Midweek report

Midweek report

  • Fedsmith lets us know,
    • “The summer of 2025 experienced an unusually high surge in incoming retirement claims, starting in May and continuing into June. This surge can be largely attributed to the significant number of federal employees who have left federal service through various programs, including deferred resignation, Voluntary Early Retirement Authority (VERA), and others.
    • “According to OPM, approximately 154,000 federal employees have resigned under the deferred resignation program, and OPM Director Scott Kupor said recently that he anticipates the total federal workforce reduction to be at least double that number in the near future.”
  • Per an OPM press release,
    • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) today announced that registration is now open for its innovative Executive Development Programs, designed specifically for Senior Executives Service (SES), GS-15, and GS-14 leaders.
    • These programs are closely aligned with President Trumpʼs new Executive Core Qualifications (ECQs) for senior executives, ensuring participants develop the critical competencies needed for todayʼs federal leadership roles.
    • By focusing on these updated standards, OPM is empowering leaders to deliver meaningful results and advance the mission of government agencies nationwide, drive President Trumpʼs ambitious agenda, and improve performance and accountability across the federal government. The program is highlighted by training videos from key Trump Administration leaders and distinguished career Senior Executives.
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “A new analysis published Aug. 6 by the Peterson Center on Healthcare and KFF found that Health Insurance Marketplace insurers will propose a median premium increase of 18% for 2026. A previous analysis reported 15% based on preliminary findings. The new findings were examined from individual market filings, which provide additional details and are publicly available. The proposal more than doubles last year’s 7% median proposed increase.
    • “Insurers are citing the increase on higher prescription drug costs as well as labor costs, inflation, the scheduled expiration of enhanced premium tax credits and impacts from tariffs. The report found that the expiring tax credits would increase out-of-pocket premium payments by more than 75% on average, while tariffs could increase costs of certain drugs, medical equipment and supplies. Final rates will be determined in late summer.”
  • Bricker Graydon informs us,
    • “As employers increasingly struggle with rising health plan costs, the IRS has provided some good news.  Recently, the IRS announced that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) affordability threshold will increase to 9.96% of household income for plan years starting in 2026.  This is an increase from the 9.02% that applied to 2025.  This significant increase means employers have more room to potentially increase the employee portion of premiums for 2026. 
    • “The ACA affordability percentage is used to determine if ACA employer penalties may apply to employer-provided coverage. An employer’s health coverage will be considered affordable as long as the employee’s required contribution for the lowest-cost, self-only coverage does not exceed 9.96% of their income (or an IRS-approved safe harbor equivalent, such as the W-2, rate-of-pay, or federal poverty line methods). For example, under the federal poverty line safe harbor, monthly employee contributions will need to remain below approximately $129.89 in 2026.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP points out,
    • “Clarametyx Biosciences said this week that its investigational antibody treatment for cystic fibrosis patients plagued by chronic bacterial lung infections will receive priority review and development incentives from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
    • “The company said in a press release that the FDA had granted CMTX-101, a monoclonal antibody designed to rapidly collapse bacterial biofilms, Fast Track and Qualified Infectious Disease Product (QIDP) designations under the Gaining Antibiotic Incentives Now Act. The two designations mean Ohio-based Clarametyx will get more frequent interactions with the agency, an expedited review process and potentially accelerated approval, and an additional 5 years of market exclusivity if CMTX-101 is approved.”
  • Cardiovascular Business reports,
    • “Boston Scientific’s Watchman device is associated with a heightened risk of air embolism events if the implant procedure is performed without positive pressure-controlled ventilation, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Air embolism is a rare, but potentially fatal complication that occurs when air enters the bloodstream and creates a blockage in a patient’s blood vessel. 
    • “According to published literature and clinical data, in percutaneous procedures requiring transseptal access to the left atrium when conscious or deep sedation is used, patients have an approximately three-times higher risk of negative left atrium pressure and air ingress,” according to a new FDA advisory. “This risk is especially prevalent in patients with preexisting low left atrial pressure, hypovolemia and partial upper airway collapse.”
    • “The FDA emphasized that air embolism can lead to “severe outcomes, including life-threatening or fatal consequences.” 
    • “Because of this risk, which has been associated with 120 serious injuries and 17 deaths as of July 30, Boston Scientific is updating the assembly instructions of several access systems used to implant the Watchman device in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation.”
  • and 
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is sharing additional details about a safety issue with certain Boston Scientific defibrillation leads. 
    • “According to the agency, some of the company’s single- and double-coil Reliance defibrillation leads coated with expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) have been associated with a potential risk of rising low-voltage shock impedance (LVSI). This issue, linked to calcification, may make the devices less effective as time goes on.
    • “The most common harm is early lead replacement, and the most serious harm is death or need for cardiac resuscitation due to non-conversion of a sustained ventricular arrhythmia from a reduced shock energy due to high impedance,” according a new FDA advisory. “As of July 24, Boston Scientific has reported 386 serious injuries and 16 patient deaths associated with this issue.”
    • “The FDA is still reviewing the situation. At this time, the agency has not determined if this is a Class I recall. The goal of this early alert is to provide details as quickly as possible.” 

From the judicial front,

  • MedTech Dive relates,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission has moved to block Edwards Lifesciences’ planned acquisition of JenaValve Technology, citing concerns that the deal threatens to reduce competition in the market for devices to treat aortic regurgitation.
    • “The agency alleged that over two days in July 2024, Edwards signed agreements to acquire both JenaValve and JC Medical, the two leading companies competing to bring transcatheter aortic valve replacement devices to market to treat the potentially fatal heart condition. Edwards closed the acquisition of JC Medical in August 2024.
    • “The FTC said Edwards’ proposed $945 million acquisition of JenaValve would combine the only two companies conducting U.S. clinical trials for a TAVR aortic regurgitation, or TAVR-AR, device.
    • “The deal threatens to reduce competition in the TAVR-AR market, likely resulting in reduced innovation, diminished product quality, and potentially increased prices for consumers,” the agency stated in a federal court complaint.
    • “The commission voted 3-0 to issue an administrative complaint and seek a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction to halt the transaction pending an administrative proceeding. The complaint and injunction request were filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP relates,
    • “In a weekly update today, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 23 more measles cases, bringing the national total for the year to 1,356 cases, the most since the United States achieved measles elimination in 2000.
    • “One more state reported cases, Wisconsin, lifting the number of affected states to 41. Three more outbreaks were reported, putting the nation’s total at 32 for the year. For comparison, the country had 16 outbreaks for all of 2024. 
    • “Of confirmed illnesses this year, 87% were part of outbreaks, compared with 69% for 2024. And of infected patients, 92% were unvaccinated or had unknown vaccination status. Though about 65% of cases occurred in children, 34% were recorded in adults ages 20 years and older.”
  • NBC News reports,
    • “A second person has now died and more than 50 people have fallen ill as part of a growing Legionnaires’ cluster in Harlem, city health officials reported Monday.
    • “The disease was initially detected on July 25; since then, two people have died and 58 people have been diagnosed, the New York City Health Department revealed in its latest update.
    • “Legionnaire’s, a type of pneumonia, is caused by the bacteria Legionella, which grows in warm water. The cases from the cluster have been found in five Harlem ZIP codes: 10027, 10030, 10035, 10037 and 10039, along with the bordering communities, according to health officials.
    • “If you’re in those ZIP codes that have demonstrated exposure, then we want you to monitor your symptoms and get to a healthcare provider as soon as you can so you can get access to antibiotics, because it is treatable,” said Dr. Tony Eyssallenne, the deputy chief medical officer for the city’s Health Department.”
  • STAT News notes,
    • “Hundreds of wildfires burning across the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan are pushing smoke across Canada and the American northeast. Canadian towns close to the wildfires are experiencing the worst of the smoke pollution, but even here in Boston, there was a brief ground stop at the airport Monday due to smoke and haze. 
    • “It’s getting better, but here’s a reminder: 
      • “Wildfire smoke is particularly harmful to kids’ respiratory health. One study found that a 10-unit increase of fine particulate matter from wildfire smoke was associated with a 30% spike in pediatric admissions for respiratory problems. “It’s quite a big bit of a difference,” the lead author said.
      • “Researchers have found that people who live in areas with high levels of fine particulate matter could have a greater risk of developing dementia, with a particularly strong link seen between the condition and exposure to wildfire emissions. Still, there are a lot of questions remaining about other long-term effects.
      • “In California, between 2008 and 2010, somewhere between 52,480 and 55,710 people died prematurely due to chronic exposure to wildfire smoke. The economic impact of those deaths was at least $432 billion.”
  • Per the AHA News,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Aug. 5 announced a new campaign educating youth ages 12-17 on substance use, mental health and how they are connected. The campaign includes facts about drugs, including prescription medications, and how they can lead to addiction and other health problems. It also includes tips and resources to help improve mental health and recognize the link between mental health and substance use.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Seven years of investigation by scientists at Harvard Medical School has revealed that the loss of the metal lithium plays a powerful role in Alzheimer’s disease, a finding that could lead to earlier detection, new treatments and a broader understanding of how the brain ages.
    • “Researchers led by Bruce A. Yankner, a professor of genetics and neurology at Harvard Medical School, reported that they were able to reverse the disease in mice and restore brain function with small amounts of the compound lithium orotate, enough to mimic the metal’s natural level in the brain. Their study appeared Wednesday in the journal Nature.
    • “The obvious impact is that because lithium orotate is dirt cheap, hopefully we will get rigorous, randomized trials testing this very, very quickly,” said Matt Kaeberlein, former director of the Healthy Aging and Longevity Research Institute at the University of Washington, who did not participate in the study. “And I would say that it will be an embarrassment to the Alzheimer’s clinical community if that doesn’t happen right away.”
    • “Yankner, who is also the co-director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research at Harvard, said: “I do not recommend that people take lithium at this point, because it has not been validated as a treatment in humans. We always have to be cautious because things can change as you go from mice to humans.” He added that the findings still need to be validated by other labs.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Most therapies for low back pain provide only short-term relief; it’s unclear, however, whether benefits from cognitive functional therapy (CFT) may last longer.
    • “Investigators in this study performed 3-year follow-up with participants in a 6-month trial of CFT versus usual care.
    • “Compared with usual care, patients receiving CFT either with or without biofeedback for 6 months continued to show more improvement after 3 years.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Healthcare experts are calling for the end of routine use of diphenhydramine, the active ingredient in a common allergy medication, sold as Benadryl, citing safety concerns that outweigh benefits, CNN reported Aug. 1. 
    • “It’s time to move on. For every single indication that people are using diphenhydramine, there are better drugs that are more effective at treating the symptoms people are trying to treat with fewer side effects,” said Anna Wolfsen, MD, an allergist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “I’ve had patients where I worried that diphenhydramine was impairing their ability to drive or fully participate in their daily lives.”
    • “The widely used, first-generation antihistamine is commonly used to treat allergies. However, other second-generation antihistamines, including brand names such as Claritin, Zyrtec and Allegra, offer the same or better relief with fewer side effects, experts told CNN.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Hinge Health beat investor expectations on revenue in the digital musculoskeletal care company’s first public earnings results.
    • “Revenue increased 55% year over year to $139.1 million in the second quarter, the firm said in earnings released Tuesday. 
    • “The digital health company reported an operational loss of $580.7 million, compared with $17.6 million last year, driven by a stock-based compensation expense largely related to Hinge’s recent IPO, a spokesperson told Healthcare Dive.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Exact Sciences announced on Wednesday that it acquired the rights to a blood-based colon cancer screening test from rival firm Freenome.
    • “Exact is paying Freenome $75 million for exclusive rights in the United States to current and future versions of the Bay Area company’s test, which is currently under review by the Food and Drug Administration. Freenome is eligible for up to $700 million in additional milestone payments.
    • “The deal ratchets up Exact’s intense competition with Guardant Health, which received FDA approval last year for its own blood-based colon cancer test.
    • “Exact had been developing its own blood-based colon cancer test. Last year, the company reported promising initial results from a study of more than 3,000 samples. But on Wednesday, the company disclosed that additional testing showed that the liquid biopsy test wasn’t quite accurate enough to win Medicare reimbursement. Instead, Exact will now look to market Freenome’s test to patients, pending approval.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Days after decreasing full-year guidance by about half a billion dollars, Oscar Health missed earnings projections for the second quarter.
    • “The insurer posted a higher-than-anticipated loss per share of 89 cents, according to estimates by FactSet, reported Sherwood News.
    • “Oscar also recorded a net loss of $228 million, one quarter after having a net profit of $275 million. The insurer saw quarterly revenues hit $2.86 billion and its medical loss ratio (MLR) climb to 91.1%.
    • “The stark jump from a MLR of 79% was due to an increase in market morbidity in the Affordable Care Act exchanges, leading to a net risk adjustment transfer accrual, CEO Mark Bertolini told investors.”
  • and
    • “Blue Shield of California is teaming up with Gemini Health to roll out a new member tool that offers greater transparency at the pharmacy counter.
    • “The tool, called Price Check My Rx, will be available in the insurer’s existing member app, allowing members to see in real time the out-of-pocket price for any new or refilled prescriptions submitted by their provider and covered under their pharmacy benefits.
    • “When the prescription is submitted electronically, the platform will send the member a push notification that prompts them to look at the pricing details and explore alternatives, including low-cost options, if they prefer. Jigar Shah, chief marketing and strategy officer for Blue Shield, told Fierce Healthcare that the tool fits within the payer’s broader goal of simplifying the patient experience.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy sales jumped 67% in the second quarter, despite generic competition in the U.S. market.
    • “The company reduced its full-year guidance due to the impact of copycat versions of its diabetes and obesity drugs.
    • “Outgoing CEO Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen expressed confidence in future growth under incoming CEO Maziar Mike Doustdar.”
  • BioPharma Dive adds,
    • “Scientists at Nxera Pharma have worked for the past year to develop a pipeline of wholly owned obesity drug candidates that the Tokyo and Cambridge, U.K.-based pharmaceutical company unveiled Wednesday. Chief among the seven new programs is an oral GLP-1 agonist that Nxera says is based on “differentiated chemistry” and is distinct from a compound it discovered together with Pfizer under a research alliance. Coincidentally, Pfizer disclosed Tuesday it discontinued development of that compound, a decision Nxera said was made “due to a portfolio decision.” 
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “BD is investing more than $35 million to expand production of prefilled flush syringes at a facility in Columbus, Nebraska, the company said Monday.
    • “The investment will add around 50 jobs at the site and equip BD to make hundreds of millions of additional units a year to meet growing demand from U.S. hospitals and health systems.
    • “BD framed the spending as part of an ongoing commitment to its Posiflush line, which has seen it invest more than $80 million to expand production of the syringes over the past three years.”

