At
least four pharma CEOs to testify at Senate drug pricing
hearing
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[February 07, 2019]
By Michael Erman
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Drugmakers Pfizer Inc,
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co and Sanofi SA said on Wednesday that their chief
executives plan to testify at a Senate hearing on rising prescription
drug prices later this month.
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They join Merck & Co CEO Ken Frazier, who said on Tuesday that he
would testify at the Feb. 26 hearing.
Johnson & Johnson said on Wednesday that Jennifer Taubert, its head
of global pharmaceuticals, would represent the healthcare
conglomerate at the hearing.
Republican Senator Chuck Grassley, chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee, and Democratic Senator Ron Wyden, ranking member of the
committee on Monday invited executives from seven pharmaceutical
companies to testify at the hearing.
The other companies invited to send executives are AbbVie Inc and
AstraZeneca Plc .
Sanofi CEO Olivier Brandicourt currently serves as chairman of drug
industry lobby group PhRMA. Bristol-Myers CEO Giovanni Caforio is
the group's chairman-elect. Albert Bourla, who became Pfizer CEO
last month, will represent the largest U.S. drugmaker at the
hearing.
The United States, which leaves drug pricing to market competition,
has higher prices than in other developed countries, where
governments directly or indirectly control costs. That makes it by
far the world's most lucrative market for manufacturers.
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Congress has been targeting the pharmaceutical industry over the
rising cost of prescription drugs for U.S. consumers, particularly
since Democrats took over the House of Representatives in January.
Drug pricing is also a top priority of the administration of
President Donald Trump, who had made it a central issue of the 2016
presidential campaign.
Drugmakers have slowed and limited U.S. price increases as scrutiny
on their practices has intensified over the past few years.
They nonetheless increased prices on hundreds of drugs in January,
including a 6.2 percent increase on the world's top-selling drug -
AbbVie's rheumatoid arthritis treatment Humira - and hikes on
insulin prices by Sanofi and Novo Nordisk.
(Reporting by Michael Erman in New York and Julie Steenhuysen in
Chicago; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Bill Berkrot)
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