Midweek Report

From Washington, DC
- The American Hospital Association News tells us,
- “A Congressional Budget Office report released June 4 found that enactment of the fiscal year 2025 budget reconciliation bill, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1), would lead to 10.9 million people becoming uninsured in 2034 due to significant changes to the Medicaid program and Affordable Care Act coverage. A follow-up letter from the CBO provides more detail on how these changes would impact the number of uninsured. The CBO also estimated that the bill would lower gross benchmark premiums for marketplace plans under the ACA by an average of 12.2%.”
- Per a Senate news release,
- On Wednesday, June 11, 2025, at 10:15 am the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing titled “23 and You, the Privacy and National Security Implications of the 23 and Me Bankruptcy.”
- STAT News reports,
- In a boost for Merck, a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office panel agreed to reconsider a patent granted to another company that could affect plans to broaden use of its franchise product, the Keytruda cancer treatment.
- “The dispute with Halozyme Therapeutics occurs as Merck plans to sell a new injectable version of Keytruda that the company is betting will sustain a medicine that has accounted for nearly half of its sales. Patent protection for the treatment, which is currently administered intravenously and generated $29.5 billion in revenue last year, lapses in 2028.
- “At issue before the PTO are certain enzymes called Mdase that Halozyme developed to enable the administration of drugs by injection. Last November, Merck petitioned the PTO to reconsider seven patents that were awarded to Halozyme, arguing they were overly broad and should not have been granted. The filing came a few months after the PTO granted one patent in particular.
- “Patent challenges are almost a daily feature of behind-the-scenes jockeying in the pharmaceutical industry, but the battle over Keytruda is more closely watched than most since the stakes are so high for Merck. In March, the company asked the Food and Drug Administration to approve the injectable version, which would cut treatment time in half, and a decision is expected in September.”
- Per an HHS new release,
- “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”), Office for Civil Rights (“OCR”) announces the appointment of Paula M. Stannard as Director of the Office for Civil Rights. In this role, Director Stannard is the Department’s chief officer and adviser to Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. concerning the implementation, compliance, and enforcement of Federal health information privacy, security, and breach notification rules under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) as well as Federal civil rights, conscience, and religious freedom laws in HHS’ jurisdiction.
- “I’m proud to welcome Paula back to HHS,” said Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “She’s a proven public servant who delivered results during her time at HHS under both President Trump and President George W. Bush. Paula brings deep institutional knowledge, relentless focus, and an unwavering commitment to civil rights. Under her leadership, the Office for Civil Rights will drive forward President Trump’s bold civil rights agenda with clarity, energy, and purpose.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- Bloomberg Law reports,
- “Moderna Inc. has agreed to do a placebo-controlled trial of its new Covid vaccine that was recently approved by US regulators, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Tuesday.
- “In a post on X, Kennedy said he wanted to “address those of you who have anxieties” about the Food and Drug Administration’s limited approval of Moderna’s vaccine, which was cleared for a narrower segment of the population than prior shots.
- “Moderna declined to comment. As a condition for approving the new shot, the FDA required a future placebo-controlled study in adults ages 50 to 64 without high-risk conditions, according to agency documents.
- “Kennedy said that “the FDA will monitor and collect data throughout the trial for every adverse outcome” and “scrutinize every aspect of the trial.”
- Per a press release,
- Hyperfine, Inc. (Nasdaq: HYPR), the groundbreaking health technology company that has redefined brain imaging with the first FDA-cleared AI-powered portable MRI system for the brain—the Swoop® system—announced today FDA clearance of its most significant technological advancement to date. The clearance includes an entirely new portable MRI scanner powered by the proprietary Optive AI™ software. This new system delivers the highest level of image quality, functionality, and usability to date, unlocking a new brain imaging paradigm for clinicians and their patients.
- Per FiercePharma,
- “Bayer has taken another step toward achieving its €3 billion peak sales estimate for androgen receptor inhibitor Nubeqa, scoring an FDA approval to expand its use to all patients with metastatic castration-sensitive prostate cancer (mCSPC), also known as metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC).
- “The label expansion comes three years after the FDA signed off on Nubeqa in combination with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and the chemotherapy docetaxel to treat patients with mCSPC. The new nod allows Nubeqa to be used along with ADT by those who can’t tolerate chemo.
- “The FDA endorsement was based on results of a phase 3 trial, ARANOTE, which showed that Nubeqa significantly extended the time before tumor progression or death in patients with mCSPC compared with ADT alone. In the study of 669 patients who were randomized 2 to 1 to receive 600 mg of Nubeqa plus ADT or placebo plus ADT, Nubeqa reduced the risk of radiographic progression or death (rPFS) by 46%, allowing the trial to achieve its primary endpoint.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “The Food and Drug Administration has awarded Sarepta Therapeutics a new kind of fast pass that could help speed the reviews of certain gene therapy applications it brings to the regulator in the future.
