Hartford Courant

Cigna’s Express Scripts probed

FTC targeting group of ‘middlemen’ in US prescripti­on system

- By Stephen Singer Hartford Courant

Express Scripts, the pharmacy benefit manager that Cigna Corp. in Bloomfield bought in 2018, is being investigat­ed by the Federal Trade Commission for what regulators claim is influence over drug prices wielded by pharmacy benefit managers and a lack of transparen­t business practices.

The FTC also is targeting pharmacy benefit managers at CVS Caremark; Optumrx Inc., Humana Inc.; Prime Therapeuti­cs LLC; and Medimpact Healthcare Systems Inc.

“Although many people have never heard of pharmacy benefit managers, these powerful middlemen have enormous influence over the U.S. prescripti­on drug system,” FTC Chair Lina M. Khan said this week in announcing the investigat­ion. “This study will shine a light on these companies’ practices and their impact on pharmacies, payers, doctors and patients.”

Pharmacy benefit managers often have enormous influence over which drugs are prescribed, which pharmacies patients may use and how much patients pay, she said.

“Many of these functions depend on highly complicate­d, opaque contractua­l relationsh­ips that are difficult or impossible to understand for patients and independen­t businesses across the prescripti­on drug system,” Khan said.

PBMS manage private insurance clients and Medicaid and Medicare prescripti­on plans and own retail and mail-order pharmacies.

The federal inquiry will examine fees and clawbacks charged to unaffiliat­ed pharmacies, methods to steer patients toward pharmacy benefit manager-owned pharmacies, potentiall­y unfair audits of independen­t pharmacies, complicate­d and opaque methods to determine pharmacy reimbursem­ent and the prevalence of prior authorizat­ions and other administra­tive restrictio­ns.

Express Scripts said it looks forward “to working cooperativ­ely with the Federal Trade Commission to share informatio­n about our mission to ensure Americans have safe and affordable access to medication­s they need.” Cigna paid $67 billion for Express Scripts in 2018.

Humana said pharmacy benefit managers “play an important role in lowering the cost of prescripti­on drugs and improving health care outcomes for patients.”

Mike Kolar, senior vice president and general counsel at Prime Therapeuti­cs, said the firm intends to cooperate with the FTC probe.

A spokesman for CVS Caremark said it will “look forward

to working cooperativ­ely with the Federal Trade Commission.”

Optumrx and Medimpact Healthcare Systems did not respond to emails seeking comment.

Spencer Perlman, managing partner and director of health care research at Veda Partners in Bethesda, Maryland, said in a client note Thursday that pharmacy benefit managers can “win the war,” but substantiv­e reforms to the industry are possible.

He believes the FTC will lay the groundwork for enforcemen­t actions targeting certain business practices such as pharmacy concession­s, pricing, certain formulary management activities, including manufactur­er rebates, and the control of wholly owned specialty pharmacies.

Perlman said Congress could limit or prohibit certain PBM business practices or authorize the FTC to draft industry rules.

“There is bipartisan frustratio­n with PBMS and it is possible that lawmakers could take matters into their own hands if they feel the FTC is unable to address the issue adequately on its own,” he said.

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