Allergan, the maker of such products as Botox, plans to raise prices
no more than once a year and keep price hikes to no more than
low-to-mid-single-digit percentages, slightly above the current
annual rate of inflation, CEO Brent Saunders said on Tuesday.
Price increases taken by Allergan so far this year reflect that
range, and will be the pattern for price increases next year and
beyond, Saunders said in an interview.
"Allergan is committed to being a good citizen in self-policing and
being disciplined about price increases," Saunders said. "And I hope
others in the industry follow."
Without mentioning names, Saunders said several drugmakers that have
come under fire from patients, consumer groups and politicians for
huge price increases, had been "reprehensible" and were choking off
investment in start-up companies doing cutting-edge drug research.
"My biggest fear, every time there's another headline or more
regulator negativity, is that venture capital needed for innovation
could move out of the sector," Saunders said, adding the amount of
venture capital backing for early stage drugmakers was slowing.
"If the bottom of the ecosystem, which is so important for early
drug discovery, begins to evaporate, innovation will start to go
away," he said. "It has started."
Saunders outlined his price-restraint vow in a blog earlier on
Tuesday.
Allergan's biggest products are Botox, used to treat wrinkles and
medical conditions such as migraine headaches, and Restasis to treat
dry eye. Although a significant portion of Botox sales are for
uninsured cosmetic conditions that patients pay out of pocket,
Saunders said Allergan would attempt to limit price increases for
all uses of the brand.
Allergan shares closed 1.3 percent higher at $239.12 on the New York
Stock Exchange on Tuesday, amid a moderate advance for the Arca
Pharmaceutical Index of large U.S. and European drugmakers.
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QUESTIONS CLINTON PROPOSALS
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has cited Turing
Pharmaceuticals LLC's 5,000 percent price increase for AIDS drug
Daraprim and Mylan NV’s repeated steep price increases on its EpiPen
device for severe allergy sufferers as “troubling” examples of price
hikes that have attracted bipartisan congressional scrutiny.
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc has also drawn criticism
for hefty increases on two heart drugs and other medicines.
Clinton said on Friday that if elected president in November, she
would create an oversight panel to protect U.S. consumers from large
price hikes on long-available innovative drugs, a proposal that
Saunders described as "impractical."
"I'd like to stop outliers too, but implementing that would be hard
to do," Saunders said. "In a free market, who says what would fall
under the panel's purview, and what the price should be?"
Clinton also called for emergency government imports of generics
when there is insufficient market competition. Saunders said such
imported drugs, lacking strict U.S. regulatory review and made under
different manufacturing conditions, could have safety issues.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson in New York; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman and Peter Cooney)
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