Tuesday report

Tuesday report

From Washington, DC

  • The Washington Post reports on the continuing shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security.
  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “Agencies are closing in on an opportunity to hire talent for temporary technology jobs, after the Office of Personnel Management released its first two shared certificates on Tuesday for the Trump administration’s “Tech Force” program.
    • “Lists of eligible candidates for software engineering and data engineering positions are now available for participating agencies to review and potentially hire, an OPM spokesperson confirmed to Federal News Network. If hired, selected employees would move into two-year roles to temporarily work on technology-related initiatives.
    • “Candidates who are listed on the new shared certificates have already passed three rounds of hiring evaluations, including a technical assessment, a resume review and a screening interview, said OPM Director Scott Kupor.”
    • “We hope to have several hundred people now who passed all three phases of that, where we will put them on a shared certificate, and then we will start to push that certificate out to all the participating agencies,” Kupor said during a March 5 event hosted by Federal News Network. “The agencies then have an opportunity, if they so choose, to do an additional round of interviews, if they want to make sure the person is the right fit for their organization.”
  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, or ARPA-H, launched a new program on Tuesday to support development of biosensors that can track multiple signals such as inflammation markers, hormones or drug levels within the body.
    • ‘The program, called Delphi, will focus on using electronic “chiplets,” with the goal of being able to “mix and match” features across wearables and ingestible sensors.
    • “The initiative comes as Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has emphasized a role for wearables in tracking health habits. Last year, the secretary said he wanted all Americans to use wearables, and the Food and Drug Administration’s device center launched a pilot that would allow the agency to waive premarket requirements for certain digital health devices while they collect real-world data under a Medicare program.”
  • Kevin Moss, writing in Federal News Network, points out special features of FEHB and PSHB plans.

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Fierce Pharma reports,
    • “About five months after U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. touted leucovorin as “an exciting therapy that may benefit large numbers of children who suffer from autism” during a White House press conference, the FDA has approved the decades-old drug for a rare genetic condition with “autistic features” that represents a small subset of autism patients.
    • “The FDA has approved GSK’s brand-name leucovorin calcium tablets, Wellcovorin, to treat cerebral folate deficiency (CFD) but only in patients who have a confirmed variant in the folate receptor 1 (FOLR1) gene.”
  • and
    • “Issues at a former Catalent plant now owned by Novo Nordisk have derailed another FDA application, with Incyte announcing Friday that the FDA handed over a complete response letter for its PD-1 inhibitor Zynyz as a first-line treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
    • “The rejection was not related to any efficacy or safety concerns but rather inspection findings at a fill-finish facility—specifically, the former Catalent plant in Bloomington, Indiana, which is now owned by Novo as part of Novo Holdings’ $16.5 billion acquisition of the CDMO in 2024.
    • “The setback comes more than a year after Incyte detailed a 25% reduction in the risk of death for a combination of Zynyz and chemotherapy versus chemo alone among patients with newly diagnosed metastatic NSCLC in the phase 3 Pod1um-304 trial.” * * *
    • “In a March 9 statement to Fierce Pharma, a Novo spokesperson said the company is “actively engaging with the agency to address its findings.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “Ipsen, a Paris-based drugmaker, is removing its cancer drug Tazverik (tazemetostat) from the U.S. market because of safety concerns. 
    • “An ongoing Tazverik clinical trial has reported adverse events of secondary hematologic malignancies — which are blood cancers — indicating “the risks may outweigh potential benefits for patients,” Ipsen said in a March 9 news release. 
    • “The FDA granted Tazverik accelerated approval in 2020. The drug is approved to treat epithelioid sarcoma, a rare, aggressive soft tissue cancer that affects a few hundred patients each year, and relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma, a form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
    • “The company said it is voluntarily withdrawing Tazverik in all indications.”

From the judicial front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “On March 8, a judge for the U.S. District Court in Connecticut approved a preliminary injunction against Aetna, ordering the insurer to alter its gender-affirming care policy for two plaintiffs.
    • “Several transgender women sued Aetna in 2024 over denied gender-affirming facial reconstructions. The complaint pointed to Aetna’s Clinical Policy Bulletin 0615, which outlines parameters for gender-affirming care.” * * *
    • “Under the preliminary injunction, Aetna must individualize coverage for Jamie Homnick, PhD, and Gennifer Herley, PhD, two of the plaintiffs. Both women lack access to this coverage and have been facing depressive symptoms due to gender dysphoria, a court document said.
    • “Aetna has a strong track record as a proud ally of the LGBTQ+ community and is committed to meeting the healthcare needs of all our members. As a third-party administrator for self-funded plan sponsors, our role is to administer benefits in accordance with the specific terms set forth by each plan,” Aetna said in a statement shared March 10 with Becker’s. 
    • “Many employer benefit plans may include customized coverage for gender-affirming procedures. We work closely with our plan sponsors to meet their unique needs and preferences while complying with all applicable regulations and legal requirements,” the statement continued. “We strongly disagree with the allegations in this lawsuit and will defend ourselves vigorously.” 
  • Here’s a link to the Leapfrog CEO Leah Binder’s statement about the Tenet Healthcare decision mentioned in yesterday’s post.
  • Per a Justice Department news release,
    • “The Department of Justice released today the first-ever Department-wide corporate enforcement policy for criminal matters, promoting uniformity, predictability, and fairness in how it pursues white-collar cases to protect the American people.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “South Plains, Texas, had long declared its measles outbreak over when in January wastewater testing picked up what Zachary Holbrooks called “a blip, a spike.”
    • “The testing found measles after months without traces of the virus, which by the 2025 West Texas outbreak’s end infected over 750 people, hospitalized nearly a hundred, and two children died.
    • “With samples sent to Baylor University weekly, subsequent testing hasn’t picked up further traces, said Holbrooks, executive director for the South Plains Public Health District. The goal is to “test long-term” and see “if anything shows up.”
    • “With the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reporting over 1,200 confirmed measles cases and 12 new outbreaks in 2026, states across the US are taking similar steps to those taken in West Texas to manage infections, mounting outreach strategies, easing access to vaccines, and more.
    • “Working against such efforts are low vaccination rates in pockets of states where misinformation and distrust of government spur outbreaks.
    • “Any state should be looking across its communities and identifying areas where the vaccination rates are lower than 95%. Those are the places that are very ripe for outbreaks,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of Brown University’s Pandemic Center.”
    • “Given 2025’s outbreak cycle, states should’ve been better prepared, Nuzzo said. Now, they’ll need to undertake “the very slow, laborious ground game of building trust” in communities to encourage vaccination.”
  • The latest issue of NIH’s Research Matters covers the following topics:
  • Healio relates
    • “Adults with type 2 diabetes who adhered to eight healthy lifestyle habits had a 60% lower risk for cardiovascular events than those who reported zero or one healthy lifestyle habits, researchers reported.
    • “In a prospective cohort study of adults with type 2 diabetes enrolled in the U.S. Veterans Affairs Million Veteran Program, researchers assessed the risk for major adverse CV events according to the number of self-reported healthy lifestyle habits for each participant. The risk for CV events declined with each additional lifestyle habit a person reported, and the findings were similar regardless of whether adults were using a GLP-1 receptor agonist.”
  • and
    • “Risks for cognitive impairment increased with more advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages. 
    • “Associations were strongest for higher urinary protein-to-creatinine ratio plus lower eGFR. ***
    • “Our findings suggest that measures of CKD severity may be relevant to consider in combination with known dementia risk factors, such as age or comorbid conditions,” [Tanika} Kelly [PH.D, MPH] told Healio. “Cognitive screenings should be considered if a patient or family member notice cognitive or behavioral changes.”
  • Health Day informs us,
    • “People think of aging as a steady decline, with seniors gradually losing their physical abilities and mental agility as the years wear on.
    • “But a new study suggests that seniors can – and often do – improve over time, with the right mindset.
    • “Nearly half of seniors 65 and older showed measurable improvement in their brain health, physical function or both over time, researchers reported in the journal Geriatrics.
    • “Many people equate aging with an inevitable and continuous loss of physical and cognitive abilities,” lead researcher Becca Levy, a professor of social and behavioral sciences at the Yale School of Public Health, said in a news release.
    • “What we found is that improvement in later life is not rare, it’s common, and it should be included in our understanding of the aging process,” Levy said.”
  • and
    • “Smoking weed, taking a hit of cocaine or popping some amphetamines can raise a person’s risk of stroke – even if they’re a younger adult.
    • “Coke and amphetamines can double or triple the risk of stroke for any adult, researchers reported in the International Journal of Stroke.
    • “Weed also increases stroke risk, but to a lesser extent, British researchers said.
    • “This is the most comprehensive analysis ever conducted on recreational drug use and stroke risk and provides compelling evidence that drugs like cocaine, amphetamines, and cannabis are causal risk factors for stroke,” lead researcher Megan Ritson said in a news release. She’s a postdoctoral research associate with the University of Cambridge.”
  • Cigna, writing in LinkedIn, discusses how employers can help improve the mental health of their male employees.
    • “Men face unique barriers to seeking mental health support, including stigma, societal expectations, and concerns about confidentiality at work.
    • “Untreated mental health conditions among men contribute to higher healthcare costs, absenteeism, and turnover.
    • “Employers that normalize mental health conversations, protect privacy, and offer tailored support men’s mental health can improve outcomes for employees and business performance.”
  • STAT News notes
    • “Several years ago, nephrologists attempted a first-of-its-kind effort: remove race from a key clinical algorithm, and attempt to undo the harms of the race-based equation for those who were still being negatively affected by it. 
    • “Until 2021, eGFR, which is used to measure kidney function, was inflated by around 16% to 21% for Black patients — which could mask severe kidney disease and delay urgently needed transplants. Not only was the equation phased out in 2022, but the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network mandated that transplant programs submit modifications for Black patients waiting for transplants. 
    • Several years ago, nephrologists attempted a first-of-its-kind effort: remove race from a key clinical algorithm, and attempt to undo the harms of the race-based equation for those who were still being negatively affected by it. 
    • Until 2021, eGFR, which is used to measure kidney function, was inflated by around 16% to 21% for Black patients — which could mask severe kidney disease and delay urgently needed transplants. Not only was the equation phased out in 2022, but the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network mandated that transplant programs submit modifications for Black patients waiting for transplants. 
  • and
    • “Vertex said Monday that a drug it secured as part of a $4.9 billion acquisitionsuccessfully reduced by half a key marker of a kidney disease known as IgA nephropathy.
    • “The results, from a Phase 3 trial, match data from a study of Otsuka’s recently approved Voyxact and are numerically superior to data released last year by Vera Therapeutics.
    • “All three companies have been racing to treat a disease that affects 330,000 people across the U.S. and Europe, according to Vertex’s estimates, putting many at risk of developing end-stage renal disease. Analysts have projected Vertex’s drug could eventually bring in $4 billion or more in annual sales.” 

From the HIMSS conference front,

  • Health Tech Magazine reports,
    • The HIMSS Global Health Conference and Exhibition is back in Las Vegas this year, with the tagline “Expert Insights, Exceptional Impact.” 
    • The annual conference kicks off Tuesday with an opening keynote from venture capital leader Jon McNeill (whose experience includes Tesla and Lyft) and Dr. John Halamka, the Dwight and Dian Diercks President of the Mayo Clinic Platform
    • Other notable keynote speakers throughout the week include Sumbul Ahmad Desai, vice president of health and fitness at Apple, on Wednesday; and Dr. Mehmet Oz, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, on Thursday (the final day of the conference). 
    • Before HIMSS 2026 began in full swing, Monday saw a day of preconference sessions organized around topics such as artificial intelligence in healthcarecybersecurityinteroperability and health information exchanges, among others. 
    • The AI in healthcare preconference track saw healthy attendance with a focus on tangible use cases and lessons on how to deploy AI into improved or better-integrated workflows.
  • Heathcare Dive digs into regulation of artificial intelligence issues.
  • MedCity News adds,
    • Verily and Samsung are teaming up to accelerate clinical research using wearable data, the companies announced Monday at the HIMSS conference in Las Vegas. 
    • “The companies are integrating user data from Samsung Galaxy smartwatches into Verily’s precision health platform, Verily Pre, so pharma companies and government agencies can run studies and monitor participants remotely.
    • “Researchers will be able to collect continuous health data from study participants wearing Samsung watches, including metrics such as heart rate, sleep and physical activity. The information will flow back into Verily’s data platform, allowing pharma companies and regulators to track patients’ health over time and quickly analyze real-world data.
    • “Consumer wearables are becoming “real, bonafide research-grade instruments,” according to Myoung Cha, Verily’s chief product officer.” 
  • In related news, “Ratnakar Lavu, chief digital information officer at Elevance Health, sat down with MobiHealthNews for an in-person interview to discuss the framework the health insurance company uses to validate and scale AI in healthcare.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Centene’s stock took a nosedive on Tuesday as the company’s top brass offered further color on the marketplace headwinds battering its performance.
    • “CEO Sarah London said during the Barclays Global Healthcare Conference that membership in its Affordable Care Act exchange plans was down to 3.6 million as of February, from 5.5 million at the end of 2025. She said the team expects that to decline further to about 3.5 million by the end of Q1.” * * *
    • “The company had braced for a likely downturn in enrollment following the expiry of the enhanced premium tax credits and the planned implementation of program integrity measures that proved controversial in the industry.” * * *
    • “Given that these shifts are driven in part by the end of the enhanced subsidies, London said that the member mix in the bronze tier does look different than in years past. Prior to the rollout of the enhanced subsidies in response to the pandemic, the bronze tier was largely made up of younger, healthier individuals.
    • “Now, the insurer is seeing people select a bronze plan because it’s a lower cost option to ensure they maintain coverage, even if they were previously in a silver or gold plan, she said.”
  • Modern Healthcare relates,
    • “Elevance Health is expanding [to California] a policy to penalize hospitals that refer patients to out-of-network providers. [The purposes of this sensible policy is to reduce No Surprises Act claims.}
    • “The insurance company has introduced the policy in at least 11 other states. 
    • “The American Hospital Association and Federation of American Hospitals have pushed back against the policy.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Private equity firms have become a major force in healthcare, investing more than $1 trillion over the last ten years, according to a recent report from New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights.
    • “The report, published March 10 and authored by Michael Goldhaber, examines how private equity’s investments have impacted patient care, hospital finances and medical access.
    • “There is a healthcare crisis in the United States. Costs are rising, driven by market consolidation, increased insurance premiums, escalating drug prices and other changes,” the report said. “Many hospitals and healthcare facilities are experiencing staffing shortages. These and other factors mean that the poorest people in the U.S. have worse health outcomes than those in other high-income countries, despite the high level of spending.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “Highly concentrated—and, by extension, less economically competitive—hospital markets are ubiquitous across the country and the norm in rural states Wyoming, North Dakota and South Dakota, according to a market analysis tool unveiled this week by Yale University’s recently launched Health Care Affordability Lab.
    • “Every hospital in those three states operates in a market deemed to be highly concentrated or even monopolistic based on their Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI), a metric used by the “Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) to determine when it should intervene in a deal on competitive grounds. 
    • “More broadly, the tool shows that 94% of the nation’s hospitals operate in markets with HHIs above 1,800, reflecting a highly concentrated market.” 
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Ugur Sahin and Özlem Türeci, who co-founded BioNTech and led its rise to prominence as a COVID-19 vaccine maker, are leaving the company to establish a new startup focused on mRNA technology. 
    • “BioNTech said Tuesday that Sahin and Türeci, who’ve been serving as CEO and Chief Medical Officer, respectively, will step down by the end of the year. Afterwards, they’ll steer a startup working on “next-generation mRNA innovations.” BioNTech will grant that unnamed biotech certain rights to its mRNA technology in exchange for a minority stake, but won’t provide ongoing capital support, the company said.
    • “BioNTech, meanwhile, will focus on advancing a late-stage portfolio that now includes several different cancer medicines. The company said its supervisory board has initiated a search to identify successors for Sahin and Türeci and ensure a “smooth transition.” It’ll provide more details on the partnership with the new startup once an official deal is signed. Paperwork should be completed by the end of the first half.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • Statista, a global data company that publishes insights for 170 industries, projects four cancer therapies will be among the top 10 best-selling pharmaceutical products in the U.S. this year. 
    • “The company projects Merck’s cancer drug Keytruda will earn $12.7 billion in U.S. revenue in 2026 — nearly twice that of the second top-selling medication, according to data shared March 9 with Becker’s
    • “[The article identifies] the medications Statista projects will be the 10 best-selling U.S. pharmaceutical products in 2026.”
  • Fierce Pharma notes,
    • “Sandoz has not minced words about the massive yet largely untapped opportunity biosimilar makers are presented with as dozens of branded medicines inch toward the patent cliff in the next decade. 
    • “Now, in an effort to fully capitalize on what the company recently referred to as a potential “‘golden decade’ of affordable medicines” after 2030, Sandoz is committing even further to its biosimilar business with plans to launch a dedicated unit that will operate separately from the company’s remaining small molecule generics division.”
    •  “The new biosimilar unit, focused on development, manufacturing and supply of copycat biologic drugs, will be led by Armin Metzger, most recently chief technical operations officer at fellow Swiss drugmaker Ferring Pharmaceuticals.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Medtronic said Tuesday it agreed to acquire neurovascular technology company Scientia Vascular for $550 million, with the potential for undisclosed milestone payments after the acquisition.
    • “Scientia’s neurovascular access devices are used to navigate the brain’s complex vasculature to treat conditions such as strokes and aneurysms.
    • “The Scientia proposal is Medtronic’s second deal of the year, after the company announced an acquisition of CathWorks for up to $585 million in February.”

