New Jobs
What 6,000 Nurses Just Told Us About Nurse Life in 2025 - Nurse.org 19 AI-Powered RCM Solutions to Solve Healthcare Providers' Financial Woes - PharmiWeb.com In 1st physician job, onboarding needs to emphasize relationships How to Become a Medical Biller & Coder in Boston, MA - Research.com How to Crack Biotech Job Interviews – 2025 Edition! - BioTecNika Lauren Elizabeth Hostler | News, Sports, Jobs - Shepherdstown Chronicle Medical Billing / Coding Professor Jobs in Higher Education CodaMetrix Chosen by Health Systems Representing $180B in Net Patient Revenue Adult education to expand at Jefferson County JVS - The Herald Star Data Science Intern Needed at Eversana - Apply Online - BioTecNika Pfizer Internship Opportunity - MSc & PhD Apply Online - BioTecNika 3 Best Industries To Find a Remote Job With a Livable Wage 40 Real Ways to Earn Money From Home SMART Fellowships 2025 For Life Sciences, Apply Now - BioTecNika 10 States Where Nurse Burnout Is Out of Control — Is Yours on the List? Providence cuts 600 jobs in restructuring | Healthcare Finance News Medical Coding Career Paths Webinar Hosted Successfully by Biotecnika Top 10 Occupational Therapy Graduate Programs | 2025 - Nurse.org Project Associate Job at NIAB – MSc Agricultural Science Candidates Attend Walk-in Florida's Gilgal Medical Opens Strategic Warehouse Facility in Dallas, Adding 50 Jobs A Leading Medical Billing and Coding Company Empowering Healthcare Providers Nationwide YSU offers new degree focused on health information management - Tribune Chronicle Bayada Home Health cuts about 100 HQ jobs amid 'challenging environment' Prime Healthcare consolidating more than 100 jobs at Chicago-area hospitals Hundreds graduate from Goodwill of North Georgia's job training programs Nurse Practitioner Billing Loopholes Made Insurers $15B — Humana Calls for Medicare Reform Nurses were COVID heroes. Now they're being squeezed by Medicaid cuts YSU to launch online healthcare data degree program - WFMJ.com Top PMHNP Programs in Florida | 2025 - Nurse.org DeepSeek calls intern for AI medical data labeling jobs - Tech in Asia Medical Claims Officer at Marie Stopes Tanzania | AJIRA YAKO Upcoming Internships, Hands-On Training & Workshops at BioTecNika - Upgrade your Skills R&D- CDAIP- Sr. Medical Coding Specialist - CD at Sanofi Nurse Practitioners Gain Prescriptive Independence After Governor's Veto Override in OK In first physician job onboarding, look for gradual education | American Medical Assoc... The rise of new-collar jobs: 6 skill-based careers for the modern workforce - Times of... Clinical Data Management Webinar: A Fast-Growing Career - BioTecNika Healthcare High-Rollers: 15 Lucrative Medical Jobs That Don't Require a Bachelor's Degree Trump Pardons Nursing Home Owner Who Stole $7M From Staff Paychecks, Committed Tax Fraud How to Spot Medical Billing Errors - AARP CT university launches new way of learning, it's growing fast - Hartford Courant Remote/WFH Life Sciences Clinical Data Coding Job at Fortrea - BioTecNika Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27% in Medical ... - CBS... Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27% in ... - KGET.com Frederick County Job Hunt May 27, 2025 | WFMD-AM Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27% in Medical ... Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27 ... - Charlotte Observer Washington State College of Ohio graduates honored at commencement - Marietta Times At Amazon, some coders say their jobs have begun to resemble warehouse work | Hacker N... At Amazon, some coders say their jobs have begun to resemble warehouse work - MSN

Medical Coding Jobs

Find your dream Job in Medical Coding

Medical Coding Jobs
News

Facing Headwinds on New Alzheimer’s Drug, Biogen Launches Controversial Campaign

Do you sometimes lose your train of thought or feel a bit more anxious than is typical for you?

Those are two of the six questions in a quiz on a website co-sponsored by the makers of Aduhelm, a controversial new Alzheimer’s drug. But even when all responses to the frequency of those experiences are “never,” the quiz issues a “talk to your doctor” recommendation about the potential need for additional cognitive testing.

Facing a host of challenges, Aduhelm’s makers Biogen and its partner Eisai are taking a page right out of a classic marketing playbook: Run an educational campaign directed at the consumer, one who is already worried about whether those lost keys or a hard-to-recall name is a sign of something grave.

The campaign — which also includes a detailed advertisement on The New York Times’ website, a Facebook page and partnerships aimed at increasing the number of places where consumers can get cognitive testing — is drawing fire from critics. They say it uses misleading information to tout a drug whose effectiveness is widely questioned.

“It’s particularly egregious because they are trying to convince people with either normal memories or normal age-related decline that they are ill and they need a drug,” said Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, a pharmacology professor at Georgetown University Medical Center, who wrote about the website in an opinion piece. 

The website’s “symptoms quiz” asks about several common concerns, such as how often a person feels depressed, struggles to come up with a word, asks the same questions over and over, or gets lost. Readers can answer “never,” “almost never,” “fairly often” or “often.” No matter the answers, however, it directs quiz takers to talk with their doctors about their concerns and whether additional testing is needed.

