News

There has been a lot of good news about the Medicare drug benefit lately. Surveys show a substantial increase in coverage, particularly among low-income seniors. Costs are less than expected; employers continue to offer retiree benefits; major insurers are sticking with the program; and product coverage remains fairly broad. Beneficiaries seem generally satisfied with the program, and the much-feared "donut hole" appears less lethal than anticipated.

Every time I look through the sales fliers in the Sunday newspaper, I'm amazed by all the stuff we can buy. Toys, such as satellite radios and video game systems, are just the beginning. Today, you can even buy high-end cleaning products for your bath or shower at more than 10 times the price of a simple sponge and some cleanser.

Washington, D.C-Employer-sponsored health-insurance plan premiums increased only 6% in 2007, less than the last four years. However, insurance costs are rising much faster than inflation and wages, according to a leading survey of employer health benefits. Premiums now average more than $12,000 for family coverage (almost $4,500 for individuals), pricing many workers out of the market.

Denver-A UnitedHealthcare initiative underway in Colorado and a handful of other states allows high-deductible PPO plan members to cut their deductibles as much as $4,000 by meeting certain wellness benchmarks. Called Vital Measures, the program launched June 1 in Colorado, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Rhode Island, and is drawing employer interest, says Cheryl Randolph, UnitedHealthcare spokesperson.

Washington, D.C.-House legislation that proposed to fund expanded coverage for children by cutting payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans was put on hold last month in an effort to reach a speedy compromise for reauthorizing the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). The legislators agreed to adopt the less-costly Senate proposal, which increases tobacco taxes to expand SCHIP into a $60 billion program over five years. The House bill sought $75 billion for SCHIP and proposed to cut payments to MA plans to offset a lower increase in cigarette taxes. Both plans are much more costly than the $30 billion program proposed by the White House.

Washington, D.C.-House and Senate leaders finally agreed on compromise legislation to renew prescription user fees late last month, just a few days before the funding program was set to expire. The Food and Drug Administration legislation increases drug user fees by $225 million over five years, in addition to adopting user fee agreements negotiated with pharmaceutical, biotech and medical device companies that already raised fees considerably. There's also a new fee program to support FDA pre-review of DTC television ads.

Washington, D.C.-Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Clinton scored points with the business community in pledging to retain the nation's public-private healthcare system while promising universal coverage, improved quality and lower costs. In an effort to distance herself from previous efforts to establish a single-payer system, Clinton offered a more centrist plan that touts the "share responsibility" of all parties and builds on the existing employer-based system. There is a mandate for large employers to provide health coverage, which most already do, along with a tax credit for small employers (fewer than 25 workers possibly) to offset premium costs.

Telavancin is a novel semisynthetic lipoglycopeptide antibiotic undergoing FDA review for complicated skin and skin-structure infections; this agent is also in phase 3 clinical trials for the treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) or multidrug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae. Telavancin exerts its antibacterial action via a dual mode of action involving both inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis and disruption of the bacterial cell membrane; the latter of these effects is believed to improve the rate of killing observed with telavancin compared with other glycopeptides. In vitro, telavancin exhibits good activity against a variety of gram-positive organisms, including drug-resistant S pneumoniae, MRSA, vancomycin intermediate-susceptible and vancomycin-resistant S aureus, and vancomycin-resistant enterococci. Clinical data have demonstrated that telavancin is at least as effective as comparator agents for a variety of infectious processes...

Parkinson disease (PD) is a chronic progressive neurodegenerative disorder that affects >1 million people in the United States. PD causes both motor and nonmotor disturbances; common symptoms include resting tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia. The current goals of treatment are to slow disease progression and to reduce disability without inducing long-term complications. The classes of agents currently approved for the treatment of PD include levodopa/carbidopa, dopamine agonists, catechol-O-methyl-transferase (COMT) inhibitors, monoamine-oxidase type B (MAO-B) inhibitors, anticholinergics, and agents/ combinations from other drug classes. Newer agents, such as rasagiline and rotigotine, offer additional treatment options to healthcare professionals. Despite these advances in the treatment of PD symptoms, current therapies do not prevent neuron degeneration. Research into new treatments is focused on neuroprotective drugs, new dopamine agonists, and nondopaminergic agents; the goal of these investigative..

The latest FDA action (through September 2007) related to satraplatin, ropinirole (Requip CR), sumatriptan/naproxen (Trexima,) desvenlafaxine (Pristiq), eprodisate (Kiacta,) raloxifene (Evista), natalizumab (Tysabri), bifeprunox, fluticasone/salmeterol inhalation powder (Advair Diskus 500/50), LX211, TZP-101, Alferminogene tadenovec, Ad5FGF-4 (Generx), tramiprosate (Alzhemed), rilonacept, aripiprazole (Abilify), sapropterin (Kuvan), oral topotecan (Hycamtin), mifepristone (Corlux), vitiligo-derived IgG (VitiGam)

WASHINGTON, D.C.-Instead of going back to academia, former FDA Commissioner and Medicare Administrator Mark McClellan, MD, is setting up his own shop to tackle health reform and drug safety more actively. Dr. McClellan will head the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform at the Brookings Institution, starting with $20 million in funding from Alfred Engelberg and Leonard Schaeffer.

Healthcare reform has surfaced as a national topic. Intel co-founder Andy Grove outlined some noteworthy ideas on healthcare reform during a national speaking tour, and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger recently proposed a plan to cover the citizens of his state. Getting a head start on the 2008 Presidential race, Mitt Rommey is weighing in with proposals based on his experience as former Governor of Massachusetts. While all these ideas are coming from different sources, they all share a few basic themes: healthcare should be easy to find, to buy, and to understand.