Monday report
- Govexec tells us,
- “Last week, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Rand Paul, R-Ky., unveiled his panel’s portion of congressional Republicans’ budget reconciliation package, which aims to reduce federal spending to partially pay for extended tax cuts for the ultrawealthy and increased immigration enforcement. The measure abandoned a series of House-passed proposals to cut the retirement benefits of currently serving federal workers but would have required future federal hires to pay nearly 15% of their paychecks toward their retirement benefits if they wished to accrue civil service protections.
- “But Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., top Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, announced Sunday that the Senate parliamentarian had ruled that most of the Senate’s proposals governing federal benefits and workforce policies violated the Byrd rule, which aims to limit reconciliation measure—and its simple majority threshold for passage—to topics that are budgetary in nature.” * * *
- “Provisions that would require a 60-vote majority to advance include the plan to require all new federal employees to pay 9.4% toward the Federal Employees Retirement System and to choose between paying an additional 5 percentage points toward FERS or serving as at-will employees; a requirement that federal employees challenging an adverse action before the Merit Systems Protection Board pay a $350 filing fee, as well as a proposal to charge federal employee unions for use of agency property and official time on a quarterly basis.
- “The parliamentarian also said that a provision effectively giving the Trump administration “carte blanche” to reorganize federal agencies and lay off thousands of federal workers would similarly run afoul of the Byrd rule. Earlier this month, Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters that he would not consider overruling the parliamentarian as part of the bid to send the reconciliation package to President Trump’s desk by July 4.
- “Still remaining in the package is a provision tasking the Office of Personnel Management with conducting an audit of enrollees in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program to ensure family members remain eligible as dependents, and a requirement that the government charge a 10% fee on deductions from federal workers paychecks, such as unions dues and charitable contributions as part of the Combined Federal Campaign.”
- The American Hospital Association News informs us,
- “The Department of Health and Human Services June 23 announced an initiative coordinated with multiple health insurance companies to streamline prior authorization processes for patients covered by Medicare Advantage, Medicaid managed care plans, Health Insurance Marketplace plans and commercial plans. Under the initiative, electronic prior authorization requests would become standardized by 2027. HHS stated that these reforms complement ongoing regulatory efforts by CMS to improve prior authorization, including building upon the Interoperability and Prior Authorization final rule.
- “The plan is expected to make the prior authorization process faster, more efficient and more transparent, the agency said. Participating insurers pledged to expand real-time responses by 2027. HHS said that the insurers would also commit to reducing the volume of medical services subject to prior authorization by 2026, including those for common procedures such as colonoscopies and cataract surgeries.
- “During a news conference, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said unlike previous attempts by insurers, this initiative would succeed because the number of insurers participating represent 257 million Americans. “The other difference is we have standards this time,” he said. “We have … deliverables. We have specificity on those deliverables, we have metrics, and we have deadlines, and we have oversight.”
- “Mehmet Oz, M.D., CMS administrator, said that the pledge “is an opportunity for industry to show itself.” Sen. Marshall, R-Kan., said that Congress could pursue codifying at least some portions of the initiative in the future.
- “Additionally, participating insurers would honor existing prior authorizations during coverage transitions.”
- Think Advisor points out,
- “Most Medicare programs use current premium revenue and government contributions to pay for their operations.
- “One Medicare program, the Medicare Part A inpatient hospitalization program, is supposed to use the earnings on assets stored in a trust fund to cover some costs.
- “Assets at the trust fund have fallen below $209 billion — less than the asset total at UnitedHealth or CVS Health.
- ‘Medicare trustees say they now expect the trust fund to run dry in 2033. That’s down from a depletion year of 2036 included in last year’s report.
- “But if the Part A trust fund runs dry, and Congress makes no changes, payroll taxes and premium revenue should be high enough to cover about 89% of the promised inpatient hospitalization benefits, according to the trustees.
- “The trustees’ estimate of the share of promised benefits ongoing revenue can pay is unchanged from last year.”
