Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Ozempic mania’s billions in bills are coming for taxpayers

- By Simone Foxman and Laura Nahmias

State and local government­s across the U.S. are grappling with a growing problem: Expensive drugs to treat diabetes and obesity are threatenin­g to drain their health care budgets.

State health plans and Medicaid offices are seeing eye-popping bills for Novo Nordisk A/S’s Ozempic, its sister drug Wegovy and similar medication­s known as GLP-1s. They’re a breakthrou­gh for treating two of the most complex chronic health conditions.

But with list prices stretching above $1,000 a month, the costs threaten to empty government coffers.

“It’s not sustainabl­e,” North Carolina Treasurer Dale Folwell, who oversees state workers health insurance, lamented at a recent board meeting. “It’ll sink the plan.”

He isn’t the only official warning about the exploding costs:

• Connecticu­t imposed new hurdles for state employees seeking weight-loss treatment in July, after spending on the drugs rose 50% annually since 2020.

• Virginia tightened criteria for Medicaid enrollees seeking GLP-1s to treat obesity in June.

• An official in Delaware warned of a surge in Medicaid claims for the drugs since March and said the state may need to implement cost controls.

Demand for the drugs is poised to explode. Public attention has focused on the well-off looking for a quick way to lose a few extra pounds, but the reality is that type of customer represents a tiny fraction of the potential market for GLP-1s.

The numbers

More than one in 10 Americans have type 2 diabetes, and upward of 100 million suffer from obesity. Those rates are higher among the 19% of Americans who rely on Medicaid, the public health-insurance program that on average accounts for more than a quarter of state spending.

As Novo Nordisk, rival Eli Lilly Co. and health advocates trumpet a growing list of benefits for patients, health-plan administra­tors fret about difficult decisions and the need to ration access.

If an elementary school teacher who has type 2 diabetes is covered for the drugs, what about an overweight Medicaid recipient who’s not diabetic but has a heart condition?

How about a police officer whose obesity is exacerbati­ng her knee pain?

The answers to these questions will help determine the burden for taxpayers. It may also intensify debates about how much the public is willing to pay for prescripti­on drugs in the U.S., where pharmaceut­ical companies can charge much more for drugs than in other countries.

The hand-wringing is another example of the profound effects rippling across society as use of the drugs increases. Already, Walmart Inc. says the medication­s are damping grocery sales, and restaurant chains including Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. and Cava Group Inc. have predicted they will cause customers to eat more healthfull­y.

A Jefferies Financial Group Inc. analyst forecast that the weight loss drugs could ultimately save airlines millions of dollars in fuel costs.

GLP-1 medication­s, including Novo’s Ozempic as well as Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro and Trulicity, were initially developed to treat type 2 diabetes, and doctors have been prescribin­g early formulatio­ns since 2005.

Type 2 diabetes is the most expensive chronic condition in the U.S. One dollar of every $4 spent on health care, or $327 billion a year, goes toward treating the disease and its symptoms, according to figures cited by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Doctors and advocacy organizati­ons like the American Diabetes Associatio­n say glucagonli­ke peptide-1 receptor agonists, as the medicines are formally known, are far more effective than previous generation­s of medication­s.

“It is going to transform medical practice,” said Kevin Petersen, the vice president of primary care for the ADA.

Open-ended

As more doctors and patients become aware of the medication­s’ potential, the costs are climbing for states. And once patients start taking GLP-1s, doctors typically recommend they take them indefinite­ly.

In 2022 alone, Medicaid spent $7.9 billion for GLP-1 drugs before manufactur­ers’ rebates, according to the latest full-year data, a number that’s more than doubled since 2020. That’s equivalent to 8.6% of the program’s total pre-rebate prescripti­on spending for the 85 million Americans it covers, based on Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission data.

So far, data suggest it’s diabetes, not weight loss, driving the surge in Medicaid spending on GLP-1s. Doctors don’t consistent­ly disclose why a patient is prescribed a drug.

But reimbursem­ents for diabetes drug Trulicity, which hasn’t been shown to cause the same dramatic weight loss and Ozempic or Mounjaro, accounted for 62% of the increase in Medicaid spending between 2020 and 2022. Incomplete claims data for 2023 suggest reimbursem­ents for GLP-1s continued to rise, driven especially by the newer drugs.

Increasing popularity of newer diabetes formulatio­ns, new studies about health benefits beyond diabetes and the likelihood that the medicines will soon come in pill form instead of injections is likely to drive more patients to take GLP1s.

If all type 2 diabetics on Medicaid who would likely benefit from the drugs got a prescripti­on, the annual cost would be some $41 billion, or close to half the money the program spent on all prescripti­on medication­s in 2022.

‘Rough arithmetic’

While most insurers, including Medicaid and state employee plans, cover GLP-1 drugs when they’re prescribed for type 2 diabetes, most don’t cover them for weight loss.

Doing so could open the floodgates, given that many more people suffer from obesity than diabetes. About 38% of Medicaid beneficiar­ies have a body-mass index of 30 or higher, according to government data.

Novo and Lilly argue that the costs of GLP-1s will pay for themselves over time by saving money on more expensive medical procedures. A person with obesity who takes a GLP-1 and avoids a heart attack prevents a very expensive hospital visit and recovery, the thinking goes.

But so far, there’s little data showing the impact anti-obesity drugs have on medical bills.

Obesity costs the U.S. healthcare system some $173 billion a year, and the condition is now so prevalent that 25% of young people are too heavy to be eligible to join the U.S. military.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office, which advises lawmakers on spending matters, is skeptical the drugs will pay for themselves when used for weight loss. Director Phillip Swagel said the agency’s “rough arithmetic” signals that savings from covering anti-obesity medication­s doesn’t offset the expense.

But Swagel acknowledg­ed the subject is incredibly complex, and the CBO has publicly appealed to researcher­s for more studies.

For now, comptrolle­rs and treasurers who oversee states’ employee health plans have been among the most vocal officials to call out rising costs and the grim budget math.

Faced with the prospect of spending $30 million on GLP1s last year, Connecticu­t Comptrolle­r Sean Scanlon introduced a trial program that requires those who want the drugs to lose weight to first enroll in a lifestyle management program.

Scanlon says data suggest growth in prescripti­ons has moderated, but not enough to seriously reduce the state’s costs.

 ?? MRIO TAMA - GETTY IMAGES ?? State health plans and Medicaid offices are seeing eye-popping bills for Novo Nordisk A/S’s Ozempic, its sister drug Wegovy and similar medication­s
MRIO TAMA - GETTY IMAGES State health plans and Medicaid offices are seeing eye-popping bills for Novo Nordisk A/S’s Ozempic, its sister drug Wegovy and similar medication­s

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