Jump to content
  • Sign Up
×
×
  • Create New...

Recommended Posts

  • Diamond Member

This is the hidden content, please

Trump previews next Medicare drug price negotiations

In a photo illustration, prescription drugs are seen next to a pill bottle on July 23, 2024 in New York City.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Healthy Returns newsletter, which brings the latest health-care news straight to your inbox. Subscribe here to receive future editions.

The Trump administration is already gearing up for another round of Medicare drug price negotiations, but it will look a little different this time around. 

The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on Monday issued

This is the hidden content, please
for that third cycle, as the second round of negotiations is underway. The process was established under the Biden administration’s signature Inflation Reduction Act as a way to rein in high health care costs for older Americans. 

CMS plans to announce a list of 15 drugs eligible for the third round of price talks by February 2026, which will then kick off months of back and forth between the government and manufacturers if they agree to participate. The new negotiated prices for those products will go into effect in 2028.

But here are the biggest changes this time around: 

  • Medicare Part B drugs – For the first time, the list would include drugs payable under Medicare Part B – which covers medicines administered in a doctor’s office or hospital – in addition to prescription drugs covered under Medicare Part D. Previous rounds only targeted Part D medications. 
  • Renegotiation process – CMS may choose to renegotiate the prices for certain drugs that already had prices set for the first and second cycles of talks, including those with new approved uses or changes in “monopoly status.” The agency will announce any medicines selected for the first cycle of renegotiation, with revised prices for those products taking effect in 2028. 
  • Transparency – CMS is aiming to boost transparency around the process, seeking public feedback on topics such as how the agency determines an initial price offer for a drug. 

“This draft guidance is critical to creating a transparent, competitive, and fair prescription drug market that puts American patients first,” Medicare Director Chris Klomp said in a

This is the hidden content, please
.

But Wall Street analysts are focused on another part of the guidance that could cause issues for Merck, Bristol Myers Squibb and some other pharmaceutical companies. 

The guidance document suggests that the Trump administration could end a workaround that those companies are using to drag out revenue from top-earning ******* drugs, such as Merck’s Keytruda and Bristol Myers Squibb’s Opdivo.

The plan had been to shift patients to newer injectable – or subcutaneous – versions of their ******* drugs and keep charging Medicare higher prices for them, even after their original intravenous versions are subject to new negotiated prices under the program. Drugmakers have been banking on those subcutaneous versions as a way to dampen the revenue they would lose from Medicare drug price negotiations, along with upcoming patent expirations for the original forms of their drugs. For example, key patents for Keytruda start expiring in 2028. 

Under the current rules, complex drugs known as biologics are eligible for the negotiation process after 13 years, but the clock restarts for a new version of the drug – like a subcutaneous form – that adds an additional active ingredient.

Subcutaneous versions of drugs like Opdivo are combination products that include an additional ingredient, allowing them to be injected quickly instead of being slowly infused like the original intravenous form.

But on Monday, CMS said it is “soliciting comments” on how it “might consider” grouping these combination drugs with their original versions — if the added ingredient doesn’t affect how the drug treats the underlying disease. In other words, the agency is considering whether to count two versions of a drug as a single product in certain cases. 

That appears to be “somewhat targeted” at products such as subcutaneous Keytruda and Opdivo, JPMorgan analysts said in a note on Monday. They said the guidance leads to “at least the potential for inclusion” of those drugs in future negotiations. 

Still, no changes are final yet, so it may be too soon to predict the impact on drugmakers like Merck and Bristol Myers Squibb. 

Feel free to send any tips, suggestions, story ideas and data to Annika at 

This is the hidden content, please
.

Latest in health care: UnitedHealth’s surprise leadership shakeup

It’s not unusual for CEOs who transformed their companies to step back into leadership when things veer off course. 

This week, UnitedHealth Group Chairman Stephen Hemsley took a page from Bob Iger’s playbook at

This is the hidden content, please
, and took back the CEO position at the company following the abrupt departure of Andrew Witty.

The last six months have been challenging for Witty, following the ******* of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson and disappointing first-quarter earnings. Shares hit a four-year low in recent weeks as it became increasingly clear that United’s Medicare Advantage peers had done a better job of pricing for elevated costs in Medicare this year.

During Hemsley’s 11-year tenure as CEO, UnitedHealth’s stock rose more than 300%, as he built the company into a health care juggernaut. Following the massive growth, the company and the industry as a whole have been facing waves of regulatory pressure and public scrutiny of their businesses.

For Hemsley, it’s a whole new environment to navigate as he tries to right the ship.

Feel free to send any tips, suggestions, story ideas and data to Bertha at

This is the hidden content, please
.

Latest in health-care tech: OpenAI launches new benchmark tool to evaluate how AI models perform in health scenarios

OpenAI on Monday launched a new evaluation tool called HealthBench, a benchmark that will help test how artificial intelligence models perform in realistic health-care scenarios. 

“If developed and deployed effectively, large language models have the potential to expand access to health information, support clinicians in delivering high-quality care, and help people advocate for their health and that of their communities,” OpenAI said in a

This is the hidden content, please
. “To get there, we need to ensure models are useful and safe.”

The company said HealthBench was developed alongside 262 doctors from 60 countries. It’s based on 5,000 conversations that simulate interactions between individual users or clinicians and AI models. The discussions are split into seven different themes, including global health, emergency situations and handling uncertainty. 

When a model responds to a prompt, each response is graded against a set of “physician-written rubric criteria specific to that conversation,” OpenAI said. HealthBench contains 48,562 unique rubric criteria.

OpenAI included one example where a user said they found their 70-year-old neighbor unresponsive on the floor. The AI model in that instance told the user to take action right away, and included eight steps they could follow. HealthBench gave this answer a 77% based on its rubric criteria. 

OpenAI said HealthBench responses were evaluated against responses written by doctors to understand how the model compared to their clinical judgement. The company found that HealthBench “closely aligns” with physicians’ grading. 

OpenAI said it used HealthBench to evaluate several existing models, including its own o3, GPT-4.1, o1, GPT-4o and GPT-3.5 Turbo models, xAI’s Grok 3,

This is the hidden content, please
’s Gemini 2.5 Pro, Anthropic’s Claude 3.7 Sonnet and Meta’s Llama 4 Maverick. 

The company found that o3 outperformed other models, and it said its models have improved by 28% on HealthBench. 

OpenAI said the full evaluation suite and underlying data for HealthBench is available in its GitHub repository. 

“We hope this supports shared progress toward using AI systems to improve human health,” the company said.

Read the full blog post

This is the hidden content, please
.

Feel free to send any tips, suggestions, story ideas and data to Ashley at *****@*****.tld.



This is the hidden content, please

#Trump #previews #Medicare #drug #price #negotiations

This is the hidden content, please

This is the hidden content, please

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Vote for the server

    To vote for this server you must login.

    Jim Carrey Flirting GIF

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Important Information

Privacy Notice: We utilize cookies to optimize your browsing experience and analyze website traffic. By consenting, you acknowledge and agree to our Cookie Policy, ensuring your privacy preferences are respected.