Tuesday report

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Many seniors enjoy the perks that come with Medicare Advantage. But those extras—like dental coverage and free gym memberships—are being scaled back.
    • “Insurers are cutting benefits and exiting from unprofitable markets, and Wall Street is cheering them on. Once rewarded by investors for rapid expansion in the lucrative privatized Medicare program, companies are now being applauded for showing restraint amid rising medical costs and lower government payments.” * * *
    • “To be clear, major insurers aren’t exiting Medicare Advantage. Apart from Cigna, which sold its Medicare business last year, the big players are still betting on the program—some are likely to take advantage of the turmoil to increase their market share. And the market is arguably still well served and competitive, especially in densely populated areas. Even after some moderation last year, the average beneficiary this year had 42 plan options from which to choose, according to health-research nonprofit KFF. 
    • “As the industry pivots to leaner operations, Wall Street may regain confidence. But the era of red-hot Medicare Advantage growth is over, at least for now. While Democrats have led efforts to cut overpayments, Republicans also face mounting pressure to curb spending—especially after recent tax cuts, notes Deutsche’s [George] Hill. He warns that more regulatory shifts may be coming, including a potential overhaul of the star ratings system, which governs billions in bonus payments tied to plan quality and patient satisfaction.
    • “Until that picture clears, investors will continue to reward restraint and tightly managed risk. In today’s Medicare Advantage market, and across government insurance programs, growth is taking a back seat to profitability.
  • BiioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “The U.S. plans to put tariffs of up to 250% on pharmaceutical imports over the next year and a half, President Donald Trump said in a Tuesday interview with CNBC.
    • “Trump said he would put a “small tariff” on such imports initially but added that he would raise the duties to 150% and then 250% in “one and a half years maximum.” The president indicated that announcements of pharmaceutical tariffs, as well as duties on semiconductors, would be announced “within the next week or so.”
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today announced the beginning of a coordinated wind-down of its mRNA vaccine development activities under the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), including the cancellation and de-scoping of various contracts and solicitations. The decision follows a comprehensive review of mRNA-related investments initiated during the COVID-19 public health emergency.
    • “We reviewed the science, listened to the experts, and acted,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “BARDA is terminating 22 mRNA vaccine development investments because the data show these vaccines fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu. We’re shifting that funding toward safer, broader vaccine platforms that remain effective even as viruses mutate.” * * *
    • “While some final-stage contracts (e.g., Arcturus and Amplitude) will be allowed to run their course to preserve prior taxpayer investment, no new mRNA-based projects will be initiated. HHS has also instructed its partner, Global Health Investment Corporation (GHIC), which manages BARDA Ventures, to cease all mRNA-based equity investments. In total, this affects 22 projects worth nearly $500 million. Other uses of mRNA technology within the department are not impacted by this announcement.” * * *
    • “The move signals a broader shift in federal vaccine development priorities. Going forward, BARDA will focus on platforms with stronger safety records and transparent clinical and manufacturing data practices. Technologies that were funded during the emergency phase but failed to meet current scientific standards will be phased out in favor of evidence-based, ethically grounded solutions – like whole-virus vaccines and novel platforms.”
  • Roll Call lets us know,
    • “The Trump administration is escalating its push against what has become a key part of the way states, localities and communities respond to the overdose epidemic: harm reduction. 
    • “A public health approach aimed at mitigating the negative health effects associated with drug use, harm reduction aims to prevent overdoses and infectious disease transmission.
    • “Methods can involve the use of opioid overdose reversal medications such as naloxone, providing sterile needles to limit the transmission of infectious diseases, test strips that detect fentanyl in drugs, and “safe consumption sites,” where people can use drugs under supervision in case they need intervention.” * * *
    • “In a “Dear Colleague” letter sent to states last week, Art Kleinschmidt, principal deputy assistant secretary at SAMHSA, said he doesn’t consider naloxone a harm reduction method and as such it would continue to be funded by the government. Kleinschmidt said test kits and other services can also be funded through grants.
    • “But the letter stated that federal funding can’t be used to “purchase pipes or other supplies for safer smoking kits nor syringes or needles used to inject illicit drugs” or “any other supplies to promote or facilitate drug use.” 
    • “Moving forward, SAMHSA funds will no longer be used to support poorly defined so-called “harm reduction” activities; rather, SAMHSA is providing guidance to state agency leadership and to grantees through new award terms and conditions that provide clarity on what supplies and services previously defined under the umbrella of harm reduction can be supported with SAMHSA funding,” Kleinschmidt wrote.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The American Hospital Association News informs us,
    • “Patients in the hospital for surgeries had better outcomes in 2024 than they did in 2019, according to a new report released today by the AHA and Vizient. 
    • “The significant improvement aligned not only with better performance on patient safety metrics — such as reductions in infections and falls — but also with marked declines in three major surgical patient safety indicators: severe bleeding, sepsis and respiratory failure. * * *
    • “The new findings build on a report AHA released in collaboration with Vizient last year showing that hospitals and health systems performed better on key patient safety and quality measures in the first quarter of 2024 than they did before the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, hospitals’ efforts to improve safety led to 200,000 Americans hospitalized between April 2023 and March 2024 surviving episodes of care they wouldn’t have in 2019.” 
  • MedPage Today reports,
    • “Unhealthy alcohol use is a leading cause of death and serious illness among U.S. adults.
    • “In new draft guidance, the USPSTF reaffirmed that all adults should be screened for unhealthy alcohol use and [newly] recommended brief behavioral counseling interventions when appropriate.
    • “The task force found insufficient evidence to make the same recommendation in adolescents.”
    • The public comment period ends on September 2, 2025.
  • Healio adds,
    • “Testing for hepatitis C virus infection every 6 to 12 months — or even more frequently — among people who inject drugs could be a beneficial, cost-effective strategy, according to a study published in JAMA Health Forum.
    • USPSTF recommends hepatitis c screening for adults aged 18 to 79 without known liver disease.
      • “Most adults need to be screened only once. Persons with continued risk for HCV infection (e.g., PWID) should be screened periodically. There is limited information about the specific screening interval that should occur in persons who continue to be at risk for new HCV infection or how pregnancy changes the need for additional screening.”
        • The JAMA Health Forum study fills in the screening interval information gap.
  • Per STAT News,
    • “Nathan Young, a community neurologist at the Mayo Clinic, recently saw a patient whose diagnosis he couldn’t quite nail down. Parkinson’s seemed a likely possibility, but Young was concerned she might instead have a rare neurological disorder called progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP, which can progress much more rapidly. 
    • “I opened a can of worms,” said Young: He ordered a PET scan of the patient’s brain, but the radiology report only confused matters. Instead of ruling out PSP, it suggested yet a third diagnosis: Alzheimer’s. 
    • “Normally at this point, Young would call in other specialists as reinforcements, including Mayo’s renowned experts. But this time he had something different to help: a new AI tool called StateViewer.”
    • “Developed by Mayo’s Neurology AI program, StateViewer takes scans like the one Young ordered — they’re called FDG-PET scans, named for the radioactive tracer they use — and spits out a report of similar brains that have been scanned in Mayo’s clinical and research networks. The output: a differential diagnosis of nine potential types of dementia. In development over the last several years, StateViewer hit the rails at all three Mayo campuses four months ago, and it’s been run thousands of times on patients’ brain scans.”
  • and
    • “Vertex Pharmaceuticals said Monday afternoon that its next-generation non-opioid pain reliever failed to significantly outperform placebo in a Phase 2 trial.
    • “The experimental drug, codenamed VX-993, is similar to the company’s recently approved pill Journavx but could potentially be given at higher doses and formulated as an IV infusion. The hope is that it could thus provide superior relief or offer an alternative to IV opioids. But after Monday’s results, the company said it would discontinue efforts to develop the drug as a single-agent medicine for acute pain.”
    • “We do not plan to advance VX-993 as monotherapy in acute pain, because we do not expect that it will be superior to our [existing] NaV1.8 inhibitors,” said CEO Reshma Kewalramani during a Monday afternoon earnings call with investors, using a scientific shorthand for the class of drugs. She noted that the company will continue a trial testing the drug in patients with diabetes who have chronic nerve pain.”
  • Cardiovascular Business points out,
    • “A surgeon at Cleveland Clinic has performed the world’s first robotic-assisted heart surgery of its kind, using CardioPrecision’s CoreVista Robot Enabling Platform to implant Corcym’s Perceval Plus aortic heart valve through a small incision in the patient’s neck.
    • “The successful operation, known as AVATAR (Advanced Videoscopic Aortic valve surgery by Transcervical Approach using Robot assistance), was performed by Marijan Koprivanac, MD, a cardiovascular surgeon with Cleveland Clinic’s Heart, Vascular and Thoracic Institute. Other robotic techniques for aortic valve replacement have already been in use, including the robotic aortic valve replacement procedures developed at the WVU Heart and Vascular Institute, what sets this approach apart is the fact that everything is done through that small incision in the neck. 
    • “Combining the artificial heart valve with this new surgical technology means patients should experience less pain and time in the hospital following heart surgery,” Koprivanac said in a statement. “In fact, we believe that this may be one of the least invasive surgical heart valve replacement options now available.”
  • Per Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News,
    • “Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an incurable neurological disorder affecting motor neurons (MNs), which are nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control voluntary muscle movement and breathing. Many ALS clinical trials, including those testing promising drugs, have fallen short of expectations, commonly because the extent of the disease can vary, and not all patients respond the same way to medications.
    • “Scientists at Case Western Reserve University now report new insights into one type of ALS, that may point towards a therapeutic approach for different types of the disorder. The team studied inducible pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-motor neurons (MNs) carrying the P56S mutation in a protein called vesicle-associated membrane protein-associated protein-B (VAPB), which is responsible for a familial form of ALS. Their findings provided evidence that the mutation activates integrated stress response (ISR) via mitochondrial dysfunction in motor neurons and also indicated that pharmacological inhibition of ISR using ISRIB helped to rescue ALS-associated phenotypes in both VAPB P56S and patient-derived IPSC-MNs.
    • “Although the research centered on this rare form type of ALS, the investigators are optimistic the positive results could provide clues for potentially treating the devastating disorder more broadly. Study lead Helen Cristina Miranda, PhD, an associate professor of genetics and genome sciences at Case Western Reserve’s School of Medicine, suggested, “This work could help lay the foundation for genetically informed clinical trials.”
    • “Miranda and colleagues reported on their study in EMBO Molecular Medicine, in a paper titled “Convergent activation of the integrated stress response and ER–mitochondria uncoupling in VAPB-associated ALS,” concluding, “This is the first study to mechanistically connect a known ALS mutation with ISR activation, highlighting the potential for mutation-specific therapeutic targeting and patient stratification in ISR-modulating clinical trials.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced a “new study to test if mothers’ diet prevents early sign of food allergy in babies. NIH trial to assess if eating peanuts, eggs during pregnancy, breastfeeding protects infants.”
    • “The study, called Expecting Mother’s Study of Consumption or Avoidance of Peanut and Egg (ESCAPE), will be led by Kirsi Järvinen-Seppo, M.D., Ph.D., chief of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology and Founders’ Distinguished Professor in Pediatric Allergy at University of Rochester Medicine. Results are expected in 2029. 
    • “More information about the trial, including contacts for people who are interested in participating, is available at ClinicalTrials.gov under study identifier NCT06260956.”
  • NIH Research Matters covers the following topics this week: “Treating CoQ10 deficiency | Specialized blood vessels in organoids | Fat-fueled neurons.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review identifies “seven new drug shortages and discontinuations, according to drug supply databases from the FDA and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.” 
  • CIGNA, writing in LinkedIn, discusses the importance of access to mental health services.
    • “Virtual care appointments have emerged as a valuable tool in providing mental health services, particularly in remote or underserved areas. Connecting with mental health professionals via telephone, video calls, and even smart phone apps, make it easier to access care without the need for travel. Additionally, virtual care often reduces wait times, providing quicker access to necessary care.
    • “Community-based mental health programs are another effective approach. These programs use the strengths and resources of local communities to provide support and care. Community health workers, peer support groups, and local organizations can play a vital role in delivering mental health services and promoting mental well-being.
    • “Integrating mental health services into primary care is also promising. By training primary care providers to recognize and address mental health issues, individuals can receive holistic care that addresses both their physical and mental health needs. This integration can help improve overall health outcomes.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Pfizer and other large pharmaceutical companies are taking seriously President Donald Trump’s demand that drugmakers make more of their medicines available direct to consumers in the U.S. at lower cost, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said Tuesday.
    • “We have serious discussions in the industry,” Bourla told investors on a conference call Pfizer held to discuss its earnings for the second quarter. “I’m connected very often individually with all the major companies, and they are all ready to roll up their sleeves and execute something like that.”
  • MedTech Dive relates,
    • “Alcon has agreed to buy implantable lens maker STAAR Surgical for about $1.5 billion in total equity value, the companies said Tuesday.
    • “Alcon, which will purchase all outstanding shares of STAAR for $28 per share in cash, expects STAAR’s refractive surgery offerings to complement Alcon’s laser vision correction business.
    • “BTIG analyst Ryan Zimmerman said Alcon is getting “a solid deal” given STAAR’s setbacks in the China market. The company is betting on a recovery in China and the longer-term health of lens-based refractive surgery, said the analyst.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Shares of Hims & Hers tumbled 12% in after-hours trading Monday after the company’s second-quarter revenue missed Wall Street analysts’ expectations.
    • “The company faces headwinds in its compounded GLP-1 drug business after pharma giant Novo Nordisk pulled the plug on a monthlong collaboration to make its weight loss drug Wegovy available on the telehealth company’s platform. The company had to off-board GLP-1 subscribers from the branded version of the drug, executives said.
    • “Hims & Hers continues to sell compounded semaglutide, the active ingredient in Novo’s Wegovy and Ozempic drugs, and these generic versions are more affordable than the branded drugs.
    • “Analysts, however, seem pleased by what they see as strong results and the online health and wellness company’s growth plans, including international expansion, new hormone health offerings and building out standalone lab testing.”
  • and
    • “Online therapy provider Talkspace continues to make big investments in artificial intelligence, seeing opportunities to improve the experience for patients and cut down on paperwork for providers.
    • “Talkspace connects people via an app with therapists who provide counseling remotely, either over the phone, by video chat or by text.
    • “The company is building out foundational large language models specifically for behavioral health using its internal, de-identified clinical data sets, as it claims to have the “largest behavioral health datasets in the industry,” consisting of millions of therapeutic interactions on the Talkspace platform over the past 12 years.
    • “Unlike existing, horizontal, general-purpose LLMs, we are working closely with mental health clinicians experienced with evidence-based therapeutic frameworks,” CEO Jon Cohen, M.D., told investors during the company’s second-quarter earnings call Tuesday. “Talkspace behavioral health LLMs are being developed specifically to understand the language complexity and workflows of mental health delivery. Once up and running, these behavioral health LLMs will be an integral part of how we provide higher-quality care to our Talkspace members.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Virtual behavioral health provider Cerebral announced Tuesday it had acquired Resilience Lab, which offers therapy and medication management through its online platform. The deal, which closed last week, includes Resilience’s clinician development program aimed at training and supporting early-career therapists. 
    • “The combined organization will be led by Cerebral CEO Brian Reinken under the Cerebral brand, with Resilence Lab Co-founder Marc Goldberg holding the president role, according to a spokesperson. Dr. Carl Marci will join the company as chief medical officer, and Resilience Lab Co-founder Christine Carville will serve as chief clinical officer. Cerebral representatives declined to disclose financial details of the deal.”
  • and
    • “Quest Diagnostics has completed its acquisition of some clinical testing assets from Spectra Laboratories, a subsidiary of dialysis company Fresenius Medical Care.
    • “Under the agreement, Quest will provide dialysis-related clinical testing to independent clinics formerly served by Spectra Laboratories.
    • “As part of a separate deal with Fresenius, Quest said in a Tuesday news release it expects to complete the acquisition of select dialysis-related water testing assets by the end of the year. It also said it plans to start providing comprehensive dialysis-related laboratory services for centers operated by Fresenius in the U.S. The transition of services is slated to be completed by early next year.”

