U.S. to select 10 costliest drugs for Medicare pricing negotiation
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[February 18, 2023]
By Ahmed Aboulenein
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government will select the 10 costliest
prescription medicines to Medicare for negotiating prices with
drugmakers starting early next year, the program's top official said on
Friday.
President Joe Biden in August signed into law the Inflation Reduction
Act, allowing the federal Medicare health plan for people age 65 and
older and the disabled to negotiate prices on some of its most costly
drugs.
The law grants the government the right to choose any 10 from a list of
the 50 medicines responsible for the highest Medicare spending that
qualify for negotiation, but does not specify the exact criteria for
choosing them.
Dr. Meena Seshamani, director of the Center for Medicare, outlined in an
interview how Medicare will select the initial drugs for negotiation
after first determining which medicines are eligible and not subject to
one of several exemptions outlined in the law.
"Then from there, we rank the negotiation-eligible drugs according to
total expenditures for that 12-month period, and we will select drugs
with the highest ranking," Seshamani said.
To produce that list, the agency first needs to decide whether to use
gross Medicare spending or net spending, which takes into account often
sizeable after-market discounts.
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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
Seshamani did not comment on which way the agency was
leaning, but pointed to a proposed rule published in December in
which the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which
oversees Medicare, redefines the term "gross covered prescription
drug costs" within Medicare Part D.
"We have proposed a clarification to maintain better consistency
with gross expenditures. So that is a proposal that is out there,
and the comment period closed on February 13," Seshamani said. "We
are processing those comments as we work to finalize that
regulation."
CMS said in January it would announce the list of 10 drugs in
September. The agency will make its initial offers in February 2024
and the negotiation period will end that Aug. 1. It will publish the
final prices a month later, and they will take effect on Jan. 1,
2026.
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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