Feature

Trump administration salutes parade of generic drug approvals, but hundreds aren’t for sale


 

Methodology

To identify approved drugs that have not reached the market, Kaiser Health News used the FDA’s Orange Book database – as of Jan. 2 – to identify drug applications approved in 2017 or 2018. We then searched the FDA’s online National Drug Code directory for billing codes for the drugs associated with each application as of the same date. To account for a possible lag, we supplemented this list with a more complete billing code directory that we obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request. It includes codes with expected future launch dates that don’t appear in the online version.

According to experts, a billing code doesn’t necessarily mean a drug is on the market. However, every drug on the market needs a list price for reimbursement. We provided a list of application numbers and billing codes to information technology firm Connecture, which then told us whether each one was active, inactive, or had no list price as of Jan. 17.

If an application had at least one billing code with a list price attached, we counted it as on the market, even if other billing codes did not have list prices.

Sometimes, a single generic application can have multiple approval dates. If one of these approval dates occurred in the past 2 years, we included it in our analysis.

To determine whether a drug was a first generic, KHN used the FDA’s 2017 and 2018 lists of first generics as of Jan 2.

Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Trump zeroes in on surprise medical bills in White House chat with patients, experts
MDedge Dermatology
Survey: Americans support Medicare for all
MDedge Dermatology
Useful financial and efficiency advice to practices is hard to come by
MDedge Dermatology
Drug-pricing policies find new momentum as ‘a 2020 thing’
MDedge Dermatology
Anxiety, depression, burnout higher in physician mothers caring for others at home
MDedge Dermatology
Medical ethics and economics
MDedge Dermatology
Shifting drugs from Part B to Part D could be costly to patients
MDedge Dermatology
Winners and losers under bold Trump plan to slash drug rebate deals
MDedge Dermatology
President Trump calls for end to HIV/AIDS, pediatric cancer
MDedge Dermatology
Hearing drills into patient impact of ACA legal challenge
MDedge Dermatology