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Saturday, July 10, 2021

Emerging Therapies for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

At the 2021 virtual American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting, a broad variety of new studies were presented on non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), including the evolving role of EGFR inhibitors and immunotherapy, the benefits of immunotherapy plus chemotherapy, and the impact of immune-related adverse events on clinical outcomes.

In a video (https://www.medpagetoday.com/d01fc25b-f695-465e-ab46-ed73dcf18425), courtesy of VJHemOnc, Benjamin Besse, MD, PhD, of Gustave Roussy Cancer Institute in Paris, discusses what these data might mean for the future of NSCLC treatment.

Following is a transcript of his remarks:

Targeted therapy is part of our management now. We use to screen five different targets, according to the ESMO [European Society for Medical Oncology] guidelines: EGFRALKROS1NTRK, and BRAF mutations. But we have seen that there are much more to come. The RET inhibitors, and of course the KRAS G12C [inhibitors].

This interesting data has been updated this year at ASCO. A lot has been said on that. Some might be disappointed by the response rate and the PFS [progression-free survival], but it's very, very high in these patients that was not supposed to be targeted, in fact -- response rate: 37.1%, PFS: 6.8 months.

We can expect the current study in second-line, post-chemo immunotherapy versus docetaxel to be positive according to these numbers, because the tolerance of the drug is good. Very interesting, very small population. Thirteen patients were only treated by immunotherapy, and in this specific population the response rate to, let's say, first-line sotorasib, at least post-immunotherapy, was 69.2%, which is I think very interesting. And let's wait to see the data of the drug first-line before any conclusion of the activity of the drug versus chemo/immunotherapy in first line.

Still, a lot of research in the EGFR exon 20 field. We have seen a few drugs that have been presented, like the DZD9008 is the specific EGFR inhibitor. Nice response rate of 40% and only 5% diarrhea. I just want to highlight that the toxicity data that were presented were for any of those levels, so it makes it very low dose of the drug and very high dose of the drug. This is why the toxicity profile seems to be OK. We know that with these specific inhibitors, what is very complicated is to manage the toxicity, so I wait for seeing more data at the RP2D dose, the one that will be developed in the phase II.

In the EGFR field, a drug that is very interesting that has been presented a couple of times and with data that is still coming, is the HER3 ADC [antibody-drug conjugate] patritumab deruxtecan. It's an antibody directed against HER3, and linked to the drug. Very interesting because HER3 is overexpressed when the patient failed EGFR TKI [tyrosine kinase inhibitor]. The response rate is very nice, 39%. And the PFS is 8.2 months. I think it's really a drug that can make it because 91% of these patients received an EGFR TKI and the platinum-based chemotherapy. So I think the activity is very impressive. We have seen a bit of [toxicity] with the drug, in particular interstitial lung disease (ILD). It's something that we are used to now with these new classes of ADC. And let's see if they are more frequent when the patients were pre-exposed to platinum-based chemotherapy.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage/ascovideopearlsnsclc/93500

Telehealth use falls nationally for third month in a row

 

  • Telehealth claim lines as a percentage of all medical claims dropped 13% in April, marking the third straight month of declines, according to new data from nonprofit Fair Health.
  • The dip was greater than the drop of 5.1% in March, but not as large as the decrease of almost 16% in February. However, overall utilization remains significantly higher than pre-COVID-19 levels.
  • The decline appears to be driven by a rebound in in-person services, researchers said. Mental health conditions bucked the trend, however, as the percentage of telehealth claim lines associated with mental conditions — the No. 1 telehealth diagnosis — continued to rise nationally and in every U.S. region.
The coronavirus spurred an unprecedented increase in telehealth utilization early last year. But early data from 2021 suggests demand is slowing as vaccinations ramp up and COVID-19 cases decrease across the U.S.

Fair Health has used its database of over 33 billion private claims records to analyze the monthly evolution of telehealth since May last year. Telehealth usage peaked among the privately insured population last April, before easing through September and re-accelerating starting in October, as the coronavirus found a renewed foothold in the U.S.

In January, virtual care claims made up 7% of all medical claim lines, but that fell to 5.9% in February, 5.6% in March and just 4.9% in April, suggesting a steady deceleration in telehealth demand.

Rebecca Pifer/Healthcare Dive, Fair Health data
 

The deceleration in April was seen in all U.S. regions, but was particularly pronounced in the South, Fair Health said, which saw a 12.2% decrease in virtual care claims.

The trend doesn't bode well for the ballooning virtual care sector, which has enjoyed historic levels of funding during COVID-19. Just halfway through the year, 2021 has already blown past 2020's  record for digital health funding, with a whopping $14.7 billion. This latest data suggests dampening utilization could throw cold water on the red-hot marketplace.

And policymakers are still mulling how many telehealth flexibilities should be allowed after the public health emergency expires, expected at the end of this year. Virtual care enjoys broad support on both sides of the aisle and the Biden administration's top health policy regulators, including CMS administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, have said they support permanently adopting virtual care coverage waivers, but returned restrictions on telehealth access could also stymie use.

Fair Health also found that nationally, mental health conditions increased from 57% from all telehealth claims in March to 59% in April. That month, psychotherapeutic/psychiatric codes jumped nationally as a percentage of telehealth procedure codes, while evaluation and management codes dropped, suggesting a continued need for virtual access to mental health services, which can be some of the rarest and most expensive medical services to find in one's own geographic area.

Also in April, acute respiratory diseases and infections increased as a percentage of claim lines nationally, and in the Midwest and South, while general signs and symptoms joined the top five telehealth diagnoses in the West. Both trends suggest a return to non-COVID-19 respiratory conditions, like colds and bronchitis, and more 'normal' conditions like stomach viruses, researchers said.

https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/telehealth-use-falls-nationally-for-third-month-in-a-row-fair-health/603009/

New vaccine guidance for the obese

 Vaccines such as Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca are designed to prevent severe Coronavirus-19 Disease (COVID-19) due to acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and are highly efficacious. The efficacy is not different in people with and without obesity except for AstraZeneca which is not known, according to a new position statement from The Obesity Society (TOS), the leading scientific membership organization advancing the science-based understanding of the causes, consequences, prevention and treatment of obesity.

Trials have demonstrated high efficacy in individuals with and without  against COVID-19-associated hospitalization and death. Therefore, TOS encourages individuals with obesity to undergo vaccination with any of the available vaccines authorized for emergency use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as soon as they are able.

"Analysis of COVID-19  in certain disease sub-groups has been difficult because the number of trial participants with the disease was too small. This was not the case for obesity. Because the prevalence of obesity among trial participants was high, and because obesity is highly associated with hospital admission and death in COVID-19, the trial results were able to show that, contrary to concerns of reduced vaccine efficacy in people with obesity, that the vaccines were just as efficacious among persons with obesity compared with persons without obesity," said Alexandra M. Hajduk, Ph.D., MPH, an epidemiologist and associate research scientist in the Department of Internal Medicine (Geriatrics) at Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Conn. Hajduk is one of the co-authors of the position statement.

The disease of obesity is a recognized risk factor for increased morbidity and mortality in persons with COVID-19 subsequent to infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus. In addition, obesity is associated with conditions that are independent risk factors and predictors of mortality from COVID-19, including diabetes, cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and pulmonary diseases.

Due to the increased prevalence of severe disease, hospitalization, and death, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) identified obesity as body mass index (BMI) ≥30 kg/m2 as a high-risk medical condition in the COVID-19 pandemic. On Dec. 20, 2020, the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended that persons aged 16-64 years with obesity should be prioritized for vaccination in Phase 1c of the phased allocation to provide guidance for federal, state and local jurisdictions where vaccine supply was limited.

Authors of the position statement wrote the document in response to published literature, as well as inquiries made to the Society by patients, providers, Society members, policymakers and others regarding the efficacy of vaccines in persons with obesity against SARS-CoV-2.

"In addition to general misconceptions about the disease of obesity, speculation on the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines in obesity has certainly added to vaccine hesitancy in those individuals with obesity. I hope this position statement not only will encourage those with and without obesity to get vaccinated, but to continue the conversations on the existing weight bias in our current health policies and poor coverage and reimbursement of effective treatments for obesity," said first author, W. Scott Butsch, MD, MSc, director of obesity medicine at the Bariatric and Metabolic Institute at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.

In their review, the authors found the following based on each of the vaccines:

Pfizer: In a sub-group analysis of the 13,218 participants with obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m2, 31.5% of the study cohort), vaccine efficacy was 95.4 % among participants with obesity compared to 94.8% among participants without obesity. Further stratification by age revealed vaccine efficacy of younger adults (age 16-64) with obesity (94.9 %) and older adults (age ≥65) with obesity (100%).

Moderna: In a sub-group analysis among participants with severe obesity (BMI ≥40 kg/m2; 6.5% of cohort) demonstrated a vaccine efficacy of 91.2%, with only one case of severe COVID-19 illness identified among 901 participants with severe obesity, compared to 11 cases among 884 participants in the placebo group with severe obesity. Post hoc analysis reported a vaccine efficacy of 95.8% for participants with obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m2; 34.5 percent of cohort), with 2 COVID-19 cases in the vaccine group and 46 in the placebo group.

Johnson & Johnson: There were 12,492 participants (28.5% of cohort) with obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) in the trial. Vaccine efficacy 14 days after dose one was 66.8% and 65.9%, 28 days after dose one compared to placebo in participants with BMI ≥30 kg/m2. There were no deaths attributable to COVID-19 in the vaccine group, whereas 6 of the 7 fatalities due to COVID-19 in the placebo group were among participants with obesity.

AstraZeneca: Participants with obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) comprised 19.4% and 20.3% of each trial cohort and was the most common comorbid condition. In an interim sub-group analysis of participants with one or more comorbidities, the vaccine efficacy was 73.4%, though, in the updated sub-group analysis, the vaccine efficacy was 62.7%. The specific vaccine efficacy and safety data in persons with obesity is not yet published.

The following recommendations are currently endorsed by TOS regarding vaccine efficacy in persons with obesity:

  1. TOS has confidence in the FDA-approved vaccine trials and the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices updated interim vaccine allocation recommendations in the indicated U.S. populations, including those individuals with obesity and severe obesity.
  2. TOS recommends that persons with obesity be vaccinated for prevention of COVID-19, in agreement with CDC recommendations, as obesity is clearly associated with an increased risk of more severe course of COVID-19 disease and death.
  3. There is no definitive way to determine which COVID vaccine is "best." Current FDA-approved COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson were all highly efficacious against COVID-19—associated hospitalization and death in trials, and were found to be equally efficacious in persons with obesity compared to normal weight individuals. TOS advises persons with obesity to accept whichever available vaccination is offered.
  4. Publication of long-term vaccine efficacy outcomes, stratified by obesity status, in peer-reviewed journals is needed and is strongly encouraged.
  5. Currently, available peer-reviewed data do not support the hypothesis of impaired humoral responses to SARS-CoV2 vaccine in people with obesity.
  6. TOS recommends that in the development of care plans for patients with COVID-19, obesity (BMI >30kg/m2) and severe obesity (BMI ≥40kg/m2) should be included as a significant risk of more severe course and outcome of COVID-19.
  7. TOS strongly supports evidence-based weight management therapies which support a healthy BMI and the promotion of COVID-19 prevention strategies, including vaccine prioritization. TOS strongly supports policies which ensure access to such treatments, including adequate and equitable coverage for behavioral, medical, device and surgical treatments for obesity.

TOS plans to monitor emerging data on  efficacy and will issue an updated evidence-based position statement at a future time.

