Drug companies favor biotech meds over pills, citing new U.S. law
Send a link to a friend
[January 13, 2023]
By Deena Beasley
San Francisco (Reuters) - Drugmakers are prioritizing complex biotech
medicines over treatments that can be given as pills because recent U.S.
legislation gives biologics a longer runway before becoming subject to
government price limits, top industry executives said this week.
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which Democrats passed last August,
for the first time allows the government's Medicare health plan for
people age 65 and over to negotiate the prices it is willing to pay for
certain medications.
The pharmaceutical industry, whose members gathered in the thousands
this week in San Francisco for the annual JP Morgan Healthcare
conference, opposed the legislation and has begun implementing
strategies to mitigate its impact.
Such a shift in focus could result in the availability of far fewer
cheap, generic pills in the long run.
All other developed nations negotiate drug prices, making the United
States the most lucrative market for the industry. The Congressional
Budget Office estimates that the IRA's drug pricing provisions will
reduce the federal deficit by $237 billion over the next decade.
Medicare will select the first 10 drugs for the program this year. The
number of medications subject to price negotiation will increase over
time, but newer drugs are not included.
The law sets a nine-year exemption period for "small-molecule" drugs,
which are mainly pills, while "large molecule" biologics, generally
injections or infusions, are protected from negotiation for 13 years.
"The difference between a nine- and 13-year product line is about 50 or
60% of the value," Eli Lilly Chief Executive Officer Dave Ricks said in
an interview. "In 10 years, we'll have far fewer small molecules being
developed than we do today."
He questioned the benefit of "rules that really just disincentivize
investment in what ends up being convenient drugs, drugs for tough
conditions like cancer and drugs that get really cheap when they go
generic."
Lilly has already dropped a small-molecule blood cancer drug from its
pipeline because "we just couldn't make the math work," Ricks said.
The Indianapolis-based company is considering culling more early-stage
pill programs and is directing its small molecule development group to
only pursue opportunities "that would be clearly good enough within nine
years to be winners."
U.S. Congresswoman Katie Porter, a Democrat who has pressed for drug
price limits, described the companies' strategy for dealing with the law
as "treating potential new drugs as bargaining chips instead of as cures
to save lives."
Most medicines on the market today are small molecules, which can be
taken by mouth, absorbed into the bloodstream and easily penetrate cell
membranes. Common examples include aspirin, statins for high cholesterol
and blood pressure drugs.
[to top of second column]
|
Eli Lilly & Co CEO Dave Ricks poses for
a picture at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco,
California, U.S., January 9, 2018. REUTERS/Caroline Humer
In recent decades, pharmaceutical
development has moved into more complex, difficult to manufacture
large molecules, derived from living cells that can target a
specific location or mechanism in the body. These biologics, like
AbbVie's rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira, need to be injected or
infused and can require special handling or monitoring of patients.
But the industry has also come up with innovative pills, which
patients often prefer. Lilly and other drugmakers, for instance, are
developing oral drugs for a diabetes and obesity- related target
that is currently reached only by injected drugs.
'UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES'
When pills lose patent protection, generic copies usually enter the
market at price discounts of up to 90%, while the competing "biosimilar"
versions of large molecule drugs is much less robust and the
discounts much lower.
Steven Pearson, president of the influential drug pricing research
group Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, said the IRA
overall should help lower prices for Medicare patients but
acknowledged new laws like it can have "unintended consequences."
He noted it is not unusual for pharmaceutical companies to choose
not to pursue a drug they once thought promising.
"We have only made it more complicated now," he said.
Stephen Ubl, president of Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers
of America (PhRMA), said the industry trade group believes the IRA
should not set different exemption periods based on drug type. "We
would like that provision to be fixed," he said.
Executives at U.S. biotech Amgen Inc said the IRA will have broad
industry impact, but that Amgen is well-positioned for growth due to
its strong position in biologics.
"Large molecules are relatively favored under the IRA as opposed to
small molecules," David Reese, head of Amgen research and
development, said in an interview. "Given our history and our focus
in protein therapeutics, that's one advantage."
PhRMA said that when asked in a recent survey if they expect to
shift research and development investment away from small molecule
medicines, 63% of member companies who responded to the question
said yes.
(Reporting By Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Editing by Caroline
Humer and Bill Berkrot)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |