Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Medicare recipients to see premium reduction in 2023

-

WASHINGTON – Medicare recipients will get a premium reduction – but not until next year – reflecting what Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said Friday was an overestima­te in costs of covering an expensive and controvers­ial new Alzheimer’s drug.

Becerra’s statement said the 2022 premium should be adjusted downward but legal and operationa­l hurdles prevented officials from doing that this year. He did not say how much the premium would be adjusted.

Medicare Part B premiums jumped by $22 a month, to $170.10, for 2022, in part because of the cost of the drug Aduhelm, which was approved despite weak evidence that it could slow the progressio­n of Alzheimer’s.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has limited coverage of Aduhelm to use in clinical trials approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion or the National Institutes of Health. It began reassessin­g the premium increase under pressure by Congress and consumers.

The drug’s manufactur­er, Cambridge, Massachuse­tts-based Biogen, has cut the cost of the drug in half, to about $28,000 a year.

CMS cited the sharp reduction in the price of the drug and the limitation­s on coverage in concluding that cost savings could be passed on to Medicare beneficiaries.

In a report to Becerra, the agency said the premium recommenda­tion for 2022 would have been $160.40 a month had the price cut and the coverage determinat­ion both been in place when officials calculated the figure.

The premium for 2023 for Medicare’s more than 56 million recipients will be announced in the fall.

“We had hoped to achieve this sooner, but CMS explains that the options to accomplish this would not be feasible,” Becerra said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States