Feature

Drugmakers blamed for blocking generics have cost U.S. billions


 


By delaying development of generics, drugmakers can maintain their monopolies and keep prices high. Most of the drugs cost Medicare Part D more in 2016 than they did in 2012, for an average spending increase of about 60% more per unit. This excludes drugs that don’t appear in the 2012 Medicare Part D data.

Revlimid cost Medicare Part D $2.7 billion in 2016, trailing only Harvoni (ledipasvir and sofosbuvir), which treats hepatitis C and is not on the FDA’s new list. The cost of Revlimid, which faces no competition from generics, has jumped 40% per unit in just 4 years, the Medicare data show, and cost $75,200/beneficiary in 2016.

Some drugs on the FDA’s list, including Celgene’s, are part of a safety program that can require restricted distribution of brand-name drugs that have serious risks or addictive qualities. Drugmakers with products in the safety program sometimes say they can’t provide samples unless the generics manufacturer jumps through a series of hoops “that generic companies find hard or impossible to comply with,” Dr. Gottlieb said in a statement.

The Department of Health & Human Services Office of Inspector General issued a report in 2013 that said the FDA couldn’t prove that the program actually improved safety, and Dr. Sarpatwari said there’s evidence drugmakers are abusing it to stave off competition from generics.

Pages

Recommended Reading

White House pushes transparency in drug price plan
MDedge Family Medicine
Novel initiative aims to combat resident burnout
MDedge Family Medicine
Patients who record office visits
MDedge Family Medicine
Diet
MDedge Family Medicine
Doctor groups float APM for treating opioid addiction
MDedge Family Medicine
How to harness value-based care codes
MDedge Family Medicine
Two more and counting: Suicide in medical trainees
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA’s Gottlieb floats ideas on Medicare drug coverage
MDedge Family Medicine
No-shows
MDedge Family Medicine
Specialty practices hire more physician assistants and nurse practitioners
MDedge Family Medicine