"As new, more transmissible variants of SARS-CoV2 emerge, including the Delta variant, vaccination efforts are even more pressing to help limit the spread of disease. These vaccines work in individuals with and without obesity. We want to end this pandemic. Let's make it happen by getting vaccinated," said Catherine Kotz, Ph.D., FTOS; professor, University of Minnesota (Integrative Biology and Physiology), associate director of research, Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Care, Minneapolis VA Health Care System; and president of The Obesity Society. Kotz is a co-author of the position statement.

"Accruing data on obesity and risk of COVID-19 severity are shocking, alarming and tragic. As individuals with obesity have a greater risk of severe COVID-19, in a sense they have even more to gain by getting vaccinated, preventing heart-breaking outcomes. By getting vaccinated, we are protecting ourselves and each other; let's get vaccinated!," said Ania M. Jastreboff, MD, Ph.D., associate professor, Yale University School of Medicine, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine physician-scientist and vice chair of TOS's Clinical Care Committee. Jastreboff is the senior author of the position statement.

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-07-vaccine-guidance-obese.html

Stretch existing Covid vaccines to inoculate more people? Experts are divided

 With the global supply of Covid-19 vaccine still woefully inadequate, vaccine makers are scouring the pharmaceutical landscape for partners to ramp up manufacturing, and civil society groups are pressing politicians to waive intellectual property protections in a bid to spur still more production.

But what if there was a simpler way? What if current supplies could be stretched, to vaccinate more people more quickly? What if the world is using more vaccine than it needs to on each person immunized, depriving people in the queue of a chance to be protected?

Reducing the size of a vaccine dose is an approach that has been used successfully before and ought to be explored, some scientists argue.

Several times in recent years the World Health Organization has recommended “fractionation” — using partial or fractional doses when supplies of critical vaccines have been limited. When a dangerous yellow fever outbreak in Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo threatened to exhaust the world’s stores of yellow fever vaccine, the WHO instructed countries to use one-fifth of a normal dose in their emergency vaccination efforts. (Research done during that 2016 outbreak suggested the lower dose protected those who received it.) The WHO has also recommended use of fractional doses of inactivated polio vaccine and meningococcal conjugate vaccines during periods of scarcity of those shots.

The idea of splitting doses of Covid vaccines is not universally supported, however; a number of experts contend that the vaccines should be used in the dose size tested during clinical trials and cleared for use by regulatory agencies. That route offers the best protection for individuals who are vaccinated, they insist. “The problem where I’m coming from is you have to prove fractional dosing works,” said Larry Corey, who co-led design of the trials of the Covid vaccines supported by the U.S. government. That hasn’t happened yet.

But Ben Cowling, an infectious diseases researcher at Hong Kong University, believes that a public health approach — one that focuses on what’s best for whole populations, not individuals — is what’s needed in a pandemic. He and two colleagues, Wey Wen Lim, of Hong Kong’s Laboratory of Data Discovery for Health, and Sarah Cobey, an associate professor of viral ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago, argued the case for using fractional doses of Covid vaccine in a commentary in Nature earlier this week.

“Think of the lives that would have been saved” if manufacturers geared their research to finding the smallest possible dose that was protective when they were testing their Covid vaccines, Cowling told STAT in an interview about fractionation.

It’s important to understand that when pharmaceutical companies set out to develop Covid vaccines in early 2020, they were in a race against time, with the SARS-CoV-2 virus sweeping the globe and infections and deaths rising rapidly. In such a scenario, there was no time to find a Goldilocks dose — the one that used just enough antigen to protect a person being vaccinated, but no more than was needed.

Settling on a vaccine dose in a situation like this is as much an art as it is a science. Most manufacturers tested a two-dose regimen, because the accumulated body of vaccine experience suggests that an immune system will need two introductions to a new pathogen to mount a good response against it. (The sole exception was Johnson & Johnson, which tested both a one-dose and a two-dose vaccine. The former has been authorized for use; study of the latter continues.)

