Sanofi
and Regeneron cut list price of cholesterol drug by 60
percent
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[February 11, 2019]
By Michael Erman
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sanofi SA and
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc said on Monday that they will slash the
U.S. list price of their potent but expensive cholesterol fighter
Praluent by 60 percent, as the drugmakers follow a similar move by rival
Amgen Inc in hopes of increasing use of the drug.
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The new list price for Praluent will be $5,850 a year, matching the
price Amgen set when it lowered the list of its competing drug,
Repatha, in October.
Sanofi and Regeneron said they expect the lower-priced Praluent to
be available for pharmacies to order in early March. They said the
new price should improve patient access and result in lower
out-of-pocket costs for U.S. consumers.
Praluent and Repatha belong a class of injectable biotech drugs
called PCSK9 inhibitors that dramatically lower bad LDL cholesterol
and reduce the risk of heart attacks and death.
Sales of both have been severely constrained by onerous roadblocks
to patient access put up by insurers looking to limit spending on
the expensive drugs.
They were approved in 2015 with initial list prices of more than
$14,000 a year.
In March of last year, Regeneron and Sanofi said that they would be
willing to charge less for their drug if insurers agreed to reduce
barriers for high-risk heart patients.
A few months later they struck a deal with Express Scripts, now part
of Cigna Corp, to make the drug available to that company's
customers at a price in the range of $4,500 to $6,600 a year.
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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.
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.
Executives from at least six drugmakers plan to testify at a Senate
hearing on rising prescription drug prices later this month.
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.
(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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