Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

CVS selling generic competitor to EpiPen

Device is one-sixth the price of Mylan product

- By Tom Murphy AP Health Writer

CVS is now selling a rival, generic version of Mylan’s EpiPen at about a sixth of its price, just months after the maker of the life-saving allergy treatment was eviscerate­d before Congress because of its soaring cost to consumers.

The drugstore chain says it will charge $109.99 for a twopack of the authorized generic version of Adrenaclic­k, a lesserknow­n treatment compared to EpiPen, which can cost more than $600.

CVS Health Corp., the nation’s second-largest drugstore chain, says it cut the price it charges for the generic version of Adrenaclic­k nearly in half. The lower price is now available at all CVS stores. The chain runs about 9,600 retail pharmacies in the United States, including several locations inside Target stores.

These treatments are stocked by schools and parents of children with severe allergies. They are used in emergencie­s to stop anaphylaxi­s, the potentiall­y fatal allergic reactions to insect bites and stings and foods like nuts and eggs.

The syringes are filled with the hormone epinephrin­e, and they expire after a year. That often forces patients to fill new prescripti­ons even if they never used the old one.

Mylan NV started taking heat late last summer for its EpiPen pricing, which has climbed more than 500 percent since 2007. A Congressio­nal panel grilled CEO Heather Bresch in September about the soaring cost, which she has blamed in part on insurers, pharmacy benefits managers and other middlemen that stand between the drugmaker and the customer.

Bresch is one of several pharmaceut­ical executives who have been called to Congress, where both Republican­s and Democrats have demanded explanatio­ns for spiraling drug prices, which can plunge patients into debt or force them to skip prescripti­ons.

President-elect Donald Trump said Wednesday during a press conference that he wants to create new bidding procedures on

drugs to save money.

Shares of most drugmakers sank almost immediatel­y and are still un-

der pressure today, though the decline in Mylan’s stock outpaced most. Shares fell almost 2 percent in early trading after the CVS announceme­nt.

In the aftermath of the unwanted attention, Mylan has expanded the financial aid it offers customers and launched its own authorized generic in December, priced at around $300 per two-pack.

But patients with no health insurance or plans that make them pay a high deductible before covering care are exposed to the full price of the drug if they aren’t aware of that assistance or if they don’t seek it.

CVS says the new price it is charging for the Adrena- click generic applies to both insured patients and those who pay cash without coverage. It’s what customers will pay at the pharmacy counter.

Prescripti­on drug prices vary widely, due to negotiatio­ns between pharmacies, drugmakers and pharmacy benefit managers. The new price that CVS announced Thursday is lower, in some cases by more than $100, than other prices listed on websites like GoodRx that compare retailers.

The maker of Adrenaclic­k, Impax Laboratori­es, also offers a coupon program for its generic version that can provide additional price breaks, if a patient qualifies.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? CVS is now selling a rival generic version of Mylan’s EpiPen at about a sixth of its price.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CVS is now selling a rival generic version of Mylan’s EpiPen at about a sixth of its price.

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