On the question of how much antigen — the fluid that comprises each vaccine dose — was needed, each of the manufacturers quickly tested a small range of options. For instance, Pfizer and BioNTech, the partnership that brought the first vaccine to market in the U.S., tested doses of 10, 20, and 30 micrograms given in a two-dose regimen, and a single 100-microgram dose in its dose-finding studyModerna tested doses of 25, 100 and 250 micrograms. Both opted for two-dose regimens with Pfizer selecting the 30-microgram dose and Moderna opting for 100 micrograms. (Moderna’s 250-microgram dose had caused too many side effects and was abandoned.)

The studies used to decide on those doses weren’t large enough to show whether the lower doses would have been protective. They only charted how tolerable the doses were — did they trigger too many unpleasant reactions? — and what the measurable immune responses were in the people who were vaccinated. For manufacturers, the priority was to find a vaccine dose that was effective, pushing them toward higher doses to be on the safe side.

(The cost of getting this wrong was evident when Sanofi, one of the world’s biggest vaccine makers, accidentally under-dosed people in one of its trials. Its Covid vaccine was not adequately protective and when Pfizer and Moderna were seeking emergency use authorizations last December, Sanofi announced it would have to redo its Phase 2 trial. While Pfizer and Moderna have been selling hundreds of millions of doses of vaccine, Sanofi still does not have an authorized product.)

A number of scientists have noted that the dose-finding studies for some of the vaccines suggest lower doses could have been used. In fact, the leadership of Operation Warp Speed — the Trump administration’s program to fast-track Covid vaccines, drugs and diagnostics — asked Moderna months ago to study whether it could halve its vaccine dose; Moncef Slaoui, the former chief adviser to Warp Speed, said on CBS in January that the responses generated by a 50-microgram dose was identical to that of the 100-microgram dose Moderna chose.

Slaoui didn’t cite a specific study, and the company sidesteps questions about whether it followed through on the Operation Warp Speed request. A Moderna spokesperson said via email that “the 100[-microgram] dose was selected for the pivotal Phase 3 study and this remains the only dose level for which we have demonstrated clinical efficacy.”

Cowling, Lim, and Cobey noted that the lowest dose Pfizer had tested, 10 micrograms, elicited immune responses that were comparable to the dose the company chose, which included three times as much antigen.

And a study from immunologists at La Jolla Institute of Immunology that was posted this week to a preprint server reported that people who received 25 micrograms of Moderna’s vaccine, the lowest dose the company studied, had immune responses that were on a par with people who had recovered from Covid infection.

One of the senior authors of that paper, Daniela Weiskopf, cautioned that because the world doesn’t yet know what levels and combinations of immune system armaments — Neutralizing antibodies? Binding antibodies? Activated B cells or T cells? — are needed to protect against the SARS-2 virus, it’s not clear if that would have been an effective vaccine.

(Multiple research groups, including scientists at Moderna, are working to try to establish so-called correlates of protection — what a protected immune system looks like. If the correlates of protection can be determined, a move to a lower dose might be considered, the company said, thought it would require regulatory approval.)

“What we don’t know … is if that is good enough,” said Weiskopf, an assistant research professor at La Jolla whose work focuses on the role of T cells in viral immunity. “Is that level of immune response enough to protect?”

Shane Crotty, an immunologist at La Jolla who was also a senior author of the paper, said he believes there would have been a measurable difference in efficacy if Moderna had opted for its lowest, rather than its highest, tested dose. But for a vaccine that showed 94% efficacy in its Phase 3 trial, would the difference have been great enough to significantly erode the effectiveness of the vaccine?

“Scientifically, there’s a reasonable chance it would be successful, but there’s also a really good reason we run Phase 3 clinical trials. It’s hard to predict those outcomes,” Crotty said.

Several countries that were having trouble accessing sufficient supplies of vaccine have asked Crotty’s advice about whether they could use fractional doses, he said. “I didn’t recommend it to anybody.”

When the WHO recommended fractional doses of yellow fever vaccine, it did so based on a study done in Brazil, which suggested the approach would work. Similar studies of Covid vaccines haven’t been conducted, Crotty said.