Monday report

From Washington, DC

  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “Federal employees’ retirement applications are continuing to flood the Office of Personnel Management. In February, another 31,000 retirement claims entered the agency’s systems. That puts OPM’s Retirement Services center at yet another record high of pending applications — now reaching above 65,000 cases with pensions that are yet-to-be finalized. That’s an 88% increase since OPM’s inventory last October, when retirements from the deferred resignation program first began trickling in.” 
  • The Government Accountability Office posted a report titled “Private Dental and Vision Insurance: Market Concentration Varied Among States.”
    • “As in health insurance markets, people looking for dental or vision insurance may face a concentrated market—i.e., only a few companies to choose from. Consumer choice may also be affected by “vertical integration”—e.g., when a vision insurance company owns the ophthalmologist’s practice and the company that makes glasses frames and lenses.
    • “Dental and vision insurance market concentration varied across states. Little research is available that shows the effects of concentration and vertical integration in these markets. Groups representing dental and vision care insurers, providers, and consumers shared varying opinions on potential effects.”
  • The American Hospital Association New tells us,
    • “March 8-14 marks Patient Safety Awareness Week. The AHA has several resources including podcasts, videos and reports that show how AHA members are advancing patient safety through innovative programs and technologies. LEARN MORE” 
  • Beckers Clinical Leadership adds,
    • “The use of artificial intelligence in diagnosis, rural healthcare access and federal funding cuts are among the most pressing patient safety concerns facing healthcare organizations in 2026, according to a new report from the Emergency Care Research Institute and the Institute for Safe Medication Practices.” * * *
    • “Here are the 10 most pressing patient safety challenges in 2026, per the report:
      • “Navigating the AI diagnostic dilemma
      • “Reduced access to rural healthcare increases health risks and disparities
      • “Increasing rates of preventable acute diseases in communities and healthcare settings 
      • “Effects of federal funding cuts on healthcare operations and patient safety 
      • “Lack of recognition and reporting of harm events
      • “Structural and systemic barriers inhibit equitable pain management for women
      • “Persistent workforce shortages continue to burden staff and restrict access to care 
      • “The impact on system improvement when a culture of blame hinders learning
      • “Emergency department boarding contributes to worse patient outcomes 
      • “Persistent gaps in manufacturer packaging and labeling design continue to undermine medication safety efforts.   

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Fierce Pharma reports,
    • “The FDA is doubling down on its goal to increase biosimilar drug availability in the U.S. with a fresh draft guidance proposing more changes to streamline development of the cheaper biologic copies. 
    • “The newly proposed guidance (PDF) focuses on clinical pharmacokinetic (PK) testing, a core aspect of biosimilar drug testing that serves as a key comparative test to weigh a proposed biosimilar against the approved product it references.
    • “In its draft guidance, the FDA offers recommendations for streamlining unnecessary PK testing when “scientifically justified,” a change that could save biosimilar drugmakers up to 50% of their PK study costs, which equates to about $20 million, the agency said in a press release.
  • and
    • “In a dizzying span of seven months in 2022, Bristol Myers Squibb gained FDA approval for three new products, touting each with the potential to achieve $4 billion in peak sales. 
    • “While multiple myeloma drug Opdualag and cardiomyopathy treatment Camzyos became blockbusters last year, psoriasis med Sotyktu wasn’t close.
    • “With a new FDA nod in hand for Sotyktu, however, BMS can reach more patients with the oral med, which was acquired in the drugmaker’s 2019 buyout of Celgene for $74 billion.
    • “The U.S. regulator has endorsed Sotyktu as a treatment for adults with active psoriatic arthritis. It becomes the first drug in its class as a selective allosteric tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor to be approved in the indication. The thumbs up comes on top of Sotyktu’s original FDA approval for moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis.”

From the judicial front,

  • The AHA News reports,
    • “The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida March 6 ruled in favor of five Florida hospitals in a case challenging the methodology used by the Leapfrog Group regarding hospital safety ratings. In particular, the court determined that Leapfrog’s methodology violated Florida’s unfair and deceptive business practices law. “Leapfrog’s change in methodology has no scientific basis, unfairly penalizes non-participating hospitals, and misrepresents hospital safety,” Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks wrote. The court’s injunction requires Leapfrog to cease assigning safety grades to hospitals, remove grades assigned to the plaintiff hospitals in 2024 and 2025, and issue corrective disclosures, along with other actions.”
  • Per a Justice Department news release,
    • “A Texas man was sentenced Friday to 90 months in prison for his role in a $59.9 million conspiracy to pay kickbacks and submit claims for medically unnecessary durable medical equipment (DME) to Medicare.
    • “According to court documents, Patrick Cassells, 65, of Fulshear, Texas, owned and operated three DME companies and concealed his role in one of those companies by falsely identifying another individual as the sole owner and manager in a Medicare enrollment application. Cassells paid illegal kickbacks to co-conspirators who sent him signed doctors’ orders and other paperwork necessary to bill Medicare for orthotic braces such as knee, back, shoulder and wrist braces. The kickbacks were disguised by referring to the doctors’ orders as “leads” and the services provided as “marketing.” Based on these orders, which were issued without doctors examining or treating the patients, Cassells submitted claims to Medicare that falsely represented that the braces were medically necessary. In total, through the three companies, Cassells caused over $59.9 million in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare, for which Medicare paid over $27 million. Cassells used proceeds of the fraud to purchase personal vehicles and vehicles that he intended to export to Nigeria.
    • “In June 2024, Cassells pleaded guilty in the Southern District of Texas to one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud.
    • “In addition to the prison sentence, Cassells was ordered to pay $25,402,614.97 in restitution and forfeiture, and to forfeit four vehicles and three properties in the Houston area.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Hill reports
    • “New data showed childhood obesity has hit a record high in recent years, while federal changes such as cuts to food assistance programs and a revamped food pyramid reignite debates over how to handle the issue.  
    • “A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report late last month showed more than 1 in 5 U.S. children and teenagers were obese between 2021 to 2023, compared to only 5.2 percent between 1971-1974. The number of children with severe obesity in recent years has hit 7 percent.
    • “School meals, physical activity and weight loss drugs have all become talking points in the problem, which is a major issue in the “Make America Healthy Again” movement associated with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
    • “Experts point to school meals and increased activity as key ways to address childhood obesity, with research showing school meals are the healthiest eating options some students have all day.  
    • “They’re noting that this increase in obesity occurred during COVID-19 and that jump in childhood obesity happened during the years when millions of kids lost access to reliable school meals. So, when schools closed for virtual learning, children lost a critical source of daily nutrition,” said Erin Hysom, senior child nutrition policy analyst on the Child Nutrition Programs and Policy team for the Food Research & Action Center.” 
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about multiple sclerosis.
  • Brown & Brown released a guide for employers on how to support women’s heart health.
  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “Infection with Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) is the cause of Kaposi sarcoma, a type of cancer where lesions grow on the skin and other parts of the body.
    • “This CDC report detailed 46 cases of suspected donor-derived KSHV-related complications among 153 transplant recipients from 2021-2025, roughly five times the number of cases reported from 2016-2020.
    • “Of the 74 transplant recipients identified as having a KSHV infection, 61% developed Kaposi sarcoma.” * * *
    • “A key challenge is the lack of an FDA-approved serology assay to screen for KSHV in donors and recipients. The existing assay for clinical testing is operator-dependent and not easy to scale, Durand noted. A molecular PCR-based assay could theoretically monitor transplant recipients for infection, she added, “but we don’t know who to monitor, how often to monitor, nor what to do with a positive test.”
    • “Despite the challenges, Durand recommended that clinicians keep the KSHV diagnosis in mind, particularly in lung and liver recipients who present with signs and symptoms that might be explained by the virus.”
  • and in better news,
    • “Along with the use of AI, routine screening mammograms could identify women at higher risk of cardiovascular disease, a retrospective cohort study suggested.
    • “A greater amount of AI-calculated breast arterial calcification on imaging was associated with an increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events.
    • “These findings indicate an opportunity to use routine mammograms for early cardiovascular risk stratification without additional radiation exposure.”
  • Health Day tells us,
    • “Telemedicine has not led to a significant rise in new mental health patients from rural or underserved communities
    • ‘High use of virtual visits led to a 3.6% decrease in the total number of new patients seen by therapists
    • “State licensing laws are likely the barrier to reaching patients across state lines.”
  • Genetic Engineering and BioTechnology News informs us,
    • “Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have developed genetically altered astrocytes that express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) as a promising immunotherapy system capable of clearing accumulations of amyloid-β (Aβ)—a hallmark pathological feature of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)—in the brains of mice.
    • “Recently approved anti-Aβ antibody therapies have shown moderate success in slowing AD progression. However, these treatments require large doses, repeated administration, and are associated with potentially serious side effects.
    • “To reduce the frequency of treatment and potentially improve the efficacy of anti-amyloid therapy, scientists headed by Marco Colonna, MD, the Robert Rock Belliveau, MD, professor of pathology at WashU Medicine engineered CAR-expressing astrocytes—CAR-As, as a new type of cellular immunotherapy. Their tests in mice showed that a single injection of the CAR-A treatment prevented amyloid plaques from developing when given before plaques start to form. A single treatment in animals that had already developed plaques also cut the amount of amyloid plaques in half.
    • “This study marks the first successful attempt at engineering astrocytes to specifically target and remove amyloid beta plaques in the brains of mice with Alzheimer’s disease,” said Colonna. “Although more work needs to be done to optimize the approach and address potential side effects, these results open up an exciting new opportunity to develop CAR-astrocytes into an immunotherapy for neurodegenerative diseases and even brain tumors.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “Xenon Pharmaceuticals said Monday that its treatment for a common type of seizure disorder significantly reduced the frequency of those seizures compared to a placebo — achieving the main goal of a Phase 3 clinical trial. 
    • “The new study results also exceeded the treatment effect reported in the company’s previous mid-stage study. 
    • Xenon said it expects to seek the approval of its drug, called azetukalner, with the Food and Drug Administration in the third quarter. 
    • “In the Phase 3 study, a 25 mg dose of azetukalner reduced the frequency of seizures over a month by 53% compared to 10% in the placebo arm. The difference, just under 43 percentage points, was statistically significant. Participants were treated for 12 weeks.
    • “A 15 mg dose of azetukalner also reduced seizure frequency more than placebo with statistical significance.” 
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb said Monday that a regimen including its experimental protein-degrading drug mezigdomide produced positive results in a late-stage trial of patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.
    • “Investigators found that a combination of mezigdomide and two other standard myeloma therapies was associated with a “statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement” in progression-free survival when compared to treatment with those two other drugs. Bristol didn’t provide specifics, but said that safety findings were “consistent” with the known profile of mezigdomide and the other components of the regimen.
    • “Mezigdomide is one of several protein-degrading therapies that Bristol Myers acquired in 2019 buyout of Celgene and sees as successors to blood cancer drugs Revlimid and Pomalyst. Another, iberdomide, hit one of its primary goals in a Phase 3 study late last year and is now under review by the Food and Drug Administration.”
  • and
    • “Roche’s experimental drug giredestrant missed the main goal of a Phase 3 trial testing it as an initial treatment for breast cancer, the company said Monday. A combination of the therapy and Pfizer’s Ibrance failed to delay progression or death compared to Ibrance and hormone treatment.
    • “The data is a blow to the Swiss drugmaker’s ambitions for giredestrant, which is already under Food and Drug Administration review in people whose breast cancer has progressed and succeeded in staving off relapses after surgery.
    • “The trial’s failure will also likely reinforce doubts about the commercial potential of drugs in giredestrant’s class, called oral SERDs. The two approved drugs in the class, Menarini’s Orserdu and Eli Lilly’s Inluriyo, have so far only been approved for people whose breast cancer carries a certain mutation.”

From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,

  • Modern Healthcare announced its Leading Women 2026. Congrats to them.
  • Fierce Healthcare announced its Fierce 15 healthcare companies.
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Novo Nordisk will begin offering its popular obesity drugs on Hims & Hers’ telehealth platform, ending a messy dispute that resulted in a lawsuit and a crackdown by U.S. drug regulators. 
    • “Under a deal announced Monday, Hims will provide access to Novo’s GLP-1 medicines — the diabetes drug Ozempic and the injectable and pill forms of the weight loss therapy Wegovy — to U.S. consumers at the same prices as other telehealth firms. Hims will no longer promote “compounded” versions of GLP-1 drugs on its website or in advertisements, and will give existing patients the chance to switch to “FDA-approved alternatives,” according to a statement from Novo. 
    • “Novo will, as a result, dismiss its patent infringement lawsuit against Hims while “reserving the right to refile in the future.” News of the deal was first reported by Bloomberg.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • “Amazon Pharmacy has added Eli Lilly’s Zepbound KwikPen in the 2.5-mg starter dose for $299 per month through its cash-pay model.
    • “Zepbound is a multidose injectable medication approved for chronic weight management and, more recently, moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea. With a valid prescription, Amazon customers can order the KwikPen online for home delivery, including same-day delivery in nearly 3,000 cities and towns, according to a March 9 news release. That reach is expected to grow to 4,500 locations by the end of 2026.
    • “Amazon Pharmacy has supplied GLP-1 medications since 2021 and works with partners including LillyDirect, WeightWatchers, UpScriptHealth and Noom. To date, the company said, its platform has saved customers “more than $200 million,” with GLP-1s representing the largest share of savings, according to the release.”
  • and
    • “New York City-based NewYork-Presbyterian is beginning to see early signals from its hospital-at-home program, which launched in November 2025 as health systems across the country continue testing whether acute-level hospital care can be delivered safely in patients’ homes.
    • “The model allows certain patients who would otherwise require inpatient admission to receive hospital-level treatment at home through a combination of in-person nursing visits, remote patient monitoring and virtual physician oversight. Programs like these expanded rapidly during the COVID-19 pandemic under a federal waiver that allowed hospitals to bill Medicare for hospital-at-home services.
    • “Although the waiver was extended until 2030, many health systems are still evaluating whether the care model can deliver consistent outcomes and operational reliability outside traditional hospital walls.
    • “At NewYork-Presbyterian, early data has been encouraging.”
  • Per a Blue Cross news release,
    •  “New research from the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) and its data analytics partner Blue Health Intelligence® (BHI®) suggests that the growing use of AI in hospital billing is driving higher health care costs by increasing the number and severity of diagnoses billed without any record of the expected treatment.
    • “Analyzing de-identified claims data from tens of thousands of maternity admissions nationwide, researchers found a sharp increase in cases coded for acute posthemorrhagic anemia, a serious condition that typically requires interventions such as blood transfusions. However, many patients coded with the diagnosis never received those treatments.
    • “Something is disconnected,” said Dr. Razia Hashmi, BCBSA’s vice president of Clinical Affairs. “Among hospitals showing the fastest rise in diagnoses of post-partum anemia, the rise in patients coded with this condition wasn’t paired with the level of care we would have expected, and the patterns we’re seeing point to AI‑enabled coding.”
    • “The cost impact is significant, reaching approximately $2.3 billion in spending:
      • “Researchers estimate that roughly $663 million in inpatient spending and at least $1.67 billion in outpatient spending may be tied to more aggressive, AI-enabled coding practices nationwide.”
  • Healthexec shares “four points about healthcare AI that notable experts are emphasizing in the public square.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Agilent Technologies said Monday it agreed to acquire Biocare Medical for $950 million in cash to expand its pathology portfolio.
    • “Biocare’s antibody, reagent and instrument business complements Agilent’s offerings in clinical and research pathology and includes immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, Agilent said. 
    • “Since 2021, Biocare has generated annual double-digit revenue and profit growth. Revenue exceeded $90 million in 2025. The laboratory instruments and services provider is buying Biocare from an investor group led by Excellere Partners and GHO Capital Partners.”
  • and
    • “Zimmer Biomet shared data on its smart knee implant at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons conference on Wednesday.
    • “The company found that patients who used its Persona IQ implant with a care management platform had better outcomes a year after surgery than people with a traditional knee implant. 
    • “Mike Anderson, Zimmer’s clinical strategy associate director, said the results of the analysis showed that the company’s technology was associated with lower rates of revision surgery and periprosthetic joint infection, less use of opioids, and fewer visits to urgent care and physical therapy.” 

Friday report

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “The U.S. Postal Service will run out of cash within a year unless Congress lifts a decades-old cap and allows the agency to borrow more money, the new postmaster general warned in an interview.
    • “If it doesn’t, the Postal Service might not be able to pay its employees or vendors by February 2027, with potentially dire consequences for mail delivery, Postmaster General David Steiner told The Associated Press.
    • “How long are employees going to work and vendors going to show up if we’re not paying them?” Steiner said in an interview on Wednesday.
    • “The postmaster general is scheduled to testify before Congress later this month about the Postal Service’s financial struggles and the need to change longstanding rules and regulations that he considers burdensome. He singled out the $15 billion cap on borrowing that has been in place since 1990.”
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), a division within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), today announced $69.1 million in funding opportunities for three grant programs: the Children’s Mental Health Initiative (CMHI), Implementing Zero Suicide in Health Systems (Zero Suicide) and Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT).
    • “Last month, I launched a comprehensive plan to strengthen prevention, expand treatment, and advance President Trump’s Great American Recovery Initiative,” said U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “These grants will directly address the root causes of addiction — including homelessness and serious mental illness — and strengthen community safety by expanding treatment that prioritizes recovery, stability, and self-sufficiency.”
    • “Recovery is possible, and these investments help communities reach people earlier with the support and treatment that can change lives,” said Senior Advisor for Addiction Recovery Kathryn Burgum. “By expanding access to evidence-based mental health services and strengthening community partnerships, we are helping more Americans find a path to healing and stability.”
  • STAT News adds in an editorial piece,
    • “In a political moment defined by division, it is telling that former Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D) and health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are attempting to find common ground on on one issue: the urgent need to take mental health and addiction seriously as national priorities.” * * *
    • “The urgency for our nation’s leaders to act is underscored by sobering data. Suicide remains one of the leading causes of death for young people. Anxiety and depression among adolescents have risen sharply over the past decade. Alcohol-related deaths continue to climb while overdose deaths remain high, particularly in communities already facing economic and health disparities. The economic toll of mental illness and addiction now reaches hundreds of billions of dollars annually — costs borne by families, employers, health systems, and taxpayers.
    • “In the discussion about this crisis, one fact is routinely overlooked: These conditions are often preventable in the first place. If the health secretary is serious about making America healthier, preventing behavioral health disorders is one place to start.”
  • Earlier this week, Blue Shield of California Paul Markovich and others launched a healthcare political movement called Worthy. Check it out.
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Just over 56 million people are enrolled in Medicare Part D, with the share of those securing coverage through Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug (MAPD) plans growing alongside the overall program.
    • “As of 2026, 24.9 million people were enrolled in standalone Part D plans, according to a new analysis from KFF, while 31.4 million were in MAPD plans. By comparison, overall enrollment in 2006 was just 21.8 million, with 15.8 million of those individuals with just Part D coverage.
    • “The data for 2026 do reflect slight growth year over year in the number of people with standalone Part D, as 23.2 million were enrolled in just the prescription drug coverage for 2025.
    • “The report found that enrollment in non-group MAPD plans has steadily risen over the past several years, while sign-ups for non-group standalone prescription coverage has plateaued.
    • “Meanwhile, it’s the opposite story in employer group Medicare, according to the report. Enrollment in employer group MAPD plans fell from 3.9 million to 2.7 million between 2025 and 2026, while sign-ups for group Part D plans rose from 5.1 million to 6.3 million.
    • “This marks the first time enrollment in employer group MAPD coverage has declined, the KFF researchers said.
    • “The researchers note that this shift may be in response to the Part D premium stabilization program, instituted last year, which is applicable only in standalone prescription plans and not MA plans. In employer Part D plans, the program would afford $10 per member per month in additional subsidies.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration’s controversial vaccines chief is leaving the agency.
    • “Dr. Vinay Prasad, who has led the FDA’s vaccines and biotech drugs division, will depart at the end of April, FDA Commissioner Marty Makary said Friday. Federal health officials are searching for his replacement, Makary said.”
  • Per an FDA press release,
    • “Earlier this week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration held a meeting with several states to discuss the section 804 importation program (SIP), which allows states and Indian tribes to import certain prescription drugs from Canada to significantly reduce the cost of these drugs to the American consumer. The gathering was the latest step toward the FDA’s implementation of President’s Trump’s executive order on lowering drug prices. 
    • “The meeting provided a forum to exchange information, with the goal of making it easier for states that have expressed interest in the program to obtain authorization without sacrificing safety or quality. Representatives from HHS and the National Academy for State Health Policy also participated.
    • “We are committed to lowering prescription drug prices for Americans, building on recent MFN wins,” said FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., M.P.H. “We’re moving forward to implement the president’s executive order as we continue the crucial work of helping states and Indian tribes import reduced cost prescription drugs, while protecting public health and safety.” * * *
    • “Presentations from yesterday’s meeting are available for download at: Section 804 Importation Program Policies and Authorizations.”
  • The American Hospital Association News points out,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration March 5 issued a request for information seeking public comments on potential new standards for in-home opioid disposal products. The FDA said it is considering whether to require opioid sponsors to make in-home disposal systems available through dispensers. Comments are due April 6.”
  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has approved a regimen involving Johnson & Johnson’s antibody drugs Tecvayli and Darzalex for relapsed multiple myeloma less than three months after the drugmaker presented study data suggesting the combination could have curative potential.   
    • “The regulator reviewed the drug under its new “national priority voucher” program, which it used “proactively” following J&J’s release of the findings at the American Society of Hematology meeting. The approval issued Thursday was the third under that program, following that of an older antibiotic and a lung cancer treatment from Boehringer Ingelheim. The review took a total of 55 days, according to the FDA.
    • “The decision also converts Tecvayli’s authorization from a conditional, “accelerated” approval to full clearance that’s based on its ability to improve survival in early disease.”
  • Cardiovascular Business informs us,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is sharing additional information about a series of recalls for certain electrophysiology (EP) and ultrasound catheters from Medline Industries. The agency emphasized that these devices should be destroyed immediately as opposed to being set to the side or returned to the manufacturer.
    • “Back in February, Medline Industries recalled several reprocessed catheters after discovering that they may contain small traces of residual material that could harm a patient. The catheters were originally made by a variety of vendors, but Medline Industries reprocessed the devices and then sold them again. Reprocessing single-use devices is a central component of the company’s business model, and it estimates this diverts more than 1 million pounds of waste from landfills each year. 
    • “Initial details about these recalls first appeared in an FDA database in February. However, this new advisory is the first time the agency has warned the public about these concerns.”

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “A coalition of federal employee unions and other employee advocacy groups this week renewed their effort to block the implementation of President Trump’s plan to convert tens of thousands of federal workers into at-will employees who can be fired for virtually any reason, arguing that Trump exceeded his authority and violated federal law in advancing the policy.
    • “On Trump’s first day back in office last year, he signed an executive order reviving Schedule F, the abortive 2020 proposal to move feds in “policy-related” positions out of the competitive service and stripping them of most civil service protections, and renaming it “Schedule Policy/Career.” Final regulations implementing the policy are set to take effect next week, after which Trump is expected to sign an additional executive order formally converting the first tranche of positions into the new job category. Officials have estimated around 50,000 employees will be targeted for conversion.
    • “On Wednesday, the American Federation of Government Employees, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the AFL-CIO, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and Democracy Forward filed an amended complaint in their lawsuit challenging Schedule Policy/Career, which began in January 2025 in the U.S. District Court for Maryland, incorporating new details that arose in the 14 months that the administration has spent preparing to launch the new excepted service job category.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “RSV activity started later than expected in most regions of the United States, though severity is not higher compared with recent seasons. This atypical season indicates that higher levels of RSV activity may continue into April in many regions. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations for RSV are highest among infants and children less than 4 years old. Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated nationally. COVID-19 activity is decreasing nationally but remains elevated in some areas of the country.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity is decreasing nationally but remains elevated in some areas of the country.
    • “Influenza
      • “Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated nationally. Influenza A activity is decreasing in most areas of the country while trends in influenza B activity vary by region.
      • “Additional information about current influenza activity can be found at: Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report | CDC
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity has started later than expected in most regions of the United States, though severity is not higher compared with recent seasons. This atypical season indicates that higher levels of RSV activity may continue into April in many regions. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations for RSV are highest among infants and children less than 4 years old.
    • “Vaccination
      • “RSV is a leading cause of hospitalization among U.S. babies.
      • “To help keep babies safe from severe RSV, babies younger than 8 months of age should get protection in their first RSV season (which usually starts in the fall) in one of these ways:
        • “The pregnant mother gets the RSV vaccine during pregnancy, or
        • “The baby gets an RSV antibody (nirsevimab or clesrovimab) just before the start of the RSV season or soon after birth, if born during the season.
      • “A CDC report showed that these protections are working. During the 2024–25 RSV season, infant RSV hospitalization rates were reduced by up to half compared to rates during seasons before when RSV prevention products were available.”
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP relates,
    • “Children under two years of age hospitalized for COVID-19 are more likely to die or become seriously ill than babies with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), according to a study  published this week in Open Forum Infectious Diseases
    • “Babies can become sick and die from both respiratory viruses, even if they were healthy before becoming infected, according to the study, which was led by researchers from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.” * * *
    • “Although RSV immunizations were approved in 2023, they were not yet widely available during the study. Only 5.5% of babies age six to 23 months were vaccinated against COVID-19 in the study.
    • “Research shows that vaccinations for both RSV and COVID-19 are safe and effective. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends women receive a COVID-19 vaccine at any time during pregnancy and an RSV vaccine between the 32nd and 36th week of pregnancy. Both vaccines can protect newborns too young to be vaccinated. 
    • “For babies whose mothers weren’t vaccinated against RSV, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends newborns under 8 months receive an injection of lab-grown antibodies. The pediatric group also recommends babies age six to 23 months be vaccinated against COVID-19.”
  • The AHA News reports,
    • “The South Carolina Department of Public Health March 6 reported that the state’s measles outbreak is at 991 cases. The agency said the vaccination status of 925 cases is unvaccinated, 26 are fully vaccinated, 19 are partially vaccinated and the status of 21 cases is unknown. Additionally, the agency reported that more than 17,300 doses of the measles vaccine were administered statewide last month, a 70% increase compared to February 2025. Nationwide, 1,277 confirmed measles cases have been reported this year to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those, 5% of all cases have been hospitalized and no deaths have been reported.” 
  • USA Today relates,
    • “International travel often comes with vaccine reminders, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now warning travelers to ensure their polio vaccinations are up to date.
    • “The CDC issued a level 2 travel advisory on March 3, warning that poliovirus has been detected in multiple destinations within the past 12 months – including parts of Africa, the Middle East and Europe.” 
  • Healio tells us,
    • “In-hospital mortality was significantly higher for younger women vs. younger men after a first heart attack, with women receiving fewer cardiac procedures and having more nontraditional cardiovascular risk factors, researchers reported.
    • “A study evaluating trends in first MI outcomes, both STEMI and non-STEMI, based on sex was published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.”
  • Health Day informs us,
    • “Regular cannabis users may be more likely to experience anxiety, depression or suicidal thoughts than non-users
    • “Rates of generalized anxiety and major depressive episodes among Canadians have nearly doubled since 2012
    • “Younger people show the strongest cannabis-mental health link.
  • Genetic Engineering and BioTechnology News notes,
    • “According to a new Stem Cell Reports paper, scientists have demonstrated that targeted delivery of mRNA can restore sperm production and fertility in genetically infertile male mice without introducing permanent changes to the germline. Full details are provided in a paper titled “Messenger RNA delivery into Sertoli cells restores fertility to congenitally infertile male mice.” The study was done by a team of scientists from Kyoto University, RIKEN, and elsewhere.  
    • “The findings represent a step forward in efforts to develop therapies that may help people affected by infertility.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “The Mayo Clinic ended 2025 with income over 13% higher than the year before, as the nonprofit health system was buoyed by increased volumes and demand for healthcare services, according to earnings documents released this week.
    • “The Rochester, Minnesota-based nonprofit health system said increases in its outpatient, hospital and surgical volumes accounted for the rise in revenue compared to the year prior.
    • “Still, as revenues rose, so too did expenses. Mayo’s increase in volumes drove supply and services expenses up, contributing to an over 8% year-over-year increase in operating costs, according to the health system.”
  • Modern Healthcare adds,
    • “Many large health systems are on the upswing financially — at least for now.
    • “Health systems are seeing improved margins as they benefit from higher volumes, investment returns and technology-driven efficiency efforts. They are betting that a stronger balance sheet will help offset the coming reimbursement cuts
    • “Nonprofit health systems addressed these issues in quarterly and full-year earnings reports released over the past few weeks. Here are five key themes from those reports.
      • “Systems are strengthening their margins
      • “Investment income is driving profits
      • “Cash on hand is improving
      • “Non-labor expenses are climbing, and
      • “Systems are bracing for what’s ahead.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Fairfield, Calif.-based NorthBay Health has signed a letter of intent to acquire Providence Queen of the Valley Medical Center in Napa, Calif., a move that would expand the system to three hospitals.”
  • and
    • “Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems has signed a definitive agreement to sell four Arkansas hospitals to Freeman Health System for $112 million.” 
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Generic versions of Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster Wegovy and Ozempic medications could be mass produced for about $3 per person per month, a cost that could greatly widen access in low- and middle-income countries, according to a new analysis.
    • “After reviewing data for active pharmaceutical ingredients from the past two years, the researchers estimated a generic version of semaglutide — the key ingredient in the Ozempic diabetes treatment and Wegovy weight loss drug — could be made for $28 to $140 per person a year and then sold at low prices once patents expire this year in several countries.
    • “Specifically, patents for semaglutide are due to expire starting later this month in India, China, Canada, Brazil, and Turkey, along with three other countries later this year, which is expected to spark distribution of generic versions. This is especially true of India, where numerous generic makers are based and are seeking new markets.
    • “The standard dose of semaglutide is 2.4 milligrams per week as an injection, which is the equivalent of 10 mg per month. This is a very small amount of drug, which is why the cost of production is so low,” said Andrew Hill, a University of Liverpool pharmacology professor, who has previously analyzed production costs for HIV, cancer, and hepatitis drugs. “These low prices open the door to worldwide access to an essential medicine.”
  • Fierce Pharma informs us,
    • “As nonprofit-governed Servier continues to make gains with its IDH-mutant glioma med Voranigo, the drugmaker is wading deeper into the rare oncology arena with a new M&A play. 
    • “Servier on Friday unveiled a definitive agreement to acquire Day One Biopharmaceuticals—a commercial-stage company developing targeted therapies for pediatric cancers and other diseases—for $21.50 per share in cash. The total value of the deal, which is expected to close in the second quarter, comes to roughly $2.5 billion, the companies said in a March 6 release.” 
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Blackstone Life Sciences is widening its presence in drug development, announcing Tuesday a $400 million commitment over four years to support Teva Pharmaceutical’s work on a late-stage gut disease drug likely to be in a hotly contested class.
    • “Per deal terms, if the drug, called duvakitug, gains Food and Drug Administration approval, Teva will owe a milestone payment to Blackstone, along with additional payouts and royalties based on commercial sales. Blackstone has signed similar deals with ModernaAlnylam Pharmaceuticals and Autolus Therapeutics.
    • “Duvakitug is in Phase 3 clinical trials that will enroll more than 3,000 people with ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease and follow them for up to 40 weeks. The deal will help subsidize Teva’s research and development spending, which topped $1 billion in 2025.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “MiniMed, Medtronic’s diabetes tech spinoff, made its debut on the public markets Friday. 
    • “The company started trading on the Nasdaq under the ticker “MMED.” MiniMed offered 28 million shares priced at $20 each, for a total value of $560 million.
    • “The amount was below the $25 to $28 per share suggested by the company in filings last month.
    • “MiniMed has a market capitalization of about $5.29 billion, according to Yahoo finance.” 

Thursday report

From Washington, DC

  • The House of Representatives today passed the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2026 (HR 7744) by a 221 to 209 vote. The Senate , however, failed to invoke cloture on a similar bill (HR 7147) by a 51-45 vote (60 votes required), meaning the ongoing DHS shutdown will continue.
  • Per a Senate news release,
    • “U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), Chairman of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, delivered remarks during today’s hearing on how the U.S. Office of National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) is improving health outcomes using patient health information.
    • “Click here to watch the full hearing.”
  • Govexec reports,
    • “The Trump administration will continue working to shrink the size of the federal workforce after already shedding more than 300,000 employees, a White House official said on Thursday, who suggested a leaner civil service will be more effective as a result of its reduced stability. 
    • “Continuing to reduce the size of the federal government and its workforce remains “priority number one,” Office of Management and Budget Deputy Director for Management Eric Ueland said at a government efficiency conference in Washington, adding it would contribute to the goal of tackling waste, fraud and abuse. He pledged that individual agencies would ensure consistent and transparent communication on their plans, so employees would at least have a clear roadmap of what is to come even if they disagree with the destination.” * * *
    • “Scott Kupor, the Office of Personnel Management [OPM] Director who also spoke at the panel, said his agency is not giving agencies any specific targets for workforce reduction.” * * *
    • “He added the needs of government will continue to grow, but agencies must find ways to add to their portfolios without adding staff.” 
  • Per an OPM news release,
    • “The US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) today announced the launch of the Attorney Talent Network.
    • “The Attorney Talent Network enables attorneys from across the United States to connect directly with federal recruiters and explore career opportunities in the federal government. By joining the network, attorneys can make their resumes searchable, receive notifications about job openings, and be alerted to upcoming hiring events.” * * *
    • “Attorneys interested in joining can create or log in to their USAJOBS account, upload their resume, and opt in to share their profile with federal recruiters through the here.
    • “For more information or to join the Attorney Talent Network, click here.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Departments of Health and Human Services and Education March 5 announced a new initiative to increase nutrition education in medical schools beginning this fall for the next academic year. The agencies announced commitments from 53 schools for the program, which will provide at least 40 hours of nutrition education or a 40-hour competency equivalent for medical students. HHS also announced $5 million in funding for a multi-phase education challenge by the National Institutes of Health to support medical schools, nursing residency, nutrition science and dietitian programs that integrate nutrition education into their curricula. Additionally, HHS said that Public Health Service officers will be required to complete nutrition-focused continuing education hours as part of their career development.”
  • Newfront offers RxDC reporting considerations for 2026 filings.
  • Per an AHIP news release,
    • “A new national survey finds American workers hold consistently positive views of employer-provided health care coverage, with nearly nine in 10 expressing satisfaction with their plans and strong majorities valuing the financial security and peace of mind their coverage provides.
    • “Employer-provided coverage is the backbone of our nation’s health care system, delivering high-quality, affordable health care and financial security to more than 180 million Americans. These findings confirm once again that Americans strongly value their employer-provided health coverage and want policymakers to support the longstanding partnership between employers and health plans,” said AHIP president and CEO Mike Tuffin.
  • Modern Healthcare points out,
    • “A health insurance industry-backed coalition is going after hospitals in a bid to capitalize on Washington’s bipartisan focus on affordability and rising healthcare costs.
    • “Better Solutions for Healthcare launched its “Hospital Watch” campaign last month. The organization’s website links to news articles and data that are unflattering to the hospital sector. A banner on the home page reads, “Shining a Light on Corporate Hospital Systems’ Role in Driving America’s Healthcare Cost Crisis.”
    • “The effort could prove well-timed. Over the past few years, Congress has focused on drug prices and pharmacy benefit managers — as has President Donald Trump — and on health insurance premiums and industry practices. Their attention may be shifting to providers.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Federal health officials, facing criticism from lawmakers for recent rejections of rare-disease drugs, attacked an Amsterdam-based biotech company seeking approval of a Huntington’s disease treatment and accused it of lying.
    • “The public criticism of Uniqure by officials at the Food and Drug Administration and Health and Human Services department was unusual for agencies that normally shy away from commenting on products still under consideration.
    • “The attacks risk further angering members of Congress who have been pressing the Trump administration to be more open to approving rare-disease therapies, after FDA officials rejected or delayed some applications for approval of some new drugs.”
  • STAT News explains,
    • “Is it better to approve a drug with undetermined or debatable benefits that is later found not to be effective?
    • “Or, is it better to reject or block a drug with undetermined or debatable benefits that is later found to be effective?
    • “These are two fundamentally different regulatory philosophies. Peter Marks, the former FDA regulator of cell and gene therapies, was firmly in the “approve now” camp. He believed in maximal flexibility, one might even call it absolute permissiveness.
    • “If there was a chance a treatment could help a patient with a rare disease, even if the data were equivocal, Marks was willing to approve it. Rejecting that drug and later learning that it was effective is a far worse outcome, in Marks’ view.
    • “Vinay Prasad, Marks’ successor at the FDA, takes a maximalist approach in the other direction. He wants to approve drugs that work with certainty. The regulatory bar is high.
    • “Uncertainty — anything outside the statistical fence — is a disqualifier. For Prasad, approving a drug without proven benefit is false hope. Approving a drug that later ends up being ineffective is the worst outcome.
    • “Two regulators, two extreme regulatory philosophies, one replacing the other.
    • “The rare disease community is suffering whiplash. Drugmakers are frustrated. Investors are sitting on their wallets.”
  • Fierce Pharma reports,
    • “Since discontinuing its two branded versions of asthma inhaler Flovent at the start of 2024, GSK has still produced “authorized generic” versions of the treatment, which are the same products with different labels distributed by another firm.
    • “Now, true competition has finally arrived for GSK’s Flovent in the form of an FDA approval for Glenmark’s fluticasone propionate inhalation aerosol. The inhaled corticosteroid, which reduces inflammation in the lungs, is a maintenance treatment and can be used by patients ages 4 and older to prevent wheezing and shortness of breath.
    • “As the first company to gain FDA approval for a Flovent generic, Glenmark receives 180 days of exclusivity before other makers of generics can enter the market. Glenmark will begin distributing fluticasone this month, the company said in a release.”
  • Radiology Business reports,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the first artificial intelligence-powered imaging device for breast cancer surgery. 
    • “Manufacturer Perimeter Medical Imaging announced the news on Tuesday after earning premarket approval for “Claire” (formerly the Perimeter OCT B-Series). The product also has received Breakthrough Device designation, with it designed to enhance surgeon’s ability to detect difficult-to-see cancers during surgery. 
    • “This could potentially reduce the need for repeat operations and save excess healthcare costs, the company contends. 
    • “Repeat breast cancer surgeries due to residual disease remain a significant clinical, health and economic burden,” Perimeter CEO Adrian Mendes said in a statement March 3. “Claire’s FDA approval marks a major milestone in breast cancer care, as we advance our goal of reducing repeat surgeries so that no patient has to be told ‘we didn’t get it all.’”
    • “Mendes said the Dallas-based company plans to roll out the product nationwide in the coming weeks. Claire combines proprietary AI with wide-field OCT imaging, enabling high-res, real-time evaluation of excised tumor margins. The system purportedly can deliver 10 times higher resolution when compared to standard X-ray and ultrasound.” 
  • BioPharma Dive adds,
    • “PepGen is in a holding pattern on its request to include U.S. patients in a Phase 2 trial of a muscle disorder treatment after the Food and Drug Administration put a partial halt on the study.
    • “The agency did not raise any questions about the company’s data in patients with the condition known as myotonic dystrophy type 1, or DM1, instead focusing on previously submitted preclinical work, PepGen said Wednesday. Specifically, the FDA seems concerned about drops in blood pressure in a study of mice that have not been seen in humans, analysts wrote.
    • “PepGen said it’s working with the FDA to address the concerns as quickly as possible. The company is continuing its Phase 2 work elsewhere and recently got permission to open the “Freedom2” studyto patients in New Zealand, Australia and South Korea.” 