While some of those concerns can be symptoms of dementia or cognitive impairment, “this clearly does overly medicalize very common events that most adults experience in the course of daily life: Who hasn’t lost one’s train of thought or the thread of a conversation, book or movie? Who hasn’t had trouble finding the right word for something?” said Dr. Jerry Avorn, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School who has been sharply critical of the approval.

Aduhelm was approved in June by the Food and Drug Administration, but that came after an FDA advisory panel recommended against it, citing a lack of definitive evidence that it works to slow the progression of the disease. The FDA, however, granted what is called “accelerated approval,” based on the drug’s ability to reduce a type of amyloid plaque in the brain. That plaque has been associated with Alzheimer’s patients, but its role in the disease is still being studied.

News reports also have raised questions about FDA officials’ efforts to help Biogen get Aduhelm approved. And consumer advocates have decried the $56,000-a-year price tag that Biogen has set for the drug.      

On the day it was approved, Patrizia Cavazzoni, the FDA’s director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said the trial results showed it substantially reduced amyloid plaques and “is reasonably likely to result in clinical benefit.”

Describing the website as part of a “disease awareness educational program,” Biogen spokesperson Allison Parks said in an email that it is aimed at “cognitive health and the importance of early detection.” She noted that the campaign does not mention the drug by name.

Earlier Thursday, in “an open letter to the Alzheimer’s disease community,” Biogen’s head of research, Dr. Alfred Sandrock, noted the drug is the first one approved for the condition since 2003 and said it has been the subject of “extensive misinformation and misunderstanding.” Sandrock stressed a need to offer it quickly to those who have only just begun to experience symptoms so they can be treated before the disease moves “beyond the stages at which Aduhelm should be initiated.”

While the drug has critics, it is also welcomed by some patients, who see it as a glimmer of hope. The Alzheimer’s Association pushed for the approval so that patients would have a new option for treatment, although the group has objected to Biogen’s pricing and the fact that it has nine years to submit follow-up effectiveness studies.

“We applaud the FDA’s decision,” said Maria Carrillo, chief science officer for the association. “There’s a benefit to having access to it now” because it is aimed at those in the early stages of dementia. Those patients want even a modest slowdown in disease progression so they have more time to do the things they want to accomplish, she said.

The drug is given by infusion every four weeks. It also requires expensive associated care. About 40% of the patients in the trials experienced brain swelling or bleeds, so regular brain imaging scans are also required, according to clinical trial results and the drug’s label. In addition, patients will likely need to be checked for amyloid protein, which is done with expensive PET scans or invasive spinal taps, according to Alzheimer’s experts.

To educate more potential patients, and customers, Biogen announced it has teamed with CVS to offer cognitive testing, and with free clinics for dementia education efforts. 

Biogen is also picking up some of the laboratory costs for patients who get a spinal tap.

Still, the drug faces headwinds: There’s a congressional probe of the drug’s approval, the head of the FDA has called for an independent investigation of its review process, and there’s pushback from policy experts and insurers over its price, which they say could seriously strain Medicare’s finances. Some medical systems, including the Cleveland Clinic and Mount Sinai, say they won’t administer it, citing efficacy and safety data.    

None of that is mentioned in Biogen’s campaign.

Instead, the advertisements and websites focus on what is called mild cognitive impairment, including a warning that 1 in 12 people over age 50 have that condition, which it describes as the earliest clinical stage of Alzheimer’s.

On its website, Biogen doesn’t cite where that statistic comes from. When asked for the source, Parks said Biogen’s researchers made some mathematical calculations based on U.S. population data and data from a January 2018 article in the journal Neurology.

Some experts say that percentage seems high, particularly on the younger end of that spectrum.

“I can’t find any evidence to support the claim that 1 in 12 Americans over age 50 have MCI due to Alzheimer’s disease. I do not believe it is accurate,” said Dr. Matthew S. Schrag, a vascular neurologist and assistant professor of neurology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee.

While some people who have mild cognitive impairment progress to Alzheimer’s — about 20% over three years — most do not, said Schrag: “It’s important to tell patients that a diagnosis of MCI is not the same as a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s.”

Mild cognitive impairment is tricky to diagnose — and not something a simple six-question quiz can uncover, said Mary Sano, director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

“The first thing to determine is whether it’s a new memory problem or a long-standing poor memory,” said Sano, who said a physician visit can help patients suss this out. “Is it due to some other medical condition or a lifestyle change?”

Carrillo, at the Alzheimer’s Association, agreed that MCI can have many causes, including poor sleep, depression or taking certain prescription medications.

Based on a review of medical literature, her organization estimates that about 8% of people over age 65 have mild cognitive impairment due to the disease.

She declined to comment on the Biogen campaign but did say that early detection of Alzheimer’s is important and that patients should seek out their physicians if they have concerns rather than rely on “a take-at-home quiz.”

Schrag, however, minced no words in his opinion of the campaign, saying it “feels like an agenda to expand the diagnosis of cognitive impairment in patients because that is the group they are marketing to.”

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

Syndicated from https://khn.org/news/article/new-alzheimers-drug-aduhelm-biogen-launches-controversial-marketing-campaign/