CVS will remove AbbVie's Humira from some drug reimbursement lists in
April
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[January 04, 2024]
By Patrick Wingrove
(Reuters) - CVS Health said on Wednesday it will remove AbbVie’s
blockbuster rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira from some of its lists of
preferred drugs for reimbursement as of April 1, and will recommend
biosimilar versions of the medicine instead.
CVS said Hyrimoz and an unbranded version of Humira, both from Swiss
drugmaker Sandoz, will be covered across all its formularies, while
branded and unbranded near copies of the drug from India's Biocon will
be covered on some reimbursement lists.
CVS also announced that AbbVie and CVS-owned company Cordavis, which
launched in August, will produce a co-branded version of Humira that
will be made available to customers in the second quarter of this year.
While most biosimilars are near copies of the branded drug, the Cordavis
version will be identical to Humira in its formulation, CVS said.
Unlike generic versions of easy to produce pills that are exact
duplicates of the branded medicines, complex biotech drugs made from
living cells cannot be exactly matched, thus the term biosimilar.
“By preferring biosimilars that have a significantly lower list price
than their reference product, CVS Caremark is putting our customers in
the driver’s seat to best meet the healthcare needs of their members and
lower drug costs,” said David Joyner, president of CVS's Caremark
pharmacy benefit division.
Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) act as middlemen for employers and
health plans. They negotiate rebates and fees with manufacturers, and
create lists, or formularies, of medications that are covered by
insurance, and reimburse pharmacies for patients' prescriptions.
A CVS spokesperson said the company expects most of its customers to
transition their coverage to biosimilars of Humira, known chemically as
adalimumab, once the original drug is taken off formulary, although they
will still have the option to cover Humira under some plans.
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People walk by a CVS pharmacy store in Manhattan, New York City, New
York, U.S., November 17, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
Humira was once the world's biggest
selling prescription medicine with peak sales of $21.2 billion in
2022.
AbbVie said it had expected some payers to make formulary
adjustments as more biosimilars entered the U.S. market, and that
Humira remains widely available for patients alongside other
adalimumab treatment options.
CVS had chosen to keep Humira on the reimbursement list it updated
for Jan. 1 2024.
Although nine Humira biosimilars were launched the U.S. last year
from drugmakers including Amgen, Pfizer and Boehringer Ingelheim,
AbbVie has managed to retain most of the market by negotiating
favorable positions on insurance drug coverage lists.
According to data from IQVIA, an average of nearly 76,000 Humira
prescriptions were written per week in the second half of last year.
Closest competitor Amgen averaged 417 prescriptions per week for its
biosimilar Amjevita.
In July, AbbVie said it expected Humira sales to fall by two
percentage points less than it had forecast at the start of the year
because of those favorable insurance positions.
Three PBMs - Caremark, Cigna's Express Scripts and UnitedHealth
Group's Optum Rx - control 80% of the U.S. prescription drug market.
(Reporting by Patrick Wingrove; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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