- “The so-called platform technology designation issued to Sarepta is meant to streamline the development and evaluation process for gene therapies using a specific delivery tool, a viral vector dubbed rAAVrh74. That component is part of multiple Sarepta programs, among them the already approved Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy Elevidys.
- “According to Sarepta, the designation is one of the first given to a drug program since the initiative was launched by the FDA. It enables Sarepta to use evidence previously gathered from studies involving the vector in future applications, though differences in how some of its newer gene therapies are manufactured may limit its usefulness.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “Smiths Medical has recalled infusion pumps to update the instructions to address three problems that could lead to serious injury or death. The devices are staying on the market.
- “The Food and Drug Administration, which published Class I notices about the recalls Tuesday, said issues with some CADD-Solis Ambulatory Infusion Pumps and CADD-Solis VIP Ambulatory Infusion Pumps could interrupt or delay treatment. Smiths has not reported any serious injuries or deaths related to the issues, but the FDA sees a risk of harm.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- STAT News reports,
- “KJ Muldoon, the first infant treated with a personalized gene-editing drug, has been discharged from the hospital for the first time in his life, the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia announced Tuesday. After 307 days at CHOP, KJ was dressed in what early studies suggest are the world’s smallest and cutest graduation cap-and-gown before leaving.
- “It’s a promising sign for KJ, his family, and the therapy researchers built in just 6 months. Born with an ultra-rare disease that prevented his liver from breaking down ammonia, he was rushed to CHOP, where specialists kept him under strict monitoring to prevent ammonia from flaring and doing long-term damage. Typically, he would receive a liver transplant. Instead, scientists across the country teamed to devise a gene-editing treatment.
- “KJ received the first of three doses at six months old. He’s now 10 months old. The hope is that, while not cured, he has been left with a far more mild version of his disease. Meanwhile, researchers are working on ways to scale his treatment for thousands of others.”
- and
- “Circulating tumor DNA blood tests are rapidly gaining popularity among oncologists for their potential to detect cancer recurrence and treatment resistance earlier than traditional imaging. But despite their promise, data presented at the annual ASCO meeting this week suggest that the clinical value of ctDNA tests is still unproven.
- “While some trials hint at benefits, others lack conclusive survival outcomes — which raises concern about whether early interventions based on ctDNA actually improve patients’ lives.
- “We need evidence to know the true value of these tests,” University of Pennsylvania cancer researcher Angela DeMichelle told STAT’s Angus Chen. “They have incredible potential to help people, but if we don’t do the studies and don’t do them the right way, we can hurt people.”
- The American Journal of Managed Care adds,
- A blood-based circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) test detected colorectal cancer (CRC) with 79.2% sensitivity and 91.5% specificity, according to a recent prospective study. These findings suggest the investigational test may be a viable noninvasive screening option, although its ability to detect advanced precancerous lesions remains limited.
- The population-based, observational study is published in JAMA.
- “This study was designed as a large, prospective diagnostic accuracy evaluation of a blood-based CRC screening test, with blinded comparison to colonoscopy in an average-risk screening population,” wrote the researchers of the study. “It enrolled a geographically and demographically diverse cohort across 201 sites, approximating the racial and ethnic distribution of the US.”
- “CRC is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths globally, with more than 1.9 million new cases and 930,000 deaths estimated in 2020 alone. Increased access to screening options—including stool-based tests, visual exams, and emerging blood-based tests—can help detect CRC at its most treatable stages and reduce both incidence and mortality.”
- Per Reuters,
- “American teens are increasingly turning to the weight-loss drug Wegovy as more families and their doctors gain confidence in its use for young people with obesity, new data shared with Reuters shows.
- “The average rate of teens beginning treatment with the highly effective Novo Nordisk (NOVOb.CO), opens new tab drug grew 50% last year to 14.8 prescriptions per 100,000 adolescents, according to an analysis by health data firm Truveta.”
- Per Healio,
- “Enrollment in a patient-delivered intervention allowed adults with overweight or obesity to better maintain weight loss than those receiving standard of care, according to trial findings published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
- “In the CHAMPS randomized controlled trial, adults with overweight or obesity who previously lost at least 5% of their body weight with lifestyle intervention were randomly assigned to a weight-loss maintenance intervention led by fellow patients who previously lost weight or to standard of care weight maintenance led by a physician. Adults participating in the patient-led intervention were more successful at maintaining their body weight.”