“We’re very interested in any evidence that is available on the performance of any of the vaccines at a dose other than the [current] dose,” said Kate O’Brien, director of the WHO’s department of immunization, vaccine, and biologicals. “The most important thing is we don’t make any recommendations that are absent data — you know, that are just data-free recommendations.”

Corey, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, admitted he isn’t a fan of the fractional dose idea. “It might work, but it may not work,” he said flatly.

“The best approach, of course, is to give the best vaccine at the effective dose,” he said. “Do you want to throw away 95% [vaccine efficacy] to get something to 80%? Will it still be as good against severe disease? Last as long?”

Even Cowling acknowledged that given that lower doses would need to be tested, the opportunity to go this route in this pandemic may be slipping from the world’s grasp. And he worries that even if the idea was adopted, fractional dose vaccines might be deemed as unacceptable in some countries; they might see it as sub-par product.

“One of my specific concerns is that, right now, if [WHO’s vaccine experts] were to convene to discuss fractionation for places like Africa or South America or parts of Asia that have had relatively low supply so far, that those places would be unhappy about the idea of using fractional doses when the developed world has been using full doses,” he said.

https://www.statnews.com/2021/07/08/stretch-existing-covid-vaccines-experts-divided/

Death rates declining for many common cancers in U.S.

 Death rates are declining for more than half of the most common forms of cancer in the U.S., according to a sweeping annual analysis released Thursday.

The new report — released by the American Cancer Society, the National Cancer Institute, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other collaborators — found that between 2014 and 2018, death rates dropped for 11 out of 19 of the most common cancers among men and 14 of the 20 most prevalent cancers among women.

Accelerating declines in lung cancer deaths may account for much of the overall progress seen in recent years, the authors of the report said. Over the past two decades, the death rate for lung cancer has declined even faster than the rate at which patients are diagnosed with the disease. And while part of the early success in preventing lung cancer can be attributed to the massive drop in smoking rates, the authors note the most recent downward trends seem to correspond with the approval of new treatments for non-small cell lung cancer that improved the likelihood of survival.

Death rates from melanoma also saw an accelerated decline in the past decade, despite a growing number of diagnoses. Like in lung cancer, authors point to the introduction of novel treatments around the same time as the turnaround on the death rate. New targeted and immune checkpoint inhibitors were approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2011, one year before major declines in death rates were seen in women and two years before they were seen in men.

chart displaying most prevalent cancers among women
J. EMORY PARKER/STAT

Farhad Islami, the lead author of the report and a scientific director at the American Cancer Society, said the findings point to areas where treatments or new advances are benefiting patients and underscore which forms of cancer may need more attention from scientists and research funding organizations.

“It’s important that people have timely access to quality treatment,” Islami said. “Not just any treatment, but something that evidence shows is effective.”

chart of cancer prevalence among men
J. EMORY PARKER/STAT

While the report showed improved survival rates for many patients over recent years, others, such as prostate, colorectal, or female breast cancers, have seen progress stalled or stopped. Breast cancer continues to be one of the three deadliest cancers for women of all races, and the most frequently fatal cancer for Hispanic women.

While the rates of death from breast cancer are declining, the pace of the decline has slowed over the past two decades, according to the report.

chart of cancer prevalence by race and ethnicity
J. EMORY PARKER/STAT

And across the board, racial health disparities persist. Black women and white women are diagnosed with breast cancer at similar rates, Islami said, but the mortality rate for Black women is 40% higher. Overall, cancer is more common among white individuals than Black individuals, but Black people die from cancer at higher rates.

Islami emphasized the importance of preventive measures for certain cancers, noting that while cancers related to smoking have continued to decrease, those related to excess body weight have increased. Early and consistent access to screenings has also been critical, he said, as demonstrated by the apparent effect of adapted screening guidelines for colorectal cancer.

From 2000 to 2010, the number of people between the ages of 50 and 75 who received a regular colonoscopy more than doubled from 19% to 55%. But between 2010 and 2015, that same rate only rose to 59%. While it’s not a clear cause and effect, this slowdown in screening uptake is closely correlated with slower improvements in the death rates from colorectal cancer.

