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Thursday, September 19, 2024

The Biden administration is wrapping up negotiations to decrease prescription drug costs : NPR


The primary worth negotiations between Medicare and drug firms has been underway since February. What will we find out about the way it’s going?



SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

The Biden administration is now wrapping up negotiations to scale back costs for Medicare recipients on the very first batch of medicines that deal with diabetes, arthritis, most cancers and coronary heart failure. NPR’s prescribed drugs correspondent Sydney Lupkin joins us. Sydney, thanks for being with us.

SYDNEY LUPKIN, BYLINE: Hello, Scott.

SIMON: This represents one thing fairly main for each the president and now actually Vice President Kamala Harris.

LUPKIN: Yeah. In Biden’s letter saying that he was stepping apart, one of many first issues that he touted was decreasing prescription drug costs. And Medicare drug worth negotiation is de facto the massive achievement in that space. It is also one thing that Trump initially campaigned on, after which he form of backpedaled. So the concept is common.

Here is the context. When Medicare Half D was created virtually twenty years in the past to cowl prescribed drugs, it was banned from negotiating drug costs. After all, negotiation occurs on a smaller scale. Particular person plans negotiate reductions with drugmakers. However there are 50 million seniors who get their medication via Medicare Half D. And that’s loads of bargaining energy. The Inflation Discount Act permits that large-scale negotiation for 10 medication now, then 15 beginning subsequent 12 months after which 20 by the tip of the last decade.

SIMON: How far alongside is the negotiation course of now?

LUPKIN: In order that they’re fairly far alongside. The drug firms and the federal government have been going forwards and backwards truly negotiating since February. The official finish of negotiations is August 1, after which the settled costs needs to be introduced on September 1.

SIMON: That is, I consider, proper in the midst of the election season, is not it?

LUPKIN: Proper in the midst of election season, proper after the DNC wraps up. And that is the best way the negotiation calendar was arrange greater than a 12 months in the past. One caveat is that the costs truly will not go into impact till January 2026.

SIMON: Do we all know if the federal government was capable of get costs down quite a bit?

LUPKIN: You understand, proper now, we do not know. There was a ton of secrecy, however that will finish subsequent week when the negotiated costs are locked in. The federal government has mentioned it will not announce them to the general public for one more month, however drug firms would possibly do it sooner. Nonetheless, the drugmakers proceed to oppose this and are in the midst of a bunch of lawsuits towards the federal government to maintain these negotiated costs from going into impact. They are saying that is all unconstitutional, that it is worth setting, that it should damage analysis and drug innovation and that firms will not deliver as many medication to market. However what they’re telling their buyers in regards to the negotiations is definitely much less pessimistic. Here is Johnson & Johnson govt Jennifer Taubert earlier this month.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

JENNIFER TAUBERT: We do anticipate a web unfavorable affect in 2025. Nevertheless, as outlined at our enterprise enterprise assessment final November, , we do anticipate, as a enterprise, rising 3%-plus subsequent 12 months after which 5- to 7% out via 2030.

LUPKIN: So although the corporate has two medication present process Medicare worth negotiation now – Stelara for psoriasis and Xarelto, which is a blood thinner – it’s nonetheless anticipating some fairly strong progress. Novartis makes Entresto for coronary heart failure, one other drug underneath negotiation. The corporate informed buyers, total, it is ready to handle the losses from decrease Medicare costs now, however it would possibly get difficult sooner or later as extra drug costs get negotiated.

SIMON: So pharmaceutical firms do not prefer it, however they actually have not walked away. Who would profit?

LUPKIN: So massive image, the nonpartisan Congressional Funds Workplace scored the negotiation a part of the Inflation Discount Act and mentioned it will save the federal government, AKA taxpayers, $98.5 billion over the subsequent 10 years. Medicare beneficiaries who take these medication ought to see extra constant copays beginning in 2026. And subsequent 12 months, everybody on Medicare Half D ought to see the $2,000 out-of-pocket cap, which is one other Inflation Discount Act modified to decrease drug prices for seniors.

SIMON: NPR prescribed drugs correspondent Sydney Lupkin. Thanks a lot.

LUPKIN: You wager.

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