Lipitor (atorvastain calcium) tablets (Paul J. Richards, AFP/Getty Images)
U.S. price increases on popular branded drugs in the past year have been
more than six times the overall rate of inflation for consumer goods, while
spending on specialty medications is up nearly 23 percent, according to data
compiled by Express Scripts for its first quarterly drug trend report. The pharmacy benefit manager, whose recent acquisition of rival Medco
Health Solutions greatly increased its available data, found that prices on a
collection of the most widely used brand name prescription medicines rose 13.3
percent from Sept 2011 to Sept 2012. That easily outpaced the overall economic
inflation rate of 2 percent.
Somewhat offsetting price hikes of branded drugs was a 21.9 percent drop
in prices for generic drugs, helped by the recent entry to the market of
generic versions of some of the most popular medicines, such as Pfizer Inc's
cholesterol fighter Lipitor and the blood clot preventer Plavix, sold by
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co and Sanofi. Those two drugs had been the world's top
selling medicines prior to facing generic competition.
The generic utilization rate in the United States is now approaching 80
percent. "The big takeaway from this for me is actually not so much that
we have ongoing brand inflation, because we've always had that, though it's
larger than usual," said Steve Miller, chief medical officer for Express
Scripts. "What's really remarkable is the gap (between branded drug prices
and generics) is getting larger because of the number of generics and the
discounts on those generics are steep."
The 35.2 percentage point net inflationary difference is the largest gap
between brand and generic prices since Express Scripts began calculating its
Prescription Price Index in 2008. "Especially during this time of
financial crisis the opportunity is a great for patients to move to generics.
Most of the drugs they want are available in generic and the prices are really
competitive," Miller said. There is great incentive for companies like
Express Scripts to increase generic usage, not only to save client's money but
because the profit margin is higher on cheap generics than with expensive
branded drugs.
Pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, administer drug benefits for
employers and health plans and run large mail order pharmacies. Spending on
traditional medications, such antidepressants, and those for blood pressure and
cholesterol, fell 0.6 percent over the first three quarters of the year
primarily due to increased use of generics, the report found.
However, spending on specialty drugs, such as treatments for cancer,
rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, jumped 22.6 percent compared with
the first three quarters of 2011, spurred by price hikes and approvals of
expensive new medicines. Specialty drug costs ate up 20.8 percent of total
pharmacy spending, Express Scripts found. The biggest jump in the category came
from utilization of new treatments for hepatitis C, with spending up 117.3
percent over 2011 levels.
Those numbers are likely to decline short term, however. Sales of new
hepatitis C drugs from Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc and Merck & Co that drove
the increased spending have started to fall as patients await a next generation
of medicines that promise fewer side effects and shorter treatment durations.
Approvals of those drugs, likely over the next two years, from companies such
as Gilead Sciences Inc and Abbott Laboratories, should re-ignite the inflation
all over again with multibillion-dollar annual sales projected for the
category.
Miller said the next big area for huge potential savings would come from
generic versions of highly expensive biotech drugs, known as biosimilars. Some
are already available in Europe but approval in the United States has been very
slow. "The savings opportunity is truly in the billions every year,"
he said. The inaugural quarterly drug trends report quantified changes in
utilization, unit costs and overall prescription drug spending, based on
Express Scripts claims data for its commercially-insured members. That total is
now nearly 100 million people, with more than half of those coming from former
Medco members, the company said.
Source: Chicago Tribune
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