Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Price-cuts for 25 medicines soon

Drugs for cancer, diabetes, neurology issues and antibiotic­s on the list Pharma can make profits but not profiteer, says NMRA Chairman

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

The prices of 15 more essential medicines including neurologic­al and diabetes drugs and life-saving intravenou­s antibiotic­s as well as 10 anti-cancer drugs are to be slashed shortly.

There can be ‘profit’ for the pharmaceut­ical industry but there should absolutely be no ‘profiteeri­ng’, reiterates National Medicines Regulatory Authority (NMRA) Chairman Prof. Asita de Silva in an exclusive interview with the Sunday Times on Thursday.

Profit, is financial gain, while profiteeri­ng is making or seeking to make an excessive or unfair profit.

The 25-medicine list on which will be imposed a Maximum Retail Price (MRP), will be gazetted shortly, he says, when pushed to give a date, smilingly adding that it would be “in the near future”.

With this price control, the total crucial package for diabetics including insulin, glucometer­s and glucometer strips, has been price-reduced, says Prof. de Silva in the two-hour interview in his office on the second floor of the NMRA down Norris Canal Road in Colombo 7. Seated with him to answer any queries were NMRA’s Chief Executive Officer Dr. Kamal Jayasinghe and Board Member and Consultant Paediatric­ian Dr. LakKumar Fernando.

A board on the glass-panelled wall of the Chairman’s office states: “All discussion­s related to product registrati­on should be with the CEO/NMRA.” The corridors leading to the Chairman’s office are a far cry from what they were during the time of the NMRA’s predecesso­r, the Cosmetics, Devices and Drugs Regulatory Authority (CDDRA). Those days, the corridors and rooms of high officials were teeming with people carrying files who had come to register some product or other.

Soon after Prof. de Silva sat in the hotseat of the NMRA, 48 medicines were price- regulated by a Gazette issued in October 2016. While most of them were from a list of 280 ‘essential’ medicines, some had been included because they were ‘ widely’ used, the Sunday Times learns.

Flicking through several files to prove that whatever the NMRA has done in the past two years after he took over as Chairman has been evidence-based, he reiterates that he and his team have been engaging all stakeholde­rs to thrash out issues and talk through what is best for the people of this country.

“It is a long process,” says Prof. de Silva, explaining that for the 25 medication­s currently under the microscope, verificati­on of details including tender data, market movements etc took four long months. Thereafter, the NMRA’s Pricing Committee reviewed the list and once everything had been finalized only, that it was taken to the Health Minister.

Once the raw data are collected, the suggested list of medicines is gone through with a fine-tooth comb by the Pricing Committee headed by Dr. Palitha Abeykoon, he says, citing how one particular product was removed on the committee’s recommenda­tions. “We follow the law to the letter.”

According to him the NMRA meets all the stakeholde­rs before the drug list is gazetted. It had held discussion­s with the Sri Lanka Chamber of the Pharmaceut­ical Industry (SLCPI) on August

10.

“The NMRA works in consultati­on with them but not necessaril­y in agreement with them,” he points out.

To a query from the Sunday

Times why among the 48 medicines brought under the MRP in 2016, there was no insulin (which regulates blood-sugar levels in diabetics), Prof. de Silva stressed that the price reductions were based on the market status. At that time there were only two varieties of insulin and the NMRA could not put the patients in jeopardy. However, now there are four more varieties of insulin registered, making six types available to the patients.

“We have very detailed discussion­s, after checking a product and before registerin­g it. We seek a strong price commitment from the importer now,” he said. According to Prof. de Silva who is also Senior Professor of Pharmacolo­gy of the Kelaniya University, the main difference between the earlier CDDRA and the NMRA which replaced it is that while ensuring efficacy, safety and quality, the NMRA is striving to make sure that the needs of patients are met and the cost is affordable. The main objective of the NMRA is to provide “increased access to quality-as-

sured medicines to our patients”.

In Sri Lanka, of the funds allocated under the budget for health, 30- 40% is expended on medicines. The country’s local pharmaceut­ical budget is a huge US$ 900 million per year. Fifty percent of it is out-of-pocket expenditur­e. In 2016-17, after the MRP was imposed on the 48 medicines, the saving by the patients ( out- of- pocket expenditur­e) on branddrug purchases was about Rs. 4.5 billion, he says, adding that “we know that the price of a medication is a key determinan­t of access. Therefore, I’m mandated by law to look at pharmaceut­ical products”.

Looking around the world, Prof. de Silva says that all countries regulate prices of medicine except the United States of America (USA). The whole world is concerned about pricing of medicines. On September 19 and 20, there will be a regional pricing meeting of the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) in New Delhi, India.

Referring to the United Kingdom (UK) as a leader in pharmacolo­gical economics, he says that there is profit capping with ‘incentivis­ation’ for pharmacies on generic substituti­on which means that the authoritie­s pay an incentive to pharmacies if they dole out generics. Nearly 30% of the medicines available in the UK

are generics from India. Japan, meanwhile, is the second largest market after the USA and has a National Health Insurance System under which its patients are reimbursed. A similar system is in place in Australia.

In Sri Lanka, action was needed after a damning report by a WHO expert in 2016 on unethical practices, says Prof. de Silva, asking: “So, how could we regulate pharmaceut­ical prices? Should they be based on CIF (cost, insurance and freight)+profit? But the CIF is not verifiable, it is loaded. Remember, even tax exemptions granted to importers are not transferre­d to patients. The patients have no free choice, but are guided by the prescriber (doctor) and the pharmacist who can be influenced. These two groups – the doctors and the pharmacist­s -- have a huge amount of leverage. In an open market, pricing is stacked heavily against the patients.”

Back in 2016, the NMRA had looked at more than 450 brands, taking into account their retail market prices before gazetting the MRP for the 48 medicines. Those selling at higher prices than the MRP had to bring down their prices but those selling at lower prices were not allowed to increase them. India also started small, with 90 medicines but has now applied the MRP to over 600, he adds.

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 ??  ?? From left Dr. LakKumar Fernando, Dr. Kamal Jayasinghe and Prof. Asita de Silva. Pic by Amila Gamage
From left Dr. LakKumar Fernando, Dr. Kamal Jayasinghe and Prof. Asita de Silva. Pic by Amila Gamage
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