Quest to Lower Drug Prices Pits Trump Against Formidable Opponents

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/finance/quest-lower-drug-prices-pits-trump-against-formidable-opponents?spMailingID=10562580&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1120480423&spReportId=MTEyMDQ4MDQyMwS2#

Image result for lowering drug prices

Aiming to significantly reduce medication prices presents the president with golden opportunities and a set of daunting challenges, healthcare industry experts say.

President Donald Trump has said medication prices are too high and he plans to address the problem.

During his presidential campaign, Trump called for Medicare to negotiate drug pricing. In January, the president criticized the lobbying efforts of pharmaceutical companies and suggested again that the federal government should negotiate drug prices.

Although he faces high hurdles, the president appears to be on the right track, says Olusegun Ishmael, MD, MBA, an emergency room physician at Paris Community Hospital in Paris, IL, and former insurance company executive.

“The biggest insurer in this country is the U.S. government—between the Veterans Administration, Medicaid, and Medicare. The government should do the same thing that UnitedHealthcare and all the Blues do to negotiate pricing based on their volume,” he says.

Insurers and foreign governments have been leveraging their purchasing power to negotiate drug prices for decades, Ishmael says.

“If someone walks into CVS or Walgreens without insurance and wants to get a prescription, they will pay almost twice as much as the UnitedHealthcare pricing. The reason is volume—it is a numbers game. As an insurer, when I have a certain amount of volume, I go to my pharmacy benefit management company and say, ‘I am bringing you a million lives.'”

GOP chairman: Drug prices ‘high on our agenda’

GOP chairman: Drug prices ‘high on our agenda’

Image result for high drug prices

House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.) said Tuesday that dealing with high drug prices will be “high on our agenda.”

The comments come after Walden attended a meeting at the White House earlier in the day with President Trump and the CEOs of several major drug companies, at which Trump pressed the companies to bring their prices down.

However, Walden pointed to solutions that are less far-reaching than what Democrats and Trump have proposed, such as allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices. Instead, Walden said there could be legislation to speed up the Food and Drug Administration’s approval process for a new competitor to a drug that currently lacks competition.

Walden said that implementing the 21st Century Cures Act, passed by Congress last year, to speed up the FDA’s approval process, is also an important part of the picture.

Trump has gone farther than most Republicans in the past on drug prices, calling for Medicare to negotiate. Trump did not directly call for that policy on Tuesday, though.

Getting any drug pricing legislation through Congress would be a tall task, given how fraught the issue is and the resistance of many Republicans to government action on the issue.

2016 Health Care Year in Review

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/blog/2016/dec/2016-health-care-year-in-review

Image result for 2016 Health Care Year in Review

This was a tumultuous year in health care and elsewhere. Wherever we looked, the improbable and unbelievable became true and believable: from Brexit to a President-elect Trump to alleged foreign sabotage of our political institutions. Historians will dissect the remnants of these events for decades. For us, for now, let’s focus on health care, which is plenty.

Drug industry unveils massive new campaign to counter criticism

Drug industry unveils massive new campaign to counter criticism

Under withering public criticism, the drug industry is doubling down on its arguments that the debate over drug prices is distorted, rolling out a multimillion-dollar ad campaign to repair its reputation and defend the value its medications provide.

The industry’s major lobbying group here, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, unveiled the campaign on Monday. Officials said they would spend in the “high” tens of millions of dollars every year for the next four to five years, rehabilitating their image in the wake of former industry executive Martin Shkreli and the political backlash to rising prices.

“Less hoodie, more lab coats” is how PhRMA President and CEO Stephen Ubl described the advertising campaign in a briefing with reporters. (Shkreli, not missing an opportunity for publicity, responded with a hastily produced website detailing how double-digit price increases are hardly unique to companies outside PhRMA’s membership.)

The campaign, branded “GoBoldly,” sounds like a more aggressive version of the industry’s previous image-making campaign, “From Hopes to Cures.” It will emphasize that biopharmaceutical companies develop breakthrough medications that save lives and that they can be the answer to the problem of health care costs, rather than the cause.

