Orlando Sentinel

To help curb prices, FDA to boost generics

- By Linda A. Johnson

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said it’s taking steps to boost the number of generic prescripti­on drugs on the market in an effort to make medicines more affordable and to prevent price gouging.

Copycat pills generally have been much cheaper than original brand-name drugs.

But recent high-profile cases have shown how lack of competitio­n and medicine shortages allowed several drug companies to drasticall­y increase prices for generics and some older brand-name products such as EpiPen emergency allergy injectors.

New FDA commission­er Dr. Scott Gottlieb made addressing prices a priority, saying that agency can help by increasing market competitio­n. While the FDA reviews and approves medication­s, it doesn’t have the power to regulate prices.

“No patient should be priced out of the medicines they need, and as an agency dedicated to promoting public health, we must do our part to help patients get access to the treatments they require,” Gottlieb said.

The FDA said this week that it will now give priority reviews to new generic drugs until there are at least three on the market.

That’s the level at which prices tend to drop sharply, up to 85 percent off the brand-name price.

The agency also published its first list of brandname drugs that no longer have a patent’s protection but don’t yet have generic competitio­n, a strategy to entice generic drugmakers to develop copycats.

The list includes an HIV medicine, a geneticall­y engineered heart drug, prescripti­on multivitam­ins and IV salt and sugar solutions.

Among the best-known cases of dramatic price hikes: Mylan’s fivefold increase for EpiPen’s price and former pharmaceut­ical executive Martin Shkreli’s Turing Pharmaceut­icals raising the price of an old drug for a deadly infection more than 5,000 percent, to $750 per pill.

Meanwhile, the FDA has scheduled a July 18 meeting to discuss possible changes to its rules for approving generics, which inadverten­tly have enabled some makers of brand-name medicines to prevent or delay generic rivals.

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