Each year, the report on cancer is meant to provide guidance to clinicians in speaking directly with their patients. But Islami said that authors are also looking toward a wider audience.

“We hope that policymakers read the paper,” Islami said. “Many of these things need community-level policies to be implemented.”

https://www.statnews.com/2021/07/08/cancer-death-rates-2021/

Medical merger could improve cancer treatment for minorities. So why is FTC blocking it?

 America has been waging a war on cancer since President Richard Nixon signed the National Cancer Act in 1971, and to his credit President Joe Biden has set a goal of ending cancer during his tenure. He has also pledged to make racial equity a core policy value. However, recent action by the Federal Trade Commission runs counter to both goals. 

The FTC is working to block the merger of biotech companies Illumina and Grail, which lead the way in the early detection of cancer using blood samples and the technology needed to process the tests. Blocking the merger is a mistake that will harm future cancer patients, particularly those in minority communities.

Nationally, cancer kills about 600,000 Americans a year – essentially a COVID-level death toll year in and year out. Cancer is the second-leading cause of death for all Americans; but Black Americans generally have the highest cancer mortality rate of all racial and ethnic groups.

For example, over a four-year period ending in 2016, Black women are almost 40% more likely to die from breast cancer than white women, while Black men overall were 18% more likely to die of all cancers than white men. 

For minorities, one key to reversing these disturbing statistics is early detection – the sooner cancer is found, the easier (and cheaper) it is to treat, and the odds of recovery are greater. However, minorities are more frequently diagnosed in later or more advanced stages of certain types of cancer than white Americans, making effective treatment more difficult. 

This is why it was so disappointing to see the FTC take action to block the Illumina-Grail merger. Grail has developed a blood test that detects 50 types of cancer, most of which currently have no other means for early detection. The companies are not competitors; they occupy two different stages in the same supply chain.

Legal challenges to such "vertical" mergers are unusual. In fact, this would be only the second in more than 40 years.

This blood testing breakthrough will allow earlier cancer treatment.  It is hard to imagine a bigger win for cancer patients, particularly minority ones hit hardest by this dreadful disease. Indeed, FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter, called the technology “a game changer for cancer patients and their loved ones.

Yet Slaughter and the FTC object to the merger because of fears that Illumina, which dominates the market on a critical input necessary for processing the blood tests of Grail and its competitors, would use its dominance to charge Grail competitors more or impede their research and development efforts. The result, the FTC says, would be less competition and higher prices. 

Those fears are not just unfounded, but backward. 

Illumina has offered customers some guaranteed access to its services as well as a commitment to drive down prices by more than 40% within four years. The FTC has accepted these types of remedies in the past.

The FTC action is based on speculation (what Illumina can do in terms of raising prices for Grail competitors), not actual evidence. Instead of risking a loss in court, the agency is banking on the European Union preventing the deal from getting done by its Dec. 20 deadline.

In April, the EU initiated a review of the merger, prompting the FTC to cynically put its lawsuit on hold until the EU decides. If the EU clears the merger, the FTC can relaunch its legal challenge confident that it will drag on. 

If the FTC can get away with essentially outsourcing its job to the EU while it slow rolls its own challenge, the agency will chill innovation. 

The only way to bring down the price of these tests is to allow companies to freely compete. A breakthrough like this one will attract other companies to enter the market and either catch up quickly or even leapfrog the existing technology. The result will be more and better cancer screening at lower cost.  

The United States brought COVID-19 vaccines to market in record time. We did it by coming together to enable innovation, not erecting barriers to stop it. Democrats and Republicans should now unite to stop the FTC from pursuing this disastrous policy. 

As a top domestic adviser in the previous White House, I witnessed firsthand what can happen when Republicans and Democrats put aside their differences to work together to address issues affecting minority communities. It is how we were able to accomplish the First Step Act, the Investing in Opportunity Act and help for historically Black colleges and universities.

