Senators took aim in particular at Abbvie Inc Chief Executive
Richard Gonzalez and his company's rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira
- the world's top-selling prescription medicine.
Executives from AstraZeneca PLC, Sanofi SA, Pfizer Inc, Merck & Co,
Johnson & Johnson and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co also answered
questions from members of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee.
The executives pointed to their companies' records of developing
lifesaving medications, saying profits generated in the lucrative
U.S. market help them fund expensive research and development of
future treatments.
"American research-based companies are leading the next wave of
biomedical innovation to help patients whose diseases cannot be
adequately treated with today's medicines. We should work to ensure
policies that support and reward these investments," said
Bristol-Myers CEO Giovanni Caforio.
The executives also voiced support for plans to reform the
industry-wide system of rebates that pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs)
and health insurers receive from drugmakers in exchange for
preferential coverage of their medicines.
In his opening statement, Senator Ron Wyden, the Finance Committee's
top Democrat, tore into each company one-by-one for "profiteering
and two-faced scheming."
"Drugmakers behave as if patients and taxpayers are unlocked ATMs
full of cash to be extracted, and their shareholders are the
customers they value above all else," Wyden said.
Senators from both parties targeted AbbVie's Gonzalez, with Wyden
noting that the CEO's bonus was partially tied to Humira sales,
which reached nearly $20 billion globally last year. Republican
Senator John Cornyn criticized the company's web of more than 130
patents that protects Humira's exclusivity.
The drug has a list price of more than $60,000 a year, nearly double
what it was in 2014, according to Rx Savings Solutions, which helps
health plans and employers seek lower cost prescription medicines.
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"I support drug companies recovering a profit based on their
research and development and development of innovative drugs. But at
some point, that patent has to end, that exclusivity has to end, to
be able to get it at a much cheaper cost," said Cornyn, the No. 2
Senate Republican from Texas.
Cornyn suggested that the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee should
examine the U.S. patent system under which drug companies protect
the exclusivity of their medicines.
Congress has already held several hearings on rising prescription
drug prices in both the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives
and the Republican-led Senate, but Tuesday's hearing is the first
time drug company executives, most of them CEOs, will face lawmakers
in more than two years.
U.S. President Donald Trump has said drugmakers are "getting away
with murder," and his administration has made bringing down
prescription medicine costs for U.S. consumers a top priority.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) last year
rolled out a plan to lower drug prices and has introduced several
modest proposals to curb medicine costs, but Democrats have said the
Trump administration is not doing enough.
HHS has proposed a rule to eliminate rebates for drugs paid for by
Medicare and Medicaid, the government health insurance programs.
Several drugmakers temporarily froze price increases last year after
criticism from Trump, but they raised prices on more than 250
prescription drugs at the start of this year, albeit at lower levels
than in years past.
(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Bill
Berkrot)
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