phase out its enforcement discretion approach for LDTs so that in vitro diagnostics manufactured by a laboratory will generally fall under the same enforcement policy as other tests.”
  • HHS’s Office for Civil Rights issued frequently asked questions about the final ACA Section 1557 rule issued on Friday.
  • Bloomberg lets us know,
    • “The US Department of Labor has rescinded a Trump-era rule that made it easier for small businesses and self-employed people to use cheaper association health plans that don’t comply with all the requirements of the Affordable Care Act. 
    • “The final Biden rule (RIN:1210-AC16) on association health plans was issued by the DOL’s Employee Benefits Security Administration Monday after clearing White House review, and will take effect 60 days after its April 30 publication in the Federal Register.”
  • HHS announced,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), announced $105 million in funding to support more than 100 community-based organizations working to improve maternal and infant health. HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson highlighted the news during a visit to Southside Medical Center, a new Healthy Start awardee, in Atlanta, Georgia. Georgia is the second stop on HRSA’s national Enhancing Maternal Health Initiative tour. Today’s Healthy Start funding announcement will support the health care and social needs of moms and babies in high need communities to help improve community health and tackle the unacceptable disparities in maternal and infant health outcomes. * * *
    • “For the full list of award recipients, visit the Healthy Start awards page.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “After decreasing for 27 years, the number of U.S. residents with tuberculosis has increased every year since 2020, with 9,615 cases recorded last year in the 50 states and D.C., according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”After decreasing for 27 years, the number of U.S. residents with tuberculosis has increased every year since 2020, with 9,615 cases recorded last year in the 50 states and D.C., according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “The finding was based on data from the agency’s National Tuberculosis Surveillance System, which collects information from state and local health departments.
    • Caused by bacteria, tuberculosis usually attacks the lungs and spreads easily from person to person through the air. People who have the disease can spread the bacteria when they cough, sneeze or simply talk. * * *
    • “The latest numbers reflect a 16 percent increase in U.S. tuberculosis cases from 2022 to 2023, and the highest number of TB cases in the country since 2013, the CDC report says. The tally also reflects increases in all age groups and among people born in the United States as well as those born elsewhere, although the report found a larger increase among people born outside the United States vs. U.S.-born individuals (18 percent vs. 9 percent).
    • “Despite the recent increases, the CDC report describes the incidence of TB in the United States as “among the lowest in the world.”
  • The New York Times tells us,
    • “Physical fitness among children and adolescents may protect against developing depressive symptoms, anxiety and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, according to a study published on Monday in JAMA Pediatrics.
    • “The study also found that better performance in cardiovascular activities, strength and muscular endurance were each associated with greater protection against such mental health conditions. The researchers deemed this linkage “dose-dependent”, suggesting that a child or adolescent who is more fit may be accordingly less likely to experience the onset of a mental health disorder.”
  • The CDC updated its online guidance about action to fight antimicrobial resistance.
    • Antimicrobial resistance happens when germs like bacteria and fungi develop the ability to defeat the drugs designed to kill them. That means the germs are not killed and continue to grow. Antimicrobial resistance has been found in every U.S. state and country. Addressing this threat requires continued aggressive action to:
      • Prevent infections in the first place
      • Improve antibiotic and antifungal use to slow the development of resistance
      • Stop the spread of resistance when it does develop
    • We all have a role to play, from travelers, animal owners, and care givers to patients and healthcare providers. Find out how you can help.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Inpatient volume growth across HCA Healthcare’s entire hospital portfolio and other steady gains on payer mix, length of stay and operating expenses have set the large chain on a strong trajectory for 2024, executives told investors Friday.
    • “The 188-hospital for-profit reported first-quarter net income of $1.59 billion ($5.93 per diluted share) and $17.34 billion in revenues.
    • “Those numbers are up from the $1.36 billion ($4.85 per diluted share) and $15.59 billion of the same period last year, and squarely ahead of consensus estimates of $5.09 earnings per share and $16.82 billion in revenues.”
  • and
    • “Teladoc acting CEO Mala Murthy sought to assure investors Thursday that the virtual care giant is poised for future growth even as it faces pressure in a saturated telehealth market.
    • “Following the abrupt departure of longtime CEO Jason Gorevic earlier this month, Teladoc is focused on boosting its top- and bottom-line performance as its shares have come under pressure, down more than 40% year-to-date.
    • “Teladoc is in a time of transition. And, as part of this evolution, the board of directors decided that it was time to look for a new leader for our company, someone to help us write the next chapter in our growth story,” Murthy, also Teladoc’s chief financial officer, said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call Thursday.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Increased reliance on imaging for diagnosis and efficient patient care mixed with higher volumes of patients has left hospitals scrambling to meet demand with the few radiologists they have.
    • “There are over 1,400 vacant radiologist positions posted on the American College of Radiology’s job board, according to a bulletin posted on its website. The total number of active radiology and diagnostic radiology physicians has dropped by 1% between 2007 and 2021, but the number of people in the U.S. per active physician in radiology grew nearly 10%, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. An increase in the Medicare population and a declining number of people with health insurance adds to the problem.”
  • and
    • Demand for Type 2 diabetes drug Ozempic is high across the U.S., but interest varies by state, according to research conducted by Bison Pharmacy
    • Bison Pharmacy, a Canadian-based prescription referral service, analyzed monthly volume data on Google searches for “Ozempic” and “Ozempic price” in each state. 
    • New York is at the top of the list and Mississippi is on the bottom.