Hiring and data: how the U.S. will set up new Medicare drug price talks
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[August 22, 2022]
By Ahmed Aboulenein
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government
will soon begin hiring experts and collecting the data needed to launch
direct negotiations over prescription drug prices for older and disabled
people, a top Biden administration official told Reuters.
President Joe Biden last week signed into law the Inflation Reduction
Act, introducing new policies to tackle climate change, taxes and the
rising cost of medicines.
The Act will for the first time allow the federal Medicare health plan
for people age 65 or older and the disabled to negotiate prices on up to
20 drugs a year. It also sets limits on drug price increases for
Medicare and caps out-of-pocket costs for those enrolled in the program.
The move represents a rare legislative defeat for the powerful
pharmaceutical industry and sets a precedent for curbing drug prices in
the world's most lucrative market for medicines.
"We definitely are looking to increase our expertise," Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in
an interview. "This has been a long time coming, for the federal
government and Medicare to have this authority."
Brooks-LaSure said she plans to create a new team tasked with
negotiating drug prices within the Center for Medicare. CMS says it
expects to start hiring for over 100 positions beginning this fall.
"We are really looking for clinical expertise ... as well as people who
have experience negotiating," said Brooks-LaSure, whose agency has
regulatory oversight of nearly all healthcare providers in the United
States and control of federal health programs covering 170 million
people, including 64 million enrolled in Medicare.
"One of the first things is for us to choose which drugs to negotiate.
We have 10, and that is something that we'll be announcing next fall, so
around a year from now," she said.
CMS will need to collect data from pharmaceutical manufacturers, health
insurers and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) to identify those first 10
drugs that will be subject to negotiations, a list that will rise to 20
by 2029, she said.
DATA COLLECTION
The government will choose from 50 "high spend" drugs based on Medicare
utilization and cost that have only one supplier. Healthcare analysts
have said that list could include Bristol-Myers Squibb Co's top-selling
cancer drug Revlimid, AbbVie Inc's rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira, and
blood thinner pill Xarelto which is sold by Johnson & Johnson in the
United States.
But full drug price information is often obscured in the U.S. market.
Drugmakers, who fought tooth and nail to prevent the new law from
passing, say they often provide substantial rebates and discounts to
health plans that are not passed on to consumers. Health plans argue
that drugmakers are responsible for setting, and raising, the price of
their medicines.
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Illustration photo shows various
medicine pills in their original packaging in Brussels, Belgium
August 9, 2019. REUTERS/Yves Herman/Illustration/File Photo
The pharmaceutical industry's
powerful trade association, Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), declined to comment on how its
members might contribute information to CMS or if any of them had
been approached.
Officials representing the largest three PBMs - who
help negotiate drug prices for health plans – did not respond to
requests for comment.
AHIP, the health insurance industry's largest trade group, and its
members "stand ready to assist" the government "on this or other
implementation issues for new policies," spokesperson David Allen
said.
MOVING FAST
Health policy experts say CMS needs to hire from the outside because
it does not currently have the capacity to negotiate drug prices. To
have an impact, the agency will need to move quickly, because the
law requires it to start negotiating in 2023, with the new prices
taking effect in 2026.
"The idea of negotiating drug prices has been talked about for quite
a while, but this legislation came together very fast. So the
federal government is going to have to move quickly to put in place
an infrastructure here," said Larry Levitt, executive vice president
for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Brooks-LaSure said she would cast a wide net and is looking to hire
experienced public and private-sector negotiators as well as
drug-pricing experts.
"We are absolutely looking to hire from within our friends in the
administration as well people outside, and folks will start to see
postings on our CMS website," she said. "So whether it's the VA,
whether it's from the outside world, from the commercial market,
welcome."
While the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA), which covers
healthcare for more than 9 million people, negotiates drug prices,
it does so on a much smaller scale than Medicare would be expected
to.
Brooks-LaSure acknowledged the difference and said, "there will be
some new uniquely CMS approaches" to negotiations.
CMS should also look to groups like the Institute for Clinical and
Economic Review (ICER), an influential Boston-based nonprofit that
researches drug prices, said Andy Slavitt, a former CMS chief under
President Barack Obama.
"These are challenging negotiations where people are forced to eat
the dog food they don't want to eat," Slavitt said.
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein in Washington; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Matthew Lewis)
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