"Pfizer & others should be ashamed that they have raised drug
prices for no reason." Trump wrote in a post on Twitter on
Monday. "We will respond!"
Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar followed up with
his own tweet saying that drugmakers who have raised prices have
created a tipping point in U.S. drug pricing policy.
"Change is coming to drug pricing, whether painful or not for
pharmaceutical companies," Azar wrote.
Neither Trump nor Azar detailed what policy changes would be
implemented to decrease prices.
Trump had said in May that some drug companies would soon
announce "voluntary, massive" cuts in prices, but none have
materialized yet. During his presidential campaign, he promised
lower U.S. drug costs.
Pfizer raised list prices on around 40 medicines earlier this
month. Those include Viagra, cholesterol drug Lipitor and
arthritis treatment Xeljanz, according to Wells Fargo. List
prices do not include rebates and discounts drugmakers may
offer.
"The list price remains unchanged for the majority of our
medicines. Our portfolio includes more than 400 medicines and
vaccines. We are modifying prices for approximately 10 percent
of these, including some instances where we’re decreasing the
price," Pfizer spokeswoman Sally Beatty told Reuters.
Pfizer's stock fell after Trump's tweet - they closed up 5 cents
at $37.16, but had been trading at $37.44 just before the tweet.
Pfizer was not the only major drug company to raise prices after
Trump suggested they would voluntarily slash prices. Israeli
generic drugmaker Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd hiked
prices on 14 drugs in June and Roche Holding's Genentech
division raised prices on a number of its drugs on July 1,
according to Wells Fargo.
Teva and Roche could not be immediately reached for comment.
(Reporting by Michael Erman and Susan Heavey; Editing by David
Gregorio, Jonathan Oatis and Susan Thomas)
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