- HHS lets us know,
- “On June 18, 2025, [as the FEHBlog noted at the time] the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas issued an order declaring unlawful and vacating most of the HIPAA Privacy Rule to Support Reproductive Health Care Privacy at 89 Federal Register 32976 (April 26, 2024).
- “With regard to the modifications to the HIPAA Privacy Rule Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) requirements at 45 CFR 164.520, the court vacated only the provisions that were deemed unlawful, namely 164.520(b)(1)(ii)(F), (G), and (H).
- “The remaining modifications to the NPP requirements are undisturbed and remain in effect, see Carmen Purl, et al. v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, et al., No. 2:24-cv-00228-Z (N.D. Tex. June 18, 2025).
- “Compliance with the remaining NPP modifications is required by February 16, 2026. HHS will determine next steps after a thorough review of the court’s decision.”
- In the FEHBlog’s view, it’s a safe bet that HHS will not appeal this decision.
- BioPharma Dive notes,
- “A top Food and Drug Administration official responsible for overseeing drug reviews is reportedly retiring from the agency, adding to an exodus of senior staff who have either left or been forced out by Trump administration leadership.
- “Jaqueline Corrigan-Curay, who serves as acting head of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, will depart next month, according to reports from Endpoints News, Stat News and other publications.
- “Corrigan-Curay became acting CDER director after Patrizia Cavazzoni left the position shortly before the Trump administration took office. A physician and lawyer, Corrigan-Curay joined the FDA in October 2016 and was appointed principal deputy center director at CDER in 2021.”
- Bloomberg Law reports,
- “Republican Senator Bill Cassidy is seeking to delay a scheduled meeting of vaccine advisers selected by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. out of concern they’re not sufficiently qualified.
- “Cassidy, who’s from Louisiana and leads the Senate’s health committee, publicly called on the Trump administration to put off the meeting slated for Wednesday via a post on the social platform X on Monday.
- “Wednesday’s meeting should not proceed with a relatively small panel, and no CDC Director in place to approve the panel’s recommendations,” posted Cassidy.” * * *
- “Cassidy will run the hearing for President Donald Trump’s CDC director nominee, Susan Monarez, on Wednesday. That’s the same day that the vaccine advisers are expected to begin their meeting.
- “Spokespeople for CDC and HHS did not immediately respond to requests for comment.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- Health Day reports,
- “Hypertension is the most common chronic condition among adults aged 85 years and older, with prevalence higher among women than men, according to a report published in the June Health E-Stats, a publication of the National Center for Health Statistics.
- “Yelena Gorina, M.P.H., and Ellen A. Kramarow, Ph.D., from the National Center for Health Statistics in Hyattsville, Maryland, used data from the 2022 and 2023 National Health Interview Survey to present estimates of the percentage of adults aged 85 years and older with 11 selected chronic conditions.
- “The number of American adults aged 85 years and older was 6.1 million in 2023 and is projected to reach 13.7 million by 2040. The authors note that the most common of the selected chronic conditions reported were hypertension, arthritis, and high cholesterol among civilian noninstitutionalized adults aged 85 years and older (66.9, 55.9, and 46.5 percent, respectively). For both men and women, hypertension was the most common chronic condition reported, with a higher prevalence for women than men (68.9 versus 63.7 percent). The prevalence of arthritis was also higher for women than men (63.2 versus 44.2 percent), but men had a higher prevalence of high cholesterol (50.5 versus 44.0 percent), cancer (39.8 versus 28.6 percent), heart disease (31.5 versus 26.3 percent), and diabetes (19.3 versus 14.5 percent).”
- The American Medical Association tells us what doctors wish their patients knew about thyroid cancer.
- Beckers Hospital Review lists by state the 514 U.S. hospitals 514 hospitals with “a catheter associated urinary tract infection rate of zero, as based on the healthcare-associated infections dataset from CMS.”