Monday Report

From Washington, DC,

  • PhRMA points out “August is National Immunization Awareness Month (NIAM)—a timely reminder of vaccines’ vital role in protecting our health, especially as preventable disease outbreaks rise and kids head back to school.”
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary today joined Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins to celebrate her signing of six new Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) state waivers to advance the Trump Administration’s priority to Make America Healthy Again. Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey joined them on the MAHA Monday event on the National Mall.
    • “MAHA Monday marks the second day of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Great American Farmers Market 2025, a weeklong celebration of food, family, and farming to showcase American agriculture as part of the Trump Administration’s events leading up to the 250th anniversary of America’s founding next year.
    • “The SNAP waivers for West Virginia, Florida, Colorado, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas amend the statutory definition of food for purchase and end the subsidization of popular types of junk food beginning in 2026.”
  • The New York Times adds
    • “New research suggests that people can lose more weight by avoiding ultra processed foods, even those that are typically considered healthy.
    • “The study, published today in the journal Nature Medicine, is the largest and longest clinical trial yet to examine the effects of ultra processed foods on weight. Participants lost twice as much weight when they followed diets made up of minimally processed foods, like pasta, chicken, fruits and vegetables, as they did when they followed diets with ultra processed foods that met nutrition standards, such as ready-to-heat frozen meals, breakfast cereals, protein bars and shakes.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The White House does not plan to require health insurers to provide coverage for in vitro fertilization services, two people with knowledge of internal discussions said, even though the idea was one of President Donald Trump’s key campaign pledges.” * * *
    • “A senior administration official, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal talks, said that while expanding IVF access remains a “huge priority” for Trump, the president can’t legally make IVF an essential health benefit without Congress first approving legislation to do so. It is unclear whether the administration plans to ask lawmakers to take up a bill, but the two people said that forcing insurance companies to cover IVF is not currently on the table.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, explains “How federal employees can check if their retirement estimate is accurate. Estimating your post-retirement income isn’t just math, it’s about getting the right data, understanding your service credit and avoiding costly missteps.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “The FDA approved aceclidine 1.44% ophthalmic solution (Vizz) for adults with presbyopia, or age-related blurred near vision, maker Lenz Therapeutics announced on Thursday [July 31].
    • It marks the first aceclidine-based solution to be approved for the condition, which affects an estimated 128 million Americans — almost half the adult population.
  • The American Hospital Association News informs us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of Philips Respironics V30, A30 and A40 ventilators due to the potential for serious injury or death. The company is updating use instructions due to the risk of failure in the ventilator inoperative alarm, which can cause therapy interruption or loss. The recall involves correcting the devices and does not call for removing them from where they are used or sold.” 
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today announced that Sean Keveney has been appointed Chief Counsel at the FDA. Keveney most recently served as Acting General Counsel of HHS, where he led the Department’s legal team in advancing key administration priorities and ensuring rigorous legal standards across public health programs.” * * *
    • “Robert Foster, the Department’s Principal Deputy General Counsel, will assume the role of Acting General Counsel of HHS. He will remain FDA Chief Counsel for Food, Research, and Drugs. Foster has deep experience in administrative law and public health litigation and has been a trusted advisor to Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. on matters ranging from vaccine regulation to bioethics.
    • “President Trump earlier this year nominated Michael Stuart, a member of the West Virginia Senate and former United States Attorney for the Southern District of West Virginia, as General Counsel of HHS. The U.S. Senate Committee on Finance held his nomination hearing on July 31, 2025.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News relates,
    • “The Gates Foundation said Monday that it would commit $2.5 billion through 2030 to support dozens of different approaches for improving women’s health, from new medicines to prevent maternal mortality to vaccines to curb infections that disproportionately affect women.
    • “The figure represents an increase of about a third in the foundation’s funding for women’s health and maternal health compared to the previous five years, and is a small illustration of the kinds of commitments that Bill Gates, the foundation’s chairman and founder, is making as he seeks to donate the vast majority of his $114 billion fortune before winding down the foundation over the next 20 years. It is the largest funding commitment the Gates Foundation has made in women’s health.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “People under age 50 have been appearing increasingly at doctors’ offices in the past few decades, complaining of blood in their stool, abdominal trouble or unexplained weight loss. The diagnosis: colorectal cancer. And by that time, it was often too late.
    • “But that paradigm is finally starting to shift, at least for patients in their 40s. 
    • “There has been a jump in people aged 45 to 49 getting screened for colorectal cancer, after recent medical guidelines lowered the screening age for those at average risk. As a result, the disease is being caught sooner, when it is more curable and the treatment is less grueling, according to new research from the American Cancer Society. 
    • “The recent screening recommendations designed to catch cases sooner appear to be working. 
    • “It’s thrilling to see this,” said Rebecca Siegel, an epidemiologist at the ACS and an author of the new research. “It means fewer deaths and higher quality of life for people who are diagnosed.” 
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Compared with untreated flu, oseltamivir [Tamiflu] treatment reduced the risk of serious neuropsychiatric events in children.
    • “Prescribing information for oseltamivir carries warnings about abnormal behavior in kids with flu based on case reports.
    • “Concerns about possible side effects may contribute to oseltamivir being underused in kids at high risk for flu complications.”
  • Diagnostic Imaging notes,
    • “Emerging research suggests that mammography may play a viable role in detecting pregnancy-related breast cancer (PABC), even among women with extremely dense breasts.
    • “For a retrospective study, recently published in Clinical Imaging, researchers reviewed mediolateral oblique and craniocaudal mammogram views for 167 women (mean age of 37) with newly diagnosed PABC as well as ultrasound imaging for 146 women in the cohort. The study authors noted use of different mammography techniques, including full-field digital mammography (78 patients) and digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) (89 patients).
    • “The researchers also pointed out that 97.6 percent of the cohort had dense breasts with 77 percent having extremely dense breasts. Eighty-two percent of the women were lactating, and 18 percent of the cohort were pregnant.”
  • Per the AHA News,
    • “Nearly 57% of mothers did not attend a postpartum follow-up visit three to eight weeks after giving birth, according to a report published July 29 by Cedar Gate Technologies. The rate was higher for younger mothers, as nearly 61% of those aged 20-24 did not attend follow-up appointments. Cedar Gate analyzed a national database of millions of commercially insured patients from July 2022 to June 2023. Previous estimates from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology suggested nearly 40% of women did not attend postpartum visits.” 
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about Huntington’s Disease.
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “While the JAK inhibitor market for alopecia areata (AA) has grown increasingly crowded in recent years, Rinvoq’s clinical performance in the hair follicle-attacking autoimmune disease could earn AbbVie a prominent seat at the table.
    • “After 24 weeks of treatment, Rinvoq (upadacitinib) at two doses—15 mg and 30 mg—helped 44.6% and 54.3% of adult alopecia patients achieve 80% or more scalp hair coverage, respectively, in a phase 3 trial. That compared to just 3.4% of patients on placebo who achieved the same level of hair growth.
    • “Patients enrolled in the study entered at a baseline of roughly 16% scalp hair coverage, as determined by the severity of alopecia tool (SALT), AbbVie said in a July 30 press release.”
  • Radiology Business informs us,
    • “Medical imaging accounts for 4 of the 5 most prevalent low-value healthcare services among Medicare beneficiaries, according to new research published Friday. 
    • “Imaging for plantar fasciitis” was the most frequently delivered unnecessary exam, occurring nearly 84 times per 100 Medicare beneficiaries, experts write in JAMA Health Forum. Low-value imaging for headache (76/100), syncope (72/100) and lower back pain (39/100) also made the top five, with vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty at No. 4. 
    • “The findings are based on a review representing claims from over 3.7 million Medicare beneficiaries treated between 2018 and 2020. Altogether, the payment program spent approximately $484 million on 15 different low-value imaging services, a figure that balloons to nearly $584 million when factoring in beneficiaries’ out-of-pocket costs.  
    • “Findings of this cross-sectional study highlight that reforms aimed at reducing spending for low-value services are feasible to achieve billions in savings without compromising patient health,” David D. Kim, PhD, and A. Mark Fendrick, MD, with the universities of Chicago and Michigan, respectively, wrote Aug. 1.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues identifies seventeen underrated skills that payer leaders need and further reports,
    • “Bloomington, Minn.-based HealthPartners is launching Simplica NextGen Copay, a health plan with no deductible or coinsurance for in-network care.
    • “With the plan, beneficiaries will also see what they’ll pay upfront before scheduling, according to an Aug. 4 HealthPartners news release. Copay amounts for specific services at each hospital or clinic vary based on the quality and affordability of the care delivered.
    • “The plan is launching on Jan. 1, 2026, and will initially be available to large-group, self-insured employers in the Twin Cities metro and surrounding counties, according to the release.
    • “We developed Simplica in response to the growing demand for more predictable benefits,” HealthPartners president and CEO Andrea Walsh said in the release. “This plan gives members the cost clarity and ease they expect from their health plan and guides them in making informed decisions about where to get the care they need.”
  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Brian Pieninck has been tapped as the next president and CEO of GuideWell and its insurer subsidiary Florida Blue, effective Oct. 1.
    • “Pieninck currently serves as president and CEO of CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield and is chair of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association’s board of directors. He will succeed Pat Geraghty, who in March announced his plans to retire Dec. 31, after 14 years with the organization. 
    • “Pieninck joined nonprofit CareFirst, an independent licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, in 2015 as executive vice president of the large group strategic business unit before becoming chief operating officer in 2017. In 2018, he was named president and CEO of the company. 
    • “Prior to CareFirst, he held multiple leadership roles during 19 years at Aetna.”
  • and
    • “Kelly Munson has been named the next president and CEO of Independence Health Group, effective Oct. 1.
    • Munson, who currently serves as president and CEO of Independence Health subsidiary AmeriHealth Caritas, will succeed Gregory Deavens, who earlier this year announced his plans to retire. Deavens will remain at the company through December to support the leadership transition, according to a Monday news release. 
    • “In addition to her role at Independence Health Group, Munson will shift into an oversight position at AmeriHealth Caritas.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to six planned hospital reopenings and adds that
    • “St. Luke’s Des Peres Hospital in St. Louis officially closed Aug. 1, a spokesperson for the Chesterfield, Mo.-based health system told Becker’s.
    • “The decision follows years of declining patient volumes and mounting financial challenges that made continued operation of the 143-bed hospital as an acute care facility unsustainable.” 

Weekend update

  • Roll Call adds,
    • “President Donald Trump gave Senate Republicans permission to begin their August recess Saturday night [August 2, 2025], shortly before Democratic and Republican leaders agreed to quickly vote on seven final civilian nominees but none of the more than 100 still pending on the calendar.
    • “The agreement allowed for votes to begin on cloture and confirmation of the nominees without debate. Among those confirmed under the deal was Jeanine Pirro, who was nominated by Trump to be U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.
    • “The directive from Trump took pressure off of Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., to clear the executive calendar and confirm all of Trump’s pending nominees before the recess.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The Senate late Friday [August 1, 2025,] passed more than $180 billion in funding for veterans programs, new military facilities, the Agriculture Department and the Food and Drug Administration, as lawmakers moved to reassert their control over federal spending amid challenges from the Trump administration.
    • “The Senate approved the bulk of the spending in a 87-9 vote. It separately cleared a measure funding Congress’s own operations as well as related entities that audit federal spending and evaluate the budgetary implications of federal laws. The legislation must go back to the House, which is on recess and will return for legislative business in September.
    • “We are on the verge of an accomplishment that we have not done since 2018, and that is, pass appropriations bills across the Senate floor prior to the August recess,” Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Susan Collins (R., Maine) said shortly before the measures passed. “That is exercising our constitutional responsibility for the power of the purse.”
    • “Sen. Patty Murray (D., Wash.), the top Democrat on the panel, said, “I believe Congress should decide how to spend taxpayer dollars. This is how we do it.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • “Falls are the leading cause of injury for people 65 and older, but the factors that lead to falls can start much earlier.
    • “The risk of falling in a given year doubles with every additional related issue—including reduced muscle strength, balance problems, medication side effects and even forgetting to take that medicine—according to a recent research paper.
    • “That’s why medical experts say that, beginning at age 65, everyone should have an initial screening to determine their personal risk level.
    • “Many people think only frail older people in nursing homes fall. But even the youngerold—those who are healthy and active—can fall,” says Emily Nabors, associate director of innovation at the National Council on Aging.
    • “The nonprofit offers a short online questionnaire that provides a fall-risk score, but Nabors suggests people also get a more comprehensive assessment from a doctor or physical therapist.
    • “Even if you’re at low risk now, there are things you can do to stay that way. And they go beyond removing trip hazards in your home.”
  • The Washington Post lets us know,
    • “Shortly after finishing breakfast six years ago, Brian Farrington felt some discomfort and thought it was heartburn. He popped a few Tums but hours later began perspiring profusely and experiencing chest pain.
    • “The next morning, Farrington, who was 53 and seemingly healthy, headed to the hospital and was shocked to learn he had suffered a heart attack. He had several blockages in his right artery. Previously, Farrington had been told his cholesterol was “borderline high” but did not require medication.
    • “As the resident of Columbus, Ohio, recovered, he considered a nagging question: Why was there so much premature heart disease in his family? His grandfather and three great-uncles had died of heart disease in their 40s, and his father had gotten a stent in his 60s. He decided to dig deeper.
    • “Farrington eventually discovered he had a heart threat that he — and many other people — had never even heard of: High levels of a fatty particle called Lipoprotein(a). The molecule is similar to LDL, the “bad” cholesterol that circulates in the blood and can promote coronary plaque, increasing the risk of heart attacks.
    • “But Lp(a) carries an extra protein that makes it an even bigger cardiac risk factor than LDL, studies have shown. Higher-than-normal levels encourage the development of blood clots as well as plaque, sharply raising the risk of stroke, heart attack and other severe problems — even among younger people with normal levels of LDL, doctors say.
  • and
    • “In March 2024, radiation oncologist Sanjay Mehta had been dealing with painful Achilles tendinitis on his left ankle for over a year. He’d tried steroid injections and PRP (platelet-rich plasma) injections, which Mehta said eventually did the trick.
    • “But when his right Achilles started hurting three months later, he opted for a different approach. He had recently started offering low-dose radiation therapy to treat some patients suffering from inflammatory conditions and thought: Why not try it himself? After six self-administered low-dose X-rays, covered by insurance, he found he was pain-free — and he began offering the therapy to more patients with similar noncancerous conditions.
    • “The main surprise was … why didn’t I think of this earlier?” he said.
    • “Mehta is part of a growing trend among U.S. radiation specialists, who have begun offering low-dose X-ray therapy for benign conditions such as arthritis, plantar fasciitisPeyronie’s disease and thick raised scars, or keloids.
    • “After the American Society for Radiation Oncology discussed the use of low-dose radiation therapy for nonmalignant conditions in its spring 2024 quarterly newsletter, its use began to pick up steam, Mehta said. Unlike radiation therapy for cancer, LDRT, as its name suggests, uses low doses to suppress inflammatory cells. Mehta said six LDRT treatments expose the patient to about the same amount of radiation as in one cancer treatment or what someone might get from “a few” CT scans.”
  • The New York Times tells us that “‘Japanese Walking’ Is a fitness trend worth trying. The workout is simple, and its health benefits are backed by nearly 20 years of research. Check it out.
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “An investigational subcutaneous autoinjector showed comparable efficacy and safety to the IV formulation of lecanemab (Leqembi) for maintenance treatment in early Alzheimer’s disease, researchers said here.
    • “Continued lecanemab treatment with 360 mg subcutaneous dosing resulted in a similar additional reduction of amyloid PET over 4 years of treatment as continuing biweekly IV lecanemab, reported Larisa Reyderman, PhD, of drugmaker Eisai, at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC).

Friday report

  • OPM Director Scott Kupor explains “What They Got Wrong About the Deferred Resignation Program.”
    • “We designed the DRP as a practical, humane, and voluntary option to accelerate workforce transitions in a system that desperately needed movement. Employees were given the option to retire early and receive eight months of paid leave; in return, the government will save $20+ billion in costs, annually.
    • “By the way, the DRP isn’t unusual. It mirrors what employers in the private sector across the country do every day, offer certainty and clarity to employees while restructuring in a responsible, mission-first way. What’s “unusual” is pretending government is exempt from the same pressures every other organization faces in a rapidly changing world and not understanding the simple difference between one-time severance costs and ongoing annual cost savings.”
  • The Plan Sponsor Council of America lets us know,
    • “The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) held a hearing on Thursday to discuss lowering health care prices. The hearing was entitled “Making Healthcare Affordable: Solutions to Lower Costs and Empower Patients.”
    • “Testifying witnesses and Senators agreed universally that price transparency is an important area of reform. “We all agree that price transparency is important,” noted Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) the Chair of the Committee.
    • “[Sen.] Cassidy highlighted one proposed bill, the Patients Deserve Price Tags Act.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • Regulators finalized an interoperability and technology rule on Thursday that aims to lessen administrative burden on providers, including through updates to prior authorization processes.
    • The Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy/Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology’s HTI-4 rule lays out new and updated health IT certification criteria for electronic prior authorization, electronic prescribing and real-time prescription benefit checks. 
    • The regulation should help clinicians spend less time on paperwork, the ASTP said. “We believe that this work will help patients and providers determine patient benefits at the point of care,” Dr. Thomas Keane, assistant secretary for technology policy and national coordinator for health IT, said during a press briefing Friday.
  • Beckers Health IT tells us,
    • “Several health systems are voicing support for a new federal initiative to improve data exchange and expand access to digital health tools, following a July 30 White House summit that formalized a public-private partnership aimed at building a more connected health ecosystem.
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, alongside the Department of Health and Human Services, convened more than 60 organizations — including EHR vendors, technology firms and provider networks — to sign onto the CMS Interoperability Framework. Eleven health systems, including Cincinnati-based Bon Secours Mercy Health, Renton, Wash.-based Providence, Cleveland Clinic, Salt Lake City-based Intermountain Health, Sioux Falls, S.D.-based Sanford Health and Atlantic City, N.J.-based AtlantiCare, committed to promoting adoption of digital tools among their patients.” * * *
    • “CMS said it plans to roll out the first phase of its interoperability framework — allowing patients to access claims data from participating provider networks — in early 2026. Future components include AI-powered care navigation tools, upgrades to Medicare Plan Finder and a digital health app library.”
  • The American Hospital News reports,
    • “The Trump administration July 31 announced modified reciprocal tariffs for several nations that would begin Aug. 7, updating those previously announced in April. Countries not listed in yesterday’s announcement will be charged a 10% baseline tariff. The executive order notes that the administration could modify tariff rates further in the future, depending on whether trade agreements are reached or if the administration determines the circumstances warrant it. 
    • “In a separate announcement, the administration raised tariffs on goods from Canada to 35%, effective Aug. 1. The tariff would not apply to Canadian goods that qualify for duty-free exemptions under the trade agreement between the U.S., Mexico and Canada.”
  • and
    • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Aug. 1 released the fiscal year 2026 final rule for inpatient rehabilitation facilities. The rule will increase payments by 2.6% overall, which includes a 3.3% market basket update reduced by a 0.7 percentage point productivity adjustment. CMS also finalized a decrease in the outlier threshold, from $12,043 to $10,062. For the IRF Quality Reporting Program, CMS finalized removal of four patient assessment data elements and removed the COVID-19 vaccination measures for both patients and health care personnel. Payment changes are effective Oct. 1, 2025.
  • and
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Aug. 1 issued a final rule for the inpatient psychiatric facility prospective payment system for fiscal year 2026. CMS will increase IPF payments by a net 2.4%, or $70 million, in FY 2026 compared to FY 2025. The payment update reflects a market-basket update of 3.2% minus a productivity adjustment of 0.7 percentage points, as well as an additional cut of 0.1% due to the updated outlier threshold. In addition, the agency will increase the adjustment factors for IPFs with teaching status and in rural locations and recognize increases to IPF teaching caps as required by law. For the IPF Quality Reporting Program, CMS will remove three measures related to health equity and one on COVID-19 staff vaccination and revise the reporting period for its emergency department visit following IPF discharge measure.”
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. today announced additional repeals of federal policy that financially rewarded hospitals for reporting staff vaccination rates – an incentive that was coercive and denied informed consent.
    • “Medical decisions should be made based on one thing: the wellbeing of the person – never on a financial bonus or a government mandate.” said Secretary Kennedy. “Doctors deserve the freedom to use their training, follow the science, and speak the truth-without fear of punishment.”
    • “The policy, established under the Biden administration’s Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) inpatient payment rule, tied hospital reimbursement to staff vaccination reporting. The data was published on CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network as a tool for public shaming, not public health.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Some obese Americans on Medicare and Medicaid could get access to expensive weight loss drugs under a five-year experiment being planned by the Trump administration.
    • “Under the proposed plan, state Medicaid programs and Medicare Part D insurance plans would be able to voluntarily choose to cover Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound for patients for “weight management” purposes, according to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services documents obtained by The Washington Post. * * *
    • “The experiment is expected to start in April 2026 for Medicaid and January 2027 for Medicare plans, according to the documents. It will be conducted through a testing lab called the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI), which tries new ways of paying for health care with the goal of lowering costs and improving care.”
    • The pilot should shift some costs from the FEHB Program to Medicare.
  • NCQA today revealed its HEDIS changes for Measurement Year 2026.

From the Food and Drug Administration,

  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has cleared Cardiosense’s CardioTag wearable heart monitor, the company said Wednesday.
    • “CardioTag captures electrocardiogram, photoplethysmogram and seismocardiogram signals, plus heart and pulse rate, to enable physicians to noninvasively monitor a patient’s cardiac function.
    • “Cardiosense is planning to combine the data with AI models for cardiovascular parameters. The company has published a paper on a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure algorithm.”

From the judicial front,

  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “Trump administration restrictions on transgender care for minors have drawn a new legal challenge from a coalition of states.
    • “The lawsuit, filed Friday in the US District Court for the District of Massachusetts, argues that what it calls President Donald Trump’s “Denial of Care” executive order and subsequent implementation actions are trying to block the provision of health care for transgender youth to minors without any basis in federal law. 
    • “No federal law prohibits, much less criminalizes, the provision or receipt of gender-affirming care for transgender adolescents,” the lawsuit said.
    • Michigan, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, and New Mexico are among the states listed on the lawsuit. Also among the plaintiffs is Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat whose attorney general is a Republican.
    • The case is Mass. v. Trump, D. Mass., No. 1:25-cv-12162, 8/1/2025.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “COVID-19 activity is increasing in many Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Southern, and West Coast states. Seasonal influenza activity is low, and RSV activity is very low.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 laboratory percent positivity is increasing nationally. Emergency department visits for COVID-19 are increasing among all ages. COVID-19 wastewater activity levels and model-based epidemic trends (Rt) indicate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in most states.
    • “Influenza
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity is very low.
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP adds,
    • COVID-19 activity is picking in the United States, according to the latest update from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Although wastewater levels are low nationally, the CDC said cases are rising in many Mid-Atlantic, Southeastern, Southern, and West Coast states. According to the CDC COVID Data Tracker, test positivity for the week ending July 26 rose to 6.5%, up from 4.9% the previous week, while the rate of COVID-related emergency department visits for all ages climbed from 0.6% to o.7%. The percentage of US deaths from COVID rose from 0.3% to 0.4%. Seasonal flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) activity remain low. The CDC also noted that respiratory infections caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae remain elevated in some parts of the country.
  • and
    • “The 2024-25 COVID mRNA vaccines targeting JN.1 were highly effective in protecting against hospitalization and death for at least 4 months in a cohort of Danish citizens aged 65 and older by October 1, 2024. The new analysis estimating the vaccine efficacy (VE) of last season’s COVID vaccines was published earlier this week in The Lancet Infectious Diseases. 
    • “In total, 894,560 Danish residents were included in the study, with a median age of 76. By Jan 31, 2025, 820,229 (91.7%) of the participants had received a JN.1 vaccine. Among those without updated JN.1 vaccination (74,331), 278 COVID-19 hospitalizations and 84 deaths were observed during 25.6 million person-days. 
    • “In contrast 197 COVID-19 hospitalizations and 56 deaths in 62.9 million person-days were observed in residents who received Pfizer’s Comirnaty (among 728,868 recipients). And 10 COVID-19 hospitalizations and 1 death were observed during 9.2 million person-days in those vaccinated with Moderna’s Spikevax vaccine (91,461 recipients).”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Does drinking alcohol increase the risk for pancreatic cancer? Researchers have long suspected it does, but the evidence has remained inconsistent.
    • “Now, a global study of more than two million people is firming up the case that a link exists.
    • “The study, which pooled data from 30 prospective cohorts, found that daily alcohol intake was associated with a “modest” increased risk for pancreatic cancer in both women and men, regardless of smoking status.”
  • Per Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News,
    • “The Notch signaling pathway plays a pivotal role in determining cell fate, especially in the development and function of T cells. But mimicking this highly mechanical, contact-dependent pathway in the lab has been a formidable challenge—until now.
    • “A team of researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School has developed a solution by designing a synthetic protein using AI-powered tools to activate Notch signaling. These soluble protein agonists can replicate Notch activation in suspension culture, opening the door to scalable, precision-controlled T-cell therapies.
    • “The study published in Cell, “Design of Soluble Notch Agonists that Drive T Cell Development and Boost Immunity” was led by George Daley, MD, PhD, Dean of Harvard Medical School and co-founder of the Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology Program at Boston Children’s Hospital. The researchers used AI-based computational design tools to build synthetic molecules with similar geometry and multivalency required for Notch activation.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “If you’ve followed health insurance earnings over the past few weeks, you might be experiencing some whiplash. 
    • Four of the biggest players — top names like UnitedHealth Group and Elevance — lowered their profit expectations for the year, while two others — Humana and CVS Health — raised them. One, Cigna, reaffirmed its previous outlook. 
    • “It turns out, the returns health insurers saw in the first half of 2025 were largely determined by what they did in the previous two years. Some saw the writing on the wall early and shook off unprofitable plans in specific counties, emerging with more stable, albeit slimmer, profiles. Others weren’t as proactive, and they’re now paying the price. 
    • “It’s sort of like where you came from in ’24 matters,” said Brad Ellis, a senior director at Fitch Ratings who leads its health insurance sector. “None of the companies I would say are doing really well, but it’s just a matter of who is doing less bad.” 
    • “Another big factor at play is everything insurers do besides insurance. Most of them now have booming pharmacy benefit managers and care delivery segments that in some cases draw more revenue and are more profitable than their insurance businesses. 
    • “One thing that unites them all: They are footing bigger bills as people get more medical services than before, and those services get more expensive. It’s happening across Affordable Care Act plans, Medicaid, and Medicare Advantage, the private form of Medicare. Some of the higher expenses stem from higher prices from hospitals and providers’ ramped-up coding tactics.”
  • World at Work adds,
    • “Healthcare costs in 2026 are expected to continue to trend upward within employer-provided coverage plans, according to recent reports from consulting firms PwC and Mercer. And, as in years past, the primary employer challenge will be how to best mitigate those expected higher costs.
    • “For instance, PwC reported in a recent survey that the overall increase in the cost of healthcare, or the “medical cost trend,” may be around 8.5% or higher for 2026. Medical cost trend is a metric that shows how much a health plan’s medical claim costs would change if it kept its plan design the same. The projection is similar to what PwC analysts have seen for the U.S. group health market so far for 2025. 
    • “PwC also noted that one force that could increase employers’ health plan costs are looming federal spending cuts to Medicaid and Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies as a result of the recently signed H.R. 1 (also known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”).
    • “In its survey, Mercer found that as health plan costs continue to increase, more employers intend to change or reduce their 2026 benefit offerings to control spending.
    • “For example, 51% of respondents said they’re “likely” or “very likely” to make plan changes that would shift more costs to employees, such as raising deductibles or out-of-pocket maximums. The percentage increased from 45% in 2024.”
  • Here is a link to Milliman’s July 2025 report titled Commercial health insurance: Detailed 2023 financial results and emerging 2024 and 2025 trends.
  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “UnitedHealth announced on Thursday it will replace its CFO, another significant executive change for the healthcare behemoth as it mounts a financial turnaround. 
    • “Wayne DeVeydt, most recently a managing director and operating partner at investment firm Bain Capital, will take up the CFO role on Sept. 2, according to a press release. 
    • “John Rex, the company’s CFO since 2016, will become a strategic advisor to CEO Stephen Hemsley, who returned to the top job in May after UnitedHealth’s previous CEO stepped down.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out the 20 highest, lowest paid physician specialties | 2025.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “President Trump demanded pharmaceutical companies lower drug prices, aligning them with other advanced countries.
    • “Analysts believe the proposals’ impact may be limited, facing legal challenges and requiring Congressional approval.
    • “PhRMA opposed the plan, advocating for addressing healthcare middlemen and urging other countries to pay their fair share for drug innovation.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Biotechnology companies specializing in psychedelics research saw their share prices rise after rumors of a billion-dollar acquisition hinted that big pharma is now more open to betting on this area of drug development.
    • “Bloomberg News reported early Thursday that AbbVie is in talks to buy privately held Gilgamesh Pharmaceuticals. If agreed to, the deal would hand AbbVie a small slate of experimental therapies for depression, anxiety and mental health conditions. Gilgamesh’s most advanced drug, code-named GM-2505, works by latching onto a brain protein known to interact with psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin.” * * *
    • “Analysts note, too, the inroads psychedelics are making with drug regulators. Martin Makary, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., head of the Department of Health and Human Services, both support speeding up the testing — and possible approval — of psychedelics. The FDA, under former president Joe Biden, also issued guidance in 2023 for psychedelic drug developers.”

Thursday report

From Washington, DC,

  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized three payment rules on Thursday, all of which will take effect on October 1, 2025, according to the American Hospital Association News.
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 31 issued a final rule that would increase Medicare inpatient prospective payment system rates by a net 2.6% in fiscal year 2026, compared with FY 2025, for hospitals that are meaningful users of electronic health records and submit quality measure data.    
    • “This 2.6% payment update reflects a hospital market basket increase of 3.3% as well as a productivity cut of 0.7%. This update also reflects CMS’ proposal to rebase and revise the market basket to a 2023 base year. In addition, the rule includes a $2 billion increase in disproportionate share hospital payments and a $192 million increase in new medical technology payments. Overall, it would increase hospital payments by $5 billion in FY 2026 as compared to FY 2025. 
  • and
    • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services today finalized a 3.0% payment update for long-term care hospitals for fiscal year 2026 relative to FY 2025. This includes a 3.4% market basket update, reduced by a 0.7 percentage point productivity adjustment. In addition, although CMS will increase the outlier threshold from $77,048 to $78,936, it says outlier payments will increase by 0.3%.  
  • and
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services today issued a final rule for the skilled nursing facility prospective payment system for fiscal year 2026. The rule will increase aggregate payments by 3.2%, which reflects a 3.3% market basket update, a 0.7 percentage point cut for productivity, and an increase of 0.6 percentage points for the market basket forecast error for FY 2024.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “President Trump escalated his demands that pharma companies lower U.S. drug prices in line with what other countries pay, sending letters to 17 major drug companies Thursday that called on them to take actions by Sept. 29.
    • “He specifically asked the firms to: provide their full portfolio of drugs to Medicaid patients at prices in line with what other major wealthy countries pay; guarantee that new drugs will be offered to Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers at those lower prices; implement direct-to-consumer distribution models for “high-volume, high rebate” drugs; and repatriate increased revenues that they earn abroad back to the U.S. 
    • “The companies he sent letters to were: AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Novartis, Gilead, EMD Serono, Pfizer, Novo Nordisk, AstraZeneca, Amgen, Genentech, Johnson & Johnson, GSK, Merck, Regeneron, Sanofi, and Eli Lilly.”
  • The AHA News tells us,
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services today issued a notice announcing a 340B Rebate Model Pilot Program as a voluntary mechanism for qualifying drug manufacturers to effectuate the 340B ceiling price on select drugs to all 340B-covered entities. 
    • “The notice said HHS’ Health Resources and Services Administration’s Office of Pharmacy Affairs, which currently oversees the 340B Drug Pricing Program, is inviting certain drug manufacturers to apply for participation in the pilot program for a minimum of one year. HRSA said the pilot program will be limited to the NDC-11s included on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Selected Drug List regardless of payer. 
    • “HRSA said manufacturers must submit applications to participate in the pilot program by Sept. 15, and approvals will be made by Oct. 15 for a Jan. 1, 2026, effective date.” 
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “Susan Monarez, Ph.D., was sworn in today as Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.”
  • The Departments of Labor, HHS, and Treasury as well as OPM issued CAA 2021 and ACA FAQs (No. 71, government link) Thursday morning. The FAQs brings us up to date on the application of the Fifth Circuit’s Texas Medical Association case to QPA calculations and reiterates that “The maximum annual limitation on [in-network] cost sharing for the 2026 plan year will be $10,600 for self-only coverage, and $21,200 for other than self-only coverage.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Per an FDA news release,
    • “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is requiring safety labeling changes to all opioid pain medications to better emphasize and explain the risks associated with their long-term use. These changes follow a public advisory committee meeting in May that reviewed data showing serious risks—such as misuse, addiction, and both fatal and non-fatal overdoses—for patients who use opioids over long period.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved a medical device that offers new hope to patients incapacitated by rheumatoid arthritis, a chronic condition that afflicts 1.5 million Americans and is often resistant to treatment.
    • “The condition is usually managed with medications. The device represents a radical departure from standard care, tapping the power of the brain and nervous system to tamp down the uncontrolled inflammation that leads to the debilitating autoimmune disease.
    • “The SetPoint System is an inch-long device that is surgically implanted into the neck, where it sits in a pod wrapped around the vagus nerve, the longest nerve in the body. The device electrically stimulates the nerve for one minute each day.
    • ‘The stimulation can turn off crippling inflammation and “reset” the immune system, research has shown. Most drugs used to treat rheumatoid arthritis suppress the immune system, leaving patients vulnerable to serious infections.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “U.S. kindergarten vaccination rates inched down again last year and the share of children with exemptions rose to an all-time high, according to federal data posted Thursday.
    • “The fraction of kids exempted from vaccine requirements rose to 4.1%, up from 3.7% the year before. It’s the third record-breaking year in a row for the exemption rate, and the vast majority are parents withholding shots for non-medical reasons.
    • “Meanwhile, 92.5% of 2024-25 kindergartners got their required measles-mumps-rubella shots, down slightly from the previous year. Before the Covid-19 pandemic, the vaccination rate was 95% — the level that makes it unlikely that a single infection will spark a disease cluster or outbreak.” * * *
    • “In the last decade, the percentage of kindergartners with medical exemptions has held steady, at about 0.2%. But the percentage with nonmedical exemptions has risen.”
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Eli Lilly’s popular diabetes drug Mounjaro proved about as effective as its older medicine Trulicity in protecting heart health in the largest and longest clinical trial of the newer GLP-1 therapy to date.
    • “According to summary results released by Lilly Thursday, Mounjaro met the main goal of the head-to-head study, which enrolled more than 13,000 people with Type 2 diabetes and heart disease and ran for nearly five years.
    • “While Mounjaro’s benefit wasn’t great enough for researchers to declare it superior to Trulicity, the rate of all-cause mortality was 16% lower for the newer drug, which in addition to stimulating the GLP-1 hormone receptor like Trulicity, also activates another known as GIP.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “The past two respiratory virus seasons tallied at least 41 pediatric cases of influenza-associated acute necrotizing encephalopathy (ANE), a rare but severe neurologic condition, a multicenter case series showed.
    • “And most of these (76%) occurred in previously healthy children with no significant medical history, Andrew Silverman, MD, MHS, of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, and colleagues from the Influenza-Associated ANE Working Group reported in JAMA.
    • “There hasn’t been any formal national surveillance of ANE to know whether the case counts for these two seasons are higher than normal, but that certainly seemed to be the case, Silverman said.
    • “Anecdotally, there seems to be an uptick in cases in the U.S.,” Silverman told MedPage Today. “From informally surveying all of these senior pediatric neurologists who have seen zero to one case in their career, now it seems like all of a sudden we’re forced to know more about ANE and how to treat it.”
    • “Mortality was high, at 27%, with 11 deaths. Patients died a median of 3 days from symptom onset, primarily from cerebral herniation (91%).”
  • Per Health Day,
    • “Blood-based colon cancer tests have become more common in recent years, offering a non-invasive option for screening
    • “Follow-up colonoscopy is recommended when a test result is ‘abnormal,’ but new data shows less than half of people following guidelines
    • “More must be done to educate people on the potentially life-saving importance of proper follow-up during colon cancer screening.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • CVS Health reported earnings that beat Wall Street’s expectations and upgraded its projection for 2025, as its health-insurance business showed signs of recovery.
    • “The healthcare giant’s results underscore a split among health insurers. On one side are companies struggling this year with a surprise financial squeeze from higher-than-expected medical costs, a list that includes CenteneMolina Healthcare and the industry bellwether, UnitedHealth Group
    • “On the other side, Humana and CVS, which both had major financial challenges last year, say that the higher medical costs are largely in line with what they had projected. Humana, like CVS, had second-quarter results that came in above analysts’ predictions, and raised its 2025 guidance.” * * *
    • “89.9%: The share of insurance premiums at Aetna spent on healthcare costs, known as the medical-loss ratio. It is a bit higher than last year’s 89.6%, but lower than the FactSet consensus of 90.5%.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues tells us,
    • “The Cigna Group reported a net income of $1.53 billion in the second quarter of 2025, compared to $1.55 billion during the same quarter last year, according to its July 31 financial report. 
    • “Total revenue was $67.2 billion for the three months ended June 30, up 11% year over year. Cigna said the increase was primarily driven by Evernorth Health Services and includes growth of existing client relationships and strong specialty pharmacy growth.” * * *  
    • “Cigna’s medical loss ratio was 83.2% in the second quarter, up from 82.3% during the same period last year. The company attributed the increase to expected higher stop-loss medical costs.” 
  • Per an Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) news release,
    • ICER announced today that it will assess the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of therapies targeting abnormal complexes of immunoglobulin for IgA nephropathy. These are expected to include sibeprenlimab (Otsuka Holdings Co., Ltd.), atacicept (Vera Therapeutics, Inc.), and budesonide (Tarpeyo®, Calliditas Therapeutics AB).  
    • The assessment will be publicly discussed during a meeting of the CTAF in February 2026, where the independent evidence review panel will deliberate and vote on evidence presented in ICER’s report.
    • ICER’s website provides timelines of key posting dates and public comment periods for this assessment

