In June, Oklahoma received approval from the U.S. Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services to factor how effective a
prescription medicine is into the price it pays to the manufacturer.
The state has signed its first contract under this strategy with
Alkermes Plc for injected schizophrenia treatment Aristada, and is
close to new agreements for an expensive antibiotic and an epilepsy
drug, Nancy Nesser, pharmacy director at the Oklahoma Health Care
Authority, told Reuters.
An Alkermes spokesperson said the arrangement is intended to
"encourage patients to stay in treatment longer and meet treatment
goals." List prices for the long-acting drug, given every month to
six weeks, start at about $1,200 a month. Under the one-year
contract, the price decreases every other month as long as the
prescription is refilled.
"The longer the member takes it, the better the rebate," Nesser
said.
State-run Medicaid departments are powerful purchasers in the $450
billion U.S. market for prescription medicines. By law, the health
program for the poor and disabled receives a mandatory 23 percent
discount off drug prices, and often negotiates additional rebates
for individual medicines.
But state governments have struggled to keep up with steep drug
price increases each year, as well as expensive new medications for
diseases including hepatitis C and cancer.
President Donald Trump has promised to lower prescription drug
prices, and in May unveiled a "blueprint" with dozens of proposals
to deliver on that pledge.
One proposal would allow some state Medicaid departments to exclude
certain drugs from reimbursement, a tactic used by private insurers
to demand larger discounts and one that would represent a more
significant change. But it is not yet clear how states could do so
under federal law without losing existing statutory rebates,
healthcare experts said.
In the meantime, Oklahoma's move can give the state more leverage
over drugmakers, state officials say.
Other states are considering whether to follow Oklahoma’s lead,
according to Nesser, who has fielded inquiries from several Medicaid
departments.
Michigan's Department of Health and Human Services - which spends
nearly $2.4 billion annually on drugs for Medicaid members - told
Reuters it will request approval for a program similar to
Oklahoma's, although details are still being worked out.
"This type of arrangement has the potential to improve the quality,
value and efficiency of drug-based treatments," Michigan Department
of Health spokesman Bob Wheaton said in an email.
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Colorado's Department of Health Care Policy and Financing said it is
in the "early planning stages" of a request to pursue value-based
Medicaid drug purchasing contracts.
SAVINGS TBD
To be sure, it remains unclear how much money these new value-based
programs will save, and whether enough drugmakers will get on board
since their participation is voluntary. Oklahoma is working with the
University of Oklahoma to study whether the new contracts save money
over time.
The state has yet to secure agreements for treatments that take up a
major portion of its $650 million in Medicaid spending, such as
attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder therapies for children.
In the meantime, the biggest hurdle is just finding pharmaceutical
companies that are willing to work with the state, Nesser said.
"Mostly we are talking to smaller companies." Approaches to cancer
drugmakers in particular have so far led nowhere: "We got the door
slammed in our face," Nesser said.
Industry trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America said it supports Medicaid efforts to use value-based
contracting for new medicines, but said states need to make sure
patients still have access to current prescriptions.
Smaller companies, particularly those with newer drugs, may have
more of an incentive to use such deals as a lever against large
rivals.
Alkermes' sales of Aristada totaled $93.5 million last year, dwarfed
by the $3 billion in sales for Johnson & Johnson's long-acting
antipsychotics including Risperdal Consta and Invega Sustenna.
The new Medicaid agreement in Oklahoma may help Alkermes in its
sales pitch to doctors, including for Aristada Initio - approved
last month as the first antipsychotic injection that does not
require patients to begin treatment by taking oral pills for several
weeks.
Nesser said other rebates under negotiation would be structured
differently than the Alkermes deal. They could link the price of a
drug to its impact on other costs, such as emergency room visits and
hospitalizations, or give higher-rebate products preferential status
over similar treatments.
(Editing by Michele Gershberg and Edward Tobin)
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