- The New York Times reports at length on the impact of the measles outbreak on healthcare providers and public health officials in rural America.
- Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, discusses “using cannabis for health problems It’s being used for everything from pain to insomnia. When it might help and when it won’t — in any case, don’t vape or smoke it.”
- FiercePharma relates,
- “Roche has demonstrated the power of combining two of oncology’s hottest modalities—bispecifics and antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs)—in a Lunsumio-Polivy regimen in large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL).
- “The combination of the CD20xCD3 bispecific Lunsumio and the CD79b-directed ADC Polivy significantly reduced the risk of progression or death by 59% versus the traditional R-GemOx regimen in patients with previously treated LBCL who are not eligible for stem cell transplant. R-GemOx includes Roche’s own Rituxan and the chemotherapies gemcitabine and oxaliplatin.
- “Patients in the Lunsumio-Polivy group went a median 11.5 months without disease progression versus 3.8 months for R-GemOx, according to the primary analysis of the phase 3 Sunmo study presented at the International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma.
- “Roche said it will submit the trial results to global health authorities, including the FDA. While Lunsumio is currently approved as an intravenous infusion to treat follicular lymphoma, the Sunmo trial uses a subcutaneous formulation of the drug. Polivy, meanwhile, received the FDA’s approval as part of a combination for certain previously untreated patients with LBCL in 2023.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Novo Nordisk’s new weight-loss drug helped patients lose even more weight on average than its current Wegovy blockbuster treatment, an early-stage trial showed, as the drugmaker races to develop the next generation of obesity medicines.
- “The company’s drug, known as amycretin, helped patients lose over 24% of their weight, which compares with an average of about 17% for its Wegovy treatment.
- “The drug mimics the same gut hormone as the Wegovy treatment to suppress appetite, delay stomach emptying and control blood sugar, but combines it with amylin, a hormone in the pancreas that also regulates appetite.
- “The new treatment was administered as a once-weekly shot and a daily pill, with results showing that side effects were mostly in line with other obesity medications. Patients taking the amycretin injection lost an average of 24.3% of their weight when dosing up to a 60-milligram shot over 36 weeks of treatment, while those on the pill lost up to 13.1% over 12 weeks.” * * *
- “The data was published in the Lancet and presented at the American Diabetes Association conference over the weekend. Novo Nordisk plans a late-stage trial for the new drug early next year.”
- STAT News also reports from the American Diabetes Association meeting,
- “An investigational therapy from Eli Lilly helped preserve lean mass and drive greater loss of fat in patients taking the popular obesity treatment Wegovy.
- “In a Phase 2 trial, patients taking the highest-dose combination of Wegovy and the drug, called bimagrumab, lost 22% of their weight at 72 weeks. Ninety-three percent of that was fat mass, and the rest was lean mass. People taking Wegovy alone lost a smaller 16% of their weight, and 72% of that was fat mass, according to results that will be presented Monday at the American Diabetes Association meeting.”
- and
- “Amgen’s monthly obesity candidate led to substantial weight loss but a high rate of side effects and discontinuations in a mid-stage trial, results that support the company’s decision to use a slower dosing schedule to make the drug more tolerable in further testing.
- “In the Phase 2 study, patients with obesity taking the injectable drug, called MariTide, lost up to 16.2% of their weight in one year when taking into account all participants regardless of discontinuations. Patients lost up to 19.9% when analyzing only those who stayed on treatment.”
- and
- “Obesity drugs were first approved to treat type 2 diabetes, but there’s a growing movement to test them in type 1 diabetes, too. Research presented Monday at a large diabetes meeting showed some promise for this approach.
- “Patients who took a GLP-1 drug fared better than those in a control group at keeping their blood glucose levels in a healthy range while also losing more weight than those who weren’t taking the drug.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “One of the most closely watched clinical trials in the burgeoning field of psychedelics research has delivered results that, while positive, appear to have unnerved some investors.
