Regeneron CEO says drug
price critique by independent group unscientific
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[May 13, 2016]
By Caroline Humer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Regeneron
Pharmaceuticals Chief Executive Leonard Schleifer on Thursday took aim
at an influential drug pricing watchdog, saying a critique of the
company's new cholesterol lowering therapy was non-scientific.
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The Boston-based Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER)
last fall reviewed two new potent cholesterol drugs called PCSK9
inhibitors. It concluded that the treatments should cost about 67
percent less than the list prices set by Regeneron with partner
Sanofi, and by Amgen Inc.
Health insurers have refused to cover the cost of the treatments in
most cases, intensifying a high-profile fight over rising drug
prices. ICER began doing value-based analyses last year with a
review of new hepatitis C drugs, and has become a prominent voice
casting doubt on the price and value of medications.
Schleifer emphasized the importance of value-based drug pricing. On
Wednesday, health insurer Cigna Corp said it had reached new
reimbursement contracts for the cholesterol medicines based on how
well they perform for patients.
Speaking at the Financial Times U.S. Healthcare & Life Sciences
Summit, Schleifer said ICER's method, which reduced the value of the
treatments based on its assumption of what the United States could
afford, lacked scientific basis.
"They did all the calculations and they said it's X, which is ok. I
could have lived with that. But ... they said society can't afford
X, so we are going to say it's one-third X," Schleifer said during a
panel discussion.
"They had value-based pricing, but they just decided that well we
can't afford it. That wasn't scientific. There was no intellectual
honesty there."
ICER Chief Operating Officer Sarah Emond, on a panel with Schleifer,
countered that budget impact is part of the equation.
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"You're attacking the science of an independent non-profit whose
entire mission is tied to opening the black box of pricing," she
said.
Insurers and the government say value-based pricing can help keep
drug prices from climbing too fast. Johnson & Johnson CEO Alex
Gorsky said at the conference that it is "incumbent upon our
industry to make sure we are moving towards more outcomes based
models."
The new cholesterol fighters were approved for patients with a
hereditary form of extreme high cholesterol and those with heart
disease. Clinical data designed to show whether they can reduce the
risk of heart attack and death in addition to lowering cholesterol
are expected late this year and could help expand their reach to
more patients.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer; Editing by Diane Craft)
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