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Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Biogen Alzheimer's Drug Slow to Take off as U.S. Medicare Wrestles With Coverage

 U.S. hospitals that were expected to be early adopters of Biogen’s Alzheimer’s drug have treated only a handful of patients since its early June approval as they wait for the first payments from the government’s Medicare program for people aged 65 and older.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the drug, called Aduhelm, based on limited evidence that it might slow a decline in cognitive function in people with the memory-robbing disease.

Some prominent doctors, hospitals and health insurers have criticized the FDA decision and said they will not offer the drug. The agency itself has invited an outside investigation into its decision-making process.

Other leading institutions, including in Michigan, Florida and Rhode Island, were eager to make the therapy available to patients in the hope it will provide a benefit, but told Reuters this week they are proceeding slowly while Medicare determines how it will cover Aduhelm, initially priced at about $56,000 per year.

Medicare has launched a nine-month process to set standardized national terms for Aduhelm coverage that may seek to limit its use.

For now, the government health plan is processing claims for the drug on a case-by-case basis. The first centers to use the drug as a commercial product said those claims have not yet been paid.

"Medicare does this very, very rarely for drugs and issues these coverage restrictions, again, very rarely," said Dr. Aaron Kesselheim of Brigham and Women’s Hospital during an online interview presented jointly by The Forum at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Reuters. Kesselheim resigned as a member of the FDA advisory panel that reviewed Biogen's drug after the agency chose not to follow it recommendation against approval.

The slow uptake raises questions about the potential for 2021 sales for the treatment ahead of Biogen’s second-quarter earnings report on Thursday.

'BEING VERY CAUTIOUS'

The Michigan Institute for Neurological Disorders (MIND) said it has only treated one patient with Aduhelm.

Sonda Rossman, head of disease state initiatives, therapeutics, and clinical research at MIND, said the institute is testing more patients for Aduhelm eligibility, but is "being very cautious" about financial, as well as medical, risks.

Florida's First Choice Neurology and Butler Hospital's Memory and Aging Program in Providence, Rhode Island, have treated three patients each. Butler's program is run by Dr. Steven Salloway, an Aduhelm supporter who has called the drug's approval "a turning point in Alzheimer’s research."

The Mayo Clinic, which has partnered with Biogen to provide clinical testing to diagnose whether someone is eligible for the new medication, said it is still reviewing whether to offer Aduhelm to its own patients.

The FDA approved Aduhelm for patients who test positive for a component of amyloid brain plaques, but later narrowed that to just those in the early stages of the disease - the group tested in clinical trials.

UCLA Health System said none of its providers have asked to use Aduhelm, with many awaiting additional data before making a final decision.

Biogen declined to comment on the number of centers using its drug, but said it expects the rollout to be gradual.

MEDICARE LIMITS

Because Alzheimer's is an age-related disease, around 85% of people eligible for Aduhelm are covered by Medicare, which could incur a $29 billion annual spending increase, according to Kaiser Family Foundation.

Experts say Medicare could seek to lower the therapy's cost to taxpayers by limiting access to the treatment, linking coverage to real-world evidence of patient outcomes, or setting a fixed payment that combines drug reimbursement with other costs related to the treatment.

"Given the potential budgetary impact, it could be that things are departing from normal," said Dan Ollendorf, of the Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health at Tufts University Medical Center in Boston.

Tufts and others have called for Medicare to go beyond a national coverage determination and institute a policy known as coverage with evidence development.

Under such a program, data on Aduhelm's real-world effectiveness and safety would be compiled in a Medicare patient registry, quickly providing new data to analyze.

Medicare could also institute a stricter "demonstration project" for Aduhelm that would pay for the drug's use at a limited number of medical centers and for a fixed amount that bundles in costs for scans, follow-up and to monitor for side effects.

While Medicare is prevented by law from negotiating drug prices, this type of approach could limit reimbursement to hospitals, possibly at an amount below Aduhelm's list price. That could put pressure on Biogen to cut the price if it wants Aduhelm to be used, said Raymond James analyst Chris Meekins.

https://www.usnews.com/news/top-news/articles/2021-07-21/analysis-biogen-alzheimers-drug-slow-to-take-off-as-us-medicare-wrestles-with-coverage

U.S Extends Travel Curbs at Canada, Mexico Land Borders Through Aug. 21

 U.S. land borders with Canada and Mexico will remain closed to non-essential travel until at least Aug. 21, the U.S. Homeland Security Department said on Wednesday.

The 30-day extension came after Canada announced Monday it will start allowing fully-vaccinated U.S. visitors into the country on Aug. 9 for non-essential travel after the COVID-19 pandemic forced an unprecedented 16-month ban that many businesses complained was crippling them.