- “Sponsored by U.K.-based biotechnology company Compass Pathways, the trial enrolled 258 people with treatment-resistant depression. Participants were given either a placebo or the company’s proprietary version of psilocybin — a psychedelic compound found in many mushroom species — and evaluated for an initial period of six weeks.
- “According to Compass, a single dose of its drug significantly reduced scores on a 60-point scale that healthcare providers use to gauge depressive symptoms.”
- The article explains why investors were not impressed by these results.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Fierce Healthcare discusses the top ten nonprofit health systems by 2024 operating revenue, and points out
- “Despite an uncertain regulatory environment and higher hold period for investments in healthcare, deal volumes remain steady.
- “So says a new report from PwC. In addition to regulatory scrutiny, persisting valuation gaps between buyers and sellers have contributed to hesitation in the market. Nonetheless, deals continue to pace significantly ahead of pre-COVID levels—though are down from the boom years of 2020 to 2022. The three-year running average of the number of healthcare transactions weighs in at 1,375.
- “The subsector leading with the most deals (454) in the last 12 months was a group of services that includes contract research organizations, ambulatory surgical centers, home infusion care and medical office buildings. These deals represented more than $31 billion in value. In second place were physician groups (413 deals totaling $11.3 billion) followed by labs and diagnostics (110 deals worth $7.6 billion).”
- and
- “Concern about the cost of GLP-1s remains high, and a new study suggests it’s not uncommon for patients to overpay for these drugs.
- “E-prescribing company DoseSpot released a study Monday that analyzed more than 100,000 prescriptions for GLP-1s and found they likely overpaid by a collective $10.2 million. Most (92%) of prescriptions included at the study could have been obtained at a lower price.
- “The data were provided exclusively to Fierce Healthcare. The report said that the $10.2 million in savings extrapolated across the approximately 32 million individuals who currently take GLP-1 ones mean there’s an opportunity here for potentially billions in savings.
- “The bulk of the savings identified in the study, or about $7 million, would have been generated by being in one of the manufacturers’ savings programs. Josh Weiner, CEO of DoseSpot, told Fierce Healthcare in an interview that stakeholders can do more to keep providers in the loop about what patients may be eligible for.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Novo Nordisk ended its partnership with Hims & Hers, accusing it of illegally selling copycats of Wegovy and deceptive marketing.
- “Hims & Hers accused Novo Nordisk of pressuring it to steer patients to Wegovy, regardless of whether it was the best option.
- “Hims & Hers’ shares dropped after the deal was scrapped. Novo Nordisk will continue to make Wegovy available via telehealth.”
- Beckers Health IT takes a look at Google Healthcare’s moves.
- Per Healthcare Dive,
- “Ohio’s attorney general has conditionally approved venture capital firm General Catalyst’s acquisition of Summa Health, according to a press release Wednesday.
- “General Catalyst’s Health Assurance Transformation subsidiary, or HATCo, and the Akron, Ohio-based health system must meet 10 conditions to allow the deal to move forward, including increasing the purchase price by $15 million in cash and an additional $15 million in equity to the surviving nonprofit foundation, according to a letter sent by Attorney General Dave Yost’s office. The equity interest can’t be sold for three years.
- “HATCo will also have to file a yearly report with the attorney general to show it’s complying with post-closing obligations, as well as provide notice of new deals that could trigger antitrust concerns.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “Illumina said Monday it agreed to acquire SomaLogic and other assets from Standard BioTools for $350 million in cash to expand in the proteomics market.
- “The deal includes additional near-term payments of up to $75 million tied to performance milestones, plus royalties.
- “Illumina said the acquisition of SomaLogic, a leader in data-driven technology, will advance the company’s multiomics strategy and strengthen the value of its NovaSeq X products.
- “Illumina and SomaLogic have partnered closely for more than three years, and this combination increases our ability to serve our customers and accelerate our technology roadmap towards advanced biomarker discovery and disease profiling,” Illumina CEO Jacob Thaysen said in a statement.”