US will still pay at least twice as much after negotiating drug prices
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[September 03, 2024]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - The U.S. government's first-ever negotiated prices for
prescription drugs are still on average more than double, and in some
cases five times, what drugmakers have agreed to in four other
high-income countries, a Reuters review has found.
The U.S. Medicare health plan, which covers more than 67 million people,
recently unveiled new maximum prices for the first 10 high-cost
medicines negotiated under the Biden Administration's Inflation
Reduction Act.
This is the first time Medicare has disclosed actual drug prices, which
are largely hidden behind a complicated U.S. system of rebates and
discounts. The lower prices will result in savings of $6 billion in
2026, the first year they take effect, Medicare said.
A Reuters review of publicly available maximum prices set by other
wealthy nations - Australia, Japan, Canada and Sweden - show that they
have negotiated far lower prices for the same drugs.
A 30-day supply of nine of the 10 drugs will cost $17,581 for Medicare
in 2026, compared with $6,725 in Sweden this year. Comparable prices
were not available for the 10th drug, Novo Nordisk's insulin Novolog.
"In the U.S. we've always accepted that we are the country that overpays
relative to the rest of the world," said Stacie Dusetzina, professor of
health policy at Nashville's Vanderbilt University.
The U.S. sees value in being the preferred customer, she said, pointing
to early availability of COVID vaccines as an example of that advantage.
Many countries have universal prescription drug coverage that relies on
centralized price negotiation with manufacturers, but U.S. law
previously prevented Medicare - the nation's single biggest government
program - from doing so.
Bristol Myers said pricing was country specific and depended on national
health systems and their regulatory policies, while Merck said it was
not valid to compare U.S. prices to overseas generics. Amgen declined to
comment and the others drugmakers did not respond.
A spokesperson for the U.S. agency that oversees Medicare said the new
law requires consideration of factors such as manufacturer data and
availability of alternative treatments, but Congress did not include
review of international prices in the negotiations.
U.S. ALWAYS PAYS MORE
A study by the non-profit RAND Corp looking at 2022 prescription prices
found that U.S. health plans paid more than three times as much for
brand-name pharmaceuticals, even after estimated discounts.
Studies have shown that faster uptake of new and more expensive drugs
helps drive U.S. prices, while other high-income countries directly
footing the bill for healthcare place tighter restrictions on
prescriptions.
The willingness of the U.S. to pay up for drugs also contributes to
lower overseas prices, said Richard Frank, director of the Brookings
Institution's Center on Health Policy.
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U.S. dollar banknotes and medicines are seen in this illustration
taken, June 27, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
photo/File Photo
"If you've got one of your buyers
who's willing to cover your sunk costs, plus some of your ongoing
costs," selling more volume to others, even at lower prices, can
still be profitable, he said.
In some cases, lower-cost generic or biosimilar versions of the
original branded drugs are already available outside the U.S.
Generic versions of Merck's Januvia, for instance, have been on the
market in Canada since late 2022, while U.S. patents for the
diabetes drug are in place until 2026.
Once patents expire on a brand-name drug and copycat versions hit
the market, prices fall sharply. But drugmakers are often able to
extend U.S. patent coverage by making small changes to things like
dosage or formulation.
There are still no U.S. biosimilar competitors for one of the most
expensive of the negotiated drugs, Amgen's Enbrel, which was first
approved in 1998 for rheumatoid arthritis. U.S. courts have upheld
Amgen's patents, blocking biosimilars until 2029.
Other countries already have multiple options. Sweden's price for a
30-day supply of an Enbrel biosimilar is $709, compared with
Medicare's newly-negotiated price of $2,355.
Since most drugmakers hike U.S. prices annually, "the longer a drug
is in the U.S. market, the more we pay," said Mariana Socal,
associate scientist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health, noting that in other countries prices typically come down
over time.
An analysis by the Brookings Institution showed that Medicare's
negotiations yielded the biggest benefit for drugs with little
market competition. It found that three drugs - Enbrel, Bristol
Myers' and Pfizer's blood thinner Eliquis, and Johnson & Johnson's
Crohn's disease drug Stelara - will account for more than half of
Medicare's expected $6 billion savings.
Even for the medicines with no generic competition outside the U.S.,
other governments have set lower prices.
The most Medicare agreed to pay for AstraZeneca's diabetes drug
Farxiga is $179 for a 30-day supply. Sweden's maximum price for 30
days of Farxiga's standard dose is $35, and the price in Canada is
about $60.
Each year, more drugs will be up for price negotiation by Medicare,
which accounts for about a third of U.S. drug spending.
"We're going to see the U.S. pushing the market ... so that the U.S.
pays something that sort of does a better job of balancing
affordability, innovation, and incentives," Brookings' Frank said.
(Reporting By Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Patrick Wingrove in New York; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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