The first television ad being released as part of the new campaign is being called “Do Not Go Gentle.” It blends Dylan Thomas’s famous poem with images of goggled scientists peering through microscopes and patients heading into treatment.

The PR campaign will be paired with a series of events intended to remake the public debate, from one about drug prices to one about medical breakthroughs and the value that novel medications provide by saving costs in the long run. The industry believes its preferred policies — value-based contracts and a modernized Food and Drug Administration — can fix the cost problem better than more direct price controls that drug makers view as their greatest threat.

“We have a great story to tell and we’re going to do a better job telling it,” Ubl said.

That is a promise, though, that industry officials have been making for more than a year. What Monday’s announcement made clear is that they are prepared to spend huge sums of money to fulfill it.

Hidden Conflicts of Interest Found Throughout Medicine

http://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/Ethics/62565?xid=fb_o_

Image result for conflicts of interest

JAMA Internal Medicine series highlights pervasiveness of problems

Precision Medicine Has Bipartisan Support, Proponents Assure Amid Trump Administration Transition

https://360dx.com/cancer/precision-medicine-has-bipartisan-support-proponents-assure-amid-trump-administration?utm_source=TrendMD&utm_medium=TrendMD&utm_campaign=1

Precision Medicine2

At a cocktail reception in Boston last week ahead of an annual meeting on personalized medicine, attendees milled around not talking about the latest advances in genomics or the challenges of companion diagnostics development. They were too preoccupied with the impact of the Presidential elections the week before.

Will the new administration value genomics research and personalized medicine projects going on around the country that depend on government funding? How will a change in administration and priorities impact projects such as the Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI) and the Cancer Moonshot? Who will head up the US Department of Health and Human Services, the National Institutes of Health, and the US Food and Drug Administration? And will these new government officials continue efforts of the last administration to advance data sharing, privacy protections, and integrated systems critical for the implementation of personalized medicine?

 

Health Affairs Web First: US Six-Month Drug Market Exclusivity Extensions Could Yield Nearly $100 Million

http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2017/01/18/health-affairs-web-first-us-six-month-drug-market-exclusivity-extensions-could-yield-nearly-100-million/

For the past few years, US lawmakers have considered legislation that would grant six additional months of market exclusivity for previously approved drugs that have been successfully tested and subsequently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating rare diseases. This proposal is intended to incentivize pharmaceutical manufacturers to invest in rare disease research.

A new study, released by Health Affairs as a Web First, analyzed the thirteen supplemental applications approved by the FDA that earned rare disease status from 2005 through 2010 to estimate the costs of the clinical trials and potential economic gain arising from a six-month exclusivity extension. According to the authors, Aaron S. Kesselheim, Ben Rome, Ameet Sarpatwari, and Jerry Avorn, the median discounted financial gain for each drug would have been $94.6 million, with blockbuster drugs predictably enjoying the highest returns. The authors’ analysis also suggests that these manufacturers had spent a median of $29.8 million on trials that gained supplemental approval for rare disease indications.

“These results confirm that market exclusivity extensions can generate substantial returns to the manufacturers that are eligible for the incentive — sums that are generally much greater than the cost of performing the requisite clinical trials,” the authors conclude. As a result, “this solution could prove costly to the health care system.” They add, “Any proposal to extend market exclusivity protections in the US prescription drug market should undergo rigorous analysis that weighs the benefits of predicted investment in research against the costs of the incentives to governmental and private-sector payers.”

The authors are all affiliated with the Program on Regulation, Therapeutics, and Law (PORTAL) at the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

This study, which was supported by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation, will also appear in Health Affairs’ February issue.

House OKs 21st Century Cures bill; Senate votes next week

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/healthcare/house-passes-landmark-medical-cures-bill-senate-to-vote-next-week?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTmpNMk1tUmxOekV3TnpZMCIsInQiOiJtUTFHVmlSWVByUWJLZ1JDRjgxaklCNXlaM2hcLzRKRXBpYlE4MFwvV1BydTgyTVJvZjAxUGF5dlFUVVVVSGF6YzdETkNyUGVtY0M1eVV0OXFESWlUNEQ1dFJGeE5hamxLWTFzb1RVRVVGZ1NFPSJ9

congress

Not everyone was on board, however. Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) voted against the measure because he said that though the bill attempts to address the need for research funding, it doesn’t guarantee the money: “There may be bipartisan agreement, but there is not a bipartisan advancement.”