From the judicial front,

  • Per a Justice Department news release,
    • “Brad D. Schimel, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, announced today that Kinex Medical Company, LLC, agreed to pay $6,925,000 to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by submitting false claims to Medicare, TRICARE, and other federal programs.
    • “Based in Waukesha, Wisconsin, Kinex sells and distributes durable medical equipment, including knee, shoulder, and hip braces, to patients across the United States. After receiving information from a whistleblower, the United States investigated and alleged that the company submitted false claims to Medicare, TRICARE, the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP), and the Office of Workers Compensation Programs of the Department of Labor (OWCP). 
    • “Specifically, the United States alleged that from 2019 through 2024, Kinex provided patients covered by these programs with medical braces that the patients did not need and then billed Medicare, TRICARE, FEHBP, and OWCP as if the braces had been necessary. The United States also alleged that Kinex convinced the patients to accept the braces by waiving costs like patient co-pays and by giving the patients other equipment for free.
    • “In addition to paying nearly $7 million to resolve the allegations concerning these false claims, Kinex also entered into a Corporate Integrity Agreement with the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General (HHS-OIG), to ensure compliance with applicable regulations going forward.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) may be nearing settlements with the remaining two pharmacy benefit managers involved in a lawsuit over insulin pricing.
    • “In a court filing (PDF) posted this week, the agency disclosed that it is making “significant progress” in talks with both CVS Health’s Caremark and UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Rx on the heels of a broad settlement with Cigna’s Express Scripts.
    • “In late January, the FTC suspended the administrative case against Express Scripts, indicating a settlement was in the works. That settlement was later confirmed Feb. 4, with the PBM agreeing to a slew of changes to resolve allegations that it unlawfully and artificially inflated the price of insulin.
    • “In the filing, the agency pushed back the date for an evidentiary hearing and oral arguments in the case by 21 days, to late March, to allow for greater negotiation time.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • MedPage Today reports,
    • “Initiation of a GLP-1 receptor agonist was tied to lower risks of several substance use disorders (SUDs) in adults with type 2 diabetes, according to a target trial emulation using data on veterans.
    • “In patients without a history of any SUD, those who started a GLP-1 drug versus an SGLT2 inhibitor had a reduced risk of a composite outcome of all SUDs, including alcohol, cannabis, cocaine, nicotine, opioid, and other SUDs (HR 0.86, 95% CI 0.83-0.88), reported Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, of the VA Saint Louis Health Care System, and colleagues.
    • “Benefits also extended to those with pre-existing SUDs, the researchers wrote in The BMJ.” 
  • The AAMC shares information about
    • GLP-1 pills for weight loss are here. How will they change obesity care?
  • and
    • What you need to know about the updated childhood vaccination schedule.
  • Cardiovascular Business informs us,
    • “A new implantable artificial intelligence (AI) device that modulates venous pressure to increase renal perfusion in diuretic-resistant heart failure patients was associated with positive 90-day data in the first-in-human RELIEF-FIH study. Researchers presented the data at the THT 2026 conference in Boston.
    • “The Relief System from Relief Cardiovascular is a first-of-its-kind device. The goal of the device is to better manage heart failure congestion at home. It is one of many new heart failure technologies aimed at finding new ways to reduce heart failure rehospitalizations, which are a major driver for healthcare costs.
    • “The Relief System incorporates a valve and sensor implant that uses AI to intelligently modulate venous pressure using hemodynamic data. The system actively adjusts flow in the inferior vena cava (IVC), which lowers venous pressure to drive durable decongestion in heart failure. It uses a daily transmission of hemodynamic data to adjust the valve through a cloud-enabled interface.”

From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “Excellus BlueCross BlueShield ended 2025 with a 1.4% operating loss totaling $108 million, as medical and drug claims climbed 16% year over year to nearly $7 billion. The insurer said March 5 the results are its largest annual claims increase in nearly 20 years.
    • “Last year, Excellus spent roughly $19 million daily on medical and drug benefits for its 1.5 million members. The company’s 2025 medical loss ratio was 92%, and it recorded a 2% net margin and $150 million in net income. Reserves closed the year at $1.7 billion, which is equal to less than three months of claims and operating expenses.
    • “Medicare Advantage drove most of the cost increase.”
  • and
    • “Three of four Regence health plans ended 2025 with operating losses as medical and drug costs climbed across Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Utah, according to results published by the organizations on March 2.
    • “The Washington plan was the hardest hit. Regence BlueShield reported an operating loss of nearly 8% on total revenue of $2.38 billion and a net loss of 3.1%. The plan paid $2.17 billion in care for its fully insured members, with per-member costs rising more than 15% year over year. Total membership at the end of 2025 was 1.58 million.
    • “In Oregon, Regence BCBS posted a 1.3% operating loss on revenue of $3.18 billion, though investment returns pushed the plan to 1.5% net income. The plan paid $2.9 billion in care for fully insured members, at $6,022 per member, up 15% from 2024. Total membership was roughly 950,000 at the end of 2025.
    • ‘Regence BlueShield of Idaho also ran an operating loss, at 0.5% on revenue of $752 million, but finished with net income of 2.5% because of the strength of investment returns. Per-member costs rose more than 22%, the steepest increase among the four plans. The plan had more than 350,000 members at year’s end.
    • “Regence BCBS of Utah reported net income of 3.5% on total revenue of $1.45 billion, slightly above its 10-year average of 3%, driven by strong member retention and investment income. The plan paid $1.31 billion in care for fully insured members, with per-member costs rising nearly 5%. Membership held at roughly 740,000.”
  • The Commonwealth Fund tells us,
    • “Changing how we pay for primary care can incentivize clinicians to deliver the right care at the right time. Historically, clinicians have been retroactively paid a fee for each service they provide. Known as fee-for-service (FFS), this practice encourages clinicians to provide more services, rather than efficiently deliver comprehensive care. Although it can lead to more care, it may not lead to better health outcomes.
    • “Instead, we could use payment to encourage primary care clinicians to deliver appropriate, efficient care in coordination with other clinicians. An increasingly common way to do this — value-based payment (VBP) — ties clinicians’ payments to their performance on outcomes, including the cost and quality of care. Specific outcomes include the way clinicians manage patients’ chronic conditions or the minimization of avoidable hospitalizations. The evidence shows that changing how we pay for primary can improve patients’ outcomes, including reducing avoidable hospitalizationsand increasing access to coordinated care.
    • “Despite the promise of VBP, some primary care practices have been left behind, and their patients haven’t been able to benefit. Policymakers and payers are particularly worried about low participation among rural, small, and independent practices, as well as community health centers (CHCs) that face unique barriers to participation.
    • “In this blog post, we assess current rates of primary care physician (PCP) participation in VBP, using data from the 2025 Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Survey of Primary Care Physicians. We also highlight opportunities to design value-based models to account for the needs of different practice settings, such as small or rural practices.”
  • STATNews relates,
    • “Digital chronic care company Omada reported a quarterly profit for the first time since going  public less than a year ago, the company revealed while announcing  its full year 2025 earnings Thursday. 
    • “Omada also provided earnings guidance for 2026, suggesting the company will continue to grow as it capitalizes on the demand for popular GLP-1 obesity medications.
    • ‘Omada earned $260 million in revenue in 2025, 53% more than the year before — above top-end preliminary results the company announced at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in January. In August, shortly after it went public, it projected top-end earnings of $241 million for the year.
    • “Notably, the company reported $5 million in net income in the fourth quarter of 2025 — the first time the company has turned a net profit. 
    • “We’re pretty ahead of schedule on a lot of positive financials,” Omada CEO Sean Duffy told STAT.”
  • Modern Healthcare tells us,
    • “CVS Health plans to launch a health technology subsidiary later this year that will offer an artificial intelligence-based platform designed to help consumers access healthcare information and services. 
    • “The platform will allow patients to find providers, compare costs of care and centralize their health records and information, CVS said. It also will make recommendations for the next steps of care for patients with chronic conditions and offer care management through a digital health portal between visits.
    • “The Health100 consumer platform, slated to launch midyear, will use agentic AI and be powered by Google Cloud technology, including Gemini AI programs.
    • “It will be rolled out first to CVS Health customers and not all features will be available upon launch, a spokesperson said. It will be expanded to other consumers, and outside providers and other companies can opt in to participate, the spokesperson said.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Amazon Web Services rolled out a suite of agentic artificial intelligence tools Thursday that aim to handle a range of healthcare tasks, like helping patients schedule appointments and summarizing medical data for clinicians. The product, called Amazon Connect Health, includes five capabilities: verifying patients’ identities; handling appointment scheduling; creating summaries of patient medical histories; creating clinical notes based on conversations between clinicians and patients; and generating medical codes from clinical documentation. 
    • “Amazon Connect Health should help patients more easily access care and assist with clinicians’ administrative work, according to Naji Shafi, general manager and director of healthcare AI at AWS. “Our healthcare workers are overburdened, drowning in administrative complexity, and it’s costing everyone,” he said.” 
  • Per Beckers Health IT,
    • “Optum is expanding its collaboration with Microsoft to introduce new AI-powered capabilities within Optum Real, a real-time claims platform designed to connect payers and providers and streamline reimbursement workflows.
    • “In a March 5 news release, the companies said the new capabilities combine Optum’s healthcare data and analytics expertise with Microsoft technologies including Azure, Dragon Copilot and Microsoft Foundry. The platform aims to give providers a unified view of clinical and operational data while helping teams identify coverage issues, automate documentation tasks and address prior authorization requirements earlier in the care process.”
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “Eli Lilly has officially launched Employer Connect, its direct-to-employer platform for its obesity medications, after teasing the rollout late last year.
    • “The drugmaker said in an announcement that the program is aimed at supporting employer choice and enabling them to build the solution that works best for them and their workforces. It will launch with more than 15 independent program administrators as partners, which allows employers to select multiple models.
    • “Coverage for GLP-1s remains a key challenge for employers to navigate, as there is significant demand for the drugs that often come at a high cost. Within the program, Lilly will offer Zepbound KwikPen to network pharmacies at a discounted $449 price.
    • “What the patient ultimately pays could vary based on the employer’s cost sharing model and which partner they lean on, per the announcement.”
  • Fierce Pharma points out,
    • “Galderma has significantly raised its peak annual sales estimate for Nemluvio (nemolizumab) to more than $4 billion, doubling its previous projection of more than $2 billion. The update follows what CEO Flemming Ørnskov described as an “outstanding launch trajectory” for the inflammatory skin condition drug in its first full year on the market. 
    • “Driven by strong adoption in its existing indications of atopic dermatitis and prurigo nodularis (PN), Nemluvio posted $452 million in 2025 sales. Growth accelerated sharply in the second half of the year, with the period contributing $321 million to the total. It comes as real-world experience with the IL-31 receptor inhibitor exceeded initial expectations, Ørnskov said on Galderma’s fourth-quarter earnings call Thursday.”
  • and
    • “After delivering solid sales growth in a difficult 2025, Germany’s Merck KGaA may have a tougher go of things this year, which the company is crediting in part to a predicted onslaught of U.S. generics to its multiple sclerosis blockbuster Mavenclad. 
    • Approved by the FDA in 2019, Mavenclad delivered its third straight year of blockbuster sales in 2025, charting nearly 17% growth over the previous year to 1.2 billion euros ($1.4 billion) worldwide, Merck KGaA reported Thursday. In North America specifically, the drug reeled in 635 million euros ($735 million) last year, Merck noted in a detailed earnings report issued(PDF) March 5.” * * *
    • “[I]n an unfortunate turn for Merck, recent efforts to stave off Mavenclad patent challenges in the U.S. have fallen short, prompting the drugmaker to more or less throw in the towel on future growth for the MS med stateside. 
    • “In particular, Merck’s guidance for the year—anticipating sales between 20 billion euros and 21 billion euros, or -1% to 2% growth— “assumes no U.S. sales of Mavenclad from March 2026 amid generic competition.”  

Midweek update

From Washington, DC

  • The Hill reports,
    • “The House on Wednesday advanced a GOP-backed Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill, an effort by Republicans to pressure Democrats to end the partial government shutdown in the wake of the U.S. launching strikes against Iran.
    • “The panel voted 211-209 to pass the rule, which tees up debate and a vote on the final passage of the measure. The bill is expected to pass the lower chamber on Thursday.”
  • Roll Call relates,
    • “The White House tentatively aims to release President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2027 budget proposal the week of March 30, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the plan.
    • “That timing would put budget delivery some eight weeks after the statutory due date of the first Monday in February, though presidential budgets often miss that deadline.
    • “Office of Management and Budget staff couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “Agencies would make layoff decisions based more highly on federal employees’ performance, rather than how long they have been working in government, according to a new proposal from the Trump administration.
    • “If finalized, proposed regulations that the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is expected to publish Thursday morning would reorder the factors that agencies consider when determining which employees to retain or remove during a reduction in force (RIF).
    • “When it comes to personnel decisions during RIFs, current federal regulations tell agencies to first look at employees’ tenure and length of service, before considering their performance ratings. The new proposed regulations seek to reverse that order, making employee performance the top priority.”
  • Per an OPM news release,
    • “The US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) today announced the launch of NASA Force, a dedicated talent track within the US Tech Force initiative designed to recruit and deploy the nation’s top engineers and technologists to support America’s space program.
    • “NASA Force will identify and place high-impact technical talent into mission-critical roles supporting NASA’s exploration, research, and advanced technology priorities, ensuring the agency has the cutting-edge expertise needed to maintain US leadership in space.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Federal regulators received a record number of comments on their proposal to keep Medicare Advantage rates flat next year, Trump administration officials said Tuesday during an industry event, as insurers continue to lobby heavily for higher reimbursement.
    • “We appreciate all the input. I mean, obviously there’s been a little bit more input this year than we typically get,” John Brooks, the CMS’ chief policy and regulatory officer, said during the Better Medicare Alliance’s summit in Washington, D.C.
    • “In January, the Trump administration proposed an average rate bump of less than 0.1% for MA plans in 2027, along with tighter guardrails around how plans adjust for the health risks of their members.” * * *
    • Regulators received almost 47,000 comments on the rule during the input period ended Feb. 25 — an all-time high, according to Brooks.
    • “In their comments, major MA carriers like UnitedHealth along with industry associations like the BMA and AHIP argued that the CMS ignored rising costs, resulting in a payment proposal underfunding MA.”
  • and
    • “The CMS innovation center is exploring more mandatory payment models as the Trump administration brainstorms how to get more providers to participate in value-based care, health officials said Tuesday.
    • “Mandatory models are going to have to be part of the equation,” CMMI Director Abe Sutton said at a conference hosted by value-based care advocacy group Accountable for Health.
    • “The CMMI tests ways of injecting more value-based care into federal programs through its models, which can be mandatory or voluntary. Mandatory models require all eligible participants — usually providers — to take part. Participants generally can’t exit the model before the testing period is up.
    • “That’s opposed to voluntary models, in which accountable care organizations or other actors can opt into participation.” * * *
    • “The CMMI started trialing more mandatory models during the first Trump administration, a direction that continued under President Joe Biden. Now, the second Trump administration is once again reiterating its support of expanded mandatory tests.”
  • Cardiovascular Business points out,
    • “The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has released a list 2,600 cardiologists who will be required to participate in a new Ambulatory Specialty Model (ASM) payment model for heart failure starting on Jan. 1, 2027.
    • “CMS said the new program aims to improve prevention and upstream management of high-cost chronic diseases with an initial push in heart failure and lower back pain. The new payment model is an attempt to reduce avoidable hospitalizations and unnecessary procedures. Heart failure is a major driver of Medicare expenses, and currently costs the U.S. health system about $179.5 billion annually.[1]
    • “Participation in the ASM will be mandatory for certain specialists who commonly treat these conditions in Medicare patients in an outpatient setting. The ASM will begin on Jan. 1, 2027, and run for five performance years through Dec. 31, 2031.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “For the third time since March 2025, HHS has postponed a planned meeting for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which provides clinical preventive health recommendations to Congress every year. 
    • “The USPSTF, which is a volunteer panel of national experts that was launched in 1984, usually meets three times a year. The group did not meet in July or in November of 2025, with the latter tied to a government shutdown. * * *
    • “An HHS spokesperson confirmed the March 2026 meeting’s postponement to Becker’s, adding that the meeting “will be rescheduled in the coming months.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Food and Drug Administration officials are giving Prime Medicine new hope for a gene-editing treatment the company was forced to shelve last year.
    • “The therapy, PM359, is designed to treat chronic granulomatous disease, or CGD, a potentially deadly condition that leaves patients highly susceptible to bacterial and fungal infections. A study of two patients released last year suggested PM359 could correct the genetic anomaly that causes the disease, offering the possibility of a cure.
    • “But the condition is so rare that Prime opted not to continue development of the therapy amid a cash crunch. Even as it announced the promising early results, Prime said it would deprioritize PM359 and focus on other programs after cutting a quarter of its staff. On Tuesday, Prime said it now sees the possibility of approval based on the two-patient study alone.”