One difficult question for the Biden administration is whether it would follow Canada's lead and require all visitors to be vaccinated for COVID-19 before entering the United States, sources briefed on the matter told Reuters.

The White House plans a new round of high-level meetings to discuss the travel restrictions and the potential of mandating COVID-19 vaccines, but no decisions have been made, the sources said.

In early June, the White House launched interagency working groups with the European Union, Britain, Canada, and Mexico to look at how to eventually to lift restrictions.

Businesses in Canada and the United States, particularly the travel and airline industries, pushed for an end to restrictions on non-essential travel between the two countries, which were imposed in March 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic.

Since then, the land border has been closed to all non-essential travel. However, the United States has allowed Canadians to fly in, while Canada has not allowed Americans to do the same.

The United States has continued to extend the restrictions on Canada and Mexico on a monthly basis since March 2020.

Airlines and others have urged the administration to lift restrictions covering most non-U.S. citizens who have recently been in Britain, the 26 Schengen nations in Europe without border controls, Ireland, China, India, South Africa, Iran and Brazil.

https://www.usnews.com/news/top-news/articles/2021-07-21/us-extends-travel-restrictions-at-canada-mexico-land-borders-through-aug-21

Covid-19 Opportunity 'Still at Play for Novavax'

 Delays for the regulatory filings of its Covid-19 vaccine NVX-CoV2373 (NUVAXOVID) have meant Novavax (NVAX) has been unable to get its offering out to the public yet. You would think that with other leading players firmly planted in the public and health policy makers’ consciousness, maybe the opportunity has already passed for last year’s outstanding performer.

However, in late-stage studies, the vaccine’s data has shown to be just as good as those of the leading approved vaccines. With the EUA filing slated for Q3, the vaccine the subject of an EMA rolling review and being assessed by other regulators - notably in the U.K. and India - the catalysts are piling up.

B.Riley’s Mayank Mamtani has long banged the drum for Novavax’s potential vaccine, and in his latest endorsement highlights the recent conversation around the EUA approved vaccines’ “safety and durability of protection.”

As for the latter, while data showing the approved vaccines’ “waning” effectiveness - either since the initial primary jabs or from the emerging variants - remains “limited,” the analyst believes the talk around the "need for boosters" is likely to also include the impact on “high-risk population segments,” including the immunocompromised, the elderly populace and frontline workers.

“Specifically,” Mamtani notes, “There is also the need to reconcile mixed evidence on kinetics of immune response among mRNA vaccines' 6-12 month follow-up data relative to JNJ's 8-month follow-up data published on 7/15.”

As for the former, Mamtani says the CDC and FDA remain “highly diligent” around the approved vaccines’ safety profile in real-world use cases. This is evident with the label updates with relevant warning language for JNJ’s vaccine regarding the risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), and young adolescents at risk of heart inflammation from PFE/MRNA’s mRNA vaccines.

Mamtani, therefore, thinks Novavax’ vaccine is well-positioned to benefit when it finally enters the market.

As such, the 5-star analyst said, “We believe the potential imminent resolution of NVAX's challenges around global regulatory filings and manufacturing scale-up activities, also explaining continued volatility, presents an underappreciated multi-year, global opportunity set based on NVAX garnering meaningful market share in the unvaccinated (near-term) and the vaccinated populations globally, with the latter notably benefiting from datasets generated in COM-COV2 ‘booster’ study and recently initiated Ph. I/II study for C-19/influenza combination vaccine product (NCT04961541).”

All in all, Mamtani reiterated a Buy rating for NVAX shares, backed by a $286 price target. The implication for investors? Upside of 53%. (To watch Mamtani’s track record, click here)

Tuning now to the rest of the Street, where the average price target is a more modest $249.60, yet still suggests one-year gains of ~19%. Overall, the stock has a Moderate Buy consensus rating, based on 4 Buys vs. 2 Holds. 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/covid-19-opportunity-still-play-162900462.html

Winn-Dixie, TRxADE HEALTH In Telemed Deal

  TRxADE HEALTH INC. (NASDAQ:MEDS) an integrated drug procurement, delivery, and healthcare platform, today announced that Bonum Health, a Digital Healthcare business subsidiary has signed a Telemedicine Service Distribution Deal with Southeastern Grocers Inc., parent company of Winn-Dixie, Harveys Supermarket and Fresco y Más grocery stores throughout the five states of Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia and Mississippi.