He also said the revised version of the bill grants all of big pharma’s “wish lists” and doesn’t tackle rising drug costs. Indeed, Doggett said it was appropriate that the medical cures bill is packed into a larger measure called the Tsunami Warning Bill because people who rely on lifesaving drugs and want to fill a prescription have been “buried in one wave, after another wave, after a giant wave of pharmaceutical price gouging. Whether it’s an EpiPen for a child who is going to have an allergic reaction, whether it’s for insulin for someone who is diabetic and relies on that insulin, whether it’s an oncology drug that costs over $100,000, it is wave after wave of a tsunami of price gouging.”

 

The players who are set to influence Trump on health care

The players who are set to influence Trump on health care

It’s customary in the nation’s capital to hail members of the incoming administration by telling everyone in town how close you are to them. So many in conservative Washington lobbying circles and elsewhere are busy touting their relationships with President-elect Donald Trump and his advisers.

There’s a benefit to proximity to power, especially now. At a time when nobody really knows how the Trump administration will regulate drugs and medical devices, fund scientific research, or repeal or replace the Affordable Care Act, relationships with the newcomers are viewed as critical to getting one’s issues on the table.

Donations don’t hurt, either.

Trump’s transition team is a moving train, so influencers are likely to jump aboard fast. Here’s STAT’s look at people and organizations in health care and science who are likely to have influence with a Trump presidency — and who else might benefit.

Regulatory, Legal Uncertainties Are Barriers To Value-Based Agreements For Drugs

http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/11/04/regulatory-legal-uncertainties-are-barriers-to-value-based-agreements-for-drugs/

blog_value_price

The past several years have seen an increasing number of new and innovative therapies entering the drug market. Many of these are precision medicines developed to treat a narrowly defined patient population, often with a previously unmet need. These treatments have demonstrated success in improving quality of life and other important health outcomes among indicated patients in clinical trials, but there is uncertainty about patient response rates in real-world settings. These uncertainties have led payers to express concerns about the costs of some new medicines and to implement policies to control patients’ access to those medicines, such as higher cost sharing, health technology assessments, and step therapy (which requires patients to try certain, often less expensive medications before progressing to costlier drugs). This creates a potential problem, as delays in receiving health care, whether due to step therapy or other factors, can be detrimental to patient health outcomes.

Performance-based risk-sharing arrangements (PBRSAs) and value-based agreements (VBAs) have received attention of late because of the flexibility they give private payers, providers, and biopharmaceutical companies to better understand the value of new medicines and align payment with it. By tying payment to real-world outcomes, these arrangements—collectively referred to in this post as VBAs—have the potential to support patients’ prompt and affordable access to new, innovative treatments while also addressing payers’ cost concerns.

Despite considerable interest from stakeholders on both sides of the negotiations, there were few successful examples of VBAs in the U.S. until very recently: Between 1993 and 2013, there were fewer than 20 VBAs executed in the U.S. However, more of these arrangements have recently been announced, although they remain rare, and payers are expressing increased interest.

The academic literature provides information about some of the existing agreements and suggests possible barriers to their execution, but it leaves many questions unanswered. We conducted two-part interviews with a group of five stakeholders regarding their experience with these types of contracts. All respondents had direct experience developing and negotiating VBAs, four as representatives of private insurers and pharmacy benefit managers, and one on behalf of a large pharmaceutical firm launching branded products.

The interviews focused on respondents’ overall perceptions and expectations of VBAs, barriers to adoption, and possible solutions to those barriers (see note 1). In order to solicit unbiased responses, the interviews were double blinded: the sponsor of the research was not revealed to interviewees, and the identity of respondents is not known by the sponsor. We conducted the initial interviews during the summer of 2015 and followed up with the respondents this fall (2016) to understand how perception of VBAs and the barriers to them may have shifted.