From the judicial front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “For the fourth time, federal auditors have turned up improper or potentially improper Medicaid payments in every sample of autism therapy records they audited. This report, focused on Colorado, yielded the highest improper payment amount yet. 
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General uncovered $285.2 million in improper and potentially improper payments in 2022 and 2023 to clinicians who provide a popular form of autism therapy called applied behavior analysis, or ABA. The payments, administered under Colorado’s Medicaid program, come from the state and federal governments. 
    • “HHS OIG announced in 2022 it would conduct reviews of Medicaid payments to ABA providers in seven states. The first was Indiana, then Wisconsin, and Maine. ABA is a commonly used therapy for managing autism symptoms, but a 2022 STAT investigation found that a rapid influx of private equity investment in the industry has contributed to a crisis of providers routinely overbilling insurers while providing substandard treatment to vulnerable children and families.” 

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • Heard about a lot of people getting flu this winter but not much about covid?
    • It’s not just you. For the second winter in a row, the United States has faced a punishing flu season, with covid as a more muted threat.
    • Early in the covid pandemic, coronavirus proved far more transmissibleand deadly as it ripped through the world than the flu typically was. Flu was almost nonexistent that first pandemic winter in 2020-2021.
    • Now that SARS-CoV-2 is no longer a novel virus sweeping through a population with little immunity, covid and influenza illnesses are becoming more similar, with a key difference: Coronavirus circulates year-round and ticks up in the summer, when flu is gone.
    • “Does that mean flu is now the woe of the winter, and covid is the scourge of the summer? It’s complicated and too soon to say.”
  • The American Hospital Association relates,
    • “The U.S. maternal mortality rate fell to 17.9 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2024, statistically similar to the 2023 rate of 18.6 per 100,000, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC reported that the maternal mortality rate for Black women in 2024 was 44.8 deaths per 100,000 live births, significantly higher than rates for white (14.2), Hispanic (12.1) and Asian (18.1) women. 
    • “The AHA is committed to safeguarding mothers and babies by eliminating maternal mortality and reducing maternal morbidity. For more on members’ efforts, including case studies, podcasts, webinars and other resources, visit the AHA’s Better Health for Mothers and Babies Initiative webpage.” 
  • The New York Times tells us,
    • “The doctor kept hearing the same story from his patients. After taking GLP-1 weight-loss drugs and finally shedding those excess pounds, some had gone a bit rogue. They began spacing out the shots instead of injecting themselves every week.
    • “And it seemed to be working, said Dr. Mitch Biermann, an obesity and internal medicine specialist at Scripps Clinic in San Diego.
    • “By the time the third person told me they were taking it every second or third week and still maintaining their weight, I started recommending it to other patients,” he said.
    • “Dr. Biermann also conceived a study to test the strategy. Now the results of that research are in: After 36 weeks of follow-up, most of the patients who spaced out their GLP-1 injections kept the weight off and also maintained health benefits like reduced blood pressure and better blood sugar control.
    • “Only four patients gained weight after making the switch, and they quickly reverted back to weekly injections, the report said.
    • “The study was small, only 34 patients in a relatively homogeneous group — mostly white and privately uninsured. And it was done by analyzing their existing medical charts.
    • “Still, the research, published in February in the journal Obesity, provides a potentially appealing new option for patients who are loath to commit to lifelong weekly injections of a costly medication that may not be covered by insurance and that some fear could have unknown side effects.”
  • Medscape informs us,
    • “Viral and bacterial infections’ overlapping symptoms and signs can complicate RSV diagnosis and lead to unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions.
    • “In this study, children who had RSV detected via a rapid antigen test had a 48% lower likelihood of receiving antibiotics within 14 days of diagnosis.
    • ‘Overall, 20% of the kids who tested positive for RSV received at least one antibiotic prescription compared with 40% of those testing negative.”
  • and
    • “Alzheimer’s brain changes progressed up to 20 times faster in women with Alzheimer’s and alpha-synuclein co-pathology compared with men, a cohort study showed.” * * *
    • “The findings suggest that when alpha-synuclein — a protein associated with Parkinson’s and other Lewy body diseases — accumulates alongside Alzheimer’s pathology, it may drive faster Alzheimer’s progression in women.”
  • Health Day points out,
    • “A frequently prescribed atrial fibrillation drug might interact with blood thinners
    • “Diltiazem had a higher rate of serious bleeding events when taken with blood thinners like apixaban or rivaroxaban
    • “Diltiazem interacts with enzymes that play a role in the metabolism of the blood thinners.”
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • “A research team funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has developed a versatile machine learning model that could one day greatly expand what medical scans can tell us about disease. Scientists used their tool, named Merlin, to assess 3D abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans, accomplishing tasks as simple as identifying anatomical features to as complex as predicting disease onset years in advance. Despite being developed as a general-purpose CT model, Merlin surpassed a gauntlet of similar automated tools in tasks they were specifically built to handle.
    • “The team trained their model on a unique set of patient CT scans linked to radiology reports and medical diagnosis codes collected from the Stanford University School of Medicine. The researchers note that it is the largest collection of abdominal CT data to date.  
    • “Rich datasets like this are necessary to push the limits of what artificial intelligence models can accomplish in medicine,” said Bruce Tromberg, Ph.D., director of NIH’s National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB). “This work exemplifies how meticulously crafted training data can enable remarkable insights that significantly streamline workflows and assist in clinical decision-making.” 
  • Genetic Engineering and BioTechnology News adds,
    • “Life is governed by tiers of gene regulation, driven by modulation of RNA polymerase (RNAP) by transcription factors. The second tier is composed of cell signaling cascades and feedback loops. Dissecting gene regulation requires distinguishing transcription factor targets from indirect network effects. 
    • “A new study by The Rockefeller University published in Molecular Cell titled, “Cell-free genomics reveals fundamental regulatory principles of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis transcription cycle,” has revealed fundamental features of the transcription cycle in the bacteria that causes tuberculosis. The study informs the development of new drugs.
    • “Gaining a deep understanding of how transcription works reveals central principles in biology that have huge significance for human health,” said Elizabeth Campbell, PhD, head of the Laboratory of Molecular Pathogenesis at The Rockefeller and corresponding author of the paper. “We can more precisely design therapeutics to target a process if we truly understand it.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “In recent months, payers across the country have tried tightening policies to get a better grip on evaluation/management coding.
    • “While payers often say the policies aim to control costs or combat fraud, these more restrictive policies are often met with provider backlash. [You will find in the article] three insurer policies from the past few months — and where they stand.
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Even as its inpatient occupancy surged near the end of 2025, the nation’s largest for-profit hospital system said it has generally managed to avoid revenue-limiting capacity constraints and should continue to do so through 2026 even as its volumes grow. 
    • “HCA Healthcare, with its stock sitting at an all-time pricing high, pleased investors earlier this year when announcing a better-than-expected fourth-quarter performance and bullish 2026 guidance despite hundreds of millions in expected headwinds due to changes in Medicaid policy. 
    • “But, while that quarter’s same-facility equivalent admissions rose 2.5% over the prior year, in line with expectations, its inpatient surgeries remained flat while its outpatient surgical volume dipped by about 1.5%. At the same time, its hospitals were filled to about 73% to 74% capacity, a historical high point that could place strains on the operating efficiency of hospitals pulling the average upward.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Grand Forks, N.D.-based Altru has acquired CHI St. Alexius Health Devils Lake (N.D.) — a 25-bed critical access hospital — from Chicago-based CommonSpirit. The hospital is now known as Altru Hospital Devils Lake, according to a March 2 Altru news release. 
    • “This transition represents an opportunity to make a meaningful difference in the lives of those we serve,” Altru CEO Todd Forkel said in the release. “Over the next several months, we will be expanding services and enhancing care offerings to better meet the needs of this important community.” 
    • “Altru is also in the process of acquiring three more hospitals from CommonSpirit. In January, Altru signed a nonbinding agreement to acquire CHI St. Alexius Health in Bismarck, CHI St. Alexius Health Turtle Lake and CHI St. Alexius Health Garrison (N.D.). If finalized, the move would expand Altru’s footprint further west in North Dakota.
    • “CommonSpirit is also in talks with Pittsburgh-based UPMC to sell Trinity Health System — a three-hospital network based in Steubenville, Ohio. CommonSpirit CFO Michael Browning said on the system’s March 2 investor call that both deals, if approved, could close in 2026.”
  • and
    • “Academic health systems posted a wide range of operating performance in 2025 and early fiscal 2026, with margins spanning from negative territory to double digits. While strong investment returns buoyed bottom lines at many organizations, core operations remain under strain from rising labor, supply and drug costs.
    • “Across these systems, operating margins spanned from -2.6% to 10.7%, highlighting the uneven financial recovery taking shape in academic healthcare. Many organizations saw stronger net income driven by investment returns and nonoperating gains, even as core operating performance remained thin. Expense growth — particularly labor, supplies and drug costs — continues to pressure margins, while scale, integration and restructuring efforts are increasingly shaping financial trajectories across academic healthcare.
    • “{The article shows] how 12 major academic and nonprofit systems stack up based on their most recent financial reports. 
  • Health Day informs us,
    • “Telemedicine appointments aren’t only more convenient, but actually save money for both patients and health care systems, a new study says.
    • “Telemedicine visits are five times less costly than in-person appointments for the most common conditions, researchers recently reported in JAMA Network Open.
    • “On average, telemedicine patients are billed $400 less, researchers found, and are less likely to need follow-up visits after their first appointment.
    • “Before we did this study, there was a common concern that telemedicine might serve only as an easy source of ‘first aid,’ just delaying in-person care and increasing costs overall,” said co-senior researcher Dr. David Asch, senior vice president for strategic initiatives at the University of Pennsylvania.
    • “But we found that wasn’t true, and our work suggests that for many patients, telemedicine can be a complete solution, not just a temporary band-aid,” he said in a news release.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “The primary growth drivers in Bayer’s pharma sector—Nubeqa and Kerendia—are performing even better than the company anticipated and their momentum is expected to continue in 2026. But that won’t lead to growth of Bayer’s pharma business overall this year as two contraction drivers—Xarelto and Eylea—are working in the opposite direction. 
    • “This will be the last year of the sector’s “resilience phase,” Bayer’s pharma president Stefan Oelrich said during a quarterly conference call, which will set it up for growth in 2027.”
    • “In a way, Bayer’s pharma business is the company in a microcosm. As the German conglomerate absorbs massive litigation charges related to its disastrous acquisition of Monsanto a decade ago and eyes a potential $7.25 billion settlement of Roundup lawsuits, a rebound is finally in sight.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Eldercare company Papa is rolling out a new program that leans on its existing companion care services to support quality improvements for health plans.
    • “Called Papa Plus, the company’s network of vetted “Pals” will be able to provide key services that insurers need in addition to their work in addressing social needs of members. These tasks could include assisting a member in scheduling a key wellness visit and then accompanying them to the appointment, providing support after hospital discharge or helping an individual use a telehealth visit.
    • “This builds a direct engagement channel to some of the most vulnerable—and least reachable—patients, Papa said in the announcement, which was shared exclusively with Fierce Healthcare.”

Tuesday report

From Washington, DC

  • The Hill reports,
    • “Top Democrats are whipping against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill expected to come to the floor this week, even as Republicans press them to support it in the wake of the U.S. attacks on Iran. 
    • “The White House and Democrats have been locked in an impasse over a deal to reopen DHS, as the minority party calls for the administration to overhaul Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) following the killings of two U.S. citizens in Minnesota by federal agents.” 
  • Per a CMS news release,
    • “Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released Medicare.gov Enhanced Login options. By providing people with Medicare these options, Medicare.gov is helping users better manage their health care information by delivering more login choices. People with Medicare do not need to create an account to access general Medicare information or their individualized Medicare information. If someone chooses to create an account, Medicare is providing new and free options with enhanced security to help protect their Medicare information.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “Medicare Advantage plans looking to maintain no-premium models could face 50% cuts to supplemental benefits and $1,000 more in older adults’ cost exposure in 2027, according to February reports commissioned by health insurance trade association AHIP.
    • “Wakely Consulting Group conducted the research. The groups evaluated how CMS’ proposed 0.09% 2027 payment increase for MA would play out for insurers and their beneficiaries. AHIP sent the findings to CMS in a Feb. 25 letter.”
  • The Paragon Health Institute notes,
    • “The [Medicare] primary base hospital payment rate for inpatient services—known as the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) operating base rate—has increased by 30 percent since 2016, mainly because of statutory formulas.  The outpatient services base rate—known as the Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) conversion factor—has increased by 26 percent since 2016, also mainly because of statutory formulas. Meanwhile, the physician base payment rate—known as the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) conversion factor—has declined by 7 percent over the same period.
    • “The declining PFS conversion factor and the rising hospital base rates are not an accident but a result of policy choices made by Congress.” * * *
    • “To reduce distortions, hospital payments in Medicare should be subject to similar fiscal sustainability pressures as physician payments. Policymakers should consider proposals that address distortions and, in particular, site neutral payment policies that equalize payments for the same services across all providers.” 
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review news release,
    • “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today posted a Special Report on Entyvio® (vedolizumab, Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd.) for the treatment of ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease. This report will be submitted to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) as part of the 2026 public comment process defined in CMS guidance on Medicare Drug Price Negotiations for price applicability year 2028. 
    • Downloads: Final Report
    • “Over three million people in the United States suffer from inflammatory bowel diseases like ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease. Our special report focuses on the medical evidence for and value of Entyvio, which is commonly used to treat both conditions,” said ICER’s President and CEO Sarah K. Emond, MPP. “We recognize that our report will be one of many inputs CMS may consider, and we hope that it will support their ongoing efforts to build a reliable, value-based, transparent drug price negotiation process on behalf of the American people.”
  • Per an OPM news release,
    • “The US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) today announced Kurt Dykstra as General Counsel.
    • “Dykstra is an accomplished attorney with nearly three decades of experience handling complex workforce issues, regulatory compliance, internal investigations, and governance. His career spans corporate law, higher education, financial services, and public service, including leadership roles as a law firm shareholder, university counsel, college president, bank executive, mayor, and Major in the US Army Reserve.
    • “As OPM’s Chief Legal Officer, Dykstra will lead the Office of the General Counsel and advise the director and agency leadership on legal and policy matters.
    • “Kurt is a proven leader with the judgment and experience to help guide OPM through complex legal and workforce challenges,” said OPM Director Scott Kupor. “He understands how strong governance, accountability, and sound legal strategy support effective government. I am confident his leadership will help ensure OPM continues to serve federal employees and the American people with integrity and excellence.”
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • “Patient Advocate Foundation and Patient Access Network Foundation merged, creating a nonprofit with over $800 million in assets.
    • “Kevin Hagan is chief executive of the combined Patient Advocate Foundation, which aims to serve patients facing rising costs.
    • “The combined foundation will launch a TotalAssist program in July and offer more than 130 disease-specific financial assistance funds.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has been talking a big game about bringing artificial intelligence to patients. In January, when it announced relaxed rules for certain AI products, Commissioner Marty Makary said the agency is “developing a new regulatory framework for AI.” 
    • “How the agency will regulate rapidly-evolving uses of generative AI is one of the big questions facing health technology developers. Large language models’ wide-ranging applications evade simple measures of safety and efficacy, challenging the FDA’s longstanding approach to device validation — and the agency has yet to authorize a device that relies on generative AI. But a recent breakthrough designation from the FDA could offer hints about its approach to regulating patient-facing chatbots that fall under its purview. 
    • “In November, the FDA quietly handed one of its breakthrough device designationsto a chatbot for patients recovering from joint replacement surgery. Under development by RecovryAI, which is coming out of stealth as it announces the designation, the LLM-powered device would be prescribed to patients to use in the 30 days after surgery. It will encourage them to check in twice a day about their sleep, activity, diet, and other elements of recovery, answering questions and escalating to a care team when necessary.” 
  • Radiology Business adds,
    • “An artificial intelligence-enabled tool capable of accurately predicting an expectant mother’s delivery date has received the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s De Novo clearance. 
    • “Ultrasound AI—a company that specializes in medical imaging AI applications—on Monday announced the clearance of its flagship Delivery Date AI technology. The product is a cloud-based software as a medical device that predicts delivery dates using ultrasound imaging alone. This could help to better prepare both patients and providers for potential complications, reducing the likelihood of preterm birth. 
    • “It was trained on a diverse dataset of over 1 million ultrasound images and evaluated via a peer-reviewed study, published in the Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine. The study, which included nearly 6,000 patients, determined AI could achieve an accuracy of 0.92 R² value for predicting the day a mother would deliver her child using only standard ultrasound images. 
    • “Delivery Date AI can be easily integrated into most ultrasound systems. Ultrasound AI indicates that installation takes just a few minutes and offers organizations scalability while also potentially reducing long-term costs by improving maternal outcomes.” 
  • Per an FDA news release,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today announced the issuance of 30 warning letters to telehealth companies for making false or misleading claims regarding compounded GLP-1 products offered on their websites. 
    • “It’s a new era. We are paying close attention to misleading claims being made by telehealth and pharma companies across all media platforms—and taking swift action,” said FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., M.P.H. “Compounded drugs can be important for overcoming shortages or meeting unique patient needs—but compounders should not try to compound drugs in a way that circumvents FDA’s approval process.”
    • “This is the second group of warning letters sent to telehealth firms since the agency launched in September a crackdown on misleading direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertisements. Over the past six months, the agency has sent thousands of letters warning pharmaceutical and telehealth firms to remove misleading ads, more than had been sent over the entire preceding decade.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Pierre Fabre Pharmaceuticals has asked the Food and Drug Administration for an urgent meeting to discuss why the agency rejected a cell therapy for a post-organ transplant malignancy, the company said Tuesday, following claims by partner Atara Biotherapeutics that the agency contradicted its previous guidance.” * * *
    • “The regulatory dispute over Ebvallo is one of a series of recent squabbles between drugmakers and the FDA related to previous agreements on approval standards. On Monday, UniQure learned it will have to conduct another trial of a Huntington’s disease gene therapy. Last month, the agency initially refused to review a flu vaccine from Moderna before quickly changing course.”

