Albuquerque Journal

Pricey drugs defeat Medicare safeguard

Senator: ‘Congress can’t continue to stand idle’

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WASHINGTON — A safeguard for Medicare beneficiar­ies has become a way for drugmakers to get paid billions of dollars for pricey medication­s at taxpayer expense, government numbers show.

The cost of Medicare’s “catastroph­ic” prescripti­on coverage jumped by 85 percent in three years, from $27.7 billion in 2013 to $51.3 billion in 2015, according to the program’s number-crunching Office of the Actuary.

Out of some 2,750 drugs covered by Medicare’s Part D benefit, two pills for hepatitis C infection — Harvoni and Sovaldi — accounted for nearly $7.5 billion in catastroph­ic drug costs in 2015.

The pharmaceut­ical industry questions the numbers, saying they overstate costs because they don’t factor in manufactur­er rebates. However, rebates are not publicly disclosed. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, is calling the rise in spending “alarming.”

Medicare’s catastroph­ic coverage was originally designed to protect seniors with multiple chronic conditions from the cumulative­ly high costs of taking many different pills.

Beneficiar­ies pay 5 percent after they have spent $4,850 of their own money.

With some drugs now costing more than $1,000 per pill, that threshold can be crossed quickly.

Lawmakers who created Part D in 2003 also hoped added protection would entice insurers to participat­e in the program. Medicare pays 80 percent of the cost of drugs above a catastroph­ic threshold that combines spending by the beneficiar­y and the insurer. That means taxpayers, not insurers, bear the exposure for the most expensive patients.

Catastroph­ic coverage will soon cost as much as the entire prescripti­on program did when it launched, said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. “Congress can’t continue to stand idle.”

Experts say the rapid rise in spending for pricey drugs threatens to make the popular prescripti­on benefit financiall­y unsustaina­ble.

Nonpartisa­n congressio­nal advisers at the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission have called for an overhaul. The presidenti­al candidates, as well as the Obama administra­tion, have proposed giving Medicare legal authority to negotiate prices.

The drug industry says Medicare patients are getting valuable, innovative medicines.

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