Bonum Health will provide affordable telemedicine services and prescription discount savings to the patients of all Winn-Dixie, Harveys and Fresco y Más retail stores and pharmacies by offering Bonum Health's signature Mobile Health Services application and prescriber program, staffed by over 600 board-certified medical providers. The partnership also provides Winn-Dixie patients direct access to prescription discount savings through Bonum Health signature telemedicine application, which can be downloaded from both the Google Play and App Store. According to Becker's Hospital Review, in 2020, approximately 5.4 million Americans lost their health insurance between February-May 2020 due to Covid-19 related lay-offs or job losses. This is a disturbing trend across America where the total number of uninsured has climbed to 21%. In the states that Winn-Dixie serves customers, the uninsured totals represent an average of 21% of all consumers across Florida, Georgia, Mississippi and Louisiana.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/winn-dixie-southeastern-grocers-inc-123500456.html

Lexaria: Tech Enhances Possible Benefits for Treating COVID-19, mRNA Vaccine Side Effects

 Lexaria Bioscience Corp. (NASDAQ:LEXX)(NASDAQ:LEXXW) (the "Company" or "Lexaria"), a global innovator in drug delivery platforms is pleased to announce that its tolerability and pharmacokinetic study VIRAL-A20-3 has been completed with positive results.

This study demonstrated that DehydraTECHTM enabled colchicine, the latest of several drugs Lexaria has successfully tested with known SARS-CoV-2 antiviral properties, benefited from our proprietary formulation and processing, resulting in increased delivery:

Drug

Cmax* % Improvement
(ng/mL)

Control
(ng/mL)

AUClast** % Improvement
(hr∙ng/mL)

Control
(hr∙ng/mL)

Colchicine

31.97
91%
(p=0.0005)

16.73

104.43
167%
(p=0.0028)

38.97


Colchicine is an approved therapeutic with anti-inflammatory effects that is principally used to treat gout and conditions such as cardiac inflammation (i.e., pericarditis), and also has potent effects in mitigating the cytokine storm associated with SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19. Colchicine is occasionally recommended and used to treat emergent pericarditis in children in cases where this form of cardiac inflammation develops following administration of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.

Similar to other antiviral agents that Lexaria has processed with DehydraTECH (e.g., darunavir, efavirenz, remdesivir's nucleoside analogue GS-441524 and ebastine), oral colchicine in its available forms today exhibits diminished bioavailability in humans, which Lexaria believes it can improve upon for better safety and efficacy outcomes. Currently available oral colchicine demonstrates bioavailability of about 45%.

Colchicine is also known to have a narrow therapeutic index, meaning the distinction between toxic and non-toxic doses is marginal and there could be significant benefits in allowing its dosing to be reduced while maintaining therapeutic delivery levels. Lexaria hopes to improve the bioavailability of colchicine to a sufficient level which could potentially allow for lower overall dosing requirements.

Ligand Partner Jazz Pharmaceuticals Launches RYLAZE for Leukemia

  Ligand Pharmaceuticals Inc.   (NASDAQ: LGND) today announced Jazz Pharmaceuticals plc (NASDAQ: JAZZ) has launched Rylaze™ (asparaginase erwinia chrysanthemi (recombinant)-rywn), also known as JZP458. Rylaze, which was approved by the FDA on June 30, 2021, is a recombinant erwinia asparaginase used as a component of a multi-agent chemotherapeutic regimen for the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) or lymphoblastic lymphoma (LBL) in adult and pediatric patients 1 month or older who have developed hypersensitivity to E. coli-derived asparaginase.

Under the terms of the license agreement with Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Ligand received a $2 million payment upon FDA’s acceptance for review of the product BLA and is entitled to receive a $5 million payment upon the first commercial sale following launch. Ligand is eligible to receive up to an additional $155.5 million in milestone payments and tiered low to mid-single digit royalties based on worldwide net sales of any products resulting from this collaboration, including Rylaze.

“This partnership with Jazz Pharmaceuticals is one of the core scientific programs that catalyzed our acquisition of Pfenex last year. The Rylaze commercial launch really showcases our highly productive partnership with Jazz and the exceptional ability of our Pelican Expression Technology to enable life-saving therapeutics,” said John Higgins, CEO of Ligand. “The robust manufacturing afforded by Ligand’s Pelican Expression Technology combined with Jazz’s demonstrated success in development and commercialization has enabled the delivery of a high-quality recombinant asparaginase option for patients with hypersensitivity to E. coli-derived asparaginase with reliable supply.”

https://www.biospace.com/article/releases/ligand-partner-jazz-pharmaceuticals-launches-rylaze-asparaginase-erwinia-chrysanthemi-recombinant-rywn-formerly-jzp458/

Medicare Issues Local Coverage Determination for Biocept Breast Cancer Assay

Reimbursement decision expands access to testing that provides critical information used to guide targeted treatment options for patients with breast cancer

Company provides updates on other initiatives including CNSide™, its proprietary test for neuro-oncology, and COVID-19 testing volume, which has now reached over 450,000 samples

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/medicare-issues-local-coverage-determination-121700546.html