From the judicial front,

  • Medical Economics tells us,
    • “Advanced analytics and multi-agency coordination are shortening investigative timelines and expanding parallel civil FCA, criminal, administrative, and state litigation exposure from a single operational issue. 
    • “Enterprise-level FCA theories are emphasizing systems, governance, and vendor relationships, with sustained focus on managed care, prescription drugs, and medically unnecessary services. 
    • “Medicare Advantage risk adjustment scrutiny is extending to incentive design, retrospective addenda, chart review vendors, and documentation tools that may be construed as rewarding coding intensity. 
    • “Telehealth platforms face continued controlled-substance risk despite extended prescribing flexibilities, with enforcement targeting clinical legitimacy, marketing representations, cross-state compliance, and decision-making controls. 
    • “Cybersecurity and privacy failures are becoming enforcement multipliers via FCA cyber-fraud theories, CCPA actions, and HIPAA tracking-technology scrutiny involving adtech and analytics data sharing.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Moderna has agreed to pay Roivant up to $2.25 billion to settle claims that the mRNA vaccine developer infringed on Roivant’s patents in its Covid-19 shot.
    • “Roivant will receive $950 million and then another $1.3 billion if Moderna’s attempts to have parts of its liability offloaded to the federal government fail upon appeal. If the full amount is paid, it will be among the largest patent settlements in history. 
    • “It is probably the largest ever,” said Jacob Sherkow, a professor of law and medicine at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
    • “The settlement comes less than a week before the two companies were set to go to a jury trial in Delaware, where legal experts say Moderna may have faced an uphill battle.\

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • To live long, be strong.
    • That’s the poetic implication of a new study of longevity and mortality in a large group of women aged 63 to 99.
    • “In the study, published in February in JAMA Network Open, researchers checked the women’s health, fitness, grip strength and lifespans. By analyzing that data, they hoped to tease out the importance of muscular strength for healthy aging.
    • “The results “were a bit of a surprise,” said Michael J. Lamonte, lead author of the study and a professor of epidemiology and healthy aging at the University of Buffalo in New York. Strength turned out to be a key — and singular — contributor to longer lives, he said, reducing the risk for early death by a third or more, even when the researchers took into account people’s aerobic fitness, health, age and exercise habits.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about cystic fibrosis.
  • MedPage tells us,
    • “A meta-analysis found that women lost more weight than men while taking a GLP-1 receptor agonist.
    • “Biological differences, such as estrogen levels and body composition, may explain why women respond more to these agents.
    • “Weight loss was consistent across many other patient subgroups broken down by age, race and ethnicity, body mass index, and HbA1c.”
  • and
    • “Lithium carbonate might have slowed decline in verbal memory in a pilot study.
    • “However, the treatment did not meet a prespecified threshold for the trial’s primary outcomes.
    • “Earlier research suggested lithium may offer neuroprotective benefits in Alzheimer’s and dementia.”
  • Genetic Engineering and BioTechnology News points out,
    • “Immune monitoring is useful to monitor processes like vaccination and during diseases like infectious disease, cancer, and autoimmunity. However, detection of antigen-specific lymphocytes is challenging given that are low in frequency and have a dispersed distribution.
    • “Now, the first bandage-like, painless, microneedle patch that can sample the body’s immune responses from the skin has been developed. The device detects inflammatory signals within minutes and collects specialized immune cells within hours without the need for blood draws or surgical biopsies.
    • “The study appears in Nature Biomedical Engineering in the paper, “Leveraging tissue-resident memory T cells for non-invasive immune monitoring via microneedle skin patches.
    • “The patch is helping researchers and clinicians study immune responses in aging and skin autoimmunity, including vitiligo and psoriasis. In the future, it could make it easier to track how people respond to vaccines, infections, and cancer therapies by complementing traditional blood tests and biopsies while being far easier on patients.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Shares of Aardvark Therapeutics lost more than half their value after safety worries led the biotechnology company to halt testing of its most advanced drug prospect. 
    • “Aardvark said Friday that, “out of an abundance of caution,” the company has voluntarily paused dosing and enrollment in a Phase 3 trial of ARD-101, an experimental drug it’s been developing for the rare genetic disease Prader-Willi syndrome. According to Aardvark, trial monitors detected “reversible cardiac observations” during a routine safety check in a study of healthy volunteers.” 
  • and
    • “Kyowa Kirin will stop all trials of an eczema drug once seen as a possible future blockbuster, claiming a new safety review has led the company to believe that the treatment’s risks may outweigh its benefits.
    • “In a Tuesday statement, the company said a planned evaluationconducted by the company and former development partner Amgen in recent weeks unearthed “emerging concerns of malignancies” related to treatment with a therapy known as rocatinlimab. These concerns included one new confirmed case and another suspected case of Kaposi’s sarcoma, a cancer that forms around skin lesions.”
    • “The findings suggest a potential link between onset of the cancer and the drug’s mechanism of modulating an immunogical pathway called OX40. While the overall number of cases is below expected background rates, the “characteristics” involved “raised a plausible biological concern that cannot be excluded,” the company said.
    • “All studies will be discontinued after study participants complete their required safety follow-up visits, Kyowa Kirin added.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review relates,
    • “Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic recorded an income from current activities of $1.5 billion (6.8% margin) in 2025, up from $1.3 billion (6.5% margin) in 2024.”
  • and
  • and
    • “Nacogdoches County Hospital District in Nacogdoches, Texas, unanimously approved a new lease agreement with Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare on Feb. 27, The Nacogdoches Daily Sentinel reported March 2.
    • “The 15-year lease agreement designates Nacogdoches Memorial Hospital and Cecil R. Bomar Rehabilitation Center as campuses of Nacogdoches Medical Center. Tenet, which operates Nacogdoches Medical Center, will assume daily operations of Nacogdoches Memorial Hospital.”
  • and
    • “Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare and Ascension are planning competing freestanding emergency departments in Fairview, Tenn., a fast-growing community in western Williamson County.”
  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “Health systems interested in preserving their operating margins will need to be proactive in addressing a growing minority population responsible for an outsized share of care utilization: patients with multiple chronic conditions. 
    • “In a newly released analysis of 2025 claims data, Vizient found that 11% of the U.S. population with multiple chronic conditions accounted for 52% of inpatient admissions. These patients also represented 35% of emergency department visits and 32% of office visits.
    • “To put it another way—compared to those without any chronic disease, these patients have about 10 times more inpatient admissions and ED visits, as well as six times as many office visits. Further, ED and office visits among those with multiple chronic conditions are projected over the next decade to grow at nearly double the rate of those with a single chronic condition, who are also higher care utilizers.
    • These patients pose a major financial challenge for providers due to their unfavorable payer mix. Specifically, Vizient found that 72% of inpatient admissions for those with multiple chronic conditions were covered by Medicare and another 10% by Medicaid. 
  • and
    • “Grow Therapy, a hybrid mental health provider, has clinched $150 million to build out physician and employer relationships.
    • “The series D round was led by TCV and Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, with participation from new investors BCI and Menlo Ventures. 
    • ‘Physicians and employers are newer customer types for Grow but have been the focus of the platform’s growth over the past five years. The capital will also be used to strengthen the tech powering Grow and enhance the user experience for patients, therapists and other partners.
    • “Grow has amassed a range of partners that today includes 125 payers, provider groups like Circle Medical, health systems like Kaiser Permanente and employers. Primary care docs are of particular focus to Grow right now, given they deliver 60% of the nation’s mental healthcare.” 
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • RadNet has struck a 230 million euros deal to buy radiology artificial intelligence company Gleamer.
    • “The takeover, which the companies disclosed Monday, gives RadNet control of devices that are used in more than 25 indications and are forecast to generate about $30 million in annualized recurring revenue this year.
    • “Buying Gleamer will expand the capabilities RadNet acquired through the DeepHealth buyout in 2020, particularly in X-ray, and accelerate its expansion outside the U.S. Gleamer will be integrated into DeepHealth, a full-owned subsidiary of Radnet.”

Monday report

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “Republicans are renewing their push to fully fund and reopen the Homeland Security Department, suggesting the war the United States launched against Iran over the weekend has heightened the need to end the single-agency shutdown that entered its third week on Monday. 
    • “House Republicans will bring up another vote on a DHS appropriations bill this week, Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., announced, saying it was dangerous for Democrats to continue holding up the funding due to concerns over the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement crackdown. 
    • “The legislation would “end the DHS shutdown so we can ensure agencies can protect America during this dangerous time,” Scalise said, noting the FBI has warned of an elevated threat of terrorist activity domestically.” * * *
    • “Most of the department’s employees have continued to work during the shutdown, with only about 8% of the workforce home on furlough. Many employees, such as law enforcement and other personnel at Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection, are receiving their normal paychecks thanks to funding Congress provided in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Others, such as Transportation Security Administration and Federal Emergency Management Agency workers, have started to receive partial paychecks or will do so this week. The U.S. Coast Guard is paying its uniformed personnel on time, but civilians will face delayed pay.” 
  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “The American Medical Association is overhauling how U.S. doctors report and bill for pregnancy services, bulldozing the current system of bundled payments and replacing it with more granular, itemized codes next year.
    • “The changes, shared exclusively with Healthcare Dive, could help improve poor maternity health outcomes in the U.S. But it’s also an acquiescence to specialty groups, which have long lobbied the powerful medical association that modern obstetric services are more complex than the current coding system is able to reflect.
    • “The move also represents a step back for value-based care, and could incentivize OB-GYNs and other doctors to provide unnecessary medical services at a time of skyrocketing health spending.
    • “But the changes shouldn’t result in OBGYNs, nurse-midwives or other maternity care specialists bringing in more revenue, according to the AMA, which argues the new coding system will benefit the entire healthcare industry.” * * *
    • “Global codes are normally billed when a baby is delivered, which can keep insurers in the dark about their members’ pregnancies. The new codes should give insurers more information, including when a member gets pregnant, that could help them ensure expecting mothers get adequate prenatal care, or know if mothers had complications during delivery that could necessitate follow-up services, according to Dr. Daniel Halevy, an executive at New York nonprofit insurer Healthfirst.”
  • and
    • “Sweeping reforms in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026, signed into law by President Donald Trump earlier this month, included changes that could upend the traditional PBM model, while also turning attention back to drugmakers.” * * *
    • “With PBMs’ bargaining power facing stricter limits under the new reform [which takes effect later this decade to allow for necessary rulemaking], questions surrounding pricing could shift in a new direction.
    • “Be ready for the spotlight to swing back to drug manufacturers,” said Jesse Dresser, a partner in law firm Frier Levitt’s life sciences department and head of its pharmacy practice group.
    • “As PBMs lose traction in the coming years, the pressure on drugmakers to justify their own list prices could intensify.
    • “Now, the argument is going to be that PBMs have been handcuffed, limiting their ability to use some of these abusive tools,” Dresser suggested. “So, it’s going to be up to the drug manufacturers to make sure they’re taking the appropriate steps and not continuing in the old paradigm now that there should be a shift in financial incentives.”
  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “A group representing thousands of pharmacies across the US said its members are experiencing financial issues after the rollout of the government’s drug price negotiation program, urging the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to immediately address cash flow concerns.
    • “A letter from the National Community Pharmacists Association is asking CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz to ensure pharmacies receive timely payments under the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program, finding in a survey that its members are facing cash flow issues after dispensing certain drugs and waiting for a refund from the manufacturer. 
    • “We need CMS to take all necessary steps to expedite the manufacturers’” refund payments to pharmacies, Ronna Hauser, senior vice president of policy and pharmacy affairs for NCPA, said in the letter to the CMS sent Thursday. “Pharmacies cannot continue to dispense these drugs with delayed payments unless the cash flow issues significantly improve.”
  • Per an Employee Benefits Research Institute news release,
    • “Rising health care costs are affecting household finances for many privately insured adults, with 4 in 10 reporting higher expenses in the past year and many cutting discretionary spending or reducing retirement contributions, according to results from the 2025 EBRI/Greenwald Research Consumer Engagement in Health Care Survey (CEHCS) released today by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI).
    • “Employment-based coverage remained the dominant source of private insurance, with 6 in 10 covered through their own job. Deductibles also remained widespread across plan types: More than three-quarters of enrollees had a medical deductible, including 70% of traditional plan enrollees. Enrollment in high-deductible health plans dipped slightly in 2025, while enrollment in consumer-directed health plans and health savings accounts (HSAs) appeared relatively stable.
    • “The annual survey also found that most enrollees spent relatively little time selecting coverage during open enrollment, with about half spending less than an hour reviewing options and most spending under two hours. While most adults reported being satisfied with the ease of plan selection and the information available, satisfaction with the availability of affordable plan options and the number of plans to choose from declined in 2025.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues tells us,
    • “CMS is sanctioning Elevance Health and plans to suspend enrollment into the insurer’s Medicare Advantage prescription drug plans, according to a Feb. 27 agency letter.
    • ‘The enrollment and communications pause is set to begin March 31 unless Elevance submits all data corrections and an attestation in advance. CMS said the intermediate sanctions stem from “substantial and persistent noncompliance with Medicare Advantage risk adjustment data submission requirements.” The sanctions will apply until Elevance resolves the issues.”
  • Per a Labor Department news release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division announced [February 26] a proposed rule designed to help workers and employers better understand how to determine when a worker is an employee and when the worker may be classified as an independent contractor under the Fair Labor Standards Act and related federal laws. 
    • The proposed rule would rescind the department’s 2024 final rule addressing the classification of independent contractors and replace it with an analysis for employee classification similar to the one adopted by the department in 2021. Consistent with Supreme Court and federal circuit court precedent, the proposed rule would make it easier to properly differentiate between employees with the protections under the Fair Labor Standards Act and those workers who work as independent contractors.” * * *
    • “The department encourages all interested parties to submit comments on the proposed rule, which has a 60-day comment period that closes at 11:59 p.m. ET on April 28, 2026.” 

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Ascendis Pharma said Friday the Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval to a treatment it’s developed for the most common type of dwarfism, ending what had been a monopoly for rival drugmaker BioMarin Pharmaceutical. 
    • “The new drug, previously known as TransCon CNP and now Yuviwel, is a once-weekly injection cleared for children aged two and older with achondroplasia and open growth plates. The treatment will compete with Voxzogo, a daily shot sold by BioMarin.”
  • MedTech Dive relates,
    • “Abbott has won approval for updated remote heart failure monitoring technology, the company said Friday.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration awarded approval to CardioMEMS Hero, a new version of the device that patients use to take daily pulmonary artery pressure readings.
    • “Abbott has made Hero smaller and 60% lighter than the previous reader, fitting the electronics into a device the size of a laptop case to make it easier to use and take on planes.”
  • and
    • “Unomedical, a subsidiary of Convatec and a supplier of insulin infusion sets to diabetes tech firms, received a warning letter from the Food and Drug Administration in January.
    • “Inspectors raised concerns with leaking infusion sets, which can pose a risk of insulin under-delivery, potentially leading to life-threatening complications like diabetic ketoacidosis.  “Regulators called for Unomedical to address problems with validating its devices, addressing complaints and providing timely adverse event reports to the FDA.
    • “The warning letter followed a remote regulatory assessment of Unomedical’s facility in Reynosa, Mexico, last summer.”

From the judicial front,

  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “The Justice Department said it won’t appeal the decision of a New York federal judge to throw out a murder charge against Luigi Mangione, which means he won’t face the death penalty if he’s convicted of killing UnitedHealth Group Inc. executive Brian Thompson.
    • “US District Judge Margaret Garnett ruled in January that prosecutors can’t pursuethe capital murder charge, but that a jury could determine if Mangione caused Thompson’s death under two federal stalking laws. If convicted of those crimes, he could face life in prison without possibility of parole. 
    • “In a one-page letter Friday to Garnett, a Justice Department lawyer said prosecutors won’t challenge the judge’s decision.” 

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The American Hospital Association News reports,
    • “A report published March 2 by the American Cancer Society found that colorectal cancer rates among adults 65 and older continue to decline while rates for younger adults continue to increase. The study found that the increase is being driven by a higher prevalence of rectal cancer, which now makes up 32% of all colorectal cancer diagnoses, up from 27% in the mid-2000s. The study also projects 158,850 new cases of colorectal cancer in the U.S. in 2026, and that 55,230 individuals will die from the disease. Nearly one-third of deaths are estimated to be younger than age 65.” 
  • Cardiovascular Business tells us,
    • “Patients with type 2 diabetes who use GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) and make healthy lifestyle choices can significantly lower their risk of experiencing a heart attack or stroke, according to new data published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.[1]
    • The study’s authors explored data from more than 98,000 participants from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ Million Veteran Program. These individuals were enrolled from 2011 to 2023. 
    • “Lifestyle habits explored in this analysis included getting a recommended amount of exercise, not smoking, sleeping well, drinking minimal alcohol, properly managing stress, connecting with others socially and avoiding opioids. Overall, adults on a GLP-1 RA and following six to eight of these healthy habits was associated with a 43% lower risk of experiencing a major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE) than those not taking GLP-1 RA or adhering to these habits. When adults followed all eight habits, meanwhile, the risk was approximately 60% lower.
    • “In addition, those using a GLP-1 RA had a 16% lower MACE risk than those who did not use a GLP-1. 
    • “Our findings underscore that, even in the era of highly effective GLP-1 pharmacotherapy, lifestyle habits remain central to diabetes management and cardiovascular risk reduction and can substantially amplify the benefits of modern medications,” corresponding author Frank Hu, MD, PhD, chair of the department of nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in a statement.”
  • Contemporary OB/GYN informs us,
    • “The quadrivalent HPV vaccine is associated with a significantly reduced risk of invasive cervical cancer that persists for at least 18 years after administration.
    • “Vaccination before the age of 17 provides a 79% lower risk of cervical cancer, while those vaccinated at age 17 or older also experience significant long term risk reductions.
    • “Population level data shows that school based vaccination cohorts have significantly lower rates of invasive cervical cancer compared to earlier opportunistic vaccination cohorts.”
  • MedPage Today points out,
    • “The location and amount of brain microbleeds that a person has could be telling of their risk of dementia, according to an observational analysis.
    • “Compared with controls with no cerebral microbleeds detected on MRI, there was an increased dementia risk in older people with:
      • “Mixed subcortical and lobar microbleeds (HR 1.99, 95% CI 1.40-2.83)
      • “Lobar-only microbleeds, with or without cortical superficial siderosis (HR 1.96, 95% CI 1.30-2.97)
      • “Any cortical superficial siderosis (HR 2.57, 95% CI 1.36-4.89)
    • “Participants with three or more cerebral microbleeds of any pattern also had an increased risk of dementia (HR 1.92, 95% CI 1.35-2.72), as did peers with at least two subcortical microbleeds, according to Rebecca Gottesman, MD, PhD, of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Maryland, and colleagues.
    • “Their report, based on the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities-Neurocognitive Study, was published in Stroke.
  • and
    • “Chronic migraine patients who used GLP-1 receptor agonists to treat conditions like obesity or diabetes had fewer emergency department (ED) visits than those on topiramate (Topamax), a real-world data analysis showed.
    • “Compared with topiramate users, GLP-1 drug initiators were 10% less likely to visit the ED over the following year (RR 0.90, 95% CI 0.86-0.94), reported Hsiangkuo Yuan, MD, PhD, of Jefferson Headache Center at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, in an abstract released ahead of the American Academy of Neurologyopens in a new tab or window annual meeting.”
  • The Wall Street Journal asks whether Multi-Cancer Blood Tests Are Ready for Prime Time?
    • Early detection tests are already on the market, but without FDA approval or proof they reduce deaths some doctors urge caution
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Roche’s experimental pill fenebrutinib hit its main goal in a second Phase 3 trial in the most common form of multiple sclerosis, helping treatment recipients experience significantly fewer relapses than study volunteers who got Sanofi’s Aubagio, the company said Monday.
    • “However, Roche also reported a case of severe liver side effects in one enrollee who got fenebrutinib in the study. It also revealed a higher number of deaths among people who took its therapy in the two Phase 3 trials in relapsing MS, which prompted one analyst, Michael Leuchten of Jefferies, to question the drug’s approval prospects. Analysts have forecasted peak sales of more than 3 billion Swiss francs, or $3.8 billion, for fenebrutinib, Leuchten wrote.
    • “Fenebrutinib is part of a new crop of “BTK inhibitors” that drugmakers are now positioning as potential autoimmune disease treatments. The effort has yielded multiple setbacks in MS, though, as the Food and Drug Administration recently rejected a BTK drug from Sanofi, and other developers like Merck KGaA and Biogen have given up on prospective drugs.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “UnitedHealth Group has named Dennis Stankiewicz as chief accounting officer, effective March 2. 
    • “Tom Roos, who has served as CAO since 2015, has been named CFO at Optum Insight, the company said in regulatory filings.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “UnitedHealth executive and former Optum leader Heather Cianfrocco is leaving the company, according to a post on LinkedIn.
    • Cianfrocco was promoted to executive vice president of governance, compliance and information security at UnitedHealth in May, after serving for a year as CEO of Optum, the company’s health services arm. Patrick Conway, the former CEO of Optum Rx, replaced Cianfrocco.
    • “Cianfrocco is departing UnitedHealth after serving in a number of executive positions, including as CEO of Optum Rx and chief of UnitedHealthcare’s community and state division. “After 24 years, I am saying goodbye to the team at UnitedHealth Group,” she said in a post on LinkedIn. “I am leaving with so much pride in what we have accomplished together.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “According to data gathered by Becker’s, Parkland Health and Hospital System [in Dallas, Texas] saw the highest number of emergency department visits in 2025. 
    • “The figures [shown in the article] represent the number of ED visits at individual hospital facilities, rather than the total visits across entire health systems. These self-reported totals were provided directly by hospitals.
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “Healthcare technology companies DoseSpot and Arrive Health have merged to combine an electronic prescribing platform with medical and pharmacy benefits data to advance real-time medication price transparency for providers and patients.
    • “The new company, called Interra Health, combines Arrive Health’s coverage and pricing network with DoseSpot’s e-prescribing capabilities to support prescribing decisions and help patients access the right medication at the lowest cost, according to the companies.
    • “Bain Capital Tech Opportunities is backing the deal and will serve as majority owner. PSG, the former majority owner of DoseSpot, will be a minority owner. Additional minority investors include Providence and UPMC Enterprises.
    • “The combined company is profitable, growing at approximately 40% annually and projected to exceed $100 million in revenue in 2026, executives said.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Privately held Candid Therapeutics will merge with Rallybio in a deal to take the inflammatory disease drugmaker public, the companies said Monday.
    • “The new entity will operate under Candid’s name, and trade on Wall Street under the ticker “CDRX.” As part of the deal, Candid raised $505 million from more than a dozen venture capital firms and mutual funds including Venrock, RA Capital Management and Janus Henderson Investors.
    • “Candid is developing bispecific antibodies known as T-cell engagers it acquired in two deals with Chinese biotechnology firms in 2024. One of Candid’s central goals is to show it can advance drugs that are similar to cell therapies targeting B cells, but easier to manufacture and administer. While bispecifics research has largely focused on cancer, startups like Candid — and even some pharmas — are now testing the applicability of these drugs against autoimmune conditions.”

Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call previews Congress’s agenda for this week here.
  • Of note,
    • Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
    • 10:00 AM (EST) – Senate | 430 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.
    • Meeting: Hearings to examine transforming health care with data, focusing on improving patient outcomes through next-generation care.
    • Meeting Details
  • Per a February 27, 2026, HHS news release,
    • The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) today announced the appointment of two new members to the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
    • The two new members are:
      • Sean G. Downing, M.D., physician specializing in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, and
      • Angelina Farella, M.D., pediatrician and owner of A Brighter Tomorrow Family Health and Wellness in Webster, Texas.

From the judicial front,

  • Per a February 27, 2026, Justice Department news release,
    • “Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates located in Atlanta, Georgia, has agreed to pay $4.75 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by receiving kickbacks in exchange for referrals of gastrointestinal pathology services and by performing certain gastrointestinal pathology services that were not medically reasonable or necessary.
    • “The United States alleged that beginning in approximately May 2017, Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates contracted with Advanced Pathology Solutions (APS), a pathology laboratory located in Little Rock, Arkansas, to construct and operate a limited-capacity pathology laboratory in Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates’ office. Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates received various benefits from APS in connection with the setup and ongoing operations of the in-house lab, in which histology technicians prepared and stained specimen sample slides and Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates billed Medicare and other insurers for the technical component of those services. In exchange, Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates agreed to exclusively refer patients to APS, which interpreted the slides and billed for the professional component of the services. The United States alleges that the benefits provided by APS to Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates were unlawful remuneration in exchange for patient referrals.” * * *
    • The claims resolved by the settlement are allegations only and there has been no determination of liability.

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • Health Day reports,
    • “Some Great Value cottage cheese products sold at Walmart are being recalled because they may not have been fully pasteurized, Saputo Cheese USA said.
    • “The recall affects select cottage cheese products made between Feb. 17 and 20, and sold in the following states: Alaska, Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, Texas, Tennessee, Utah, Washington and Wyoming, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reported.
    • “No illnesses or hospitalizations have been reported so far.
  • Medscape tells us,
    • “Age-adjusted rates of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality tripled from 3.4 to 10.34 per 100,000 people between 1999 and 2023 among US adults with obesity, with higher rates observed in men, older adults, non-Hispanic Black adults, and in the South.”
  • and
    • “Most Americans with obesity perceive themselves as only having overweight regardless of race or ethnicity, whereas experiences of weight stigma and bias differ across White, Black, and Hispanic groups with obesity, new research found.
    • “Clinicians need to know their patients, understand them from a cultural and racial perspective, and tailor treatment plans to align with their expectations and needs. This will improve motivation, engagement, and adherence,” study author Rodolfo J. Galindo, MD, Director of the Comprehensive Diabetes Center, Lennar Medical Center, University of Miami Health System, told Medscape Medical News.
    • “Obesity medicine physician scientist Fatima Cody Stanford, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, told Medscape Medical News that the new findings add “an important, clinically relevant nuance that weight stigma is not monolithic and that experiences and attitudes can differ meaningfully across racial/ethnic groups among adults living with obesity.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish patients knew about social isolation.
  • Medscape informs us,
    • “Can agnostic therapies revolutionize precision oncology? Are we ready to treat cancer without looking at the organ? For decades, cancer has been told as a story of organs: lungs, breast, colon, etc. Each diagnosis implied a predictable therapeutic path. In recent years that map has begun to blur, and in oncology clinics it is increasingly common for specialists to focus less on the patient’s cancer type and more on the molecular alteration driving its growth. The idea is to concentrate on the molecular footprint rather than the organ — a shift that is transforming precision oncology.”
  • and
    • “Described for the first time in the 1940s, lipedema has long been misunderstood, often mistaken for common obesity or lymphedema and frequently treated as a cosmetic issue. This has produced chronic underdiagnosis, stigma, and fragmented care.
    • “But that picture has changed structurally with the recent publication of the Lipedema World Alliance’s first international consensus on the definition and management of lipedema, based on the Delphi method.
    • “Specialists from 19 countries contributed 59 consensus statements covering definition, pathophysiology, diagnosis, impact on quality of life, therapeutic strategies, and future research directions. Rather than offering definitive solutions, the document provides a shared starting point for clinicians, researchers, and policymakers.”
  • Fierce Pharma points out,
    • “The treatment landscape for clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) could be due for a shake-up following dual breakthroughs from Merck’s Litespark clinical trial program for Welireg. Data being presented at the 2026 American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Genitourinary Cancers Symposium suggest that adding Welireg to other existing drugs significantly improves outcomes for patients at two distinct stages of their cancer journeys.
    • “For advanced ccRCC patients whose cancer has recurred following previous immunotherapy, a combination of Welireg (belzutifan) and Merck’s Eisai-partnered Lenvima (lenvatinib) significantly reduced patients’ risk of disease progression or death by 30% compared with Exelixis’ Cabometyx (cabozantinib), according to results from the Litespark-011 trial.
    • “Separately, in patients with resected ccRCC at an increased risk of recurrence following surgery, by adding Welireg to Merck’s standard Keytruda, investigators achieved a 28% reduction in the risk of the patients’ cancer returning, according to data from the Litespark-022 study.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Healthcare Cost Institute reports,
    • “Hospital outpatient care is a large and growing component of the health care spending equation among ESI [employer sponsored insurance] enrollees. There is a disconnect between the most common reasons for hospital outpatient visits and the drivers of spending. Diagnostic tests, imaging, and evaluation and management visits accounted for more than 75% of visits in 2022, but these three categories represented just 39% of spending, which was largely driven by imaging procedures. Meanwhile, major surgeries and minor procedures accounted for 34% of spending despite being only 8% of visits.
    • “Site neutral payment policies are one approach to curbing the growth of hospital outpatient spending. These policies require providers to charge the same amount for a service regardless of whether it was performed in a hospital outpatient department or a less intensive setting like a doctor’s office. Site neutral payments could reduce the amount of money spent on imaging and evaluation and management visits, but may not be appropriate for major surgeries like joint replacement.
    • Hospital outpatient services are also nearly three times more expensive in ESI than in Medicare. Policies that aim to align Medicare and ESI payments for outpatient care may be more suited to addressing the drivers of cost like outpatient surgery and other higher intensity procedures. Payment parity policies can also impact lower-cost, high-volume services like mammography and diagnostic testing. Effective approaches to addressing outpatient hospital costs will require creativity and a blended approach that accounts for the wide spectrum of care delivered in this setting.”
  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “For-profit hospital operator Universal Health Services expects to increase admissions and hit long-standing growth targets in its behavioral health unit this year, executives said on a fourth-quarter earnings call Thursday.
    • “Executives said 2026 would be the year its behavioral health unit achieved 2% to 3% growth in adjusted patient days — a number the system has struggled to hit as it tries to address lagging growth at its behavioral facilities. The system initially expected to hit that target last year, but deferred due to challenges with labor and staffing.
    • “Still, executives said they anticipate multiple headwinds this year, including losses from the lapse of more generous subsidies in Affordable Care Act plans and a new staffing law in California.”
  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “UniQure lost nearly half a billion dollars in market value Thursday, as comments made by the head of the Food and Drug Administration appeared to stoke investor fears that the company’s most advanced research project won’t be approved in the U.S.
    • “Shares of UniQure dropped more than 30% shortly after FDA Commissioner Martin Makary appeared on CNBC to defend the agency’s approach to approving rare disease therapies. The agency has come under fire for multiple delays and regulatory setbacks involving these medications. Makary, though, said critics have been searching for a “boogeyman” to blame for recent rejections, when the bottom line is that some of these therapies just haven’t been proven effective.
    • “He mentioned, as one example, how the FDA was pressured to approve a product that’s injected into the space surrounding the brain, through a burr hole drilled into patients’ skulls.
    • “Makary didn’t name any company, but that didn’t stop some investors from interpreting his remarks as a reference to UniQure’s “AMT-130,” a gene therapy for Huntington’s disease administered via burr hole.
    • “Wall Street analysts noted that Makary might not have been talking about UniQure * * *.
    • In any case, what’s notable from Makary’s appearance is his “steadfast defense” of the FDA, “which is discouraging for those hoping that the agency can be convinced to reconsider recent negative decisions, in the absence of specific political pressure,” wrote Paul Matteis, of Stifel, in a note to clients.
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • GE HealthCare has struck a 10-year deal with UCSF Health to support imaging at the healthcare system, the company said Thursday.
    • UCSF Health will work with GE HealthCare to implement remote scanning capabilities, train staff and improve magnetic resonance imaging performance. 
    • The agreement is part of a series of large deals involving GE HealthCare. CEO Peter Arduini told investors last month that the company has inked enterprise deals worth $7 billion in three years.

Friday report

From Washington, DC

  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “The Trump administration has proposed flat rates in Medicare Advantage (MA) for 2027, and insurers argue in new commentary that those levels do not reflect the realities of the program.
    • “In late January, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released its annual proposed advance notice governing MA and Part D. 
    • “The proposal includes a net payment rate increase of 0.09% in MA, meaning levels will be essentially flat if the plan becomes final.
    • “The proposed rule drew immediate ire from the industry, which is already navigating significant financial challenges in this market. Multiple leading players have elected to exit certain MA markets. 
    • “In official comments (PDF) submitted Wednesday to the CMS, the AHIP said the proposed rule “risks undermining CMS’ goal of providing beneficiaries with stable, affordable choices during the annual enrollment period.”
    • “At a time of sharply rising medical costs and high utilization of medical services, the combined effect of the proposed policy changes and growth rates will not keep pace with the cost of caring for seniors in 2027,” the organization, which is the largest lobbying group representing insurers, said in its comment letter.”
  • MedPage Today relates,
    • A top health official at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) [Chris Klomp] hedged on payment reform, but committed to helping physicians address prior authorization challenges, during the American Medical Association’s (AMA) National Advocacy Conference.”
  • Per Beckers Health IT,
    • “CMS has rolled out an app directory for Medicare recipients as part of the agency’s push to digitize healthcare.
    • “The Medicare App Library seeks solutions that fall under one of three use cases: “kill the clipboard,” conversational AI assistants, or diabetes and obesity prevention and management.
    • “We are calling on health app developers, tech-enabled organizations, and innovators to voluntarily align around a shared framework for data and access that empowers people, improves care, and accelerates progress,” CMS stated Feb. 23. “This is a movement, not a mandate. It is a call to action, not a regulation. Let’s show what’s possible when we work together — and finally bring healthcare into the modern era.”
  • Federal News Network tells us
    • “Tens of thousands of federal employees at U.S. Customs and Border Protection are expected to continue receiving pay during the Department of Homeland Security’s current funding lapse, according to an email viewed by Federal News Network.
    • “CBP, a component of DHS, plans to use discretionary funding from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to exempt and continue paying more than 57,600 agency employees who have been working throughout the partial shutdown this month. Details of the agency’s decision come from an email sent this week by the National Treasury Employees Union, obtained by Federal News Network.
    • “Under the current shutdown, CBP will “exempt” and provide pay to a large portion of its workforce, including law enforcement personnel and certain civilian agency employees. Some other CBP employees, however, are still considered “excepted” and will not receive pay until after the shutdown ends.”
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • “The Trump administration is imposing a six-month moratorium on Medicare enrollment for certain suppliers of durable medical equipment, prosthetics and orthotics, or DMEPOS, as part of a broader plan to combat fraud in healthcare.
    • “The administration said Wednesday that the nationwide halt on enrollment would give the government time to consider more actions “to further mitigate longstanding instances of fraud, waste, and abuse perpetrated by certain DMEPOS companies.”
    • “The temporary freeze applies to all applications for initial enrollment and changes in majority ownership for medical supply companies.
    • “Durable medical equipment includes items such as walkers, wheelchairs, oxygen equipment, hospital beds, continuous positive airway pressure machines and blood sugar monitors.”
  • NCQA, writing in LinkedIn, announced its “Advanced Primary Care Pilot Program” and invited readers to “Meet Our Primary Care Partners!”
  • The Labor Department’s Employee Benefits Security Administration let us know about extending the public comment period on its proposed Improving Transparency Into Pharmacy Benefit Manager Fee Disclosure rule to April 15, 2026.

