Trump
administration proposes Medicare rules aimed at opioids, drug costs
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[November 17, 2017] By
Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - The Trump administration on
Thursday proposed changes to Medicare drug plans including limits on
opioid prescriptions and rules aimed at reducing drug costs for seniors,
such as requiring health insurers to pass on discounts to consumers.
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To help combat overprescription and abuse of addictive painkillers,
the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) said it
was considering allowing drug coverage plans to require
beneficiaries to obtain prescriptions for opioids only from selected
prescribers or pharmacies.
CMS, part of the Department of Health and Human Services, oversees
healthcare and drug benefits under the government-paid health plan
for older and disabled people, which includes coverage plans managed
by private insurers.
CMS said it is requesting information on applying discounts drug
companies negotiate with health plans to prices beneficiaries pay at
the pharmacy counter. Drugmakers have argued that consumers with
high deductibles or other coverage limitations are not getting the
benefit of such contracted discounts.
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The proposal signals "that CMS is starting down the road of
potentially disrupting the prescription drug rebate and distribution
system," Evercore ISI analyst Michael Newshel said in a research
note.
The drug industry has been on edge for two years about the potential
for more government pressure on pricing after sharp increases in the
costs of some life-saving drugs drew scrutiny in the press and among
lawmakers.
Newshel said the CMS change could lower the out-of-pocket price paid
by consumers for brand-name drugs, while also potentially lowering
the revenue and rebate dollars that now flow to drug distributors
and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), particularly if such a move to
transparency were adopted more broadly beyond Medicare.
Health insurers often contract with PBMs like Express Scripts
Holding Co to manage plans for prescription drugs, which are
distributed by wholesalers like AmeriSource Bergen Corp and McKesson
Corp.
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CMS said it is also considering a change in treatment of "biosimilar"
drugs, which are copies of expensive biotechnology drugs that have
lost patent protection. To encourage the use of lower-cost
alternatives, CMS said it may cover biosimilars like other generic
drugs when determining how much certain beneficiaries pay for drugs
out of pocket.
The agency may also allow midyear changes to prescription drug
formularies when a new, lower-cost generic becomes available and may
revise pharmacy participation rules to promote greater participation
of local pharmacies.
President Trump has in the past championed other tactics for
reducing prescription prices, including allowing Medicare to
directly negotiate with drug companies or import medicines from
other countries. But those options were not mentioned in the
proposed rule changes.
If finalized, the changes would take effect in contract year 2019.
(Reporting by Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Editing by Matthew Lewis
and Cynthia Osterman)
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