Midweek report

  • Fedscoop interviews the new OPM Director Scott Kupor.
  • Kevin Moss, writing in Govexec, discusses how to avoid Medicare Part B late enrollment penalties.
  • The Wall Street Journal informs us,
    • “A Trump administration effort to block all funding that flows to outside health researchers was scrapped Tuesday evening after senior White House officials intervened, people familiar with the matter said. The funds—billions of dollars to study diabetes, cancer and more—are set to flow again, the people said.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 30 announced the creation of a “digital health ecosystem” that includes partnerships with health care organizations and technology companies, including Amazon, Anthropic, Apple, Google, and OpenAI. The initiative includes an interoperability framework with a goal of making health information easier to share between patients and providers. During an event at the White House, CMS announced voluntary criteria for data exchange to make data more accessible for health information networks and exchanges, electronic health records and technology platforms. More than 60 companies, including networks, payers, providers and app vendors signed pledges for the interoperability framework and agreed to meet certain objectives in the first quarter of 2026. The initiative will use secure digital identity credentials to obtain medical records from CMS-aligned networks that meet the agency’s data sharing criteria. Applications will be used to assist in delivering services such as diabetes and obesity management, conversational AI assistants and tools to replace paper intake forms with digital check-in methods.” 
  • Beckers Clinical Leadership points out four things to know about “a July report from HHS’ Office of Inspector General [concluding that’ hospitals failed to capture 49% of patient harm events because staff either did not consider them harmful or were not required to disclose them.”
  • BenefitsFocus shares HSA/HDHP trend identified by Benefitfocus’ 2025 Report.
    • “Benefitfocus found that Gen Z workers had the highest HSA-eligible HDHP participation relative to Millennials, Gen Xers, and Baby Boomers, and while overall participation in HDHP plans dipped slightly across all generations in 2025, Benefitfocus’ data showed that HSA-eligible HDHP participation increased among Gen Zers at a greater clip compared to Millennials, Gen Xers, and Baby Boomers from 2024 to 2025. 
    • “Benefitfocus also found that Gen Z workers had the lowest health care utilization. This makes some sense considering the fact that Gen Z are younger, and it’s likely that the younger you are, the less health care you may need to utilize. 
    • “However, Benefitfocus suggests that Gen Zers are under-utilizing health care because there is a gap in understanding (1) the benefits that are available to them, and also, (2) the various engagement tools that can help them access these benefits. 
    • “To this latter point, there are various tools and different programs that employers can deploy (1) to “engage” Gen Zers and (2) to better help Gen Zers understand that accessing high-value, cost-effective health care services (like preventive care, Telehealth services, and also Direct Primary Care services) is available to them for both short-term and long-term health needs.” 
  • Route 50 informs us,
    • “The Federal Communications Commission voted last week to require text messages to the 988 suicide and mental health crisis hotline to be georouted to local crisis centers based on where they are sent from.
    • “Previously, texts to 988, also known as Lifeline, had been routed to crisis centers based on the area code of the texter’s phone number. Mental health and crisis counseling experts had long warned the FCC that the discrepancy could limit Lifeline’s ability to connect those in crisis with local resources.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Fierce Healthcare notes,
    • “Following the departure of Vinay Prasad, M.D., former head of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), the FDA has already tapped someone else to temporarily fill his shoes.
    • “Freshly appointed Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) leader George Tidmarsh M.D., Ph.D., will now take on the role of acting director of CBER as well, according to an internal letter from FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., to staffers that was viewed by Fierce.
    • “Both departments fall under the FDA’s umbrella, with CDER covering most small-molecule and biological therapeutics while CBER oversees vaccines, cell and gene therapies and other blood products.”
    • “Tidmarsh is a veteran biotech executive who stepped into his federal leadership role at the beginning of last week.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “After patients go into remission, there may still be undetected cancer cells lying dormant through the body. Years or even decades after remission, these cells might activate and cause metastatic lesions in these patients. Certain respiratory infections, including the flu and Covid-19, may be among the triggers for this awakening, according to a new study.
    • “The study, which combined mouse experiments and epidemiological data, focused on breast cancer and was published Wednesday in Nature. It found the immune system’s response to viral infections in the lungs might be contributing to this cancer cell activation. The epidemiological analyses also found that patients in breast cancer remission were more likely to develop lung metastases if they tested positive for Covid.
    • “Taken together, experts told STAT that the findings reveal new insights on how metastatic disease occurs, although they also cautioned that the findings are early and may not yet be generalizable to all cancer types or even all subtypes of breast cancer.
    • “It’s an exciting link between acute infections and a reactivation of these dormant cells that can lead to cancer progression,” John Alcorn, an immunology professor at the University of Pittsburgh who was not involved in the study, told STAT. “Something that we once thought of as a two-week problem really has far-reaching effects beyond that.”
  • Per a National Institutes of Health news release,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have shown for the first time that a type of human papillomavirus (HPV) commonly found on the skin can directly cause a form of skin cancer called cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) when certain immune cells malfunction. cSCC is one of the most common cancers in the United States and worldwide. Previously, scientists believed HPV merely facilitated the accumulation of DNA mutations caused by ultraviolet (UV) radiation, usually the primary driver of cSCC. The findings were published today in The New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “This discovery could completely change how we think about the development, and consequently the treatment, of cSCC in people who have a health condition that compromises immune function,” said Andrea Lisco, M.D., Ph.D., of NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). “It suggests that there may be more people out there with aggressive forms of cSCC who have an underlying immune defect and could benefit from treatments targeting the immune system.”
    • “There are many different types of HPV, each tending to infect cells in a particular tissue and part of the body. The types of HPV found mostly on the skin—beta-HPV—are considered benign members of the skin microbiome that typically do not integrate into the DNA of skin cells. This contrasts with the alpha types of HPV, known to integrate into the DNA of mucous membrane cells and directly cause cancer of the genitals, anus, head and neck.”
  • The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Taking Measure blog explains “How Nature’s Symmetry Might Help Us See Early Warning Signs of Cancer.”
  • Health Day reports,
    • “A dementia diagnosis typically arrives more than three years after the onset of symptoms
    • “That time lag jumps to an average of more than four years for folks battling early-onset dementias
    • “As drugs to fight dementias emerge, spotting the disease early will be crucial, researchers say.”
  • Also per STAT News,
    • “The decades-long push to develop an HIV vaccine has been riddled with setbacks. But researchers reported on Wednesday that they have managed to circumvent one of the longstanding challenges to developing protective shots against this complex and crafty virus.
    • “Scientists used a messenger RNA-based vaccine to reliably trigger antibodies that block viral infection in people and monkeys. The key, they found, was to use a vaccine that hid a portion of a key protein complex that pokes out of HIV’s surface, concealing a region that usually distracts the immune system from mounting a protective response. Only 4% of participants given a vaccine that exposed this part of the viral surface produced antibodies that could block infection; that jumped to 80% when this region wasn’t visible to the immune system.
    • “While researchers found that the vaccines they tested were generally safe and well tolerated, 6.5% of study participants developed hives, a finding also seen in another mRNA-based HIV vaccine study. These cases improved when participants took antihistamines, but scientists are looking into why this happened and how to avoid it.
    • “The findings were described in a pair of papers published in Science Translational Medicine. The authors note that this is the first time an HIV vaccine candidate has sparked antibodies that can neutralize infection in a large percentage of subjects.”
  • Per Medical Economics,
    • “Teens who regularly use e-cigarettes are just as likely to become cigarette smokers as their peers were in the 1970s, according to a new study co-led by researchers at the University of Michigan.
    • “The findings, published in the journal Tobacco Control, come despite dramatic declines in overall teen cigarette use over the last five decades. The study, a collaboration between the University of Michigan, Penn State University, and Purdue University, reveals that teenagers who had never used e-cigarettes had less than a 1-in-50 chance of smoking cigarettes weekly. In contrast, those who had tried e-cigarettes faced more than a 1-in-10 chance, while consistent e-cigarette users had nearly a 1-in-3 chance of also reporting cigarette use.
    • “The use of e-cigarettes and the proliferation of e-cigarettes have really disrupted those awesome trends and improvements,” said Jessica Mongilio, research fellow at the U-M School of Nursing and one of the study’s lead researchers. “For kids who have never used e-cigarettes, we do see those historic declines in risk. But for kids who do use e-cigarettes, it’s almost as if all of those policies and all of those perceptions have done nothing, and they’ve got a really high risk of smoking cigarettes.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The use of ultrapotent synthetic opioids called nitazenes are spreading in Europe.
    • “Nitazenes, often from China, are mixed into heroin and other drugs. Even trace amounts can cause fatal overdoses, authorities warn.
    • “The U.S. has seen nitazenes in drug seizures, and the DEA warns Mexican cartels could use their relations with China-based suppliers to obtain nitazenes.” * * *
    • “The most common street nitazenes are roughly 50 to 250 times as potent as heroin, or up to five times the strength of fentanyl. They are likely much more prevalent than official statistics suggest, due to limited testing. Authorities say official death tolls are almost certainly undercounts.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Humana raised its 2025 guidance alongside the release of second quarter results that beat analyst expectations on Wednesday. It’s a bright spot for investors in the health insurance sector following dismal reports from other payers.
    • “Executives attributed the outperformance to higher-than-anticipated prescription volumes and more lucrative drugs dispensed in Humana’s pharmacy services division. The company also benefited from higher revenue in its insurance segment from unexpectedly strong Medicare Advantage membership retention.
    • “In addition, medical costs — though elevated — remained generally in line with what Humana had planned for coming into 2025, the company said. Humana’s stock was up 6% in Wednesday morning trading following the results.”
  • and
    • “Certain Universal Health Services growth targets for 2025 are looking less achievable after the for-profit health system reported another quarter of lackluster admissions on Monday.
    • “Behavioral health volumes in the second quarter were essentially flat, with adjusted admissions rising just 0.4%. It’s an improvement from last quarter, when behavioral health volumes declined. However, executives now consider UHS’ plans to grow adjusted behavioral patient days by 2.5% to 3% a long-term target, instead of a 2025 goal.
    • “CEO Marc Miller said one of the reasons UHS’ patient day target has remained “elusive” is payers’ growing preference for outpatient care, a trend that hasn’t favored UHS’ inpatient-heavy portfolio. To be competitive in the long term, UHS plans to focus capital spending on outpatient projects, building 10 to 15 freestanding behavioral health facilities per year.”
  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “Teladoc Health announced its second-quarter earnings Tuesday, which revealed a 2% decline in revenue for the company. The company performed roughly 1% better than Wall Street analysts anticipated. 
    • “Teladoc reported $631.9 million in total revenue for the quarter that ended June 30, and a net loss of $32.7 million, or $0.19 per share. In the same quarter a year ago, the company posted a net loss of $838 million after it was hit with a $790 million goodwill impairment charge related to its virtual mental health offering, BetterHelp.
    • “Teladoc’s adjusted EBITDA margin was $69.3 million, down 23% year over year. Citigroup, Goldman Sachs Group, Bank of America and Truist Financial reduced their target prices for Teladoc in early July, MarketBeat noted.
    • “The integrated care portion of the business was the lone division with upside in the second-quarter earnings results. Integrated care brought in $391.5 million, up 4% compared to the same period last year. Its adjusted EBITDA margin was 14.7%.
    • “BetterHelp garnered $240.4 million in revenue, down 9% year over year. The tele-mental health brand had an adjusted EBITDA margin of 4.9%.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes “Where hospital margins are climbing [and] dropping the most.”
    • “Margin growth or decline varied by region and hospital size. Here is the breakdown:
      • “South: 6.1 percentage points
      • “Midwest: 2.5 percentage points
      • “Northeast: 1.6 percentage points
      • “West: -2.2 percentage points
      • “0 to 25 beds: -1 percentage points
      • “100 to 199 beds: 4.2 percentage points
      • “300 to 400 beds: 0.8 percentage points
      • “500 or more beds: -0.2 percentage points’
  • The Wall Street Journal Bankruptcy Pro publication reports on “Hospital Failures Following Private-Equity Payouts Leave Patients, Taxpayers in Lurch. Communities where Steward Health Care and Prospect Medical had hospitals that closed are trying to fill gaps in healthcare and government budgets.”
  • WTW consulting’s Pulse offers the latest news on GLP-1 drugs.
    • “Utilization will continue to rise. A robust pipeline of new GLP-1 drugs later this year and in 2026 will bring more competition with the potential to drive lower unit costs.
    • “Government price negotiations for Medicare Part D plans could also put downward pressure on GLP-1 drugs in the commercial market.
    • “The drugs will likely gain other uses this year including metabolic dysfunction associated steatohepatitis, heart failure and peripheral artery disease, which will also contribute to more utilization.”

Tuesday report

From Washington, DC,

  • The Senate confirmed Susan Monarez to be Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today by a 51 to 47 vote. The AP adds,
    • “She holds a doctorate in microbiology and immunology from the University of Wisconsin and did postdoctoral research at Stanford University. Prior to the CDC, Monarez was largely known for her government roles in health technology and biosecurity.”
  • MedCity News tells us,
    • “On Thursday, a coalition of 28 healthcare organizations sent a letter to leaders in Congress calling on them to extend the Affordable Care Act enhanced premium tax credits, which are set to expire at the end of the year.
    • “The letter was addressed to John Thune, Senate majority leader; Chuck Schumer, Senate minority leader; Mike Johnson, speaker of the House; and Hakeem Jeffries, minority leader of the House. The letter was led by Keep Americans Covered and was signed by healthcare organizations including AHIP, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, the American Medical Association, Kaiser Permanente, Families USA and more.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could “imminently” overhaul a key federal advisory panel that recommends which preventive services insurers must pay for, according to a person familiar with the plans. 
    • “The person said that federal health officials are actively vetting new members for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. David Mansdoerfer, an adviser to a Kennedy-aligned group of physicians, said he’s aware of people being considered for the panel, but declined to name them.” * * *
    • “Mansdoerfer added that the existing panel is “M.D. heavy” and a reconstituted panel is more likely to include “allied health professionals,” which are health care providers who aren’t nurses or physicians, like physical therapists and dietitians.” 
  • Following up on yesterday’s post about Medicare Part D, here is a link to the CMS guidance upon which the Wall Street Journal relied.
  • World at Work informs us,
    • “Health savings accounts (HSAs) have become a staple total rewards offering over the last decade, but a new study by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) showed employees are still leaving the full value of these accounts on the table.
    • “The June 12 EBRI report pulled data from 14.5 million accountholders, containing more than $48 billion in total assets — roughly 40% of the entire HSA universe. The analysis revealed:
      • “Low balances. End-of-year balances increased in 2023 (the most recent analysis period) to $4,747 but are still modest compared with average out-of-pocket maximums for HSA-eligible health plans ($8,300 for individual coverage in 2025, $16,600 for family coverage)
      • Low contributions. Relative to 2022, average HSA contributions increased in 2023. However, after adjusting for inflation, both employer and employee contributions were higher in the 2010s. Also, notably, the average combined HSA contribution was $760 less than the statutory maximum contribution for individuals and $4,660 less than the statutory maximum contribution for accountholders with family coverage.
      • High withdrawals. More than half of accountholders withdrew funds, and the average distribution rose to $1,801.
      • “Low investment. Only 15% of accountholders invested in assets other than cash. 
    • EBRI found that, essentially, employees use HSAs as specialized checking accounts rather than investment accounts, and in doing so, miss out on the triple tax advantage available if they maximize contributions, minimize withdrawals and invest their balances.
    • “The good news is that, here we are 20-plus years after HSAs launched, and they’ve become pretty standard. They’re a typical plan offering from most employers of all sizes — not just large or small companies, or in certain industries,” said Alexander Domaszewicz, a principal and healthcare consultant at advisory firm Mercer. “If we live long enough, we’ll have healthcare expenses, and we want to be prepared for that. But while awareness and visibility of HSAs have grown, they’re still intimidating to folks.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues calls attention to recent No Surprises Act developments.
  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “The Trump administration is detailing how it expects agencies to recruit more political appointees through the new “Schedule G” hiring category, while also reminding agencies that all non-career hires must be approved by the White House.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management on Tuesday outlined how agencies should adopt the federal employment classification President Donald Trump created earlier this month. Generally, the new Schedule G broadens agencies’ options for hiring political appointees, beyond the avenues already available to presidential administrations for picking their own staff members.
    • “In its guidance on Trump’s new hiring authority, OPM said agencies will have to run any Schedule G hires they want make by the White House for review and approval.
    • “As a matter of practice,” OPM said, agencies will have to send all their political hires to their White House liaison — a position that coordinates with the White House on hiring and retention of political appointees — before agencies can advance any Schedule G appointments.”

