Consumers kept in dark over drug pricing
"For Aston they are life-saving drugs that if he didn't have them he'd be having seizures and that could kill him," Martin said. "It's not just, 'I have heartburn and I need some Prilosec.' It's the fact that something that is saving my child is so expensive."
Fortunately for Martin, her insurance plan covered most of the cost, leaving her to pay the
For every generic drug that costs next to nothing, there's a Yervoy. The treatment for skin cancer costs more than
Consumers are kept hidden from this secret world of drug pricing, which is shrouded in layers of complexity that often confound the principles of basic economics. For example, the
The American public spent
Higher prices also impact the uninsured or those taking medication a health plan won't cover. And everyone pays for higher prices through government subsidized health plans.
More than 40 million people are enrolled in
Public fed up
The development of new and better drugs has an immeasurable benefit to Americans. Health care has shifted toward prevention, and innovative drugs to treat more diseases have been a big part of that. An expensive drug that prevents an even more expensive surgery or a stay in a nursing home is arguably a win, said
But critics say drug makers are taking advantage of the public's ignorance about pricing as well as government incentives meant to spur innovation to reap big profits at the expense of the American people.
"The American people should not be forced to choose between filling a prescription or making their monthly mortgage payment," Sen.
Many Americans are demanding changes. In a
"If you're a consumer, how would you ever know what something is supposed to cost?" said
To give consumers better information on which to make their health care decisions, this newspaper examined two big drivers in how prescription prices are set: specialty drugs and pharmacy benefit managers, the so-called middlemen in the pricing structure. Although their roles are not widely understood, both have great influence over what you pay at the drug counter.
Specialty drugs
The following three examples show why specialty drug prices have generated so much ire from lawmakers and the public.
>>Mylan, manufacturer of the EpiPen, came under fire from consumers and
>>The CEO of
>>Multiple Sclerosis patients have seen the cost of their medication go up from about
Even with government subsidies, some drug prices are out of reach for those who need them.
In 2015
There are many reasons for the rising costs of these specialty drugs, known as biologics in the industry. They range from a lack of competition due to the small number of potential users, the cost of researching, developing and producing the drugs and, some suspect, intentionally inflated pricing.
In some cases, reform efforts have had unintended consequences too, such as when the government granted exclusivity to some drug makers to provide more incentives for developing drug treatments for rare diseases -- a designation some pharmaceutical companies used to drive profits by raising prices and expanding the number of diseases treated with these so-called orphan drugs.
Industry advocates say the high cost of developing drugs is responsible for prices that may seem out of whack. The industry says the average cost for developing a new drug and getting it through the
In explaining Mylan's price hikes on its EpiPen product in September, CEO
"This year, for example, we will spend approximately
Improvements in the EpiPen have also cost the company more than
But health plan sponsors say high sticker prices get absorbed into overall health care costs, and get paid by the consumer eventually. Specialty drugs account for a third of all prescription drug spending by private and public health plans.
"They have an average cost that's 22 times higher than a conventional medication," said
"Our specialty drug spend is projected to be 50 percent of our overall spend in 2018," Lehman said. "That means half of the premium is tied into drugs that are used by just one to two percent of the people."
Middlemen
To hear pharmacy benefit managers tell it, drug prices would be a lot higher if those companies weren't negotiating discounts for health plans.
But critics say their opaque tactics are actually a driving force behind price increases. It's a complex system and few people know just how influential these pharmacy benefit managers are.
Pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs are huge companies that handle prescription drug claims on behalf of health plans throughout the country, including in
Pharmacy benefit managers say they save employers about 30 percent annually on their prescription drug costs because of their collective buying power and rebates negotiated with drug makers.
But not everyone agrees.
Anthem, one of the nation's largest health benefit companies with 38 million members, alleges that
"(
Some Anthem patients are also suing
"Pharmacy benefit managers are one of the largest yet unknown industries in
Three PBMs --
Some argue that the rebates the pharmacy benefit managers receive don't actually save money for consumers because manufacturers factor that cost into their pricing structure.
"It's payoffs," said
'They don't have a competitor'
Although competition hasn't lowered the price of some drugs, a lack of competition is a factor in the huge markup for drugs like H.P. Acthar Gel, the anti-seizure medication prescribed to Aston Martin.
"There's one company that makes it," said his mother. "They don't have a competitor."
H.P. Acthar Gel is known as an orphan drug, or a highly-specialized medication used to treat one or a handful of rare conditions affecting fewer than 200,000 patients.
The profit margins on these drugs are so slim -- and the demand so small -- there is little incentive for companies to develop cheaper generics, industry experts say. That means families often have little choice but to pay up. After all, if a life is at stake, not getting the drug is hardly an option.
Aston Martin is one of those patients whose life is at stake. His spasms, if left untreated, could cause developmental delays and even death. He was having 50 to 100 small seizures a day before the treatment, and is now down to just a few a day.
Legislation passed in the early 1980s was aimed at ensuring the flow of life-saving drugs that offer little profit potential.
In 1983
The hope was the incentives would discourage companies from pulling away from developing medications a small number of desperately need. To that end, the law has been successful. In fiscal year 2016, companies took advantage of the tax credits to the tune of
But the exclusivity agreements have been controversial. Some argue pharmaceutical companies have taken advantage of the exclusivity period -- and lack of competition -- to both raise prices and expand the number of diseases treated by the government-protected orphan drugs. Because the law makes no restrictions on how many times manufacturers can seek orphan drug status, they can return to the
In some cases, drugs that did not have orphan status had dramatic price increases after getting exclusivity. A
H.P. Acthar Gel was developed in the 1950s and at one time cost about
Despite some of the problems, Lehman said the Orphan Drug Act of 1983 is responsible for the type of research and development that has saved lives.
"It's been wildly successful in bringing products to people who have rare diseases," he said.
System reforms
In his first press conference after being elected, President
"We're the largest buyer of drugs in the world and yet we don't bid properly," Trump said.
Just what will change, and how quickly, is not clear, however.
Proponents say giving the federal government the ability to negotiate on behalf of millions of
But critics -- pharmacy benefit managers among them -- argue that private plans already negotiate the best deals available.
There's also concern that pharmaceutical companies would reduce their investment in research and development if government negotiation held down the prices they could charge.
Other suggested reforms have to do with the
"How a drug moves its way through, that process is a mystery to everyone and adds time and expense to the process that I think isn't benefiting anyone," said
OPERS' Lehman says the entire pricing structure should be changed from a pay-per-pill model to one that is value based. Under that model, if a drug doesn't have a good outcome for the patient, the manufacturer gets paid less, he said.
In testimony before
Many argue that more transparency is needed.
The FAIR Drug Pricing Act -- sponsored last year by McCain, Sen.
The bill did not move past the committee stage.
Cedarville's Sweeney understands the concerns over high drug prices but says the public needs to put them in context.
If someone has a disease that currently sends them the hospital four to six times per year, their cost to manage that condition is likely more than
"So you come out with a drug that prevents that hospitalization and it costs
___
(c)2017 the Dayton Daily News (Dayton, Ohio)
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