U.S. House panel approves three bills aimed at tackling high drug prices
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[September 30, 2021]
By Diane Bartz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House
Judiciary Committee voted on Wednesday to approve three bills to stop
practices drugmakers use to raise prices and fend off competition,
including a bill to ban the tactic of paying generic companies to delay
bringing cheaper versions of their medicines to market.
While the votes were not unanimous, they passed the committee by a big
margin. A fourth measure is set to be considered on Thursday.
Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler said the Congressional Budget Office
had estimated that banning so-called pay-for-delay patent deals used to
stall generic competition - the subject of one of the bills - would save
Americans more than half a billion dollars over 10 years.
The measures were introduced in a rare hearing that mixed members of the
House and Senate, during which lawmakers from both parties and from both
chambers said they had introduced the bills aimed at ultimately lowering
the cost of prescription medicines for Americans. Four identical bills
were introduced in the House and Senate.
The House Judiciary Committee voted on Wednesday to enable the Federal
Trade Commission to ban sham citizen petitions, in which drug companies
petition the U.S. Food and Drug Administration about a generic company
seeking approval for a rival drug with the goal of delaying its market
entry.
Brand name drugs can fairly quickly lose more than 80% of their sales
revenue once multiple generic versions reach the market.
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Pharmaceutical tablets and capsules are arranged in the shape of a
U.S. dollar sign on a table in this picture illustration taken in
Ljubljana August 20, 2014. REUTERS/Srdjan Zivulovic/File Photo
They also approved a measure to stop product-hopping,
the practice of making a minor tweak to the formula of a medication
to win a new patent and therefore a longer period of exclusivity,
and would also stop pay-for-delay patent deals.
The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the measures in July, all on
a voice vote.
The House Judiciary committee is set to vote on Thursday on the last
measure, which would make it easier to bring to market biosimilars,
cheaper versions of expensive biotech drugs that cannot be exactly
duplicated, unlike pills.
The measures must next be taken up by the full House and Senate.
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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