- Medscape notes,
- “As part of treating the overall well-being of your patients, it may be beneficial to recommend nutritional counseling. More insurance carriers are providing this service as a benefit.
- “When patients have conditions such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease or obesity, suggesting nutritional counseling could help your patients become more informed about making healthier choices. More health insurance plans cover nutritional counseling, although some may only provide coverage for specific conditions.
- “Integrating nutritional counseling into routine clinical practice is essential and necessary to achieving optimal health outcomes,” said Scott Isaacs, MD, adjunct assistant professor of medicine, Emory University, and president of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology, who is based in Atlanta. “By ensuring that nutritional counseling is accessible, personalized, and supported by insurance, we empower our patients to prevent disease, effectively manage chronic conditions, and improve both quality of live and longevity.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “New research is helping to answer an important question about ultra-processed foods: Which ones might be healthier?
- “One reason many ultra–processed foods often lead us to eat big meals and heavy snacks is because of their texture, which makes them go down easily and quickly, according to a new study presented this week at a conference in Orlando, Fla., of the American Society for Nutrition.
- “But some diets filled with ultra-processed foods don’t cause us to eat as much. People in the study who had a diet of slower-to-eat ultra-processed foods such as crunchy breakfast cereal and multigrain buns consumed an average of 369 fewer calories a day than when they were eating quick-to-eat ultra-processed foods such as commercially made smoothies and soft breads.
- “Meals that are equally satisfying were eaten in different ways purely as a function of the way they’re textured,” said Ciarán Forde, a professor at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, who led the study.”
- Per an NIH press release,
- Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have identified which brain circuits are vital for visual acuity and how they are affected by damaged retinal cells. While vision restoration therapies, such as stem-cell and gene therapies, aim to replace or repair damaged cells in the eye, it is critical to understand how brain circuits involved in vision are affected by retinal cell loss. Study results suggest that targeting these circuits may be necessary to achieve optimal recovery of visual function, and have significant implications for the development of future vision restoration therapies that address visual pathways beyond the retina. The study published today in The Journal of Neuroscience.
- “A huge amount of progress has been made in repairing the eye, however little attention has been paid to the functional consequences beyond the eye,” said the study’s lead investigator, Farran Briggs, Ph.D., senior investigator at NIH’s National Eye Institute (NEI). “Brain circuits downstream of damaged or dying retinal cells in the eye may also undergo some loss of function following changes to their retinal inputs.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Beckers Health IT lets us know about six things concerning “CVS Health’s $20B bet on integrated, tech-enabled care,” and five details about Mark Cuban’s pharmacy network.
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “Despite tight budgets and other operational challenges, health systems are increasingly investing in replacement hospitals and sustainability, while maintaining a strong focus on outpatient facilities in construction and design projects.
- “More than 53% of the construction and design firms that responded to Modern Healthcare’s 2025 Construction and Design Survey said the industry is growing, even as it faces financial headwinds such as funding limitations, inflation and recent tariffs.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “Looking to defend its giant cardiometabolic health franchise, Eli Lilly is licensing a technology from Swedish biotechnology firm Camurus that promises to produce longer-acting medications.
- “Camurus’ FluidCrystal technology is designed to methodically release a therapeutic drug substance into the body over a period of days or months. After an injection, the solution interacts with bodily fluids to transform into a liquid crystalline gel. The gel holds the active ingredient and then slowly degrades, releasing medicine.
- “The deal includes an unspecified upfront payment as part of an initial package that may be worth as much as $290 million, Camurus said Tuesday. That figure also includes payments for reaching certain development and regulatory milestones. Another $580 million could be available for meeting sales goals, along with mid-single digit royalties for successful products.”
- BioPharma Dive summarizes its reporters’ takeaways from the ASCO conference which ended yesterday.
- Fierce Healthcare relates,
- “DispatchHealth and Medically Home closed their merger deal on Wednesday, combining the forces of at-home care and hospital-at-home leaders.
- “Operating under the DispatchHealth brand, the combined company will provide three core service lines. Its hospital-alternative care service, also called hospital at home, provides inpatient hospital-level care at home. The company also provides emergency-level care, when appropriate, to help patients avoid ED visits.
- “The merger was announced in mid-March. In the coming months, the company will integrate Medically Home’s technology platform and clinical command center for use nationwide, the company said.
- “The two leadership teams have combined. Jennifer Webster will continue as the CEO of DispatchHealth. Graham Barnes, who took over as CEO of Medically Home in August 2024, is departing to pursue new opportunities. Pippa Shulman, D.O., has assumed the role of chief medical officer, according to a press release.”