There are few policies that are literally a matter of life or death; the pervasive racial disparity in American health care is one of them.  It is a big challenge that demands a proportionate bipartisan response. Stopping the FTC’s misguided and dangerous action against better cancer screening would be a good place to start.

Ja’Ron Smith is the executive director of the Center for Advancing Opportunity, a partnership between the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, the Charles Koch Foundation and Koch Industries.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2021/07/06/merger-may-improve-cancer-care-minorities-why-ftc-blocking-it/7789749002/

Are Health Insurers Pushing Self-Diagnosis for Patients?

 When President Obama touted the Affordable Care Act in 2008, he promised that more Americans would have better healthcare. Recently, UnitedHealthcare, the largest insurance company in the United States announced a new policy decision to retroactively deny emergency room claims. If this policy change is allowed to stand, Americans may well wake up to learn that in an emergency situation they might just have to save themselves. 

UnitedHealthcare partners with more than 1.3 million physicians and care professionals, and 6,500 hospitals and care facilities. The scope of this policy has the potential to negatively impact millions of patients, most of whom, go to the emergency room because they believed it will save their life. 

A recent study by researchers at MIT Sloan School of Management and Boston Emergency Medical Services, states that during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many were afraid of going to emergency rooms for fear of catching the virus, many more Americans had heart attacks and other fatalities outside of hospitals where they could have received care. They also found that this happened most often in low-income neighborhoods. Is UnitedHealthcare going to retroactively pay these people because they did not use the emergency room?

This policy will affect millions of Americans in 35 states, including the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, a place where I served as Human Services Secretary. During my tenure at the helm of the agency we partnered with providers to lead a successful effort to root out well over one billion dollars in healthcare and human services fraud, waste, and abuse, without impacting critical services like emergency room visits. If UnitedHealthcare or any other insurer is serious about efficiency and saving money, they might ask states and providers to partner with them to strategically reduce fraud and waste across the system. 

Physicians, hospitals, and other healthcare providers are on the front lines taking care of patients and are most aware of the waste in the system that exists. Without their critical input, cost cutting decisions will be made by desk job executives who have might have financial acumen but little in the way of patient care knowledge. The American Medical Association has characterized this policy as causing patients to “second guess their instincts that emergency care is needed.” Dr. Mark Rosenberg of the American College of Emergency Physicians meanwhile, criticized UnitedHealth for trying to “cut its costs at the expense of necessary patient care.”

What is even more puzzling about this policy is that emergency room usage was dropping prior to COVID-19. According to GIST Healthcare consulting visits to the emergency room “were down 27 percent in 2020, compared to 2019.” Although COVID-19 created an outlier, it is far from the norm. On the heels of what looks to be the end of this pandemic, a policy like this will strike fear in the most vulnerable patients. 

The good news is that public backlash has caused UnitedHealthcare to delay the original July 1st launch date of this dangerous policy until “the end of the national public health emergency period.” While it may seem a welcome reprieve for American families struggling economically from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Public Health Emergency period is set to expire on July 20. Furthermore, if UnitedHealthcare plans to review old medical records searching for emergency room visits and charge patients retroactively, this and any other potential future delay would be meaningless as patients can just be back billed.

Insurance companies at their most basic level are meant to protect patients. Although streamlining emergency department efforts are critical and reducing expenditures across the board are imperative to fixing healthcare, a more prudent approach is to advance comprehensive reform together with the hospitals and providers to improve the entire system and make it more efficient and cost effective. If President Biden is serious about providing better healthcare for Americans, he ought to pay attention to how lopsided decisions like this could harm patients and turn professional medical diagnosis into self-diagnosis. Policies like this will punish patients physically as well as financially and erode any gains the United States has made to make it a healthier nation. 

Gary D. Alexander served as Health and Human Services Secretary in Rhode Island from 2006-2011 and Human Services Secretary for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania from 2011-2013.

https://www.realclearhealth.com/articles/2021/07/07/_are_health_insurers_pushing_self-diagnosis_for_patients__111226.html