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Bloomberg Law informs us,
    • “Vinay Prasad, a top regulator at the US Food and Drug Administration, has left the agency after a controversy over his handling of Sarepta Therapeutics Inc.’s gene therapy. 
    • “Dr. Prasad did not want to be a distraction to the great work of the FDA in the Trump administration and has decided to return to California and spend more time with his family,” Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson Andrew Nixon said in a written statement. 
    • “Prasad did not immediately respond to a request for comment about his departure.” 
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration pushed Tuesday to restrict a synthetic opioid found in tablets, gummies and drinkable shots commonly sold in convenience stores.
    • “Health officials announced they will seek to add 7-OH — a potent substance synthesized from a compound in the kratom leaf — to the tier of controlled substances reserved for the most addictive drugs, such as heroin and LSD.
    • “The FDA, researchers and kratom companies have grown increasingly alarmed by the rise of 7-OH products they say are distinct from all-natural teas and powders derived from a leaf that grows on trees native to Southeast Asia.
    • “FDA Commissioner Marty Makary said at a news conference that the agency is not asking to restrict natural products made from kratom, which contains trace amount of the compound. In a report released Tuesday, the agency said it maintains concerns about kratom broadly but needed to act urgently on 7-OH because of its risk of sedation, nausea, breathing problems and addiction.”
  • From the judicial front,
    • Fierce Healthcare reports,
      • “A new law in Arkansas banning pharmacy benefit managers from owning pharmacies has been blocked by a federal judge, the latest development in one of the industry’s most-watched new pieces of legislation.
      • “Judge Brian Miller said the law may violate (PDF) the Commerce Clause in the constitution and is likely preempted by TRICARE, a health care program for military families. The state is barred from enforcing the law until final disposition, a ruling shows.
      • “Act 624 appears to overtly discriminate against plaintiffs as out of state companies and the state has failed to show that it has no other means to advance its interests,” said Miller, adding other enacted state laws already can properly restrict PBMs.
      • “Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin said he plans on appealing the decision, reported the Associated Press.
      • “We’re pleased with the Court’s decision to grant a preliminary injunction to stop the implementation of Act 624,” a CVS Health spokesperson said in a statement. “We continue to be focused on serving people in Arkansas and are actively looking to work together with the state to reduce drug prices and ensure access to pharmacies.”

From the public health and medical researach front,

  • KFF considers whether our country’s measles elimination status is at risk.
  • The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality released a medical expenditures survey report titled “Healthcare Expenditures for Heart Disease among Adults Aged 18 and Older in the U.S. Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population, 2022.”
    • “In 2022, 7.8 percent of adults aged 18 and older were treated for heart disease, and men were more likely than women to have treated heart disease (8.4 % vs. 7.2%).
    • “Among age groups, the treated prevalence of heart disease was highest for those aged 65 and older (22.8%) compared to only 6.0 percent for adults aged 45-64, and 1.4 percent for adults ages 18-44.
    • “In 2022, healthcare expenditures to treat heart disease for adults in the US totaled $100.0 billion (with an average cost of $4,900 per adult with diagnosed and treated heart disease).
    • “The largest portion of heart disease expenditures were incurred through hospital inpatient stays (46.1%) and prescribed medications (20.5%).
    • “The majority of heart disease treatment costs were paid by Medicare (57.6%) and private insurance (24.2%).”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “The global incidence of liver cancer is projected to double by 2050.
    • “Sixty percent of liver cancers are preventable by controlling risk factors including hepatitis B and C, alcohol consumption, and MASLD.
    • “The Lancet Commission estimated that a 2-5% reduction in the age-standardized incidence rate of liver cancer could prevent up to 17.3 million new cases and save up to 15.1 million lives.”
  • Per Neurology Adviser,
    • “Urinary tract infections (UTIs) may be a trigger for myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke, with an increased risk for both within the first 7 days of infection, according to the findings of a study published in BMJ Open.”
    • “Growing evidence suggests that acute infection plays a role in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease.
    • “Researchers from Cardiff University in the United Kingdom conducted this self-controlled cases series using data from the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank which houses nation-wide data from Wales. Patients (N=105,930) with MI (n=51,660) or stroke (n=58,150) between 2010 and 2020 were evaluated for general practitioner suspected or confirmed UTI before or after MI or stroke event. The peak risk period was defined as up to 90 days after UTI.
    • “The MI and stroke cohorts consisted of 63% and 49% men, with mean ages of 69 and 74 years for men and 77 and 79 years for women, respectively.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “A major Alzheimer’s disease medical group is recommending that specialists may use certain blood tests to help diagnose patients with cognitive impairment in lieu of more complex and invasive tests, a move that could lead more people to get treated for the devastating disease.
    • “The Alzheimer’s Association, in its first clinical guidelines on blood biomarker testing, said Tuesday that tests that have over 90% sensitivity (ability to identify positive results) and 90% specificity (ability to identify negative results) can be used instead of current diagnostic methods like PET scans and cerebrospinal fluid tests.
    • “The group said that tests that have over 90% sensitivity and 75% specificity can be used to triage patients, meaning negative results rule can rule out Alzheimer’s with high probability but positive results should be confirmed with the standard diagnostic methods, given that these blood tests have a higher likelihood of false positives.
    • “The authors stressed that the guidelines should not be considered a substitute for a full clinical evaluation and that they apply only to people who are in the care of specialists and have already been confirmed to have cognitive impairment. The authors also noted that there’s wide variability in the blood tests on the market and that many do not meet the accuracy thresholds.”
  • Per Benefits Pro,
    • “Researchers at Cigna’s Evernorth Research Institute are seeing early signs that offering patients semaglutide and other GLP-1 agonists might cut the cost of managing mental health problems.
    • “Duy Do and two other Evernorth researchers found that using Ozempic or similar drugs to control blood sugar reduced use of office visits to treat depression by 13% and reduced use of office visits to treat anxiety by 15%.
    • “Use of GLP-1 agonists did not reduce use of emergency room visits or inpatient care for depression or anxiety, but the researchers say their work shows the need for understanding how GLP-1 agonist use affects people’s mental health and use of mental health services.
    • “Given the high economic burden of mental health disorders among patients with T2DM, further research is needed to confirm the clinical and cost-effectiveness of [GLP-1s] in reducing the overall health care burdens for this patient population,” Do and colleagues conclude.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “UnitedHealth Group anticipates its 2025 earnings to fall below expectations due to rising costs and operational issues.
    • “CEO Stephen Hemsley aims to restore UnitedHealth to high performance, projecting earnings growth for the coming year.
    • “UnitedHealth is facing industry upheaval with rising healthcare costs, government actions, and ongoing Justice Department probes.”
  • Modern Healthcare tells us,
    • “Humana is offering certain employees voluntary early retirement buyouts.
    • “Employees age 50 or older with at least three years of service are eligible for the program, although those working in certain business-critical areas will be ineligible, a company spokesperson said Tuesday. He said the window to apply for voluntary early retirement will be open for several weeks.
    • “The Louisville, Kentucky-based health insurer said the offers are part of ongoing evaluations Humana conducts to adjust staffing and drive organizational efficiency.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • U.S. News & World Report released its 2025-2026 Best Hospitals rankings and ratings July 29, which included its list of 504 Best Regional Hospitals across 49 states and 95 metropolitan areas.
    • “The latest edition of Best Hospitals, now in its 36th year, evaluated more than 4,400 hospitals on measures such as risk-adjusted mortality rates, preventable complications and level of nursing care.” 
    • The article lists the no. 1 ranked hospitals in each eligible state.
  • Cardiovascular Business points out the best heart hospitals according to U.S. News and World Report.
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “Earlier this year, CVS Health announced that it would invest $20 billion in improving the consumer experience and making the healthcare journey simpler.
    • “Now, its health benefits arm, Aetna, is unveiling its new Care Paths program, which connects members who have certain health needs—launching with diabetes, joint health and maternity care—to a more personalized view of their benefits and more directly with the care team supporting them. The platform is powered by artificial intelligence and offers users individualized recommendations for health and wellness programs related to their conditions as well as care kits when available.
    • “The goal, the insurer said, is to make members’ interactions with their health plans feel less transactional and instead more holistic. Aetna offered an exclusive look at the new offering to Fierce Healthcare.”
  • and
    • Sword Health, a company that provides virtual physical therapy and mental health, is now offering an AI assistant for payers and providers to tackle operational and administrative tasks.
    • “The new AI division marks a notable expansion from the company’s core business of virtual care services like digital musculoskeletal care, pelvic health and movement health.
    • “The launch of the new division, called Sword Intelligence, marks a “pivotal evolution” in Sword Health’s strategy, according to the company.
    • “Sword Intelligence allows us to move beyond delivering care to our own members to enabling the entire healthcare industry to scale it efficiently and effectively,” Virgilio “V” Bento, founder and CEO of Sword Health, told Fierce Healthcare when reached via email.”
  • The Wall Street Journal further reports,
    • Merck & Co. said it is embarking on a multi-year cost-savings plan, which includes cuts to its workforce and real-estate footprint, as it looks to redirect resources toward new product launches.
    • “The plan comes as the drug company on Tuesday logged lower revenue and sales in its latest quarter and narrowed its full-year guidance.
    • “The company said it expects the plan to result in $3 billion in annual cost savings by the end of 2027, which it plans to reinvest to support new products as well as its pipeline across multiple therapeutic areas.
    • “As part of the cost-savings plan, Merck expects to eliminate certain administrative, sales and research-and-development positions.
    • “The company didn’t disclose how many workers would be affected but said it would continue to hire employees in new roles across strategic growth areas of its business.
    • “Merck said it also would reduce its global real-estate footprint and continue to optimize its manufacturing network.
    • “The company expects the workforce cuts and real-estate reductions to result in annual cost savings of about $1.7 billion, which would be substantially realized by the end of 2027.”
  • and
    • “Novo Nordisk shares plunged after losing its lead in the weight-loss drug market to competitors like Eli Lilly.
    • “The company lowered its 2025 sales growth forecast due to copycat versions of Wegovy and slower Ozempic sales.
    • “Maziar Mike Doustdar was named chief executive, effective Aug. 7, succeeding Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen.”