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday posted a warning letter sent to Beta Bionics in late January.
    • “The letter raised concerns with how the diabetes tech company handled complaints of severe low and high blood sugar associated with its automated insulin delivery system. The FDA also flagged problems with the company making modifications to its device without notifying regulators.
    • “In an annual report filed Tuesday, the company said it has already taken several corrective actions, including improvements to the processes identified in the warning letter. The company is also preparing a written response to the letter.”
  • Cadiovascular Business informs us,
    • Cara Medical, a medtech company focused on advanced imaging technologies, has secured U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for its new platform that noninvasively visualizes a patient’s cardiac conduction system.
    • “The CARA System, which previously earned the FDA’s breakthrough device designation, was designed to help interventional cardiologists and electrophysiologists plan ahead before procedures and then guide them during treatment. It can be used for structural heart interventions such as transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) as well as pacing procedures.
    • “The newly cleared system includes two primary components. The CARA Metis Simulator is a preprocedural planning software that identifies the cardiac conduction axis on CT angiography results and generates a 3D map of the patient’s conduction system. The CARA Atlas Navigator, meanwhile, overlays that map onto live fluoroscopic images to assist with intraprocedural guidance. 
    • “Artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms play a role in both components, extracting metadata and detecting the user’s catheter for visualization, but all AI calculations can still be confirmed by a physician.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated nationally. RSV activity is elevated and increasing in some areas of the country. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations for RSV are highest among infants and children less than 4 years old. COVID-19 activity is decreasing nationally but remains elevated in some areas of the country.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity is decreasing nationally but remains elevated in some areas of the country.
    • “Influenza
      • “Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated nationally. Influenza A activity is decreasing while influenza B activity is increasing nationally and in most areas of the country.
      • “Additional information about current influenza activity can be found at: Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report | CDC
    • RSV
      • “RSV activity is elevated in many areas of the country, including emergency department visits and hospitalizations among infants and children 4 years and younger.
    • Vaccination
      • “National vaccination coverage for COVID-19, influenza, and RSV vaccines remains low for children and adults. COVID-19, influenza, and RSV vaccines can provide protection against severe disease. It is not too late to get vaccinated this season. Talk to your doctor or trusted healthcare provider about what vaccines are recommended for you and your family.”
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP tells us,
    • “The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has ended its investigation into the recent multistate infant botulism outbreak traced to ByHeart powdered formula and lowered the total case number by three. In a Public Health Alert issued earlier this week, California, CDC, and Food and Drug Administration scientists reported 51 infections, but yesterday the CDC said it has excluded three suspected cases, for a total of 48 (28 confirmed, 20 probable) in November and December 2025. While the outbreak is over, investigators continue to probe how Clostridium botulinum bacteria got into the formula, the CDC said.
    • “A report published yesterday in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report describes how officials used artificial intelligence (AI) to identify contaminated ice in a beer cooler as the source of a 2024 Salmonella enterica outbreak at a county fair. Ice is an uncommon vehicle for Salmonella spread at public events, noted author Katherine Houser, RN, of the Brown County Health Department in Mount Sterling, Illinois. The outbreak sickened 13 people (seven confirmed, six probable cases). AI tools helped synthesize background information to support and contextualize the environmental health team’s assessment, Houser said.”
  • The CDC also announced today,
    • “As of February 26, 2026, 1,136 confirmed* measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026. Among these, 1,130 measles cases were reported by 28 jurisdictions: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York City, New York State, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin. A total of 6 measles cases were reported among international visitors to the United States. 
    • “There have been 10 new outbreaks** reported in 2026, and 90% of confirmed cases (1,023 of 1,136) are outbreak-associated (152 from outbreaks starting in 2026 and 871 from outbreaks that started in 2025).”
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “Identical stool samples sent to seven direct-to-consumer microbiome testing companies produced substantially different bacterial profiles and health assessments.
    • “Across 18 commonly reported microbial genera, no company’s results matched the consensus; and only three genera of 1,208 identified taxa appeared in every report.
    • “Researchers attributed the discrepancies to differences in laboratory methods and analysis pipelines, and say the results underscore the need for standardized testing and quality controls.”
  • The Wall Street Journal considers
    • “Why All The Fuss About Bone Density?
    • “Like most of my peers, I’m being bombarded daily with hectoring advice about my bones. What’s a 40-something woman to do?” * * *
    • “For guidance, [the journalist] consult[s] with Dr. Karen Tang, the author of “It’s Not Hysteria: Everything You Need to Know About Your Reproductive Health (but Were Never Told),” who offers a more measured take.” 
  • Medscape adds,
    • “A low-dose, single pill that combines three antihypertensive treatments is as effective as standard-dose monotherapy — in some cases even better — for treating mild-to-moderate hypertension, according to the first phase 3 double-blind trials comparing the medications.
    • “Investigators for the HM-APOLLO-301 and HM-APOLLO-302 phase 3 clinical trials, which were published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, contend there is now concrete evidence to support the efficacy of the single-pill therapy.
    • “They argue that starting with the traditional single-agent therapy and then titrating up can delay blood pressure control, increase the possibility of adverse effects, and affect patient adherence.”
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP relates,
    • “The results of a randomized controlled trial (RCT) indicate that meningococcal B vaccine is not effective at preventing gonorrhea infection in high-risk groups.
    • “The results, presented this week at the Conference on Retroviruses and Infections by a team of Australian researchers, show that among gay and bisexual men with a history of gonorrhea infection who received either the 4CMenB vaccine or placebo, gonorrhea incidence was essentially the same—roughly 48% in both arms.
    • “The 4CMenB vaccine is designed to protect against four serogroups of Neisseria meningitidis, which can cause invasive meningococcal disease. But in recent years, observational studies have suggested 4CMenB might also provide moderate cross-protection against Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the bacterium that causes gonorrhea—one of the most common sexually transmitted infections (STIs) worldwide.” 
  • Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News reports,
    • “CAR T cell therapy has revolutionized the treatment of many blood cancers, but has shown little success against solid tumors, which account for more than 85% of all cancers.
    • “Columbia University researchers have now developed a new form of highly sensitive CAR T cells, known as HIT T cells, that aims to overcome one of the biggest barriers in solid tumor immunotherapies, which is the way that solid tumors lack a single, widely shared surface target.
    • “Headed by Michel Sadelain, MD, PhD, director Columbia Initiative in Cell Engineering and Therapy (CICET), the researchers engineered an ultra-sensitive and highly selective chimeric antigen receptor called an HLA-independent T cell (HIT) receptor, which is capable of detecting even the smallest amounts of the protein CD70 on tumor cells.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Elevance is consolidating control of its health insurance businesses under Felicia Norwood, its head of government benefits, as the company looks to improve coordination across its Medicaid, Medicare and commercial plans and — hopefully — bolster waning profits.
    • “Mark Kaye, Elevance’s CFO, will also take on leadership of health services division Carelon as current president Peter Haytaian leaves to spend more time with his family, according to a press release Thursday announcing the executive changes.
    • “Haytaian will leave the role effective May 4 and stay on as an advisor through the end of the year. The executive first joined Elevance in 2012 through its acquisition of Amerigroup before becoming president of Carelon in 2021.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “Longtime UnitedHealth Group executive Heather Cianfrocco is leaving the company.
    • Ms. Cianfrocco has served as executive vice president of governance, compliance and information security at UnitedHealth since April 2025. She briefly served as CEO of Optum from 2024 to 2025 before being succeeded by Patrick Conway, MD, who previously led Optum Rx. 
    • “After 24 years, I am saying goodbye to the team at UnitedHealth Group,” she wrote on LinkedIn Feb. 27. “I am leaving with so much pride in what we have accomplished together. I’ve had the privilege of working alongside some of the most talented, mission-driven people who show up every day determined to make health care easier to navigate, more affordable and more human.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “CVS Caremark is expanding its use of Surescripts’ Touchless Prior Authorization platform to accelerate approvals for select specialty medications.
    • “The prior authorization technology connects directly to patients’ EHRs to gather required clinical data and match it with prior authorization criteria, according to a Feb. 25 news release. When requirements are met, CVS Caremark can approve medications automatically in as little as 22 seconds.
    • “The platform is currently used for select specialty drugs, including Vivitrol and Epidiolex, which treat substance use disorder and epilepsy. These medications typically require complex approvals because of their high impact and specialized clinical use cases.”
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “Teladoc Health projects membership in its business-to-business integrated care unit will decline this year, in part due to the expiration of enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies, management said during a fourth-quarter earnings call Wednesday.
    • “The company expects 97 million to 100 million members in U.S. integrated care in 2026, down from 101.8 million at the end of last year. 
    • ‘Teladoc expects the decline will be driven by enrollment reductions at some client health plans in government programs, which were impacted by the lapse of more generous financial assistance for ACA coverage, CEO Chuck Divita said on the call.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “Walgreens is wading into the self-pay GLP-1 space, going head-to-head with telehealth subscription offerings.
    • “The retail pharmacy giant launched a digital weight management service to offer access to personalized, clinician-guided support for weight loss. The service expands Walgreens’ virtual healthcare platform and provides patients with access to licensed doctors and nurse practitioners, FDA-approved medication options and ongoing virtual support, according to the company in a press release.
    • “Virtual visits through the weight management service cost $49 with no requirement for a monthly subscription. The program, currently available in 28 states, is intended for eligible overweight and obese adults ages 18-64 who plan to self-pay for their GLP-1 medication.”
  • Healthexec summarizes news from “the 2026 ViVE conference, part of HLTH, [which] just wrapped up in California. On the show floor, people from across the healthcare and health IT space gathered for four days of events, thought leader insights and product showcases on the floors of the Los Angeles Convention Center. 

Thursday report

From Washington, DC,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “In his first week leading two of the nation’s health agencies, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya has been met with praise and gratitude from federal employees — an unexpected reception for a scientist who spent much of the last few years facing scorn from most other public health experts.
    • “Dr. Bhattacharya, director of the National Institutes of Health, was last week named the acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A medical economist and former Stanford University professor, he replaced Jim O’Neill, a Silicon Valley executive with no medical training.
    • “Like most officials in the Trump administration, Dr. Bhattacharya was staunchly opposed to mandates for Covid vaccines, but unlike many, he has not questioned the safety of childhood vaccines.
    • “In meetings with C.D.C. staff this week, Dr. Bhattacharya offered to publicly endorse immunizations in general and the measles vaccine in particular; extolled the importance of prevention efforts against H.I.V.; and promised to try to extend remote work accommodations, according to several C.D.C. employees with knowledge of the discussions.” 
  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “HHS released its third annual report Feb. 9 that evaluates how the No Surprises Act has affected healthcare markets.
    • “The report was produced with analytical support from RAND, and extends claims data trends through 2022, the first full year after the law took effect.
    • “Because most self-insured employer plans were not previously subject to state surprise billing laws, the NSA represented a bigger regulatory change for them than for fully insured plans. Average out-of-network per-claim payments for emergency services in self-insured plans fell 41% during the period, compared to 22% for fully insured plans. Self-insured plans also saw steeper declines in out-of-network billing prevalence and out-of-pocket costs across the board.”
  • Avalere Health tells us,
    • “From 2025 to 2026, overall Part D enrollment increased from 55.4 million to 56.9 million (a 2.7% increase). Over this period, enrollment in PDPs grew by 7.2% while enrollment in MA-PDs decreased by 0.5%. This is a notable shift from trends in recent years. MA-PD enrollment had climbed from 26 million in 2022 to 31.8 million in 2025, with annual growth of 7.4% from 2023 to 2024 and 4.3% from 2024 to 2025. By contrast, PDP enrollment was stable at 23.4 million in 2022 and 23.5 million in 2025, before rising to 25.2 million in 2026.  
    • “PDP enrollees are increasingly selecting lower premiums plans. In 2026, 64% of PDP enrollees chose plans with premiums under $25, up from 49% in 2025. At the same time, the share selecting plans with premiums of $100 or more increased to 17% in 2026, up from 12% in 2025.” * * *
    • “Despite continued declines in the number of standalone PDPs offered in 2025 and 2026 relative to prior years, PDP enrollment has increased while MA-PD enrollment has largely leveled off. For plan sponsors, this divergence may signal changing beneficiary preferences around premium sensitivity, benefit offerings, pharmacy network design, and the value proposition of integrated MA coverage versus a standalone Part D product.” 
        
  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “The Agriculture Department is planning to sell one of its headquarters buildings, as part of an ongoing agency reorganization that will relocate more than half of its workforce in Washington, D.C. to regional hubs across the country.
    • “USDA announced Wednesday that it is turning the department’s South Building over to its landlord, the General Services Administration, which plans to sell the building.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, explains “How to make the most of FERS, Social Security and your TSP.”
    • “Understanding each part of your federal retirement can help you plan when and how to retire and avoid surprises.”
  • Govexec relates,
    • Newly released data from the Government Accountability Office offers some of the most granular glimpses yet of how the Trump administration’s sprint to remake the federal workforce in the president’s image impacted agency headcounts.
    • “The report, published Tuesday, responds to a request by congressional Democrats to catalog data related to a variety of workforce changes undertaken shortly after President Trump returned to office last January, including reductions in force, the purge of recently hired or promoted employees with fewer civil service protections and the deferred resignation program.
    • “GAO said it relied upon data from the Office of Personnel Management and individual agencies in compiling its report. OPM has previously said that around 317,000 federal workers left government in 2025. The watchdog agency’s report captures the first six months of Trump’s second term, capturing a fraction of that throughput.
    • “Of the 134,122 employees who separated from the 23 CFO Act agencies during the period from January to June 2025, a substantial majority (around 77%) retired or resigned,” GAO found. “Another roughly 19% were terminated or removed from their positions. Of these, agencies reported that nearly 4,500 employees (or about 3%) were terminated during a probationary or trial period.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • ABC News reports,
    • “Frozen blueberries distributed in four states have been voluntarily recalled due to possible listeria contamination.
    • “Oregon Potato Company, which owns the Salem, Oregon-based Willamette Valley Fruit Company, voluntarily recalled 55,689 pounds of frozen blueberries on Feb. 12 over potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes, according an enforcement report from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
    • “The recall was designated as a Class I recall on Feb. 24, the highest FDA classification, which indicates that “use of or exposure to” the affected product can cause “serious adverse health consequences or death.”
  • MedPage Today adds,
    • “The FDA approved dupilumab (Dupixent) for treating allergic fungal rhinosinusitis, a first for the condition, the agency announced on Wednesday.
    • “Approval stipulates use in individuals 6 years and older with prior sino-nasal surgery, as the condition has a high rate of post-operative recurrence.
    • “Allergic fungal rhinosinusitis is characterized by the production of thick, sticky mucus following an allergic reaction to fungi in the sinuses. Left untreated, the type 2 inflammatory disease can expand the sinuses, erode surrounding bone, and lead to vision problems, nerve damage, and even facial deformities.”

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “A federal appeals court on Thursday declined to enforce a temporary decision blocking the Trump administration from stripping two-thirds of the federal workforce of their collective bargaining rights, dimming though not extinguishing the American Federation of Government Employees’ legal challenges against a pair of anti-union executive orders.
    • “A three-judge panel on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously that it could not uphold a preliminary injunction that would have blocked the Trump administration from implementing a pair of 2025 executive orders that cite a seldom-used provision of the 1978 Civil Service Reform Act to ban collective bargaining at most federal agencies, under the auspices of national security. That injunction had itself been put on hold by the appellate judges since last August.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The last thing someone in their 30s or 40s should worry about is dying of a heart attack. But new research shows more are.
    • “The proportion of adults ages 18 to 54 who died in a hospital of a severe first heart attack rose 57% between 2011 and 2022, according to a new study published Thursdayin the Journal of the American Heart Association.
    • “Most of those who died were men, but women died at higher rates than men.
    • “The study offers the latest evidence of worsening health among younger U.S. adults, including deaths from conditions traditionally tied to aging, such as heart disease and cancer.”
  • The American Hospital Association News relates,
    • “Obesity rates for U.S. children and teenagers have reached record highs, while rates for adults had a slight decline, according to reports by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Both reports examined historical trends using height and weight data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. From August 2021 to August 2023, an estimated 21.1% of children and teenagers ages 2-19 were obese, up from 19.3% from 2017-2018. Additionally, from 2021-2023, 7% of children and adolescents were severely obese and 15.1% were overweight. For adults, 40.3% were obese from 2021-2023, down from 42.8% in 2017-2018. In addition, from 2021-2023, 9.7% of adults were severely obese and 31.7% were overweight.”
  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “Eli Lilly’s GLP-1 pill orforglipron was associated with greater weight loss and reductions in blood sugar levels than Novo Nordisk’s rival drug Rybelsus in a head-to-head trial in people with diabetes.
    • “The study results disclosed Thursday could help strengthen Lilly’s case for approval as well as orforglipron’s uptake in diabetes. But investigators also flagged higher rates of side effects in orforglipron recipients that led people to stop treatment. 
    • “The data highlight another potential threat to Novo, which has seen its shares tumble amid pricing pressure and competition from Lilly as well as drug compounders. The Denmark-based company markets the only oral GLP-1 medications for diabetes and obesity — Rybelsus and the Wegovy pill, respectively — but that could soon change. Lilly expects the Food and Drug Administration to decide whether to clear use of orforglipron in obesity sometime in the second quarter.” 
  • Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News informs us,
    • “A study by researchers at The Jackson Laboratory (JAX), the Broad Institute, and Yale University has identified how specific genetic changes function in cells to influence disease risk and other human health traits. By probing regions of DNA previously linked to disease, the scientists created high resolution maps of DNA variant activity, helping pinpoint the exact changes that shape blood pressure, cholesterol levels, blood sugar and other complex human traits.
    • “The study takes on a long-standing challenge in human genetics. Scientists have known for years that certain regions of the genome—often spanning tens of thousands to millions of DNA letters—are associated with diseases. But because these regions usually contain many variants that could potentially drive those associations, performing the necessary experiments to pinpoint which specific DNA changes truly matter has been difficult and time-consuming.
    • “The solution was scale. Using a massively parallel reporter assay (MRPA)—which is a high-throughput approach that simultaneously evaluates the regulatory activity of thousands of DNA sequences—the team tested more than 220,000 previously identified DNA changes in five different cell types. By doing so, they resolved about 20% of these regions across the genome, revealing new insights into what these variants do, which in turn could help improve risk prediction and guide the development of new therapies.
    • “Geneticist Ryan Tewhey, PhD, an associate professor who led the team at JAX, explained that previously making these connections was like searching for a single typo on one page of a massive book. The researchers’ new experimental approach is more akin to speed reading, scanning thousands of pages at once and flagging the exact letters that change meaning, dramatically accelerating genetic discovery.”
  • The Washington Post lets us know that “An all-or-nothing mindset could be hurting your exercise and health goals.
    • “If you’ve given up on your New Year’s resolutions to get fit, here are some tips for getting back in the saddle.”
  • MedPage Today adds,
    • “The cost of sunscreen with an SPF-50 rating varied by 17.5-fold per ounce and 100-fold per application in an economic analysis.
    • “Wearing more protective clothing could significantly reduce the amount of sunscreen needed and could lower application expenses.
    • “Standardization of sunscreen application to achieve desired thickness might influence annual cost.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “Cigna has acquired CarepathRx, a large pharmacy backed by private equity that dispenses prescription drugs to nearly 10% of U.S. hospitals.
    • “The acquisition, discovered by STAT in a review of Cigna’s financial filings, reinforces the company’s push to control more of the lucrative flow of pharmaceuticals through the U.S. health care system. Cigna executives have repeatedly told investors that managing prescription drugs has been one of their highest priorities since the company acquired Express Scripts for $54 billion in 2018.”
  • Beckers Health IT relates,
    • “Two years after a merger that created a now $12.1 billion system, St. Louis-based BJC Health is rolling out fresh branding to solidify its market positioning and boost recruitment and retention, leaders told Becker’s.
    • “St. Louis-based BJC HealthCare and Kansas City, Mo.-based Saint Luke’s Health System joined forcesin early 2024, rebranding as BJC Health in late 2025. Now, the organization’s West region is in the midst of a new marketing campaign — “All For Kansas City” — and updating signage to bring the BJC brand to its market.
    • “The new logo puts an exclamation point behind the fact that the Saint Luke’s brand is here to stay, and, at the same time, connects us to BJC Health,” said Julie Quirin, president of BJC Health’s West region (aka Saint Luke’s Health System). “It tells the story that we’re stronger together, while leaning into that brand equity that we’ve built over the last 150 years here in Kansas City.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Already on a roll with its first-in-class FcRn blocker Vyvgart, argenx has reported successful trial results that could pave the way for the fast-rising blockbuster to reach a new indication—ocular myasthenia gravis.
    • “The phase 3 Adapt Oculus study, which is the first to specifically evaluate a targeted treatment for ocular myasthenia gravis (oMG), has achieved its primary endpoint, demonstrating that Vyvgart can improve vision by a statistically significant margin, argenx reported Thursday.
    • “The company hailed the victory the same day it unveiled its 2025 earnings, showing that Vyvgart sales came in at $1.3 billion in the fourth quarter and $4.2 billion for the full year.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Labcorp has expanded its collaboration with PathAI to use a digital pathology platform at its anatomic pathology labs and hospital sites.
    • “The agreement, which Labcorp disclosed Monday, supports the use of PathAI’s AISight Dx to enable digital workflows for case management, slide review, collaboration and annotation.
    • “Quest Diagnostics, Labcorp’s main rival, licensed AISight Dx in 2024 in conjunction with its $100 million acquisition of PathAI’s diagnostic laboratory in Memphis, Tennessee.”