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						Medicare Part D no match for runaway specialty drug 
						costs: study
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		 [February 07, 2019]   
		By Mark Miller 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - When Medicare 
		prescription drug insurance was created in 2003, the idea that 
		beneficiaries with very high drug costs should pick up 5 percent of the 
		tab seemed reasonable - but that was well before specialty drugs were 
		invented that carry price tags in the tens of thousands of dollars.
 
 Today, the 5 percent coinsurance charge shouldered by Medicare Part D 
		beneficiaries with serious illnesses does not look so reasonable. 
		Instead, sky-high prices of specialty drugs threaten to bankrupt some 
		enrollees - mainly because Part D does not cap the total amounts that 
		enrollees must pay out of pocket each year.
 
 A new report finds that Part D enrollees are exposed to thousands of 
		dollars in out-of-pocket costs for drugs that treat cancer and other 
		serious illnesses. Researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) 
		studied expected annual out-of-pocket costs this year for 30 specialty 
		drugs used to treat four conditions: cancer, hepatitis C, multiple 
		sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. Median out-of-pocket costs ranged 
		from $2,622 for Zepatier (for hepatitis C) to $16,551 for Idhifa (for 
		leukemia).
 
		
		 
		
 But not all specialty tier drugs are covered by all Part D plans. For 14 
		specialty drugs examined in the study that were not covered by some or 
		all plans this year, the median total annual costs ranged from $26,209 
		for Zepatier to an eye-popping $145,769 for Gleevec, a brand name drug 
		that has revolutionized treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia and other 
		complex disorders.
 
 A “relatively small share of enrollees” in Part D grapple with these 
		costs, the study notes - but that is small comfort if you are among 
		them. The out-of-pocket costs reviewed by KFF were highest for cancer 
		drugs, followed by hepatitis C, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple 
		sclerosis.
 
 Expensive patented brand-name drugs are a key part of the problem, but 
		not the entire story. For example, there is a generic version of Gleevec 
		- Imatinib mesylate - but KFF reports that it costs $91,844, compared 
		with $145,787 for the brand-name version. “The generic drug may be less, 
		but it’s still really expensive,” said Juliette Cubanski, associate 
		director of the program on Medicare policy at KFF and a coauthor of the 
		report.
 
 Part D covers most outpatient prescription drugs. In 2019, the standard 
		benefit can have a deductible as high as $415, and 25 percent 
		coinsurance up to an initial coverage limit of $3,820 in your total 
		out-of-pocket spending.
 
 The next level of coverage is the so-called coverage gap, or doughnut 
		hole. The gap was closed gradually as part of the Affordable Care Act, 
		and it is entirely closed for brand-name drugs in 2019 - but it still 
		features a different cost-sharing arrangement. Here, brand-name drug 
		manufacturers must provide a 70 percent discount on drug prices, and 
		enrollees bear 25 percent of cost out of pocket (for generic drugs, the 
		enrollee share is 37 percent). That coverage continues until the 
		“catastrophic” level, which begins at $5,100 in out-of-pocket spending.
 
 Closing the coverage gap is a bit of good news, but patients using 
		expensive specialty drugs do not really see the benefits. “They go right 
		through the gap into the catastrophic level of coverage - maybe with the 
		very first prescription they fill,” Cubanski said.
 
 And the fact that Part D has no overall cap on enrollee out-of-pocket 
		costs leaves it “out of step” with most other private coverage, she 
		notes. For example, KFF reports that 81 percent of large employer health 
		insurance plans had maximum dollar limits on coinsurance last year.
 
		
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			 A photo illustration 
			shows a stethoscope and blood-pressure machine of a French general 
			practitioner displayed in a doctor's office in Bordeaux January 7, 
			2015. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo 
            
			 
PROPOSED REFORMS
 Part D catastrophic costs are part of the bigger debate in Washington on soaring 
prescription drug costs. President Donald Trump signaled in his State of the 
Union message this week that reform efforts targeting drug costs are a high 
priority, and his administration has proposed reforms that it argues would 
alleviate the problems in Part D. The plan calls for sharing rebates with 
enrollees, changing definitions of what counts toward out-of-pocket spending and 
capping out-of-pocket costs. That could reduce the cost of specialty drugs above 
the catastrophic level, but it could also mean higher costs for others with 
lower spending in the form of higher premiums and other out-of-pocket costs.
 
Democrats have urged allowing Medicare to negotiate prices directly with 
pharmaceutical companies. (https://reut.rs/2IzEY6E). And some Medicare for All 
proposals also address the issue, by covering all out-of-pocket costs, or by 
charging only nominal amounts for prescriptions and imposing very low annual 
out-of-pocket limits. “It seems that under most Medicare For All plans, the 
problem of high out-of-pocket drug costs would be less of an issue than it is 
today,” Cubanski said.
 PROTECTING AGAINST RISKS
 
 Unfortunately, there is not much that Part D enrollees can do to protect against 
these high out-of-pocket risks. Part D plans all charge similar amounts for 
specialty tier drugs, ranging from 25 to 33 percent coinsurance, so picking one 
plan over the other will not help much with the costs patients are required to 
pay. What does matter is whether the drug you need is covered by your plan.
 
 
 But predicting the need for a specialty drug is impossible. “You might need one 
next year, but not this year,” Cubanski notes.
 
 Low-income enrollees who qualify for Medicare’s Extra Help program, which helps 
pay out-of-pocket Part D costs, do get relief from high out-of-pocket costs. The 
program is available to enrollees with very low levels of income and assets. 
(https://bit.ly/2DW7tve)
 
 Extra Help offers varying levels of support, but with full help, enrollees 
usually pay nothing when they reach the catastrophic level of coverage.
 
 Enrollees with somewhat higher income may qualify for assistance with specialty 
drug costs direct from patient assistance programs funded by pharmaceutical 
companies, or direct from the companies. Cubanski recommends contacting drug 
manufacturers directly to inquire about this, or asking your pharmacist.
 
 (Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
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