Monday report

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Medicare drug plan premiums are expected to rise significantly next year due to rising costs and regulatory changes.
    • “A subsidy program that shielded seniors from rising monthly bills will be cut by about 40% in 2026.
    • “The premium increase will affect millions of seniors and may push more enrollees into Medicare Advantage plans.”
  • KFF tells us,
    • “Two new KFF analyses examine the latest data about Medicare Advantage, including trends in enrollment, premiums, out-of-pocket limits, supplemental benefits and prior authorization.
    • “The first analysis, focusing on enrollment trends, finds that 54% of eligible Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in Medicare Advantage in 2025, though increases in enrollment slowed this year. One in five Medicare Advantage enrollees is in a special needs plan (SNP), reflecting a steady increase in recent years. And Medicare Advantage enrollment remains highly concentrated among a handful of insurance companies. 
    • “The second analysis finds that more than three quarters (76%) of enrollees in individual Medicare Advantage plans with prescription drug coverage pay no premium other than the Medicare Part B premium. The share of enrollees in plans offering a rebate against the Part B premium rose sharply from 12% in 2024 to 32% in 2025, but among these enrollees, about half are in plans that offer rebates of less than $10 a month while fewer (36%) are in plans that offer rebates of $50 or more per month. Prior authorization is most often required for expensive services such as skilled nursing facility stays (99%), Part B drugs (98%), inpatient hospital stays (acute: 96%; psychiatric: 93%) and outpatient psychiatric services (80%).” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “No decision has been made on the future of an advisory panel [the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force] that decides which preventive care offerings, like cancer screenings, must be covered by insurers, a federal health department spokesperson said, after a [Wall Street Journal] report that health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is planning to oust all members. 
    • “But the report has alarmed the American Medical Association, which is calling on Kennedy to keep the panel’s members in place.” 
  • Modern Healthcare informs us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services wants to take another crack at creating a national provider directory in an effort to replace insurance company lists that are often riddled with errors.
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz touted the idea at a meeting with health information technology executives in June. In a later post on the social media platform X, CMS described its goal as a “dynamic, interoperable directory that connects the data CMS has with what the industry knows, so we all work from the same map.” * * *
    • “The insurance industry would support a national provider directory “grounded in a robust public-private partnership,” the trade group AHIP said in a statement. At the AHIP 2025 conference last month, executives from Centene, Cigna and Aetna parent company CVS Health said their companies have met with CMS to discuss the concept.”
  • and
    • “Top Trump administration health officials are expected to bring tech companies to the White House this week to roll out a plan to encourage more seamless sharing of healthcare data, according to people familiar with the matter.
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz are expected to host executives at an event on Wednesday, said the people, who did not provide names of the attendees and asked not to be named because the details haven’t been made public.
    • “The plan was developed in coordination with the White House, building on a May effort by CMS to get public input on addressing barriers to sharing patient data.”
  • The American Hospital Association lets us know,
    • “The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration July 28 released its latest national survey on drug use and mental health. Among the findings, the percentage of adolescents aged 12 to 17 who had serious thoughts of suicide declined from 12.9% in 2021 to 10.1% in 2024. It also found a decline in adolescents who experienced a major depressive episode, dropping from 20.8% in 2021 to 15.4% in 2024. The survey also found that among the 61.5 million adults aged 18 or older in 2024 with any mental illness, 52.1% (32 million) received any mental health treatment in the past year. Among 14.6 million adults with serious mental illness in the past year, 70.8% (10.3 million) received mental health treatment. Due to changes to the survey questions and approach, not all estimates in the 2024 survey are comparable with 2023 and 2022 estimates, SAMHSA notes.” 
  • An HHS news release adds,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has announced a $100M pilot funding opportunity to prevent, test for, treat, and cure Hepatitis C (HCV) in individuals with substance use disorder (SUD) and/or serious mental illness (SMI). This program is designed to support communities severely affected by homelessness and to gain insights on effective ways to identify patients, complete treatment, cure infections, and reduce reinfection by Hepatitis C (a liver disease caused by the Hepatitis C virus).
    • “HHS is delivering on our promise to the American people for a healthier, brighter future,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “Through this pilot program, we are launching a comprehensive, integrated care model that not only cures HCV but also tackles critical risk factors like substance use, mental health challenges, and homelessness head-on.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review highlights five things to know about the foreign trade deals that the Trump administration has recently struck.

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has given Sarepta Therapeutics a green light to resume shipping its gene therapy Elevidys to some patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a little over one week after demanding the company halt sales over safety concerns. 
    • “In a statement Monday evening, Sarepta said it would begin shipments to treatment sites “imminently.” The resumption applies only to Duchenne patients who can still walk, which typically describes individuals who are younger and whose disease hasn’t advanced as far.”
  • and
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has delayed its review of a Bayer therapy for hot flashes related to menopause, telling the drugmaker it needs additional to review the company’s application.
    • “In a Friday statement, Bayer said the FDA did not raise any concerns around “general approvability” of the drug, called elinzanetant. Still, the agency extended its decision deadline by three months.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Johnson & Johnson’s Ethicon unit has corrected disposable surgical stapler cartridges over a fault related to one death and one injury, the Food and Drug Administration said Friday.
    • “The company wrote to customers in April after learning that devices may activate but not cut or staple tissue. Additional steps are needed to open and remove locked devices from tissue. 
    • “Ethicon designed the stapler to prevent lockout events from harming patients. Still, the FDA said the lockout problem could cause life-threatening hemorrhage, surgical delay and death.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A combination of healthy activities including exercise, nutritious diet, computer brain games and socializing can improve cognitive performance in people at risk for dementia, according to a large new study.
    • “The study, conducted in five locations across the United States over two years, is the biggest randomized trial to examine whether healthy behaviors protect brain health.
    • “It confirms that paying attention to things like physical activity and vascular risk factors and diet are all really important ways to maintain brain health,” said Dr. Kristine Yaffe, an expert in cognitive aging at the University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved in the study.
    • “The results were presented on Monday at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Toronto and published in the journal JAMA.”
  • The Washington Post adds,
    • “Any amount of walking is good for your health but picking up the pace has significant benefits — and it’s never too late for someone to train to walk faster.
    • “In an analysis published in PLOS One earlier this month, researchers found that frail older adults who deliberately walked faster saw a meaningful improvement in the distance they could travel when instructed to walk for six minutes straight. (Frailty is an age-related syndrome that affects 5 to 17 percent of older adults and is characterized by fatigue, a loss of strength and unexplained weight loss.)
    • “The results show that regardless of your age, the intensity of your workout can lead to greater improvements in physical function, said Daniel Rubin, the lead author of the analysis and an associate professor of anesthesia and critical care at the University of Chicago.”
  • Per the National Academy of Medicine,
    • “With more than half a million people globally living beyond the age of 100, it is time to rethink how health professionals and educators view older adults and the aging process. “Redefining aging” begins with transforming the mindset of current and future health professionals through targeted education. This involves encouraging them to reconsider how they address the unique needs of older adults and identifying those who can drive this change. Educators, health professionals, administrators, and policymakers must collaborate to reshape systems and attitudes. Together, they can build a well‑trained workforce that is not only prepared but motivated to address the complexities of aging that may include chronic disease and functional decline but also opportunities for growth and innovation. The barriers to achieving a change in mindset and solutions for overcoming challenges prompt a call to action. This paper is an entreaty by a group of interprofessional educators passionate about ensuring all health professionals are trained to meet the complex needs of older adults.”
  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) affects at least 4.5% of those 18-49 years old, according to an analysis of U.S. cohorts * * * as reported in NEJM Evidence.”
    • “The early COPD group was more likely to be hospitalized or die from chronic respiratory disease, to develop heart failure, and to die before 75 years of age from any cause.
    • “Having a definition for early COPD might allow for studies to find ways to treat the disease and reduce its impact.”
  • The AHA News informs us,
    • “Five pediatric flu deaths were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week, pushing the total to 266 for the 2024-2025 flu season, according to the latest data. The total is the highest reported in any non-pandemic flu season since the agency began reporting it in 2004. The CDC said 90% of reported pediatric deaths this flu season have happened to children who were not fully vaccinated against the flu.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about the impact of caffeine.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Bristol Myers Squibb BMY and Bain Capital are forming a new biopharmaceutical company focused on therapies for autoimmune diseases.
    • The new company will be created with $300 million in financing led by Bain Capital, including funds from the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board.
    • The company will begin with five potential treatments for autoimmune diseases in-licensed from Bristol Myers Squibb, which will retain 20% equity in the new company. Bristol Myers Squibb will also be entitled to royalties and milestones from the potential treatments.
    • Biotech executive Daniel Lynch, currently chairman of the board at Xilio Therapeutics XLO, will lead the new company as chief executive.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “GSK is turning to a China-based biotechnology company in search of its next blockbuster medicine, announcing Monday a broad drug making alliance with Hengrui Pharma that could be worth billions of dollars.
    • “GSK will pay Hengrui $500 million upfront to start the alliance. In return, it will receive rights outside of the greater China region and Taiwan to an experimental drug for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as well as the potential to develop up to 11 other therapies for respiratory illnesses, immune disorders or cancer. If a variety of milestones are met, the deal could be worth up to $12 billion, plus royalties, GSK said.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues offers us six prior authorization updates that Beckers has reported since June 23.
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) agent powered by a large language model (LLM) that creates more accurate and informative descriptions of biological processes and their functions in gene set analysis than current systems.
    • “The system, called GeneAgent, cross-checks its own initial predictions—also known as claims— for accuracy against information from established, expert-curated databases and returns a verification report detailing its successes and failures. The AI agent can help researchers interpret high-throughput molecular data and identify relevant biological pathways or functional modules, which can lead to a better understanding of how different diseases and conditions affect groups of genes individually and together.”

Weekend Update

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call discusses likely Senate activities this week.
  • Congress in the July 4, 2025, budget reconciliation act (§ 90101, at 291) did enact a law requiring OPM to place more internal controls over family member eligibility.
    • – No later than 12/31/25, OPM must develop a process by which any [ineligible] individual enrolled in, or covered under, a [FEHB or PSHB] shall be disenrolled or removed from enrollment in, or coverage under, that plan.
  • This requirement should include implementation of the HIPAA 820 standard enrollment roster transaction. 
    • – No later than July 3, 2026, OPM must issue regulations and implement a process to verify – (1) the veracity of any qualifying life event through which an enrollee seeks to add a member of family to his/her coverage; and (2) that, when an enrollee in the Program seeks to add a member of family to his/her coverage, including during any open season, the individual so added is a qualifying member of family with respect to the enrollee.
  • It would be sensible for OPM to implement a program similar to TRICARE’s DEERS program which places the reporting burden on the TRICARE enrollee. 
  • HIPAA Suite explains,
    • “The HIPAA 820 transaction set [which has been around since 2008] handles the [electronic] communication between a sponsor that is an entity that pays for someone’s health care, and another entity that manages health care benefits, such as an insurance company.
    • “For example, a large employer that has a contract with an insurance company or a government agency that handles social and health benefits will use the 820 transaction to manage premium payments. This information can either be very detailed and contain demographic information on each individual that is covered or just contain a summary of the payment for all members.
  • The HIPAA standard transaction law requires health plans to be able to process the HIPAA 820. What’s more nearly half of FEHB and PSHB enrollees have self only coverage.

From the public health and medical reseach front,

  • MedPage Today reports,
    • “For years, we’ve told our patients that human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination works best when administered before sexual debut — and rightfully so. But what happens when a woman has already developed high-grade cervical dysplasia and undergoes surgical treatment?
    • Our recent study, published in The Lancet Regional Health – Europe, explored that very question. And the results were striking: women who received the HPV vaccine after surgical excision (conization) experienced a 74% reduction in recurrent high-grade cervical lesions (CIN2+), with the most dramatic benefit seen within the first 6 months after surgery.
  • and
    • “Cases of “Ozempic mouth” and “Ozempic teeth” have recently been described in the news, with most of the problems — inflammation affecting the gums, tooth decay, and even bad breath — linked to a dry mouth.
    • “All of the GLP-1 agonists that we use now cause changes in how everything is secreted in your GI tract,” Ann Marie Defnet, MD, who specializes in obesity medicine and bariatric surgery at Northwell Health’s North Shore University Hospital and Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New York City, told MedPage Today. And this “definitely has an impact on saliva.”
    • “People taking GLP-1 drugs also tend to be a bit dehydrated because they are often not hungry or thirsty, she noted.
    • “I haven’t seen too many horrible cases of periodontal disease, gingivitis, or anything like that, nor have I had any patients really complaining about dry mouth,” she noted. “But definitely I have patients all the time that [say], ‘Oh yeah, I can tell I’m dehydrated.'”
    • “Defnet said she believes some of the serious oral health issues that have been reported are likely representative of “more of a later stage issue with patients who maybe just aren’t staying hydrated in general.”
    • “One of the big things I always counsel my patients on is they just have to remember to continue to drink water, even if they’re not thirsty, even if they’re not hungry,” Defnet said. “That seems to help with all of these symptoms.”
  • The New York Times discusses “Coronary artery calcium testing [which] can reveal plaque in arteries, offering a more precise estimate of a patient’s risk [of having a heart attack]. Yet the test remains underused.”
    • “A brief and painless CT scan, it would show whether the fatty deposits called plaque were developing in the arteries leading to her heart.
    • “When plaque ruptures, it can cause clots that block blood flow and trigger heart attacks. The scan would help determine whether Ms. Hollander would benefit from taking a statin, which could reduce plaque and prevent more from forming.
    • “The test is used by more people every year,” said Dr. Michael Blaha, co-director of the preventive cardiology program at Johns Hopkins University. Calcium scans quadrupled between 2006 and 2017, his research team reported, and Google searches for related terms have risen even more sharply.
    • “Yet “it’s still being underused compared to its value,” he said.
    • “One reason is that although the test is comparatively inexpensive — sometimes up to $300, but often $100 or less — patients must pay for it out of pocket. Medicare rarely covers it, though some doctors argue that it should.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Radiology Business lets us know,
    • “Physicians are increasingly exiting Medicare, according to new research published in JAMA Health Forum
    • “Radiology and other specialties have expressed concern in recent years that inadequate payment rates could push practices to close or stop accepting the federal program for seniors. Since 2001, Medicare reimbursements to physicians have fallen 33%, when adjusting for inflation, according to the American Medical Association. 
    • “Researchers recently sought to test this theory, analyzing 100% of fee-for-service Medicare Part B claims logged between 2010 to 2024. They found the share of physicians exiting Medicare increased “significantly” from 1.8% to 3.6% by the end of the study period. 
    • “The findings may reflect multiple factors, including the greater burden of new communication methods (e.g., portal messages) and demands for clinical documentation,” Hannah T. Neprash, PhD, and Michael E. Chernew, PhD, healthcare policy experts with the University of Minnesota and Harvard Medical School, respectively, wrote July 18. “More rapid growth in exit[s] among small practices likely contributes to consolidated physician markets, given that new physicians increasingly work for large practices.”
    • “Researchers excluded docs who on average billed for fewer than 100 Medicare claims annually. They defined an exit as the absence of any claims in the payment program for 12 consecutive months. Altogether, the study sample included over 791,000 physicians at an average age of nearly 45. Physician Medicare exits displayed a gradual increase from 2010-2013 before stabilizing between 2014-2016. They saw another gradual increase from 2017-2019 and then spiked amid the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020-2021 before returning to regular levels by 2023.” 
  • The boilerplate in an FEHB or PSHB brochure (meaning its OPM policy) reads,
    • If you are enrolled in Medicare Part B, a physician may ask you to sign a private contract agreeing that you can be billed directly for services ordinarily covered by Original Medicare. Should you sign an agreement, Medicare will not pay any portion of the charges, and we will not increase our payment. We will still limit our payment to the amount we would have paid after Original Medicare’s payment. You may be responsible for paying the difference between the billed amount and the amount we paid.
  • MedCity News informs us that “Sentara Health has rolled out Regard’s AI-powered chart review and discharge summary tool across all 12 of its hospitals [located in Virginia and North Carolina]. The tool has delivered consistent benefits when it comes to patient safety and documentation accuracy, said Joseph Evans, Sentara’s chief health information officer.