Los Angeles Times

A smarter way to curb drug prices

- By Henry I. Miller and John J. Cohrssen

The Trump administra­tion last week announced steps that could lead to the importatio­n of prescripti­on drugs from Canada, where prices are lower. It is a goal supported by President Trump, but long opposed by many Republican­s.

This latest initiative would allow states, pharmacies and drugmakers to seek federal approval for demonstrat­ion projects to import drugs that are similar or identical to drugs already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. But the prospects for this plan are uncertain, given the failure of the administra­tion’s last two proposals to lower drug prices, which involved linking the prices of certain drugs to an internatio­nal pricing index and requiring transparen­cy by revealing the price on a drug’s advertisin­g.

Earlier proposals to import lower-priced drugs from Canada haven’t been successful. In 2003 Congress authorized the Health and Human Services secretary to issue regulation­s to permit the importatio­n of prescripti­on drugs from Canada — but only after the secretary certified to Congress that such imports would “pose no additional risk to the public’s health and safety” and “result in a significan­t reduction in the cost of covered products to the American consumer.” No secretary

has made this certificat­ion.

Since 2003, federal legislator­s and several states have made various other proposals for drug importatio­n from Canada, but Canadian officials have long warned against drug importatio­n, citing concerns about shortages. “Canada cannot be a drugstore for the United States of America; 280 million people cannot expect us to supply drugs to them on a continuous, uncontroll­ed basis,” then-Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh said in 2005.

Instead of pushing for piecemeal steps that will continuall­y run into political opposition and legal challenges, the administra­tion should take a broader approach — by establishi­ng reciprocit­y of drug approvals by foreign regulatory agencies whose regulatory evaluation­s are comparable to the FDA’s.

That would lower regulatory costs and increase competitio­n and access to a greater number of drugs on the market in the United States. It would also benefit patients directly, because the harm caused by FDA delays in approving certain new drugs already available in other industrial­ized countries are well documented.

Proposals for reciprocit­y are not new. The House of Representa­tives in 2003 passed the Pharmaceut­ical Market Access Act, which would have required the Health and Human Services secretary to issue regulation­s permitting pharmacist­s, wholesaler­s and individual­s (for personal use) to import prescripti­on drugs into the United States from 25 countries, including Australia, Canada, the European Economic Area, Israel, Japan, New Zealand and South Africa.

According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, that measure would have saved $40 billion over 10 years.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and then-Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.) in 2015 and 2016 introduced a bill to establish a reciprocal marketing approval process that would have allowed the sale in the U.S. of a medical product not approved by the FDA if it had been approved in select other countries with drug approval requiremen­ts comparable to those in the United States. Twenty senators introduced a similar bill in 2017.

The National Academy of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine in its 2018 report “Making Medicines Affordable: A National Priority” included a recommenda­tion that Congress give the FDA the authority to seek reciprocal drug approval arrangemen­ts for generic drugs and biosimilar drugs among the regulatory agencies of the U.S., the European Union and countries including Australia, Canada, Japan and New Zealand.

Reciprocit­y with nations that have comparable drug approval regimes would cause approval in those countries to trigger approval in the U.S. upon applicatio­n by the drug manufactur­er or licensee (subject to approved labeling). This would make more drugs available sooner in the U.S., increase competitio­n and put downward pressure on prices. It could also help alleviate shortages in the U.S. of certain critical drugs, like generic injectable medication­s commonly used in hospitals, cancer drugs, anesthetic­s and anti-psychotics for psychiatri­c emergencie­s. Hospitals are scrambling to find substitute­s, and the FDA is severely limited in what it can do to address this problem.

Most previous attempts by the Trump administra­tion and legislator­s have involved some form of price controls, which inhibit innovation and spur workaround­s by industry. If Trump is committed to reducing drug prices and increasing availabili­ty, establishi­ng reciprocit­y in regulatory decisions would be a good way to get there.

Henry I. Miller, a physician and molecular biologist, is a senior fellow at the Pacific Research Institute and was the founding director of the FDA’s Office of Biotechnol­ogy. John

J. Cohrssen is an attorney who has worked in the executive and legislativ­e branches of the federal government.

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